Main Street, Crosby, Minnesota, is lined with automobiles and spectators for the July 4th, 1918, parade. Nurses march behind a Red Cross automobile past Louis Bauer's Jewelry store. A man on horseback rides beside the car.
Crosby High School Boys Basketball Team poses with their coach. Those identified in the back row are (left to right): Fred Crosby, Iver Bergren, Fritz Enuis, Earl Dawson and Harvey Dale Thorpe. Those identified in the front row are (left to right): James Dibble, Jude Lewis and Oscar Anderson. The coach is unidentified.
Crosby Ironton High School Boys Basketball Team poses with their coach. They are identified as (left to right): Lorraine Ellingson, Bob Young, Scott Carhart, Guy Demmick, Alfred Anderson, Evald Nelson, Albert Lee and Coach Randolph.
The Crosby [Baseball] Ball Club poses on their field. They are (left to right): Bill Hillie, Harry Middlebrook, Art Prat, Paul Bezers, Earl Morse, Lindy (Lindahl) Ernest, Jack Schmidt, Nig Lane, Lee Nelson, Jude Lewis, Henning (Andy) Anderson and Jimmie Loppin.
Ingall's Motor Boat Company ferry "Lotus" is docked at the boat landing on Serpent Lake in Crosby, Minnesota. A canoe and rowboats are by the dock. Lakeside General Store is open for business.
The Ingall's Ferry "Twin City" ran between Crosby and Deerwood, Minnesota on Serpent Lake. There is a message on the back to Miss Bridget Hennick from her "loving Pappa."
Ingall's Motor Boat Company Ferry approaches the pier on Serpent Lake with a load of passengers. Men and a dog are waiting on the pier. The ferry was the main mode of travel between Deerwood and Crosby, Minnesota, before the construction of Minnesota State Highway 210 between Deerwood and Crosby.
Ingall's Motor Boat Company ferry "Twin City" is approaching the boat landing on Serpent Lake in Crosby, Minnesota. The ferry is flying many flags. The captain and passengers are visible in the boat.
Snow drifts block the entrance to the Spalding Hotel, Main Street, Crosby, Minnesota. A fire escape services the second and third floor. A horse approaches on the side street.
This is the interior of the First National Bank in Crosby, Minnesota. Tellers stand behind the bars, one at the "Paying" window and one at the "Receiving" window. A spittoon sits on the floor. A drinking fountain is to the right. Marble lines the bottom of the teller area.
Cottage tenements of Crosby, Minnesota, were also known as Honeymoon Row. The cottages are under construction, with horses and buggies parked outside. These four-room cottages, built by the mine owners, rented for $12 a month including sewer, water, electric lights and a sanitary closet.
Honeymoon Row, Crosby, Minnesota, was streets of small cottages built by mining companies to accommodate miners and their families. A horse and buggy travel the unpaved street.
This view of Crosby, Minnesota, taken from the water tower, shows the Spalding Hotel in the center and the White School at center top. The Miner's Hospital is the three-story building to the left of the school. A message on the back to Mrs. Chas. Berg is in a language other than English.