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Max Moxley Photographs
Ranching
The photo was taken by Sterling photographer H.L. Truesdell, who had a studio at Seventh and Adams. Local cattleman agree that the location appears to…
Max Moxley Photographs
Automobile
Sterling had several car dealerships at one time. Beginning in the 1940's this Chevrolet agency was first owned by Chub Revel, Les Amend and later…
Max Moxley Photographs
Farming
Sorghum vulgare var. technicum was used produce to brooms. Sterling was know as the broomcorn capital, shipping truckloads of broomcorn to the east…
Max Moxley Photographs
Broomcorn
{Written on back of picture} J.H. Smith, founding President, himself from New York bought in Eastern Capital to finance local broomcorn buyers.…
Max Moxley Photographs
Newspaper
Printing room in one of the several papers in Sterling around the turn of the century.
Max Moxley Photographs
Newspaper
Men working at a newspaper, possibly the Sterling Bulletin.
Max Moxley Photographs
Fourth of July
This one horse, rear engine buggy was the highlight of the Fourth of July parade in 1906. It is advertising Arnold Milling Co. Crystal Flour. Notable…
Max Moxley Photographs
History--Sterling, Kansas
Here a work crew, composed largely of local men, tears out the original limestone curbing and replaces it with the town's first concrete curb and…
Max Moxley Photographs
Farming
The 1950's saw the end of horse-drawn implements on local farms. The Mansz brothers who lived on Avenue V six miles east of Sterling, were the last to…
Max Moxley Photographs
Floods
Flood July 1929 shows a man, a woman, and two boys standing knee-deep in flood water in front of a business. The striped awning reads, "... SAVING &…