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Essay: Frank B. Carpenter
Document, handwritten, artist Frank B. Carpenter and the Lincoln famil
A Collection Of Designs For Rural Retreats, As Villas, Principally In The Gothic And Castle Styles Of Architecture : With their Ichnography, or Plans, laid down to Scale; And Other Appendages / By James Malton, Architect, Author of an Essay on British Cottage Architecture, Young Painter's Maulstick, and other Works
Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: London: Published By J. And T. Carpenter, Booksellers, Old Bond Street; To Be Had At Taylor's Architectural Library, Holborn; Of All The Principal Booksellers; And Of The Author, No. 17, Norton Street, Portland-Place. - Erscheinungsjahr nach Copac ermittelt34 Ill. (Stahlst.
ROBERT McCAULEY, Composer MASTERS RECITAL KEITH CARPENTER, Composer SENIOR RECITAL Thursday, April 27, 1989 8:00 p.m. in the Shepherd School Recital Hall
Playlist: Takt! / Keith Carpenter (1967-) -- The Tausig series (1988-89) / Robert McCauley -- Three poems of Leslie Scalapiano / Robert McCauley -- Three songs on poems of Dana Gioia / Robert McCauley -- Pacific epitaphs / Keith Carpenter (1967-) -- An even number of odd pieces / Keith Carpenter (1967-) -- Ringing changes / Robert McCauley.This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Doctor of Musical Arts degree.This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Master of Music degree
1.03.001 Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter, Mrs. C. Carpenter, 1862-1863
1.03.001 Nancy Feronia (Rice) Carpenter, Mrs. C. Carpenter, 1862-186
KEITH CARPENTER, Composition Presented with STEVEN TRAUTMANN, Composition SENIOR RECITAL Thursday December 1, 1988 8:00 p.m. in Hamman Hall
Playlist: Visage: wood / Keith Carpenter (1967-) -- Black hole (tape) / Steven Trautmann -- Chili with beans / Steven Trautmann -- Iphigenia / Keith Carpenter (1967-).This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music
James Madison Carpenter (interview)
This interview is included in the American Folklore Society Oral History Project held at the Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. This collection consists of sound recordings, manuscripts, and graphic materials documenting English, Scottish, and American folk music, dance, children's games, and British folk drama and festivals. Content includes approximately 1,000 ballad texts and 850 tunes of the Francis J. Child canon; 500 sea songs; 1,000 other ballads and songs from Great Britain and the United States, particularly from North Carolina and Mississippi; 200 children's singing games, riddles, and nursery rhymes; 300 English and Scottish folk plays; miscellaneous folktales, Cornish carols, and African-American spirituals; with over 500 related photographic images and 40 drawings collected by James Madison Carpenter from 1928 to 1955. Additions to the collection, including an interview with Carpenter in 1972, lecture notes, and papers of Carpenter's Duke University students, date to 1987. Included is Carpenter's correspondence with John A. Lomax and others. Dance content includes documentation of sword dance plays, fiddle tunes for Morris dance, and photographs of Morris dance (with broom dancing), sword dance, Helston furry dance, and dancing at May Day celebrations and at English Folk Dance Society festivals. Drawings by George Baker illustrate mummers' plays and characters. The collection includes a few items from Ireland and Wales. This collection consists of 28.5 linear ft. (58 boxes) ca. 21,600 items, 19,417 manuscript items, 175 sound cylinders, 221 sound discs (analog, 78 rpm, 12 in.), 563 photographs (composed of negatives, photographic prints, glass negatives, lantern slides, slides, black and white, colored), 40 drawings (pencil, ink, black and white, and colored), and 10 microfilm reels. Note: Sound recordings are in English, Scots, Scottish Gaelic and in Cornish dialect. Biography/History note: James Madison Carpenter (1889-1984) was an American professor of English and a university lecturer. After obtaining his doctorate from Harvard in 1929, he spent the next six years as a Harvard Fellow, traveling throughout England and Scotland collecting folk songs, folk plays, and other folklore material. In 1938, he began teaching at Duke University and continued folk song research there until 1943. He served as Chair of the English Department at Greensboro College, North Carolina, where he taught for 10 years, and retired to his hometown of Booneville, Mississippi in 1964. Carpenter died on July 4, 1984
Carpenter Organ
Recto: [imprinted] Carpenter Organ, M. W. Vaughan, Gen'l Agt., 930 Main St., Dallas, Texas. Bufford. 949
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