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Caption: " Joe, Lois, Esther."
"The automobile may have been the only one in the families, and may have been the one my grandfather Miller drove from Kansas, or the one the Edwards traveled in when they abandoned their homes on Bellyache in 1929 and journeyed to Chandler, Arizona. Most travel was by horseback or horse and buggy (wagon?)." -- Esther Rogers, March 3, 2013.
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Annabelle Neff, Shirley and Pauline (Rogers) Frazier posing for a photograph in front of an automobile, June, 1940.
The Neff family moved to Eagle county, Colorado, to the Red canyon ranch in 1911. Marcus P. Neff owned the ranch for 21 years and then moved to Red Cliff with his wife, Annabelle, and family. Mr. Neff owned and operated the Battle Mountain Transportation Company.
The Rogers family lived on High St. Son, Garland, lived in Rifle,...
7. Joyriding
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Clyde Nottingham (driving) and younger brother, Harry Nottingham, in front seat. Harry is holding Clyde's daughter, Lola. Clyde's wife, Myrtle is holding baby son Roland in the back seat, next to friend, Lillian Snell, who once worked for the Nottinghams. The automobile is in front of Harry Nottingham's old house at Buck Creek as they leave for a trip to Salida.
It is unknown whether this is the car belonging to Clyde Nottingham and Tom Dice [1906]...
12. McCoy Hotel
14. Chambers & Fairs
15. The Automobile
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Caption: "Joseph Washington Edwards with Joe, Esther, and Lois."
"I was the middle child. My brother, Joseph K. Edwards was born on Bellyache in 1924. He was killed in WW II. My sister, Lois Elaine Edwards, was born on Bellyache in 1927. She died in 1985. Lois married Robert W. Kirk in Colorado Springs in 1945. I had a brother, Richard ("Dickey") born after they left Bellyache. He died in 1936 in LaJunta, Colorado, at age 5." -- Esther Rogers,...
17. Broadway
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Easter Day, 1949, on Eagle Street, Red Cliff. The Ivan Dump children are in their front yard with Easter baskets lined up on the boardwalk. From left to right, Betty Mae Dump Elsberry, Ed Dump Dumph, and Ernie Dump Dumph. Len Dump Dumph is perched on the fence post. Mine tailings are visible on East hill side of Eagle Street.