1,969 research outputs found
Phillip Panek Biar
abstract: Phillip was nine years old when his village was attacked.
“Lost Boys Found” is an ongoing, interdisciplinary project that is collecting, recording and archiving the oral histories of the Lost Boys/Girls of Sudan. The collection is a work-in-progress, seeking to record the oral history of as many Lost Boys/Girls as are willing, and will be used in a future book.Age: 24Region: Bahr al GhazalThis picture and bio was donated to the "Lost Boys Found" oral history project from The Arizona Lost Boys Cente
Lewis Phillip Hall, Local Historian and Author
Lewis Phillip Hall-local historian and autho
[2001.13.262] Image of Ludwig ?Lewis? and Christina (Graf) Buck with their grandson Phillip Westine
Photographic image. Black and white. Image of an elderly couple sitting on a bench on a porch of a house with a young boy sitting between them. Man is wearing a suit and hat and woman is wearing a dress. Identified as Ludwig ?Lewis? and Christina (Graf) Buck with their grandson Phillip Westine. They are seated on the summer porch of the Ludwig ?Lewis? and Christina (Graf) Buck home in Streeter, North Dakota. Circa 1945. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf- Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
Phillip Hoose: 2025 Irma Black Award Silver Medal Acceptance Speech
Author Phillip Hoose gives an acceptance speech for Claudette Colvin: I Want Freedom Now!, illustrated by Bea Jackson (Straus and Giroux)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/irma_black_awards/1019/thumbnail.jp
[2001.13.268] Image of Ludwig ?Lewis? Buck holding his grandson Phillip Westine
Photographic image. Black and white. Image of a man wearing a suit and hat holding a young child. Identified as Ludwig ?Lewis? Buck holding his grandson Phillip Westine in Streeter, North Dakota. Circa 1940s. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf-Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
[2001.13.218] Ludwig "Lewis" and Christina (Graf) Buck family
Photographic image. Black and white. Formal family portrait of the Ludwig ?Lewis? and Christina (Graf) Buck family, taken on their 45th wedding anniversary; with adult children and two spouses, and grandchildren. (L to R): Arthur Buck with his wife Mary Jane (Phelphs) Buck seated with their daughter Christine; Martha Buck stands beside Arthur; Esther (Buck) Lundin is seated on the couch arm; Magdalena Buck; Ludwig ?Lewis? and Christina; Paul Loring Westin, seated on back of sofa; Wilhelmina ?Minnie? (Buck) Zimmerman, standing next to her brother Irvin/ Irwin Buck; and Gertrude (Buck) Westine, seated with her son Phillip Westine. Dated 1944. Photographer is King Studios; Jamestown, North Dakota. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf- Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
[2001.13.266] Image of Irvin Buck holding Phillip Westine and Ludwig ?Lewis? Buck in Streeter, ND
Photographic image. Black and white. Image of two men and one child. Man on the right is wearing a suit and hat. Man on the left is wearing a military uniform and is holding a young child. Identified as Irvin Buck holding his nephew Phillip Westine and Ludwig ?Lewis? Buck in Streeter, North Dakota. Circa 1940s. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf-Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
Phillip Herring
Phillip Herring (1936- ) is a scholar and biographer, who taught English at the University of Wisconsin at Madison for over twenty five years. He attended the University of Texas at Austin, where he was awarded a Ph.D. in 1966, and later worked at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. Herring is the author of Joyce's Uncertainty Principle (1987), Djuna: the Life and Work of Djuna Barnes (1995), and is the co-editor of Djuna Barnes's Collected Poems: With Notes Towards the Memoirs (2005). His papers consist of correspondence, photographs, and other materials accumulated during the writing of his Barnes biography. Subjects include Djuna Barnes, her family and friends, and locations relating to Barnes's life
[2001.13.099] Portrait of Lydia (Graf) Cherryholm and Margaretha (Graf) Wentz
Circa 1908 portrait of sisters identified as Lydia Graf Cherryholm and Margaretha Graf Wentz. Margaretha Graf (born 1887, Scotland, Dakota Territory) and Lydia Graf (born 1890, Richville, Logan County) were youngest daughters of Johann Graf, Sr. and Christina Mittleider. Photographer is Fallman, Eureka, South Dakota. Photo courtesy of Ludwig (Lewis) Jr. and Christina Graf Buck Collection.Photographic image. Black and white. Portrait of two young women standing next to each other. Both women are wearing dresses and have bows in their hair. Identified as Lydia (Graf) Cherryholm and Margaretha (Graf) Wentz, the youngest daughters of Johann, Sr. and Christina (Mittleider) Graf. Circa 1908. Photographer is Fallman; Eureka, South Dakota. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf-Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
[2001.13.084] Portrait of Adolf Graf
Portrait of Adolf Graf, son of John Graf, Jr. and Katherina Buck Graf, circa 1940's. Photographer is Kuether Studio, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Photo courtesy of Ludwig (Lewis) Jr. and Christina Graf Buck Collection.Photographic image. Black and white. Portrait of a man wearing a suit and tie. Identified as Adolf Graf, the son of John, Jr. and Katherina (Buck) Graf. Circa 1940's. Photographer is Kuether Studio; Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Courtesy of Ludwig and Christina Graf-Buck Collection, 2001.13, GRHC
- …
