9,113 research outputs found
(121) Psychological Department, Academic Year 1891-1892
In 1893, Clark University exhibited materials from the University at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. It is not known which photographs of this series were actually included in the exhibit.
This photo shows Clark University\u27s Psychology Department for the 1892-1893 academic year. Front row (left to right): Thaddeus L. Bolton, William H. Burnham, Benjamin I. Gilman, G. Stanley Hall, Edward C. Sanford, Clifton F. Hodge, Alexander F. Chamberlain. Back row (left to right): John A. Bergstrom, R.C. Hollenbaugh, Arthur H. Daniels, Frank Drew, Edward W. Flagg, Fletcher B. Dresslar, unknown, unknown, James H. Leuba, Herbert A. Aikins, James S. Lemon, unknown.https://commons.clarku.edu/colexpophotos/1124/thumbnail.jp
Transcribed letter from Andrew Inglis Clark to Edward Ivey
Clark Letter to Edward Ivey.
The 'Ted' in the letter is Edward Ivey, a close friend of Clark's from the 1870s. Ivey was an active member of the Minerva Club.
Ivey, a grocer, was active in Hobart mercantile life. A degree of defensiveness shown by Clark in a letter which implies that Ivey, to whom Clark clearly seeks to justify himself, was a democrat in some emphatic sense. Other letters from Ivey to Clark confirm close personal friendship and some kind of link between Ivey and the Clark family.
C4/C 21
(120) Psychological Department, Academic Year 1892-1893
In 1893, Clark University exhibited materials from the University at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. It is not known which photographs of this series were actually included in the exhibit.
This photo shows Clark University\u27s Psychology Department for the 1892-1893 academic year. Front row (left to right): Thaddeus L. Bolton, William H. Burnham, Benjamin I. Gilman, G. Stanley Hall, Edward C. Sanford, Clifton F. Hodge, Alexander F. Chamberlain. Back row (left to right): John A. Bergstrom, R.C. Hollenbaugh, Arthur H. Daniels, Frank Drew, Edward W. Flagg, Fletcher B. Dresslar, unknown, unknown, James H. Leuba, Herbert A. Aikins, James S. Lemon, unknown.
There is a supplemental file available containing the handwritten list of names on the back of this photograph.https://commons.clarku.edu/colexpophotos/1123/thumbnail.jp
(10) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume II: 1925-1937 [1932-1934: Interlude at Clark University]
Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more.This section covers a brief period in Robert Goddard\u27s life, from mid 1932 to mid 1934, between his two grant funded periods (1930-1932, 1934-1942) for rocket research in Roswell, New Mexico. During this time, he continued to teach at Clark University and conduct research funded by the Smithsonian Institution and the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation.
This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: Charles Greeley Abbot, John C. Merriam, Wallace W. Atwood, Legation of Switzerland, Werner Brügel, Claude A. Swanson, Henry L. Roosevelt, Edwin Fitch Northrup, Fred S. Tobey, Harry F. Guggenheim, Admiral William Harrison Standley, H. Gordon Garbedian, Florence Schloss Guggenheim, Charles Lindbergh.
Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1009/thumbnail.jp
(05) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume I: 1898-1924 [1915-1920: Experimentation with Solid Propellants]
Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more.
This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from 1915 through 1920. During this time, he became an Assistant Professor in Physics at Clark University, demonstrated that reaction takes place in a vacuum, hence a rocket could function in airless space, received his first Smithsonian grant for rocket work, conducted research for the U.S. Signal Corps and Army Ordinance, demonstrated solid-propellant military rockets, published A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes , and began his twenty-plus year tenure as Professor of Physics at Clark University.
This section contains the following published articles by Goddard (there are also unpublished works on subjects such as atomic disintegration): Approximate Solution of a General Case of Rocket Action , Physical Review (1919) A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes , Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections (1919) On High-altitude Research , Science (1920) The Rocket Method , Journal of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute (1920) The Possibilities of the Rocket in Weather Forecasting , Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (1920)
This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: William T. Foster, Edmund C. Sanford, Edward Charles Pickering, Charles Greeley Abbot, Charles Doolittle Walcott, Edgar Buckingham, Hudson Maxim, Richard Rathbun, George I. Rockwood, Samuel Wesley Stratton, Rear Admiral Ralph Earle, Major General George O. Squier, Colonel Edward Marsh Shinkle, Robert Simpson Woodard, Nahum D. Goddard, George E. Hale, Hugh M. Dorsey, General Clark C. Williams, Hudson Maxim, General George W. Burr, Walter S. Adams, Major W.A. Borden, Clarence N. Hickman, Lieutenant Colonel Herbert O’Leary, Charles F. Marvin, Gordon S. Fulcher, Bronx Exposition Inc, A. Russell Bond (Scientific American Monthly), Karl Taylor Compton, Henry N. Crowther, Rear Admiral Ralph Earle, Robert Esnault-Peleterie, Lieutenant Colonel Amos A. Fries, Macmillian & Co., Ltd., Lieutenant Commander Olaf M. Hustveldt, William de C. Ravenel, F.P. Fergusson.
Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1004/thumbnail.jp
Hill Country Heritage Region
Application materials submitted to the Texas Historical Commission requesting a historic marker for the Edward Clark House Outbuilding, in Austin, Texas. The materials include the inscription text of the marker, original application, narrative, floorplans, plat maps, and photographs
(06) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume I: 1898-1924 [1921-1924: Beginnings of Experimentation with Liquid Propellants]
Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more.
This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from 1921 through 1924. During this time, Goddard began his experimentation with liquid propellants for rockets, became a part-time consultant on solid-propellant rocket weapons for the U.S government, began a twenty-year tenure as Director of Physical Laboratories at Clark University, and married Esther Goddard (formerly Kisk).
This section contains the following published articles by Goddard: That Moon-rocket Proposition - Refutation of Some Popular Fallacies , Scientific American (1921) The High-altitude Rocket , Monthly Weather Review (1924)
This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: Lieutenant Commander Olaf M. Hustveldt, Charles Doolittle Walcott, Charles Greeley Abbot, Vatican Observatory, the Trustees of Clark University, Wallace W. Atwood, Navy Bureau of Ordnance, Wallace W. Atwood, F.W. Baldwin, Hermann Oberth, Lieutenant Commander Theodore Stark Wilkinson, C.S. Thompson, Major A. Gibson, William de C. Ravenel, Rear Admiral Charles B. McVay, Jr., A.A. Hamerschlag, Burton E. Livingston, Watson Davis, E.E. Free (Popular Radio), Axel Corlin, Nature, Albert Adams Merrill, David White, French Embassy.
Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1005/thumbnail.jp
(09) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume II: 1925-1937 [1930-1932: The First New Mexico Adventure]
Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more. This section covers Robert Goddard\u27s life from mid 1930 to mid 1932 when Goddard received his first Guggenheim grant (this one from Daniel) which would bring Robert and Esther to Roswell, New Mexico for two years of rocket research. They would soon relocate to Roswell for a much longer stretch of time, 1934-1942, under grants from the Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Foundation. In April of 1932, Goddard achieved the first flight of a rocket with gyroscopic stabilization.
This section contains correspondence by, to, and about Robert H. Goddard from the following people and entities: Charles Greeley Abbot, John C. Merriam, Franz Oskar Leo Elder von Hoefft, Wallace W. Atwood, David Lasser, Ivy Lee, Carl L. Bausch, W.F. Clark, L.T.E. Thompson, George Crompton, Lawrence Mansur, Walter S. Adams, Ernest O. Lawrence, John A. Fleming, Nils Thure Ljungquist, Florence Schloss Guggenheim, Major Kenneth B. Harmon, Frederick G. Keyes, George K. Burgess, Willis Ford Insurance Agency, G. Edward Pendray, R.E Turpin, Robert A. Millikan, Charles Franklin Brooks, Russell B. Hastings, H. Gordon Garbedian, H.G. Wells, Rudyard Kipling, Percy M. Roope, E.G. Minton, Charles F. Brooks, Lieutenant Colonel W.A. Capron.
Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1008/thumbnail.jp
(01) The Papers of Robert H. Goddard, Volume 1: 1898-1924 [Forward, Introduction]
Meticulously curated and edited by Esther C. Goddard and G. Edward Pendray, The Papers of Robert H. Goddard is a 1700-page 3 volume set published in 1970. The set presents a careful and exhaustive chronological presentation of Robert Goddard’s life through diary snippets, notebook entries, correspondence, publications, speeches, patent outlines, school papers, press, reports and more.
This section contains a forward by G. Edward Pendray and an introduction by Esther C. Goddard.
Disclaimer: The images in these scans have been rendered somewhat distorted after the fact. We apologize for this error. Thankfully, most of the photographs used in these papers are part of the The Goddard Rocket Researches: A Photographic Record and can be seen individually in high-quality scans.https://commons.clarku.edu/papersgoddard/1000/thumbnail.jp
Clark College and Clark Atlanta University Photographs
Clark Atlanta University was established in 1988 as a result of the consolidation of two independent historically black institutions - Atlanta University (1865) and Clark College (1869). The bulk of this collection contains photographs of Clark College before its consolidation with Atlanta University. The photographs show student life including classes, athletics, clubs, sororities and fraternities, and graduation. Also included in this collection are notable people such as Vivian Henderson, Carl Ware, Vernon Jordan, C. Eric Lincoln, Thomas Cole, Jesse Jackson, Andrew Young, and James P. Brawley.
At the AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library we are always striving to improve our digital collections. We welcome additional information about people, places, or events depicted in any of the works in this collection. To submit information, please contact us at [email protected]
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