Page 92 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Five portraits of police officers are attached to the page. Names of the pictured officers are recorded below the images.
Page 89 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Six portraits of police officers are attached to the page. Names of the pictured officers are recorded below the images.
Page 121 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Photographs of Thomas Sullivan, George Fisher, J. S. Snow, Fred Martin, and J. L. Sullavan are attached to the page.
Page 119 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Photographs of John Faught, Harry Boyer, George Waddell, G. S. McLarnan, and Dennis Flynn are attached to the page.
Page 120 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Photographs of John M. Love, Virgil Sands, Eugene Trinqual, Joe McCormick, and Jack Reynolds are attached to the page.
Page 113 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. Photographs of Doctor W. Connelly Anderson, Charles King, Ray Nick, George Helard, and unidentified police officers are attached to the page.
Page 13 of the Hugh M. Dougherty Scrapbook #1. A group portrait of police officers standing outside of Police Station No. 4, once located at 1913 Walnut Street, is attached to the upper left hand corner of the page. The names of the pictured officers is printed below the image. A photograph of a group of police officers standing outside of Police Station No. 3 is attached to the lower left hand corner of the page. A portrait of a police officer is attached to the right hand side of the page.
Unidentified group portrait taken in front of the Western College dormitory, once located at 22nd Street and Tracy Avenue. The building once housed the Margaret-Klock Armour Memorial Home for Aged Couples.
Unidentified group portrait taken in front of the Western College dormitory, once located at 22nd Street and Tracy Avenue. The building once housed the Margaret-Klock Armour Memorial Home for Aged Couples.
A family photograph of G. M. D. Akard. George's relationship to James J. Akard, captain of Company A, Eighth Missouri State Militia Cavalry during the Civil War, is unknown.