Color postcard of Broad Street looking west toward the 400 block, showing parts of Williams Restaurant, Clark's Drug Store, and a gas station with 1950s automobiles and buses on the street.
Looking east down Broad Street toward the Neuse River. Photo taken during 1884. Image is the same taken by William Garrison Reed, titled "Photograph 607: Newberne: Where the 44th Mass. made Dress Parades [Broad Street]."
The family information was recorded in the book "My Experience, or Foot-prints of a Presbyterian to Spiritualism" by Francis Smith (Baltimore, 1860). 1900 and 1920 census records locate the family in Georgia.
Bradham's Pharmacy, corner of Middle and Pollock Streets. Oscar Marks is identified as the man on the left. "Uncle Dick" (Richard F. Butler) is identified on the right.
Caleb Bradham's drugstore on the southeast corner of Middle and Pollock Streets decorated in bunting for the 1900 Fair. Bicycles are parked in front of the building.
Bradham's Pharmacy decorated for the April 1900 Fair. The building was located at the southeast corner of Middle and Pollock Streets. Several men are standing in front of the building, some with bicycles.
Billhead for Bradham and Smith, Brokers and Commission Merchants, on Craven Street in New Bern. The principal owners were Caleb D. Bradham, inventor of Pepsi-Cola, and William J. Smith.