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   <page id="cat_Bath5">
   <title>Bath, Then and Now</title>
   <exhibit>Eastern North Carolina Digital History Exhibit</exhibit>
   <project>Bath Tricentennial</project>
   <digital_object_list>
<list_item><creation_date>1890-00-01</creation_date><int link="wrpn">St. Thomas Church</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>1900-00-01</creation_date><int link="stca">St. Thomas Church Altar</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>1910-00-01</creation_date><int link="bona">Bonner House</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>2005-00-00</creation_date><int link="bonn1">Bonner House</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>2005-00-00</creation_date><int link="pmhc">Palmer-Marsh House Chimney</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>2005-00-00</creation_date><int link="stcb1">St. Thomas Church Today</int></list_item>
<list_item><creation_date>2005-00-00</creation_date><int link="vdvh">Van Der Veer House</int></list_item>
</digital_object_list>
   <description type="category">One of the best ways to see the changes in Bath is to look at photographs from the turn of the twentieth century alongside photographs taken of Bath today. Photographer Thomas R. Draper came to Bath in 1890 and established a souvenir shop where he sold his pictures. Draper&rsquo;s photographs  along with some other snapshots of the era and the pictures of Bath in the 1905 souvenir calendar <i>Ye Old Bath Town</i>, give a good picture of what Bath&rsquo;s historic structures looked like one-hundred-plus years ago. In the spring of 2005, Adrienne Rae and Ashley Noble each went to Bath and took pictures of many of the now restored historic buildings as they appear today.</description>
   </page>