Schneider's Creek adjoining the homestead covered in 1930. Used in Hannes Schneider, p. 150A. A duplicate photo and a near duplicate photo are included.
The fence is the boundary between the land of Joseph M. Snyder (left) and the land of Edith Quickfall. Legal letter confirming this boundary is on the back of the photo. Used in Hannes Schneider, p. 110A. Duplicate included.
A sketching of the "Red" school house by J.G. Stroh. The building was demolished in 1857. Used in Hannes Schneider, p. 120G. Write-up included with photo.
A sketching of the buildings on the north side of King Street between Queen St. and Frederick St. Used in Hannes Schneider, p. 120G. Related photograph in file 1994-1.46.
West Pipe company, owned land south of the David B. Schneider homestead which was torn down to make way for the Conestoga Parkway.This road continued to Nine Pines School house and on to Mannheim. Found in Hist. Mss. 168.2.1.
Semi-formal. Earl Schwartzentruber, Genevieve? Schwartzentruber and their three children in an unknown local, although, they were in Argentina on MCC assignment at one point.
A group posing with two of the cyclists who made the trip from Indiana to "the Twenty" (the Jordan-Vineland district) the first Mennonite settlement in Canada. With bicycles, l-r: Aaron C. Kolb and William P. Coffman.