Browse Items (73 total)

  • Tags: Nampa People

Founder of the Bank of Nampa in 1901. Fred Mock was reportedly a member of the various organizations and a very active member of the Nampa community.

Three of the G. M. Brown children standing on wool sacks.

New residents of Nampa - Ada, Keith, Lyle, Lorraine and Maxine Geisler

Owned homestead on present site of Karcher Mall, Nampa. The Karchers were amongst the earliest residents in Nampa.

Evelyn, Maurice, Raymond, Ed and R.E. Gilmore pose in front of the three- seated truck they drove from Wichita, Kansas to Nampa. Mr. Gilmore adapted…

As of 1985, Gracie (Bowers) Pfost was the only Idaho woman to have been elected to the U.S. Congress.
As a teenager and young woman, she worked at…

Picnic on the way to Givens Hot Springs. Nampa youth would take a day-long trip to Givens by buckboard in this era.
The only details of this photo…

Gundy moved to Nampa in 1921. While farming, Mr. Brown acquired a fleet of trucks and developed Brown and Sons Livestock Transportation. Late in life,…

The Fujii's arrived from Japan in 1906. They embodied the true pioneer spirit even through hardships of World War II.

1927, J. A. Winther came to Nampa with his wife and family upon accepting the position of Nampa school music teacher. Mr. Winther taught all grades…

J. Fremont Bow came to Nampa in 1904. He served as the city's mayor May 1921 - April 1923.

Jacob and Polly Miller moved to Nampa in 1899. Jacob died in 1900, thus Polly ran the farm with her three eldest sons.

Jake Lockman was the 1st traveling salesman for the Crescent Brewery starting in 1907.

Police Chief from 1939-1940

In 1874, at the age of two, J. O.'s mother, Lucy Titsworth, traveled by wagon train with her family to the Bruneau Valley. John Oscar Young is…

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