Browse Items (342 total) Collection: Floyd Earl McRae Pellston History Photographic Collection Browse All Browse by Tag Search Items Previous Page of 18 Next Page Sort by: TitleCreatorDate Added Two men standing beside a steam engine in a rail yard Tags: Logging, Pellston Two men standing in front of the Pellston Garage, Wallpaper and Paint Store Tags: Business, Pellston Two men standing in front of train engine on logging spur with logs and other workmen in background Tags: Logging, Pellston Two men with a crosscut saw felling a large elm tree Tags: Logging, Pellston Two men with a load of tamarack bark on the big wheels or “katydid” Tags: Logging, Pellston Two men with a team of draft horses and logs Tags: Logging, Pellston Two men with pipes in a train car, three men stowed beneath the car looking out Tags: Ely Two men with two teams of draft horses outside the Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill Tags: Logging, Mills, Pellston Two small homes with two men standing in a fenced lane Tags: Logging, Pellston Two small homes with two men standing in a fenced lane Tags: Logging, Pellston Two workmen and a team of oxen in the woods Tags: Logging, Pellston Two workmen outside a crude shelter in the woods Tags: Logging, Pellston Two workmen removing bark from a felled tree Tags: Logging, Pellston Two workmen with a steam engine in the woods Tags: Logging, Pellston Two young boys sitting on a log in front of a stockpile of logs Tags: Logging, Pellston Two young men with a crosscut saw working on bucking a log Tags: Logging, Pellston Vada McRae standing in the driveway of the McRae family home, 6304 W. Mill St., Pellston, Michigan Tags: McRae, Pellston Vada McRae with Jackson and Tindle Co. Mill in Background Tags: McRae, Mills, Pellston View of Stimson Street, downtown Pellston featuring Joe’s Meat Shop and John’s Little Tavern[a?] Tags: Business, Pellston View of Stimson Street, downtown Pellston, featuring the drug store and three men Tags: Business, Pellston Previous Page of 18 Next Page Featured Item The Suburban Station in Petoskey in the early 1900s. This was the same site as Petoskey's first depot. It was used only in the summer and closed in the winter.