Browse Items (15 total)

http://dighist.fas.harvard.edu/courses/2015/HUM54/files/original/5646fa148f425cc6923780465a4180e2.jpg
A profile of Wen-ti Tsen.
http://dighist.fas.harvard.edu/courses/2015/HUM54/files/original/5646fa148f425cc6923780465a4180e2.jpg
A profile of Wen-ti Tsen.
http://dighist.fas.harvard.edu/courses/2015/HUM54/files/original/e20a1a1baba95515437e95de7ef12645.JPG
Custom Block House, built back in 1848, still stands today as a mixed use building, and is evidence of the wharves as a shipping and industrial hub.
http://dighist.fas.harvard.edu/courses/2015/HUM54/files/original/3ef4cebdcb83fa6106a7690f01efe81a.jpg
This “Home Town” exhibit features an unknown figure that Wen-ti Tsen affectionately refers to only as “the Laundryman.” To Tsen, the Laundryman is a representation of the Chinese immigrant work ethic.
http://dighist.fas.harvard.edu/courses/2015/HUM54/files/original/bbfb1c441c389bfc5dba702a9a3e4c0f.jpg
A look at Manezhnaya Square back in 1938. It is much less developed but one can clearly see the beautiful Moscow Hotel.
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