110,035 research outputs found
Earl Douglass correspondence: relatives, 1928-1930
Letters between Earl Douglass and brother-in-law Grover Goetschius, sometimes with Earl\u27s son Gawin, 1928 and 1930
Earl Gregg Swem Correspondence regarding George Rogers Clark, 1961
Copies of 2 letters relating to the George Rogers Clark Papers. Earl Gregg Swem to Mrs. Isaac Hardeman, 8/14/1961 and Mrs. Isaac Hardeman to Mrs. W.L. Lyon Brown, 10/21/1961.Photocopies.Found In: Acc. 2004.50, Earl Gregg Swem Papers, 1927-1965 » Series 8: Mss. Acc. 2004.50 Addition: 1961 » Box 1
John F. Benyon and Earl Gregg Swem Correspondence, 1923-1924
Letters, 1923-1924, between John F. Benyon and Earl Gregg Swem concerning Swem writing a history of the College of William and Mary for Benyon's "Uncle Sam's History of the United States."Found In: UA 32.003, Earl Gregg Swem Library Records, 1920-[ongoing] » Series 1: Librarians' General Correspondence: circa 1920-[ongoing] » Sub-Series 1: Acc. 1980.115: Correspondenc
Oral History Interview with G. Earl Paulk, November 8, 2007
The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an interview with G. Earl Paulk. In 1933 Paulk completed 15 months with the Civilian Conservation Corps in Arizona, building roads and serving as a telephone linesman. He was drafted into the Navy in September of 1943. He completed diesel engine school in Chicago. He completed advanced mechanic school in Boston. Beginning in December of 1943 Paulk served as a Motor Machinists Mate aboard USS LST-1017. He also served as a 20mm antiaircraft gunner. He provides some details of the LST and the weapons on board. In 1944 they traveled to New Guinea and Mindanao to deliver fuel and supplies to the Army. They provided support and supplies for the battles of Leyte Gulf, Luzon and the invasion at Lingayen Gulf. After the bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, they transported Japanese Army soldiers back to Japan. Paulk was discharged in January of 1946
Earl Douglass correspondence: business and personal, 1911
Letters to Earl Douglass received in 1911, including from Nettie G. White at Lancaster, Mass.; M. E. Wadsworth at the University of Pittsburgh School of Mines; and other business-related letters
Earl Douglass correspondence: relatives, 1900-1908
A set of letters to Earl Douglass dated 1900, 1901, 1903, 1904, and 1908 from nieces Gretta and Viola Battin of Medford, Minnesota; sister Ida Battin at Medford, Minn.; cousin Laura Douglass at Lakeport or Oswego, N.Y.; an aunt named Felitia at Limerick; also from a friend at Bozeman in 1903, Nettie G. White
Earl Douglass correspondence: relatives, 1910-1921
Set of letters to Earl and Pearl Douglass dated 1910 to 1921, from Pearl\u27s relatives at Alder, Montana; Earl\u27s cousin Alice; to Gawin Douglass from friend George O. Morgan of Shields, Pa., 1919; from Earl\u27s niece Viola in California, 1919; a letter to Earl\u27s sister, Nettie, from Pearl\u27s "aunt Hattie" in Grants Pass, Or., 1921; letter from Viola to Nettie, 1921
Earl Douglass correspondence: miscellaneous, 1895
Letters to Earl Douglass received in June through December of 1895, including letters from Luther Foster at Bozeman, Montana; Walter H. Weed, geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey; Philip J. Maguire at Lincoln, Nebraska; Hiram G. Ballard in Creston, Illinois; R.A. O\u27Neil at St. Louis, Mo.; John Whitten at Columbia, Mo.; Cora Duffey at Grand Rapids, Mich.; John A. Maguire at Mitchell, S.D.; Cora Beard at Grovelake, Minn.; M.J. Evans at Aurora, Minn.; Margaret H. Duffey at Springfield, Mo., and others
Earl Douglass correspondence: Earl and Pearl, 1929
A set of letters from 1929, when Pearl was staying in Montana and Earl was in the Uinta Basin. Includes several letters from Earl to Gawin concerning employment opportunities in the Uinta Basin, and some are between Pearl and Gawin, or from Earl to either Earl or Gawin. Pearl wrote enthusiastically about their home in Salt Lake City which they would occupy as a family later in the year
Earl Douglass correspondence: miscellaneous, 1895
Letters to Earl Douglass received in January through May of 1895. Includes letters exchanged with a collection agency over a subscription for publications Douglass claimed never to have received; also letters from: L. Lorraine Hay of Hitchcock, S.D.; Walter Harvey Weed of the U.S. Geological Survey; Thomas A. Williams at South Dakota Agricultural College; Philip J. Maguire at Lincoln, Neb.; Cora Duffey at Chicago, Illinois, and Grovelake, Missouri; John A. Maguire at Salem, S.D.; Luther Foster at the Montana Agricultural College; Hiram G. Ballard at Creston, Illinois. Also an unsigned letter from a woman in Chicago (probably Cora Duffey) who advises him not to put women on a pedastel and worship them
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