153,307 research outputs found

    Letter from Alfred Blalock to C. D. Coleman, March 15, 1948

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    Letter, addressed to C. D. Coleman, from Dr. Alfred Blalock in which Blalock requests that Coleman send a bill for the surgical instrument that Coleman will be preparing for him at the request of Dr. Horace G. Smithy

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from S. D. Coleman to D. W. Kempner accepting his invitation to his annual Thanksgiving party

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Drs. Coleman, Stewart, Ketchum & Thompson to D. W. Kempner inviting Mr. and Mrs. Kempner to their home during the centennial

    Oral History with Mr. Thomas D. Coleman

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    Oral History with Mr. Thomas D. Coleman recorded at his farm in Louisville, Mississippi

    Postcard, D. H. Coleman to Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Bogan, December 13, 1943

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    This postcard is a form letter requesting family of service people to write thank you notes to individuals who sent Christmas packages to service people. The card, mailed by D. H. Coleman, was sent to William N. Bogan\u27s (Neill) parents requesting a thank you not be sent to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Duncan who picked Neill\u27s name. The postcard is postmarked West Point, Mississippi, December 13, 1943.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-bogan-correspondence/1110/thumbnail.jp

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from Chauncey D. Leake to S. D. Coleman thanking the latter for the hat

    Finding Common Ground: Morton Coleman: My Life as a Mediator in Neighborhoods, Communities, Government, and Politics

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    In his memoir, Morton Coleman illustrates the importance of mediating influences and finding common ground, especially "as our political environment has become increasingly polarized, with both conservative and liberal perspectives becoming hardened by the echo chambers of ideologically skewed media outlets." The memoir covers Mr. Coleman's: 1. Work as a community organizer at two Pittsburgh settlement houses amidst upheaval due to urban development and major changes in the racial makeup of the neighborhoods served (approximately 1954–61, 2. Involvement in neighborhood development issues, first at the Kingsley settlement house and the Pittsburgh Department of City Planning (1959–64) and then through interaction with community development organizations and as a consultant to Henry Ford II in Detroit, Mich., 3. Time as an aide to Pittsburgh Mayor Joseph Barr (1964–69)—years dominated by Great Society programs, the civil rights movement, desegregation, and Vietnam War protests, and 4. Attempts at community consensus building, first as executive of the Hartford Process in Hartford, Conn., (1977–1980), and then at the University of Pittsburgh Institute of Politics, which he founded in 1989 and with which he remains active as director emeritus

    Coleman, D F, 61859

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/377987Surname: COLEMAN Given Name(s) or Initials: D F Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 61859 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-3920191800 Item: [2016.0049.10281] "Coleman, D F, 61859

    Coleman and Truss family letters, W.0103

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    Abstract: Contains letters written before, during, and after the Civil War by the Coleman family of St. Clair, AlabamaScope and Content Note: This collection contains letters written by members of the extended Coleman family. These letters date from 1860 to 1868 and relay general family news, as well as reports of military life. The collection includes correspondence written by two generations of this St. Clair County, Alabama, family. Three letters written by or addressed to brothers William A. Coleman and James L. Coleman describe daily life in St. Clair, describing the sale of materials and cotton planting conditions. One letter written by James Coleman offers condolences to William after the death of his son. The collection also includes letters written by the sons and son-in-law of William and James: William S. Coleman, Thomas P. Coleman, and James D. Truss. Letters written by William's son Thomas P. Coleman describe the First Battle of Bull Run (identified as the Battle of Manassas) and battles near Richmond, Virginia, in 1862 and provide detailed descriptions of camp life. Five letters written by William's son-in-law James D. Truss describe camp conditions in the Tenth Alabama Regiment, detailing the distribution of food and clothing and medical care in the camp. This collection of letters also includes a letter written by the officers of the 10th Alabama asking an unknown officer to resign his post and detailing the company's grievances against him.Biographical/Historical Note: Philip Grundy Coleman was born on June 28, 1776, in South Carolina. In approximately 1822, Coleman moved to St. Clair County, Alabama. He married Martha G. Merryman, and the couple had seven children: William A. (1807-1873), Julia A. S. H. (1811-1853), James L. (1813-1887), Cinthia Catherine (1815-1854), Sarah E. F. I. (1817-1836), Thomas P. (1820-1834), and Martha A. A. (1824-1876). Coleman died on July 18, 1846, in Pickensville, Alabama.James L. Coleman married Eliza Francis Collins on September 7, 1837; the couple had thirteen children, including William Sinclair Coleman and Thomas P. Coleman. In 1861, William Coleman enlisted in Company C of the Twenty-fourth Alabama Infantry Regiment. William was captured on March 15, 1865, in Bentonville, North Carolina, and imprisoned at Point Lookout, Maryland, until the end of the war. Thomas Coleman enlisted in the Tenth Alabama Infantry Regiment.William A. Coleman married Maranna Roberson on February 5, 1829; the couple had five children: Sidney L., Martha, Thomas P., James K. P., and Luann F. Sidney L. Coleman enlisted as a member of the Company F of the Tenth Alabama Infantry Regiment and was killed in action on December 20, 1861, at Drainville, Virginia. Thomas Coleman was also a member of Company F and died at Winchester, Virginia, on September 19, 1864. William A. Coleman's daughter married Martha married James D. Truss, who served as a Major in the Tenth Alabama
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