14,285 research outputs found
Interview with Elizabeth Inez Freeman
Audio recording and transcript of Elizabeth Inez Freeman's 1979 interview with Bernard McNicholl for the Coal Tyee History Project. Freeman, whose father was a coal miner, shares her memories about growing up in Nanaimo and living close to the Number 1 Esplanade Mine. She also shares the story of her mother's memory of the 1887 explosion at the Number 1 Esplanade Mine and her own memories about the Vancouver Island Coal Miners' Strike.https://library.viu.ca/libinfo/harmfullanguagestatementhttps://viuspace.viu.ca/bitstream/handle/10613/82/CoalTyeeFreemanScript1979.pdf?sequence=
Bess Freeman Folder
8 pages of family history documents containing and related to Bessie May Lucas Freeman; Gaylord Freeman; Elizabeth Clay Freeman - including: obits; memorial tribute
Jan Freeman, 35th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Jan Freeman is the author of Hyena, Autumn Sequence, and Simon Says, which was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetry. Her poems have been published in numerous journals and several anthologies. She co-edited the acclaimed Sisters: An Anthology (2009). Freeman founded Paris Press in 1995 in order to bring into print Muriel Rukeyser’s The Life of Poetry. She has been its director and publisher since. Paris Press educates the public about groundbreaking yet overlooked literature by women and has also championed the work of Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Ruth Stone and numerous other women writers of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries
Letters from John Sloan and Amelia Elizabeth White to Don Freeman, 1943-1944
27 leaves (single sided)Letters from John Sloan and Amelia Elizabeth White to Don Freeman, 1943-1944
Original content not owned by the Delaware Art Musuem
A pilgrimage to Rubidoux : [a poem] / Elizabeth Anderson Freeman.
[20] p. on double leaves, [9] leaves of plates
Elizabeth\u27s Blog
Blog created by Elizabeth Rodriguez for the 2018 Freeman Asian Internship Progra
Interview with Elizabeth Janeway, author
Author of The Walsh Girls, Man's World, and Woman's Place, Elizabeth Janeway is interviewed by Milwaukee TV and radio moderator Winifred Ryhn and Claudine Shannon, assistant professor of Community Affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Extension. She explores how societal attitudes are shaped and how they have determined the traditional roles of men and women.GrayscaleSoun
Interview with Elizabeth Miars
Interview with Elizabeth Miars, principal of Rachel Freeman Elementary School and recipient of UNCW's Razor Walker Award
Diary of Elizabeth Waties Allston Pringle, 1865
Redex Film ProductsElizabeth Waties Allston Pringle (formerly Elizabeth Waties Allston) was born in 1845 on Pawley's Island, South Carolina to Robert F.W. Allston and Adele Petigru. The family home, a rice plantation of 630 slaves named Chicora Wood, was located on the Pee Dee River near Georgetown. Elizabeth married John Julius Pringle in 1870. Under the pen name Patience Pennington, she is the author of ""A Woman Rice Planter"" and ""Chronicles of Chicora Wood."" She died at her family home December 5, 1921. Her diaries include descriptions of trips to northeastern United States including New York City, New York, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Washington D.C. She also writes about day-to-day activities on the plantation and keeps ledgers of annual expenditures
Diary of Elizabeth Waties Allston Pringle, 1914
Redex Film ProductsElizabeth Waties Allston Pringle (formerly Elizabeth Waties Allston) was born in 1845 on Pawley's Island, South Carolina to Robert F.W. Allston and Adele Petigru. The family home, a rice plantation of 630 slaves named Chicora Wood, was located on the Pee Dee River near Georgetown. Elizabeth married John Julius Pringle in 1870. Under the pen name Patience Pennington, she is the author of ""A Woman Rice Planter"" and ""Chronicles of Chicora Wood."" She died at her family home December 5, 1921. Her diaries include descriptions of trips to northeastern United States including New York City, New York, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Washington D.C. She also writes about day-to-day activities on the plantation and keeps ledgers of annual expenditures
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