908 research outputs found

    Brainerd Missionaries Dedication address, 1935 March 31

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    Several drafts of the address given at the Brainerd Missionaries dedication ceremony by Chattanooga, Tennessee historian and author, Robert Sparks Walker

    Brainerd Missionaries Dedication address, 1935 March 31

    No full text
    Several drafts of the address given at the Brainerd Missionaries dedication ceremony by Chattanooga, Tennessee historian and author, Robert Sparks Walker

    Cephas Brainerd, c. 1853

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    A portrait photograph of 2010 YMCA Hall of Fame Inductee, Cephas Brainerd, most likely taken the year he joined the New York YMCA in 1853.For more information on Cephas Brainerd, see https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/863.The back of the photograph has a handwritten caption reading "Cephas Brainerd 1853. The year he joined the New York YMCA.

    Ard Hoyt correspondence with John C. Calhoun, 1823 October 1

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    Annual report authored Brainerd Mission founder Ard Hoyt for review by the United States Secretary of War John C. Calhoun providing an update on the progress of the Cherokee mission school

    Ard Hoyt correspondence with John C. Calhoun, 1823 October 1

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    Annual report authored Brainerd Mission founder Ard Hoyt for review by the United States Secretary of War John C. Calhoun providing an update on the progress of the Cherokee mission school

    The Widow, A Leader in Women\u27s Education, Wife of the Song Writer, Author Of Darling Nelly Gray; Experiences of Her Remarkable Life of Ninety-Seven Years

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    The Widow by Brainerd Hanby. This self-published book contains Brainerd\u27s recollections of his mother, Mary Katherine Winter Hanby. She was one of the first two graduates of Otterbein University (1857), the wife (and shortly thereafter the widow) of Benjamin Russell Hanby (class of 1858), composer of Up on the Housetop and Darling Nelly Gray. The book deals primarily with Kate\u27s life after Ben\u27s death, and her struggles raising two children as a single woman in the late nineteenth century.https://digitalcommons.otterbein.edu/archives_hanby/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Brainerd Currie: Man

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    It was only last year that I was reviewing Brainerd Currie\u27s Selected Essays on The Conflict of Laws for the Duke Law Journal, and memories of happy encounters with their gentle author were surging through the reading of his original and profound and constructive work. Now as I write of Brainerd Currie, whose life began in Georgia in 1912 and came to a close in North Carolina in 1965, it seems impossible to dispel sadness in coming to terms with the harsh loss of such a friend. Yet one hears his soft-spoken words, no less real because they are imagined, and they alleviate the hurt of loss with their sweet raillery: I expect better of my friends than that they should mourn me, for mourning is no way to celebrate a fine friendship

    Palmer Gladys, Parnes H., Wilcok R., Herman M., Brainerd C. — The reluctant job changer

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    Pison Gilles. Palmer Gladys, Parnes H., Wilcok R., Herman M., Brainerd C. — The reluctant job changer. In: Population, 19ᵉ année, n°2, 1964. pp. 365-366

    Palmer Gladys, Parnes H., Wilcok R., Herman M., Brainerd C. — The reluctant job changer

    No full text
    P. G. Palmer Gladys, Parnes H., Wilcok R., Herman M., Brainerd C. — The reluctant job changer. In: Population, 19ᵉ année, n°2, 1964. pp. 365-366
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