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Imagga
created on 2019-06-07
text visuals | 100% | |
Captions
Microsoft
created by unknown on 2019-06-07
a close up of a sign | 80% | |
a screen shot of a computer | 56% | |
a white sign with black text | 54.6% | |
Clarifai
Created by general-english-image-caption-clip on 2025-07-12
featured image of this map.
Salesforce
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip on 2025-06-13
a photograph of a document with a list of important documents, including a list of important documents
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip-2 on 2025-07-07
a document with the words state of new york on it
OpenAI GPT
Created by gpt-4o-2024-11-20 on 2025-06-14
This image depicts a document titled "State of New York, Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission Exhibit by State Board of Charities." It provides details about the Lewis County almshouse in Lowville, Lewis County, New York, an institution categorized under the composite type with administration by the "Keeper of almshouse" and supervision by the "County Superintendent of the Poor."
The document includes information about fiscal control, visitation, capacity (100 inmates), acreage (59 acres), the value of farm products and operations from 1903, and inmate classifications. Average weekly maintenance costs for inmates as of 1903 are listed as $1.43, with total expenses of $5,034.56. The document also specifies the number of supported individuals: 64 for the year, with 41 remaining in October 1903. Breakdowns for conditions include able-bodied, elderly (over 70 years), sick/infirm patients, blind individuals, and mentally defective inmates.
General information mentions that some buildings are old but have been improved recently. It notes that a dairy farm contributed one-third of maintenance costs, and the hospital facilities are being upgraded by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
Created by gpt-4o-2024-08-06 on 2025-06-14
The image is a document titled "State of New York Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission Exhibit by State Board of Charities." It provides a detailed overview of the Lewis County Almshouse in Lowville, Lewis County, New York. Key information includes:
- The almshouse is classified under the "composite" system.
- Fiscal control is managed by the Board of Supervisors of County, with county supervision.
- Visitation is handled by the State Board of Charities, and administration is by the Keeper of Almshouse.
- The institution has a capacity of 100 and occupies 59 acres.
- The value of farm products in 1903 was $1,450.65, and receipts from sales were $372.71.
- The average number of inmates in 1903 was 45, with an average weekly maintenance cost of $1.43 per inmate.
- A total of 64 individuals were supported in 1903, with 41 remaining as of October 1, 1903.
- Inmate classification includes able-bodied, over 70 years of age, sick or infirm, blind, and mentally defective.
- Total expenses for 1903 amounted to $4,034.56.
- General information notes that the almshouse is of the composite type, with improvements made recently. Some buildings are old but have been thoroughly improved, and the dairy farm contributes significantly to maintenance costs. Plans include converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
Anthropic Claude
Created by anthropic.claude-3-haiku-20240307-v1:0 on 2025-06-20
The image appears to be an exhibit by the State Board of Charities for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission. It provides detailed information about the Lewis County Almshouse, including its system, fiscal control, visitation and inspection, capacity, value of land and buildings, value of labor of inmates, average number of inmates, total number supported during the year, and classification of inmates. The document also includes general information about the almshouse, noting that some of the buildings are old but have been altered and improved lately, and that the dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance. The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
Created by us.anthropic.claude-3-opus-20240229-v1:0 on 2025-06-20
The image shows an exhibit card from the State of New York Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission. It provides details about the Lewis County Almshouse, located in Lowville, Lewis County, N.Y.
The card lists statistics about the almshouse, including its system (congregate or cottage), fiscal control, visitation and inspection, capacity, acreage, value of land/buildings/labor, average number of inmates, weekly per capita cost, state/county/city/town poor breakdown, total number remaining as of October 1, 1903, classification of inmates by age and other factors, and total expenses for 1903.
The general information at the bottom notes the almshouse is of the composite type, with dairy farm activities constituting a major part of its maintenance. It mentions the hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting former insane asylum space into a hospital.
Created by us.anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022-v2:0 on 2025-06-20
This is a historical document from the State of New York's Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, specifically an exhibit by the State Board of Charities. The document details information about the Lewis County Almshouse located in Lowville, Lewis County, NY in 1903. Here are the key details:
- It was a composite system facility with a capacity of 100 and 59 acres of land
- The property and buildings were valued at $25,000 in 1903
- Farm products were valued at $1,408.85 with sales of $372.71 that year
- The average number of inmates in 1903 was 45
- Weekly per capita cost of maintenance was $1.43
- The population included 17 county poor and 47 city/town poor
- As of October 1, 1903, there were 41 people remaining in the institution
- The facility included separate rooms for hospital facilities
- The document notes that while some buildings were old, they had been altered and improved, with the dairy farm contributing one-third of maintenance costs
- Plans were in place to convert the former insane asylum into a hospital
This document appears to be part of a larger exhibition or documentation of charitable institutions in New York State during the early 1900s.
Meta Llama
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-06-13
The image presents a document from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, specifically an exhibit by the State Board of Charities. The document is titled "STATE OF NEW YORK" and features a formal layout with a white background and black text.
- Title and Header
- Title: "STATE OF NEW YORK"
- Subtitle: "Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission"
- Exhibit by: "STATE BOARD OF CHARITIES"
- Name of Institution
- Name: "Lewis county almshouse"
- Location: "Lowville, Lewis County, N.Y."
- System (congregate or cottage)
- System: "Composite"
- Fiscal control, Board of Supervisors of County
- Fiscal control: "Supervision, County Department of the Poor"
- Visitation and inspection, State Board of Charities
- Visitation and inspection: "Hospital facilities, Reformatory rooms"
- Capacity
- Capacity: "100"
- **Value of land and buildings 1903, $38,000"
- Value of land and buildings: "$38,000"
- **Value of products of farm 1903, $1,400.65"
- Value of products of farm: "$1,400.65"
- **Receipts from sales 1903, $375.71"
- Receipts from sales: "$375.71"
- **Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance 1903, $1.45"
- Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance: "$1.45"
- **Total number supported during the year 1903, 64"
- Total number supported: "64"
- **State poor, county poor, city or town poor, 47"
- State poor: "17"
- County poor: "17"
- City or town poor: "47"
- **Total number remaining in institution October 1, 1903, 41"
- Total number remaining: "41"
- **Classification: Able-bodied, over 70 years of age, sick or infirm, blind, mentally defective, 18"
- Classification: "Able-bodied: 18, over 70 years of age: 18, sick or infirm: 25, blind: 2, mentally defective: 15"
- **Total expenses 1903, $1,034.86"
- Total expenses: "$1,034.86"
- General information
- General information: "An almshouse of the composite type. Some of the buildings are old, but all have been altered and improved lately. The dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance. The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital."
In summary, the document provides detailed information about the Lewis county almshouse in New York, including its location, system, fiscal control, visitation and inspection, capacity, value of land and buildings, value of products of farm, receipts from sales, average weekly per capita cost of maintenance, total number supported, state poor, county poor, city or town poor, total number remaining, classification, total expenses, and general information.
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-06-13
The image presents a document from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, specifically an exhibit by the State Board of Charities. The document is titled "STATE OF NEW YORK" and features a table with various columns and rows containing information about institutions in Lewis County.
Document Details:
- Title: STATE OF NEW YORK
- Subtitle: Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission
- Exhibit By: STATE BOARD OF CHARITIES
Table Structure:
- Columns:
- Name of institution
- Location
- System (congregate or cottage)
- Fiscal control
- Visitation and inspection
- Capacity
- Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance
- Total number supported during the year
- State poor
- County poor
- City or town poor
- Classification
- Total expenses
- General information
Institution Information:
- Name: Lewis County Almshouse
- Location: Lowville, Lewis County, N.Y.
- System: Composite
- Fiscal Control: Board of Supervisors of County
- Visitation and Inspection: State Board of Charities
- Capacity: 100
- Average Weekly Per Capita Cost of Maintenance: $1.45
- Total Number Supported During the Year: 1903, 64
- State Poor: 17
- County Poor: 41
- City or Town Poor: 6
- Classification: Able-bodied
- Total Expenses: $4,074.68
- General Information: An almshouse of the composite type. Some of the buildings are old, but all have been altered and improved lately. The dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance. The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
Overall, the document provides detailed information about the Lewis County Almshouse, including its capacity, expenses, and classification. It also highlights the institution's efforts to improve its facilities and services.
Amazon Nova
Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-06-14
The image is a document titled "STATE OF NEW YORK Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission EXHIBIT BY STATE BOARD OF CHARITIES" with various details about an almshouse in Lewis County, New York. The document provides information about the name, location, system, fiscal control, supervision, visitation and inspection, capacity, value of land and buildings, value of products, average weekly cost of maintenance, total support, total number remaining, classification, and general information about the institution. The document also includes financial details such as total expenses, receipts from sales, and average number of inmates. The document is dated 1903 and is a formal report or exhibit for the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission.
Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-06-14
The image shows a document that is an exhibit by the State Board of Charities, Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission. The document is titled "State of New York." It is a report that contains information about the Louisiana County Almshouse. The report includes details such as the name of the institution, location, system, administration, fiscal control, supervision, visitation and inspection, capacity, value of land and buildings, average number of inmates, average weekly per capita cost of maintenance, total number supported during the year, total number remaining in the institution, classification, and total expenses. The report also includes general information about the institution.
Google Gemini
Created by gemini-2.0-flash on 2025-06-13
Here is a description of the image:
The image shows a document titled "State of New York" with the heading "Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission" and "Exhibit by State Board of Charities." The document provides information about the Lewis County Almshouse. The data includes its location as Lowville, Lewis County, N.Y., and it's composite system of operation. It is fiscally controlled by the Board of Supervisors of the county and inspected by the State Board of Charities.
Other details include:
- Capacity: 100
- Acreage: 59
- Value of land and buildings in 1903: $38,000
- Value of products from farm in 1903: $1,468.65
- Receipts from sales in 1903: $372.71
- Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance in 1903: $1.43
- Total number supported during the year 1903: 64
- State poor: 17
- City or town poor: 47
- Total number remaining in the institution on October 1, 1903: 41
The document classifies the inmates as:
- Able-bodied
- Over 70 years of age: 18
- Sick or infirm: 23
- Blind: 2
- Mentally defective: 15
Additional information states that it is an almshouse of the composite type, some of the buildings are old but have been altered and improved lately. The dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance, and hospital facilities are to be improved by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital. The total expenses for 1903 are listed as $4,034.56.
Created by gemini-2.0-flash-lite on 2025-06-13
Here's a description of the image:
Overall Appearance: The image is a document, likely a black and white reproduction of an official report or exhibit. It's in a rectangular format and appears to be mounted on a larger sheet. There is a watermark in the top right corner with numbers.
Text and Layout:
- The document is a table or form with structured information. It's neatly organized with headings and data points.
- The language is formal, consistent with official reports.
Key Elements:
- Title and Header: At the top, there is the heading: "STATE OF NEW YORK, Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, EXHIBIT BY, STATE BOARD OF CHARITIES"
- Institutional Information: The document provides details about "Lewis county almshouse" and several related details (location, administration, fiscal control, inspection, capacity, acreage, value of land/buildings, etc.)
- Data and Statistics: There are several data points including the capacity, total number supported in the year, state and county poor numbers.
- Demographic Breakdown: The document includes the breakdown of the inmates by categories like "Able-bodied, Over 70 years of age, Sick or infirm, Blind, Mentally Defective."
- General Information: There's a short paragraph at the bottom giving general notes about the almshouse (buildings, maintenance, hospital)
General Impression:
- This image is a historical record of a New York state institution, potentially a report or exhibit at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition.
- The document likely provides a snapshot of the institution's operations, demographics, and financial data.
- The text indicates a focus on the physical state of the facility and its services.
Mistral Pixtral
Created by us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0 on 2025-06-14
The image is a document from the State of New York's Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, exhibited by the State Board of Charities. It provides detailed information about the Lewis County Almshouse, located in Lowville, Lewis County, New York.
Key details from the document include:
- Name of Institution: Lewis County Almshouse
- Location: Lowville, Lewis County, New York
- Administration: Keeper of almshouse
- Supervision: County Superintendent of the Poor
- Visitation and Inspection: State Board of Charities
- Hospital Facilities: Separate rooms
Capacity and Value:
- Capacity: 200
- Average: 50
- Value of land and buildings (1903): $35,000
- Value of labor of inmates (1903): $300
- Value of products of farm (1903): $1,600
- Receipts from sales (1903): $375
Maintenance Costs:
- Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance (1903): $1.45
Inmate Statistics:
- Total number supported during the year 1903: 144
- State poor: 17
- County poor: 47
- City or town poor: 67
- Total number remaining in institution on October 1, 1903: 41
Classification of Inmates:
- Able-bodied: 18
- Over 70 years of age: 18
- Sick or infirm: 23
- Blind: 5
- Mentally defective: 10
Total Expenditure (1903): $5,354.88
General Information:
- The almshouse is a combination of the congregate type.
- Some buildings are old but have been altered and improved lately.
- The dairy farm contributes considerably to the cost of maintenance.
- The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
The document appears to be a historical record providing a snapshot of the operations, financials, and demographics of the Lewis County Almshouse in 1903.
Qwen
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-7B-Instruct on 2025-07-11
The image appears to be a historical document from the State of New York, specifically an exhibit from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission. It is titled "STATE OF NEW YORK Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission EXHIBIT BY STATE BOARD OF CHARITIES." The document provides detailed information about the Lewis County Almshouse located in Lowville, Lewis County, New York.
The document includes the following details:
- Name of institution: Lewis County Almshouse
- Location: Lowville, Lewis County, N.Y.
- System: Composite
- Administration: Keeper of Almshouse
- Supervision: County Superintendent of the Poor
- Hospital facilities: Separate rooms
- Capacity: 100
- Acreage: 59
- Fiscal control: Board of Supervisors of County
- Visitation and inspection: State Board of Charities
- Value of land and buildings (1903): $38,000
- Value of labor of inmates (1903): $300
- Value of products of farm (1903): $1,459.65
- Receipts from sales (1903): $372.71
- Average weekly per capita cost of maintenance (1903): $1.43
- Total number supported during the year (1903): 64
- State poor: 0
- County poor: 17
- City or town poor: 47
- Total number remaining in institution (October 1, 1903): 41
- Classification:
- Able-bodied: 0
- Over 70 years of age: 18
- Sick or infirm: 23
- Blind: 2
- Mentally defective: 15
- Total expenses (1903): $4,034.56
- General information: An almshouse of the composite type. Some of the buildings are old, but all have been altered and improved lately. Its dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance. The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.
The document provides a snapshot of the operational and financial details of the Lewis County Almshouse in 1903, including its capacity, funding, and the types of individuals it housed. It also highlights the need for improvement in hospital facilities.
Created by Qwen/Qwen2.5-VL-72B-Instruct on 2025-07-11
This image is a document from the State of New York, specifically from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Commission, and it is an exhibit by the State Board of Charities. The document provides detailed information about the Lewis County Almshouse located in Lowville, Lewis County, New York.
Key details from the document include:
- Name of Institution: Lewis County Almshouse
- Location: Lowville, Lewis County, New York
- System: Composite
- Administration: Keeper of Almshouse
- Supervision: County Superintendent of the Poor
- Fiscal Control: Board of Supervisors of County
- Visitation and Inspection: State Board of Charities
- Hospital Facilities: Separate rooms
- Capacity: 100
- Acreage: 59
- Value of Land and Buildings (1903): $38,000
- Value of Labor of Inmates (1903): $300
- Value of Products of Farm (1903): $1,459.65
- Receipts from Sales (1903): $372.71
- Average Number of Inmates (1903): 45
- Average Weekly Per Capita Cost of Maintenance (1903): $1.43
- Total Number Supported During the Year 1903: 64
- State poor: 17
- County poor: 47
- Total Number Remaining in Institution (October 1, 1903): 41
- Classification:
- Able-bodied: 18
- Over 70 years of age: 23
- Sick or infirm: 2
- Blind: 15
- Total Expenses (1903): $4,034.56
General Information: The document notes that the almshouse is of the composite type, with some old buildings that have been altered and improved. The dairy farm contributes one-third of the cost of maintenance. The hospital facilities are to be bettered by converting the former insane asylum into a hospital.