Photograph of Two People Standing in Snow in front of 312 E. South Street

Basic details

Photograph of Two People Standing in Snow in front of 312 E. South Street is an image, with genre photograph, group portraits and buildings.
Its dimensions are 3.5 in. x 5 in..
It was created sometime in 1963.
Dr. Harold Pepinsky is the contributor.
You can find the original at Worthington Historical Society.

Background

This black and white photographs shows two unidentified people standing on the snow-covered lawn beside 312 E. South Street. They are dressed in winter coats and face the photographer.

The original owners of the home were David and Olga Wilder. The home is part of the Rush Creek Village neighborhood in Worthington, which is based on the organic architecture principles of Frank Lloyd Wright. The builders of the neighborhood were Martha and Richard Wakefield, and the designer was Theodore (Ted) van Fossen. Homes were designed in accordance with nature and the surrounding homes in the neighborhood as a whole, in a way that protects the privacy and vistas of all residents. In its description of Rush Creek Village, the Worthington Historical Society website notes, "No other organically designed community of this size and architectural consistency exists."

Subjects

It covers the topics snow and homes.
It covers the Worthington neighborhood Rush Creek Village.
It features the address 312 E. South Street.

Record details

This file was reformatted digital in the format video/jpeg.
The Worthington Memory identification code is wcd0712.
This metadata record was human prepared by Worthington Libraries on . It was last updated .

Downloads

Image file (304.72 KB)