This collection consists of business records, financial and legal documents, printed material, manuscripts, correspondence and photographs relating to the personal lives, ancestry and creative activities of Anne and Charles Farrell, as well as their three sons. The couple were talented photographers who captured many images of people and places in Greensboro and throughout North Carolina from the mid-1920s through the late 1940s. The museum also has an Art Shop Collection (https://gateway.uncg.edu/islandora/object/ghm%3AArtShop) containing several thousand images produced by their business, and additional collections of their work are held by the North Carolina State Archives and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Exterior of Curry High School on campus of the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina (now The University of North Carolina at Greensboro).
A clown pulling a Chatham Dog Food wagon in front of the Southern Life Building at 330 South Greene Street during the Greensboro Sesquicentennial parade.
Looking northwest at the busy intersection of Elm and Market streets, once known as Jefferson Square. The Jefferson Standard Building (now Lincoln Financial Center), the Banner Building, the O. Henry Hotel, and part of the Southeastern Building are visible.
Looking northwest at the busy intersection of Elm and Market streets, once known as Jefferson Square. Liggett's Drug Store, the Jefferson Standard Building (now Lincoln Financial Center), the Banner Building, and the O. Henry Hotel are visible.