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0057 0057
Union RR - Hall Locomotive Repair Shops off Thompson Rd.
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0059 0059
Former Saw Mill - Thompson Run Road. 1970s
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0202
0202
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0331 0331
Former Roosevelt School on thomspon Run Rd. c. 1970.
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0315 0315
Robert and Mary Thompson.
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0517 0517
Robert Thompson House (razed) on Beatty Road (near present day University Park and College park Drives).
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0512
0512
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0578 0578
Robert Thompson (1873-1944) with grandson Darryl in the 1940s.
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0579
0579
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0580
0580
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0581 0581
Robert and Mary Thompson with their grandchildren. c. 1940.
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0582 0582
Darryl Thompson with "Old Shep." c. 1940s.
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0710 0710
Colonel Elmer Ellsworth Thompson (1862-1937).
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0711
0711
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0802 0802
Sarah Sylves Thompson with Former Councilman James Mirro.
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0367 0367
Former Saw Mill on Thompson Run Road, now Eles Brothers Cement Co. 2005.
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Grace Thompson in 1927.1292 1292
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0533 0533
WPSL, Monroeville's radio station. c. 1970. The station signed on the air in September 1964 with call letters taken from the name of the founder. Punchy Sylvis Leib. When she died, her sister Sarah Sylves Thompson, took over as President of The Monroeville Broadcasting Company. The station was sold to out-of-town interests, and the call letters changed in 1980.
Union RR - Hall Locomotive Repair Shops off Thompson Rd.
Former Saw Mill - Thompson Run Road. 1970s
Former Roosevelt School on thomspon Run Rd. c. 1970.
Robert and Mary Thompson.
Robert Thompson House (razed) on Beatty Road (near present day University Park and College park Drives).
Robert Thompson (1873-1944) with grandson Darryl in the 1940s.
Robert and Mary Thompson with their grandchildren. c. 1940.
Darryl Thompson with "Old Shep." c. 1940s.
Colonel Elmer Ellsworth Thompson (1862-1937).
Sarah Sylves Thompson with Former Councilman James Mirro.
Former Saw Mill on Thompson Run Road, now Eles Brothers Cement Co. 2005.
WPSL, Monroeville's radio station. c. 1970. The station signed on the air in September 1964 with call letters taken from the name of the founder. Punchy Sylvis Leib. When she died, her sister Sarah Sylves Thompson, took over as President of The Monroeville Broadcasting Company. The station was sold to out-of-town interests, and the call letters changed in 1980.