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Irene R. Armitage Memorabilia
This small memorabilia collection consists of a photograph, commencement program, alumni letter, and a book of compiled Bible studies.Guide to the Irene R. Armitage Memorabilia
Collection # 1990.496
University Libraries
Department of Archives and Special Collections
Loma Linda University
11072 Anderson Street
Loma Linda CA 92350
Phone: 909-558-4942
Fax: 909-558-0381
Email: [email protected]
URL: http://www.llu.edu/llu/library/speccoll/
© 2021 Loma Linda University. All rights reserved.
University Libraries, Publisher.
Collection processed by Chelsi C. Cannon
Electronic finding aid created by Chelsi C. Cannon
Descriptive Summary
Creator: Irene R. Armitage
Title: Irene R. Armitage Memorabilia
Date Span: 1929-1979
Abstract: This small memorabilia collection consists of a photograph, commencement program, alumni letter, and a book of compiled Bible studies.
Languages: English
Extent: 4 folders, 5 items
Collection number: 1990.496
Repository: Department of Archives and Special Collections, University Libraries, Loma Linda University
Biographical / Historical Note
Irene R. Armitage was the daughter of Mary Caroline Mortenson and Frank Benjamin Armitage. Irene’s mother Mary attended Battle Creek College and was employed by William C. White to care for his daughters Ella May and Mabel White until he sent for them to join him in Australia. Mary then married George Byron Tripp and in 1895 the two left to serve as missionaries in Africa. After Tripp died of Malaria in 1898, Mary married fellow missionary Frank Armitage, whose wife Anna Olsen had also succumbed to Malaria. Irene was born to Frank and Mary in Capetown, South Africa on March 18, 1901. Irene had two sisters. Violet Armitage (later Staples) was the daughter of Anna Olsen and Frank Armitage. When Irene was a young girl, her parents adopted Evelyn (later DeBorde). Irene’s father established a Seventh-day Adventist school in Spierenkopf, Rwanda, where the girls received their early education. Later, Irene went to a boarding school near Capetown. At 25 years old, she came to the United States and joined the nursing program at the College of Medical Evangelists in Loma Linda, Ca. Irene then received anesthetist training at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago. After returning to Loma Linda, Irene worked for many years as a nurse anesthetist there and at the Paradise Valley Sanitarium. In her later years, she worked for the Doctors Haskell in San Bernardino. Among Irene’s friends in the Loma Linda medical community, were two fellow nurses, Grace and Birtle Allen. In 1982, several years after Birtle's wife Grace died, he and Irene were married. He was 90 and she was 81. Irene passed away 8 years later on June 2, 1990 in Loma Linda, California.
Administrative Information
Restrictions on access: None
Terms governing use and reproduction: The Department of Archives and Special Collections adheres to all applicable copyright laws.
Provenance: Irene R. Armitage Allen
Preferred citation:
Published citations should take the following form:
[item description], [ ], Collection # , University Libraries, Loma Linda University
Processing Information
Access Points
Subjects (Individuals):
Adams, W. M.
Akamine, Mildred
Allen, B. M.
Anderson, Edna Evelyn
Armitage, Irene Ruth
Baker, Alonzo
Balser, Esther Catherine
Beatty, Lucille Helen
Bond, Elsa A.
Calkins, Glenn A.
Clark, Scotson
Cox, Ruth Caroline
Crawford, Velma Garnet
Christiansen, Ruth C.
Davis Alice Genevieve
Estes, Leota Charlotte
Oddard, Verna
Gardner, Floyd
Gressinger, Dorothy
Haygood, Ione Marsleet
Jackson, Helen E.
King, Myron S.
Murphy, F. J.
Nichols, Rosezella Evelyn
Nickel, Catherin Aletha
Price, Guinevere
Raff, J.
Richards, Phoebe
Risley, E. H.
Robbins, Grace Harriet
Ryder, Gladys Lydia
Schneider, Johanna H.
Seibold, Lydia B.
Smith, A. R.
Stratemeyer, Klacena Mary
Talmage, Lucile
Updyke, Mabel
Van Tilborg, Sue Elizabeth
Wallack, Jennie Mae
Walton, Daisy E.
Wheeler, Hazel Fay
Graf, Catherine
Howe, Muriel
Subjects (Organizations):
College of Medical Evangelists, School of Nursing, Class of 1929
Loma Linda University, School of Nursing, Alumni Association
Northern California Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
Southern California College Boys’ Chorus
Subjects (Topical and Geographical):
Campmeeting (1931)
Graduation
Lodi, California
Loma Linda, California
Nurses
Document types
Photograph, Commencement program, Monograph, Letter
Other Resources
Related Material
Seventh-day Adventist History Photo Archive
See: SDA02366, SDA02328, SDA02384, SDA02385, SDA02382, SDA02381, SDA02382, SDA02364, SDASDA02379, SDA02376, SDA02377, SDA02322, SDA02333, SDA02349, SDA02314
Memories of Kitchen and Diet Kit Album
See: MKDK-27, MKDK-53
Container List
Series I: Memorabilia
Language: English
Extent: 3 folders, 4 items
Ser – Fld - Item Description
I – 1 – 1 A typed letter from the Loma Linda University School of Nursing Alumni Association, March 1, 1979, signed Muriel Howe, President
The letter congratulates the alumnus on the golden anniversary and presents a commemorative certificate.
I – 1 – 2 A commemorative certificate, 9 x 7 in., cardstock paper
“Loma Linda University Greets Irene Armitage on the golden anniversary of the class of nineteen twenty-nine school of nursing expresses thanks for your loyalty, and extends best wishes for the years ahead Loma Linda, California, April 8, 1979” Signed V. Norskov Olsen, President of the University
I – 2 – 1 10 x 8 in black and white photograph of the School of Nursing class of 1929 at the Golden Anniversary Reunion, 1979
I -3 - 1 College of Medical Evangelists, Loma Linda School of Nursing, Commencement Exercises, Sunday Eve., April 21, 1929, 5 o’clock, Out-door Amphitheater
Single folio, 5 x 6 in.
Series II: Monograph
Language: English
Extent: 1 folder
Ser – Fld - Item Description
II – 1 – 1 “Bible Studies given by Elder W. M. Adams to the Workers of Northern California Conference During Preparation of Camp, 1931 Camp-Meeting, June 4-14. Duplicated by Request of the Conference Workers.” Fastened with orange construction paper and tied into a Cambridge Binder No. 2. 8.5 x 11 in.
6 studies: Truth as a whole (i, 4 p.), Faith and works (I, 9 p.), Righteousness by faith (i, 14 p.), Divine and human efforts in forming Christian Character (i, 13 p.), Sanctification (i, 10 p.), Faith and its counterfeit (i, 3 p.)
Items found inside the monograph:
Multiple clippings from the Youth’s Instructor column “He Leadeth Me”
Handwritten notes on the back of an envelope fragment addressed from Fred S. Taylor, 4121 Cleveland Ave. San Diego, Calif. To Miss Irene Armitage, Paradise Valley Sanitarium, National City, California. The envelope is postage marked Aug. 4, 1934 and stamped with a purple 3 cent Washington stamp.
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Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage
Arefina-Armitage, Tatiana I., Armitage, Brian J. (2012): Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage. Insecta Mundi 2012 (225): 1-6, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1010846
Emma H. Palmer to Eliza J.W. Armitage
Letter to Eliza J.W. Armitage regarding Pandita Ramabai Sarasvati
Figure 2 in Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage
Figure 2. Pahamunaya spinifera sp. n., male genitalia. A) Lateral; B) Dorsal; C) Ventral; D) Phallic apparatus, lateral.Published as part of <i>Arefina-Armitage, Tatiana I. & Armitage, Brian J., 2012, Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage, pp. 1-6 in Insecta Mundi 2012 (225)</i> on page 4, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10108466">10.5281/zenodo.10108466</a>
Figure 1 in Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage
Figure 1. Pahamunaya talon sp. n., male. A) Fore- and hind wings. Genitalia: B) Lateral; C) Dorsal; D) Ventral; E) Phallic apparatus, lateral.Published as part of <i>Arefina-Armitage, Tatiana I. & Armitage, Brian J., 2012, Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage, pp. 1-6 in Insecta Mundi 2012 (225)</i> on page 3, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10108466">10.5281/zenodo.10108466</a>
Figure 3 in Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage
Figure 3. Pahamunaya khoii Oláh and Johanson, male. A) Head, dorsal. Genitalia: B) Lateral; C) Dorsal; D) Ventral; E) Left inferior appendage ventrolateral; F) Phallic apparatus, lateral.Published as part of <i>Arefina-Armitage, Tatiana I. & Armitage, Brian J., 2012, Two new species of the genus Pahamunaya Schmid (Trichoptera: Polycentropodidae) from Vietnam Tatiana I. Arefina-Armitage and Brian J. Armitage, pp. 1-6 in Insecta Mundi 2012 (225)</i> on page 5, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10108466">10.5281/zenodo.10108466</a>
Armitage root cellar, hatch entrance, Portland, Newfoundland.
Cellar currently owned by Peter Armitage and Barb Neis, Portland, Goose Bay, Bonavista Bay. Dimensions are 2 m x 2.8 m x 1.65 m high. Access is through hatch in upper level shed. Concrete walls, with concrete floor covered by sawdust and planking. Sawdust on floor of roof for insulation purposes. Roof vent on the north side.
Believed to have been built by Gilbert Ash in the 1920s and has been in continuous use. It was rebuilt by John Ash, son of Gilbert Ash, in the late 1990s. Peter Armitage and Barb Neis bought the property from the Ash family in 2009 and replaced the roof of the cellar in 2010. It is currently used to store cabbage, carrots, potatoes, and paint, and has also been used a beer cooler in the past
Armitage root cellar, exterior, Portland, Newfoundland.
Cellar currently owned by Peter Armitage and Barb Neis, Portland, Goose Bay, Bonavista Bay. Dimensions are 2 m x 2.8 m x 1.65 m high. Access is through hatch in upper level shed. Concrete walls, with concrete floor covered by sawdust and planking. Sawdust on floor of roof for insulation purposes. Roof vent on the north side.
Believed to have been built by Gilbert Ash in the 1920s and has been in continuous use. It was rebuilt by John Ash, son of Gilbert Ash, in the late 1990s. Peter Armitage and Barb Neis bought the property from the Ash family in 2009 and replaced the roof of the cellar in 2010. It is currently used to store cabbage, carrots, potatoes, and paint, and has also been used a beer cooler in the past
Phylocentropus ngoclinh Arefina-Armitage & Armitage 2011, sp. n.
Phylocentropus ngoclinh sp. n. (Figures 5-9) Diagnosis. Phylocentropus ngoclinh is similar to Ph. orientalis in the shape of segment Xand the preanal appendage in lateral view. It differs by the shape of the segment Xin dorsal view; by the inferior appendage subquadrate in lateral view; and, by the shape of the phallic apparatus. Adult. Length of male forewing 6.9-7.0 mm. General color yellowish-brown, wings pale. Forewings with venation complete; hind wings with forks I, II, III, and V. Male genitalia. Sternite IX 2.5 times as long as wide; in lateral view, anterior portion with acuminate apex, posterior margin rounded. Segment X long, trapezoidal in lateral view, bifurcate in dorsal view. Preanalappendage large, elongate, broad basally, graduallytapering apically, withrounded apex in lateral view. Intermediateappendage absent. Inferior appendage subquadrate in lateral view, distal margin with shallow rounded concavity; posterodorsal portion of inferior appendageproducing lobe, resembling bird head in ventral view. Phallic apparatus long and slender; endotheca short, with apex rounded in lateral view, acuminate in dorsal view. Female and immature stages. Unknown. Holotype male. Vietnam, Quang Nam Province, Ngoc Linh, 950 m, 15 o 10’N, 108 o 5’E, Malaise trap, 16 April 1999, K. Long, C. Johnson. Paratype: 1 male, same data as holotype, 11-18 March 1999. Figures 1-4. Phylocentropus tohoku sp. n., male genitalia. 1) Lateral view. 2) Dorsal view. 3) Ventral view. 4) Phallic apparatus, lateral view. Distribution. Known only from the type locality in Quang Nam Province (Vietnam). Etymology. This species is named for the mountain, Ngoc Linh, referred to as the “the roof of Vietnam ”, wherein this species was collected.Published as part of Arefina-Armitage, I. T. & Armitage, B. J., 2011, Three new species of Phylocentropus Banks (Trichoptera: Dipseudopsidae) from Vietnam, pp. 1-6 in Insecta Mundi 2011 (193) on pages 1-
Virilio and the Media
In books such as The Aesthetics of Disappearance, War and Cinema, The Lost Dimension, and The Vision Machine, Paul Virilio has fundamentally changed how we think about contemporary media culture. Virilio’s examinations of the connections between perception, logistics, the city, and new media technologies comprise some of the most powerful texts within his hypermodern philosophy.Virilio and the Media presents an introduction to Virilio’s important media related ideas, from polar inertia and the accident to the landscape of events, cities of panic, and the instrumental image loop of television. John Armitage positions Virilio’s essential media texts in their theoretical contexts whilst outlining their substantial influence on recent cultural thinking. Consequently, Armitage renders Virilio’s media texts accessible, priming his readers to create individual critical evaluations of Virilio’s writings. The book closes with an annotated and user-friendly Guide to Further Reading and a non-technical Glossary of Virilio’s significant concepts.Virilio’s texts on the media are vital for everyone concerned with contemporary media culture, and Virilio and the Media offers a comprehensive and up to date introduction to the ever expanding range of his critical media and cultural work
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