58,962 research outputs found

    Martha Ann Bell and B. F. (Benjamin Frankin) Bell correspondence with Emma Bell, 1901 May 23

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    Letter from Martha Ann Bell and B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell to their daughter Emma Bell, then studying in St. Louis, Missouri at the St. Louis School of Art, in response to Emma's letter of 1901 May 18. The letter is mostly the work of Martha Ann Bell, but both parents pledge their emotional, spiritual, and material support of Emma

    Martha Ann Bell and B. F. (Benjamin Frankin) Bell correspondence with Emma Bell, 1901 May 23

    No full text
    Letter from Martha Ann Bell and B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell to their daughter Emma Bell, then studying in St. Louis, Missouri at the St. Louis School of Art, in response to Emma's letter of 1901 May 18. The letter is mostly the work of Martha Ann Bell, but both parents pledge their emotional, spiritual, and material support of Emma

    Emma Bell Miles correspondence with B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell, 1902 October

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    Letter from Emma Bell Miles to her father B. F (Benjamin Franklin) Bell, then living in Soddy, Tennessee. After updating him on the health of her infant twin daughters, Emma proposes that her father deed the cabin and its lot to her in return for her signing the family homeplace over to him for use during his life or in return for payment. Martha Ann Bell had bequeathed the family homeplace to her daughter Emma in a penciled will, and its frame house is where Emma and Frank lived as newlyweds

    Emma Bell Miles correspondence with B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell, 1902 October

    No full text
    Letter from Emma Bell Miles to her father B. F (Benjamin Franklin) Bell, then living in Soddy, Tennessee. After updating him on the health of her infant twin daughters, Emma proposes that her father deed the cabin and its lot to her in return for her signing the family homeplace over to him for use during his life or in return for payment. Martha Ann Bell had bequeathed the family homeplace to her daughter Emma in a penciled will, and its frame house is where Emma and Frank lived as newlyweds

    B. F. (Benjamin Frankin) Bell correspondence with Emma Bell Miles, 1902 November 3

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    Letter from B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell to his daughter Emma Bell Miles dismissing Emma's proposal that he deed the cabin and its lot to her in return for her signing the family homeplace over to him for use during his life or in return for payment, in effect refusing to honor the will of Martha Ann Bell

    B. F. (Benjamin Frankin) Bell correspondence with Emma Bell Miles, 1902 November 3

    No full text
    Letter from B. F. (Benjamin Franklin) Bell to his daughter Emma Bell Miles dismissing Emma's proposal that he deed the cabin and its lot to her in return for her signing the family homeplace over to him for use during his life or in return for payment, in effect refusing to honor the will of Martha Ann Bell

    Bell Museum Natural History Leaflet, Number 3

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    A Peregrine Falcon Life Table by Harrison B. Tordoff. "Harrison B. Tordoff is Professor of Ecology and Behavioral Biology at the Bell Museum of Natural History."Bell Museum; Tordoff, Harrison B.. (1986). Bell Museum Natural History Leaflet, Number 3. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/250084

    Emma Bell Miles journal, 1911-1914

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    Journal authored by Walden's Ridge naturalist, artist, and author Emma Bell Miles from 1911 January 9 to 1914 May 3

    Emma Bell Miles journal, 1908-1911

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    Journal authored by Walden's Ridge naturalist, artist, and author Emma Bell Miles from 1908 May 24 to 1911 April 25

    Emma Bell Miles journal, 1915-1918

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    Journal authored by Walden's Ridge naturalist, artist, and author Emma Bell Miles from 1915 November 11 to 1918 August 8
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