54,945 research outputs found

    Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furman

    No full text
    A one page letter and envelope from Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furma

    Charles Thomas Evans to James C. Furman

    No full text
    A one page letter and envelope from Charles Thomas Evans to James C. Furma

    Judge Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furman

    No full text
    A one page letter and envelope from Judge Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furma

    Judge Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furman

    No full text
    A one page letter and envelope from Judge Josiah J. Evans to James C. Furma

    James Evans Investiture Speech

    Full text link
    James Evans Investiture Speec

    Interview with President James Evans

    Full text link
    Former President James Evans and First Lady Lois Evans describe their approximate forty year association with Lindenwood. *Note* President Evans wanted to make a correction to the narrative. Where he mentioned the number of nursing students expected to be coming in the fall of 2015, the number should be 100 instead of the stated 200. A link to a transcription of this recording can be found below

    Remarks delivered by James P. Evans

    Full text link
    Remarks delivered by James P. Evans, president and chief executive officer, Best Western International Inc., April 14, 1999, AH&MA Leadership Keynote Addres

    Jimmie Evans’s Camp-fire, or Fifteen Months in Rebel Prisons.

    No full text
    This manuscript narrates James Evans's capture by Confederate forces at the Battle of Chickamauga during the American Civil War. Evans describes his capture while assisting a wounded comrade from the field during the federal retreat and his experiences as a prisoner of war, 1863-1864. Evans was a prisoner of war for fifteen months, spending time in prisons in Virginia, Georgia, and South Carolina. This manuscript was probably prepared by Evans for presentation to the William H. Boynton Post No. 94, Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) in Northfield, Vermont, in 1891.James Evans (1833-1904) took a position as armorer and janitor at Norwich University in 1869, remaining until 1901. He was known affectionately as "Jimmie" or "Uncle Jim" by the cadets. Transcription by Tess Zimmermann. Transcriptions may be subject to error

    James Barbuto

    No full text
    One black and white photographic print of James V. Barbuto (left), two unidentified men, and an unidentified boy sitting on a stage at an event, probably in Akron, Ohio. An unidentified man stands behind them shaking hands with a police officer. Barbuto was probably running for Summit County Prosecutor at the time

    James Evans, approximately 1885-1892

    No full text
    Portrait of James "Jimmy" Evans, Norwich University janitor, approximately 1885-1892.Cabinet card with gold beveled edges
    corecore