48,719 research outputs found

    Letter from Capt. Robert H. Fletcher to Don Fisher

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    Letter from Captain Robert H. Fletcher to Don Fisher commending Stanton's service

    Robert C. Fletcher album, 1910s-1920s (AL-188)

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    Photograph album from Gallaudet University Archives, originally compiled by Robert C. Fletcher. Includes photos of campus buildings, student body, sports and student events, Washington, D.C., sights, and family photos.This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s)

    Estimate made by Robert Fletcher

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    This note provides details on an estimate made by Robert Fletcher and an account of what the author had already paid to W.B. Greenlaw. The author and date of this note are unknown. An educated guess could be that the author is Roberton Topp

    Robert Court Fletcher World War I Correspondence and Dog Tags, MSS.4151

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    Abstract: Sixteen letters and postcards from this World War I soldier to his sister in Birmingham, Alabama.Scope and Content Note: The collection contains sixteen postcards and letters from Robert C. Fletcher of Birmingham, Alabama, to his sister Fay. Each letter starts with "My Darling Sister" and are mostly requests for more mail; he does not give much information about the fledgling Tank Corps. Fletcher's dog tags are also included.Biographical/Historical Note: Robert Court Fletcher, second child and only son of James M. and Florence Court Fletcher, was born in Vigo, Indiana, on September 10, 1893. At least he and his sister Fay were living in Birmingham, Alabama, when he was drafted in March of 1918. Only two of his letters mention the he has written to their mother (James Fletcher died in 1912 before the war) but didn't indicate where she was living. In one of the early letters he tells Fay that he has taken an insurance policy for $10,000 listing her as his beneficiary and then once she marries, that he will change his insurance as soon as he can. All his letters and postcards begin with "My Darling Sister" and close with "your devoted brother, Bob."In March 1918, Fletcher was drafted, and by early May he was at Camp Colt in Getttysburg, Pennsylvania, where he was part of the newly formed Tank Corps commanded by Major Dwight Eisenhower. When he was deployed to the European Theater, he was assigned to the 302nd Tank Battalion equipped with heavy British Mark VI tanks. Once in France, the battalion was stationed in Langres at the American Expeditionary Forces' Tank Center commanded by Captain George S. Patton. After the Meuse-Argonne offensive, he was transferred to the 344th Tank Battalion, which was also stationed at Langres and was equipped with lighter French Renault tanks.Very little is known about Fletcher after he returned from Europe. He married Ethel (maiden name unknown) and worked as a clerk in the soda industry. He died on April 6, 1958, and is buried in Sanford, North Carolina in the same cemetery plot as his father

    Robert Fletcher.

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    Poutrin . Robert Fletcher.. In: Journal de la Société des Américanistes. Tome 10 n°1, 1913. p. 210

    Bill Fletcher Interview (Woodford County)

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    (Starts at 25:37) An interview with Bill Fletcher by Robert M. Rennick on the place names of communities in Woodford County, Kentucky

    John Robert Pickering Fletcher Interview, October 30, 2005

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    John Fletcher, an early member of the Missoula New Party, discusses the origins of the local organization in 1993, its political leaning, its relation to the national New Party, and its relative autonomy. He describes the party’s success in electing to the city council members or candidates who were New Party-sympathetic as well as its involvement in the Living Wage Campaign in late 1990s. Fletcher reflects on the party’s dissolution following the 2001 election cycle and his objection to the members’ consensus to disband. He attributes the New Party’s relative success in the 1990s to its status as a membership organization and the extra-political activities the members pursued together. He estimates that at its height the Missoula New Party had over 200 due-paying members. The interviewee\u27s full birth date has been restricted in both the audio and transcript for this interview.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/missoulanewparty_oralhistory/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Author Tom Keneally back stage at the Nimrod Theatre, Sydney, 1980 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Robert McFarlane collection of photographs.; Inscriptions: "Author Tom Keneally back stage Nimrod Theatre 1980 Robert McFarlane"--In pencil on reverse.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6615438

    Fletcher, Robert James. Iles Paradis, Iles d'Illusion, Lettres des Mers du Sud. Un cas d'hébridisation : Robert James Fletcher

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    Defert Daniel. Fletcher, Robert James. Iles Paradis, Iles d'Illusion, Lettres des Mers du Sud. Un cas d'hébridisation : Robert James Fletcher. In: Journal de la Société des océanistes, n°70-71, tome 37, 1981. pp. 129-131

    Fletcher, Robert James. Iles Paradis, Iles d'Illusion, Lettres des Mers du Sud. Un cas d'hébridisation : Robert James Fletcher

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    Defert Daniel. Fletcher, Robert James. Iles Paradis, Iles d'Illusion, Lettres des Mers du Sud. Un cas d'hébridisation : Robert James Fletcher. In: Journal de la Société des océanistes, n°70-71, tome 37, 1981. pp. 129-131
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