2,674 research outputs found

    Correspondence to Austin MacCormick from Edwin Gill

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    Letter from Edwin Gill, Commissioner of Paroles, North Carolina to Austin H. MacCormick, President of the American Prison Association. In this letter, Edwin Gill writes that he is sending Austin MacCormick a report that he thinks would be of interest to him: A Report Covering the Active Roster Under Supervision

    Correspondence - J. Melville Broughton and Edwin Gill

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    Correspondence from Joseph Melville Broughton to Honorable Edwin Gill notifying him that he has accepted the invitation to speak at Gardner-Webb College on Easter.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/gardner-webb-buildings-and-grounds-o-max-gardner-building/1020/thumbnail.jp

    Edwin Gaustad oral history interview.

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    Oral history interview with Edwin Gaustad conducted by David Marshall, originally recorded May 1, 2007, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Accompanied by one finding aid.Dr. Gaustad, a retired history professor and renowned author of American religion, talks about his life, family, education, publications and interests

    [Note by an unknown author, addressed to General Edwin Walker]

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    Photocopy of a partially illegible note by an unknown author, from an envelope addressed to General Edwin Walker

    Old Dame Gill

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    Relief prints--woodcuts;Illustrated with uncolored woodcuts engraved by Allen Robert Branston (1778-1827). Special Collections copy is uncut and unbound. Jack and Jill and Old Dame Gill expands the familiar nursery rhyme "Jack and Jill" beyond the traditional verses. The illustration on Page 16 depicts two men who appear to be wrestling. One is holding a cup.Publisher information taken from Edwin Pearson's "Banbury Chapbooks and Nursery Toy Book Literature." Author, Illustrator, and Printer information taken from UW Libraries catalog record which cites Boston University's Aldrich Collection record. The uncut and unbound edition shares the same catalog record and call number as the bound edition.Nursery rhymes; Chapbooks;Gift of Pamela K. Hare

    Old Dame Gill

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    Relief prints--woodcuts;Illustrated with uncolored woodcuts engraved by Allen Robert Branston (1778-1827). Special Collections copy is uncut and unbound. Jack and Jill and Old Dame Gill expands the familiar nursery rhyme "Jack and Jill" beyond the traditional verses. Page 2 features the first verse of the original rhyme and describes Jack and Jill going up the hill "to fetch a pail of water" and tumbling down again. The illustration on Page 2 appears to depict two women walking down a country lane. However, it may depict Jack and Jill as young boys often wore dresses in the early 19th century. Pages 14 and 15 describe Dame Gill punishing Jack and Jill. Hearing this, the dog and the pig join forces and knock over Dame Gill. The illustration on Page 14 depicts a woman who appears to be raising a candlestick above her head. Page 3 describes Jack running home to have his head plastered by Dame Gill. The illustration depicts a child riding a makeshift hobby horse.Publisher information taken from Edwin Pearson's "Banbury Chapbooks and Nursery Toy Book Literature." Author, Illustrator, and Printer information taken from UW Libraries catalog record which cites Boston University's Aldrich Collection record. The uncut and unbound edition shares the same catalog record and call number as the bound edition.Nursery rhymes; Chapbooks;Gift of Pamela K. Hare

    Lincoln, the Man of the People signed by Edwin Markham, March 19, 1928

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    This revised version of the poem, Lincoln, The Man of the People is inscribed to Jessie Randolph on March 19, 1928 and signed by the author, Edwin Markham. This revision was read at the dedication of the great Lincoln Memorial that was erected in Washington, D.C. in 1922.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-manuscripts-original-manuscripts/1221/thumbnail.jp

    Edwin Kinney Wright

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    Photograph - A portrait of Dr. Edwin Kinney Wright, Athabasca, Albert

    The rise of the State in education. Part one: The intellectual background. by Edwin G. West

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    tag=1 data=The rise of the State in education. Part one: The intellectual background. by Edwin G. West tag=2 data=West, Edwin G. tag=3 data=Policy, tag=4 data=7 tag=5 data=1 tag=6 data=Autumn 1991 tag=7 data=55-57. tag=8 data=EDUCATION tag=10 data=In the first of two articles documenting the growth of state involvement in education, the author traces the decline of the classical political economists' ideal of private, competitive education and its replacement by compulsory, state-subsidised schooling. tag=11 data=1991/3/6 tag=12 data=91/0518 tag=13 data=CABIn the first of two articles documenting the growth of state involvement in education, the author traces the decline of the classical political economists' ideal of private, competitive education and its replacement by compulsory, state-subsidised schooling

    Goody Blake & Harry Gill /

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    Includes 1 woodcut.First sentence: "Oh! what's the matter? what's the matter? What is't that ails young Harry Gill, that everymore his teeth they chatter, chatter, chatter, chatter still?""Goody Blake & Harry Gill" first published 1798.The miser: p. [11]-12.Woodcut: title-page vignette.At head of title: Beauties of the muses.Cover title.Mode of access: Internet.Copy in McGill Library's Rare Books and Special Collections: bound with Edwin and Angelina. Printed for J.T. Ward and Company, No. 3, Bread-Street-Hill, Cheapside,1808. Bound together subsequent to publication with 11 other chapbooks with binder's title: Poems. Bound in brown calf over boards. Isabel Mackenzie. Montreal. March/70. $50.00
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