The Campanile in winter. The long distance photograph shows the top of the tower rising from a group of trees, which together with an overhanging branch close to the camera frame the Campanile as the focus of the shot. The clock shows 10:10.
The Campanile in January 1949. Long shadows play on the snow between the camera and the tower. The clock shows 10:10. Sloss House can be seen to the left of the Campanile, both enshrouded by trees.
The Campanile on a snow covered central campus. Clock shows 3:10. A conifer in the left near foreground and a leafless tree on image right frame the Campanile. There are surface stains on the photograph. One of a set of three photographs of The…
The Campanile on a snow covered central campus. Clock shows 3:17. A leafless elm on the right foreground partially frames the view of the Campanile in the distance. A bicycle is parked in a snowdrift in the right foreground. A packed trail in the…
The Campanile on a snow covered central campus. Clock shows 3:11. A dark conifer on image right contrasts with the open expanse of central campus snow. There are surface stains on the photograph. One of a set of three photographs of the Campanile,…
Central campus in winter. An empty snow covered sidewalk is in the foreground with the Campanile in the distance. Clock shows 10:38. One of a set of five winter photographs, the others of which are: 4-8-I.Campanile.230-7-6-2 [not digitized];…
This closely cropped blue toned photograph depicts the Campanile in late fall or winter. The oval photograph is mounted on a formal presentation card embossed with ""Lunde, Ames, Iowa.""
The Campanile on the edge of the great central lawn, with trees behind it and surrounding central campus. A road cuts diagonally across the foreground and then angles back toward the Campanile in the distance. Trees in the middle distance on the left…
The Campanile in March 1906. Beardshear Hall is in the background on the image left behind a line of conifers. The same line of conifers obscures the view of the bottom of the Campanile. A path crosses the foreground from edge to edge of the image.