1,735,383 research outputs found

    No. 340, Marcus R. Cooley, Jr.

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    Transcript (23 pages) of interview by Lyle Cooley with Marcus R. Cooley, Jr. on February 15, 1984. This interview is no. 340 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project, and tape no. U-1240Marcus Cooley, whose father, Mark, was the oldest son of Andrew Wood Cooley and Ann Hazen, recounts family stories about "Grandpa Cooley." Interviewer: Lyle Coole

    Cooley Mason collection

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    This collection contains scrapbooks, correspondence, photographs, and records related to Cooley Mason and his wife Christin Hardin Mason

    No.292, Andrew W. Cooley

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    Transcript (10 pages) of interview by Everett Cooley with Andrew W. Cooley on April 8, 1991. This interview is no. 292 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History Project.Monologue entitled: A Confidential Account of My Days of Wine and Roses, detailing his experience as an alcoholic

    No.420 Vernon A. Cooley

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    Transcript (102 pages) of interviews by Everett L. Cooley with Vernon A. Cooley on August 15 and 29, 1995In this series of interviews, Vernon Cooley (b. 1913), patriarch of the Andrew Wood Cooley Association, details his genealogy and recalls his childhood in Logan, Utah. He also discusses various famiy members and provides insight into growing up in a polygamous clan. Other topics covered include his missions to England and Israel, his marriages and family life, service as a U. S. Army chaplain, and influential people he has known. Interviewer: Everett L. Coole

    No.311, Andrew W. Cooley III

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    Transcript (33 pages) of monologue by Andrew W. Cooley III on November 19, 1990. This interview is no. 311 in the Everett L. Cooley Oral History ProjectIn this taped monologue, Cooley (b. 1913) recalls growing up in the Millcreek area of Salt Lake County, a rural lifestyle, working with Wallace Stegner at the I and M Furniture Store, Stegner dating his sister, and his mission for the LDS Church in Jacksonville, Florida

    Carolyn Cooley Interview

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    Life of Carolyn Cooley, focusing on civil rights and her husband Dr. J. F. Cooley. The interview includes the accounts of some of the trials that Cooley and her husband faced in the late 1960’s to the mid 1970’s; for example, Dr. J. F. Cooley was fired from his teaching position in a school in Forrest City, Arkansas in 1969 for supposed insubordination. The interview also includes descriptions of the couple’s contributions to society such as establishing a program in 1976, which aided people who were in need of food and clothing

    letter Cooley to Berry 6-1-70

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    Correspondence from Dr. Cooley to Dr. Berry regarding upcoming presentation at the Mended Hearts Convention in Houston, Texas

    Earl Cooley Interview, June 20, 1984

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    Earl Cooley describes developments in the smokejumper program from World War II until he left the organization in 1951. He discusses the use of conscientious objectors as smokejumpers during the war through the Civilian Public Service program (CPS). Cooley also recalls the smokejumper program training men for the military during the war, including the all-African American 555th Battalion. He describes the transition to using returning military veterans after the war, the 1949 Mann Gulch Fire, and the filming of Red Skies of Montana. He talks about returning to run the smokejumper program in 1958 and offers his thoughts on its future.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/smokejumpers/1118/thumbnail.jp
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