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Mary Jane Perez Cornielle
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Updated: February 19, 2015
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Mary Jane Perez Cornielle
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Feb 19, 2015 10:52 PM
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2020 marks 20 years since the inception of AncientFaces. We are the same team who began this community so long ago. Over the years it feels, at least to us, that our family has expanded to include so many. Thank you!
2020 marks 20 years since the inception of AncientFaces. We are the same team who began this community so long ago. Over the years it feels, at least to us, that our family has expanded to include so many. Thank you!


Anna Byers and her Irish friends.
A photo of my maternal Grandmother, Anna Byers McNally. with work place friends. She emigrated with parents and sibs from Germany in 1882 when she was 6. They settled in Penn. and got into the silk mill business. Anna was evidently in charge of a processing room from a picture we have.She met my grandfather, Ernest V McNally,from Conn. who also was in the mills . Married on 07 and moved to Belding, Michigan where the Belding Bros mills were set up. My mother, Helen McNally was born there and her brother, Valentine was born in Penn.After the silk Mills closed in the early 30's the couple managed the Hotel Belding until it closed in early 40's.Don't know the theme of the photo.
People tagged:


Tama Kura/Kuva & Otella Kuhtik
A photo found at antique shop. Not my family line.
Written on the back: Tama Kura or Kuva Otella Kuhtik. 1900.
Picture taken in Boston.
People in photo include: Otella Kuhtik
Written on the back: Tama Kura or Kuva Otella Kuhtik. 1900.
Picture taken in Boston.
People in photo include: Otella Kuhtik

Josephine Graham Bacon
A photo of Josephine Graham Bacon
People in photo include: Josephine Graham Bacon
People in photo include: Josephine Graham Bacon


Cattle Nose Prints
In 1922, Dr. W. E. Petersen, a dairy researcher at the University of Minnesota, gave an extensive report on the methods of obtaining ink noseprints, and the use of these prints in identifying dairy cattle. He presented the following conclusions:
The design on the nose (area from the upper lip to the top of the nostril) is a result of subcutaneous (under the skin) glands which cause distinct elevations or ridges.
Each design or pattern of ridges and grooves is specific for that individual animal.
As the animal gets older, the nose becomes larger; however, the pattern of ridges and grooves remains the same.
Legible or readable noseprints can be used as a means of positive identification and can be made from a small portion of the print.
The ink noseprinting procedure is simple enough to be practical.
The design on the nose (area from the upper lip to the top of the nostril) is a result of subcutaneous (under the skin) glands which cause distinct elevations or ridges.
Each design or pattern of ridges and grooves is specific for that individual animal.
As the animal gets older, the nose becomes larger; however, the pattern of ridges and grooves remains the same.
Legible or readable noseprints can be used as a means of positive identification and can be made from a small portion of the print.
The ink noseprinting procedure is simple enough to be practical.


1933 Long Beach CA earthquake
Harry Worley, wife Etta O'Dell Worley holding their youngest child, Melvin Arlen Worley (born 1932), living on the street following a 6.3 earthquake in March 1933. Child and woman on the right are unknown, but no doubt friends of the Worley's.
People in photo include: Melvin Arlen Worley
People in photo include: Melvin Arlen Worley
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Unknown boy
Taken in the early 1900's by my guess.
(I don't think that's a cigarette in his left hand.)
(I don't think that's a cigarette in his left hand.)


Iroquois Indians in Buffalo NY
Iroquois Indians in Buffalo New York in 1914.
This was a panoramic photo, put together in two parts, so I split the photo back into two parts. While it is difficult to see the faces, the photo gives a wonderful sense of what life was like for these people. It looks to be the dead of winter.
Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress, William A Drennan
This was a panoramic photo, put together in two parts, so I split the photo back into two parts. While it is difficult to see the faces, the photo gives a wonderful sense of what life was like for these people. It looks to be the dead of winter.
Photo courtesy of the Library of Congress, William A Drennan


Rabbi Dow Ber Meisels
A photo of my fourth great grand-father, rabbi Dow Ber Meisels, born in 1798. He was Chief Rabbi in Krakow, Poland. He supported Polish Independence for which he was persecuted by the Russian government.
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Possible Civil War Widow
This photo was purchased by me at the flea market in Dayton, OH
Who is this woman, and who is the man in the photo in the broach she is wearing?
Who is this woman, and who is the man in the photo in the broach she is wearing?
