1,226 research outputs found

    Frederick J. Wesson, Jr.

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    Wesson receiving medal from commanding officer. On verso: Maj. F.J. Wesson, Jr. [attached description]:".receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross.".is Major Frederick J. Wesson, Jr., of Nashville, Ark.

    Keynote Speakers Joshua Wesson and David Rosengarten 01

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    Chef and author David Rosengarten speaks at the 1993 International Pinot Noir Celebration with the founder of Best Cellars, Joshua Wesson. (left to right): Joshua Wesson, David Rosengartenhttps://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/ipnc_photos/1073/thumbnail.jp

    An edited version of a letter written by a forebear from Europe at the end of World War I

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    This letter was contributed by William's granddaughter, Jane Wesson of Carine in Western Australia..

    Keynote Speakers David Rosengarten and Joshua Wesson 02

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    Chef and author David Rosengarten speaks at the 1993 International Pinot Noir Celebration with the founder of Best Cellars, Joshua Wesson. (left to right): David Rosengarten, Joshua Wessonhttps://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/ipnc_photos/1078/thumbnail.jp

    Keynote Speakers David Rosengarten and Joshua Wesson 01

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    Chef and author David Rosengarten speaks at the 1993 International Pinot Noir Celebration with the founder of Best Cellars, Joshua Wesson. (left to right): David Rosengarten, Joshua Wessonhttps://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/ipnc_photos/1076/thumbnail.jp

    Promissory note from J. H. Wesson to J. H. Woodward, April 13, 1911

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    A document from an extensive collection spanning four generations of the Woodward family that operated merchant pig iron companies in West Virginia and Alabama. The collection begins with Stimpson Harvey Woodward (S. H. Woodward), a native of Massachusetts, who moved from Pittsburgh to Wheeling, West Virginia in 1852. He had interests in an iron company as early as 1852 in West Virginia and began Alabama operations in 1869. The family business continued in Alabama until the death of S. H. Woodward's great-grandson in 1965

    Mississippi Mills, Wesson, Mississippi

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    This postcard features a black and white image of the Mississippi Mills, one of the earliest and most important manufacturing plants to be established in Copiah County, Mississippi. It was the cotton and woolen mills known as the Mississippi Manufacturing Company, later renamed the Mississippi Mills, which was erected in 1866 at Wesson by Colonel James Madison Wesson. The building is a long, five story structure with six story towers spaced from each corner of the building with one in the front center. A two story building at the right end has a cupola in the center of the roof. Trees are in front of the mill buildings. An electric utility pole is pictured in the left of the image. The title of the card is printed in the lower left of the image. The back of the card is addressed to Mrs. J. T Gibson in San Francisco, California. The card is postmarked Beauregard, Mississippi, December 18, 1906.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-lampton-images-ms-capitol/1198/thumbnail.jp

    Mississippi Mills, Wesson, Mississippi

    No full text
    This postcard features a black and white image of the Mississippi Mills, one of the earliest and most important manufacturing plants to be established in Copiah County, Mississippi. It was the cotton and woolen mills known as the Mississippi Manufacturing Company, later renamed the Mississippi Mills, which was erected in 1866 at Wesson by Colonel James Madison Wesson. The building is a long, five story structure with six story towers spaced from each corner of the building with one in the front center. A two story building at the right end has a cupola in the center of the roof. Trees are in front of the mill buildings. An electric utility pole is pictured in the left of the image. The title of the card is printed in the lower left of the image. The back of the card is addressed to Mrs. J. T Gibson in San Francisco, California. The card is postmarked Beauregard, Mississippi, December 18, 1906.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-lampton-images-ms-capitol/1294/thumbnail.jp

    Mississippi Mills, Wesson, Mississippi

    No full text
    This postcard features a black and white image of the Mississippi Mills, one of the earliest and most important manufacturing plants to be established in Copiah County, Mississippi. It was the cotton and woolen mills known as the Mississippi Manufacturing Company, later renamed the Mississippi Mills, which was erected in 1866 at Wesson by Colonel James Madison Wesson. The building is a long, five story structure with six story towers spaced from each corner of the building with one in the front center. A two story building at the right end has a cupola in the center of the roof. Trees are in front of the mill buildings. An electric utility pole is pictured in the left of the image. The title of the card is printed in the lower left of the image. The back of the card is addressed to Mrs. J. T Gibson in San Francisco, California. The card is postmarked Beauregard, Mississippi, December 18, 1906.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-lampton-images-ms-capitol/1390/thumbnail.jp
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