Mapping Mobility: Spatial and Class Change in the Gilded Age Wall Street WorkforceMain MenuWomen Attached and Men AdriftResearch StrategyHistory of Brown Brothers & Co.Women's LivesMen's LivesConclusion: Digital and Digitized Histories of GenderMethodology and ProductionBibliographyAcknowledgmentsAtiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311
Farm of W. Gerard Vermilye, located in Closter, N.J. (1912)
12018-05-24T15:08:34+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d31193plain2018-05-24T15:13:15+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311W. Gerard Vermilye (misspelled "Vermilie" here) owned a 23-acre farm in Closter, New Jersey, where he was recorded in the 1910 Census.
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12018-05-24T15:07:39+00:00Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311"Map bounded by High St., Ruckman Rd., Lenox Ave., Massachusetts Ave., Schraalenburgh Rd." (1912)2From G.W. Bromley & Co., Atlas of Bergen County (1912), vol. 1, plate 23media/nypl.digitalcollections.aa2a2e01-ca52-6dc7-e040-e00a180601d2.001.v.jpgplain2018-05-24T15:07:59+00:001912Atiba Pertilla49e1cef3634460a9a4563de96681500e3121d311