An autochrome photograph of the W. H. Collins residence, taken from the south and looking north. Collins was president of the W. H. Collins Investment Company.
Houses
An autochrome photograph of C. H. Tinsley's residence, taken from the northeast. Tinsley was a Kansas City insurance agent.
An autochrome photograph of Sid J. Hare's house and rock garden. Hare was a Kansas City landscape architect.
An autochrome photograph of James Neal Foster's residence, taken from the southwest. James was secretary of the Foster Lumber Company and his wife Sadie Ross Foster was president of the Kansas City Browning Society.
An autochrome photograph of M. B. Nelson's house, taken from the west. Nelson was president of the Long-Bell Lumber Company.
An autochrome photograph of a sculpture near the entrance to the residence of Martha D. Shields, taken looking south. Her deceased husband, Edwin W. Shields, was president of Simmonds-Shields-Theis Grain Company.
An autochrome photograph of Andrew S. Barada's garden, taken from the south in the spring of 1933. Barada was president of Barada and Page (Chemicals).
An autochrome photograph of the "Kitty Kat Kottage", a cottage at Unity Farm (Unity Village).
An autochrome photograph of Dr. Solon E. Haynes's garden, taken from the southwest. Haynes was a Kansas City physician.
An autochrome photograph of Herbert F. Hall's residence, taken from the southwest. Hall was president of the Hall-Baker Grain Company.
An autochrome photograph of flowers near the entrance to Clifford B. Smith's residence, taken looking northeast. Smith was a publisher and his wife, Laura Conyers Smith, was the founder of the Kansas City Rose Society.
An autochrome photograph of Fred Wolferman's driveway and the rear of his house. Wolferman was founder of Wolferman's Grocery Stores.