2,452 research outputs found
[Letter from James G. Steese to Morris Sheppard - September 10, 1918]
Letter from Colonel of Engineers James G. Steese to Senator Morris Sheppard concerning James Ferdinand McCan's application for the "camouflage service" during World War I. Steese states the application, regarding which Sheppard sent communications, has been referred to the Commanding Officer of the 40th Engineers
Mercurius elencticus, [electronic resource] : communicating his most impartial intelligence from all parts ...
Title from caption.Attributed to Samuel Sheppard. Cf. Nelson and Seccombe.Reels listed in chronological order of serial publication; holdings dispersed throughout collection.Reproduction of the originals in the British Library.ThomasonNelson and SeccombeElectronic reproduction
[Letter from P. C. Harris to Morris Sheppard - October 4, 1918]
Letter from acting adjutant general Peter Charles Harris to Senator Morris Sheppard regarding the application of artist James Ferdinand McCan's application to the camouflage service. Harris informs Sheppard that, as commissions for the service are made from enlisted men, and that McCan is "beyond the draft age", McCan should "secure induction into the service and then apply... for a commission commensurate with his ability.
Sheppard, Rose. Rose Sheppard and Bridget Cheeks discuss nursing practices in Newfoundland
Sheppard, Rose and Bridget Cheeks interviewed by Marilyn Beaton and Jeanette Walsh in Gander on September 23, 2007 on the topic of the experiences of nurses immigrating to Newfoundland and Labrador. Each informant talks about where she was born and where she got her training; Fever Program and midwifery program; how they came to work in Newfoundland; preparations made to come here; first impressions of Newfoundland; talks about the old James Paton Hospital; the reception they got from community; differences between working in Ireland compared to Newfoundland; keeping records; accommodations in Newfoundland; uniforms; going to Nova Scotia for work; talk about missing Ireland; giving medications. Place of birth for both Sheppard and Cheeks: Irelan
[Dr. James R. Sheppard, Marshall Physician]
Dr. James R. Sheppard was an African-American physician who established a hospital in Marshall in 1925. It was located at 606 S. Carter St. in the historic New Town Neighborhood in the western part of the city. It was called the Sheppard Sanitarium on the Sanborn Maps. Later the hospital was purchased by Dr. Williams Watts and renamed the Sheppard-Watts Hospital. Nothing more is known about Dr. Sheppard
Letter re: John Biggs and James Stewart
Letter from Morris Sheppard, United States Senator, to Amon Carter regarding John Biggs and James Stewart
Sheppard, James
James Sheppard was born in New York City in 1924, to parents who had just emigrated from Antigua. He was the eldest of four siblings. He graduated high school in 1942, and served in the Army during World War II. He worked as an aviation mechanic after the war; in 1957 he was hired by the Federal Aviation Administration as an inspector, a job he continued until he retired in 1985. He married twice, and had five children and seven grandchildren. His family moved to Westbrook, Maine, in 1971, when the FAA transferred him to work at the Portland Jetport. He was an active member of the Lions Club, and mentored local students. He discusses raising children, his family history in the Caribbean, discrimination he has faced as an African American throughout his life, Portland’s growing community of African immigrants, and cultural differences between Maine and New York City.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/aa_hiwimi/1013/thumbnail.jp
Notes on interview with James Harris Stewart
James Harris Stewart is interviewed by Gwendolyn Sheppard on March 31, 1989 as part of the Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project. The transcription and audio are unavailable. This document includes Sheppard's notes after the interview took place. Stewart was raised in Georgia and moved to Asheville where he met his future wife. He found Asheville to be less racially discriminating than Georgia, but describes some restrictions due to Jim Crow laws. He raised four children and was closer to them than his father had been to him. With a fourth grade education, he went back to school at the age of 30.Stewart 1
Interviewee: James Harris Stewart
Interviewer: Gwendolyn Sheppard
County: Buncombe
Date: March 31, 1989
Transcript and audio of interview are unavailable. These are the observations of Gwendolyn Sheppard after her interview with James Harris Stewart.
James Harris Stewart is a very soft-spoken but lively gentleman. He lives alone in the same home where he raised his four children. The home is cozy and meticulously clean. He tells me that his home is just as it was the night that his wife died three years ago. He vows to never change anything about his home. Everything is just as his wife left it.
Mr. Stewart is a native of Gordon, Georgia. He had a difficult time talking about his childhood which he said was rough. Mr. Stewart is the seventh of eight children born to Richard Candus Stewart and Irene Veal Stewart. He describes his father as a "very strict and religious man". Mr. Stewart's father was an entrepreneur. He got his start in business when he accumulated cotton and then sold it two days before the price dropped. Mr. Stewart's mother died when he was 7 and he does not remember much about her. After the death of his mother, his maternal grandmother came to live with them until his father remarried.
According to Mr. Stewart, one of the most amazing things about his family was that his father and his two brothers married his mother and two of her sisters. The offspring from these unions looked more like sisters and brothers than cousins. After the death of his mother, Mr. Stewart's father re-married. He described his stepmother as the typical "storybook stepmother like the one in Cinderella."
Mr. Stewart had to leave Georgia in 1938 to seek work. He was on his way to Philadelphia when he stopped in Asheville to visit a friend. That is where he met and fell in love with his future wife. He has lived in Asheville ever since. Also, he felt that at the time conditions were better for blacks in Asheville than in Georgia. He mentioned that in Georgia black men could be arrested for vagrancy. This is ironic since, according to him, there was not much work for blacks in Georgia, therefore there wasn't much for them to do. As far as he could tell racial discrimination was not as bad in Asheville, although there were "Jim Crow" laws when he arrived. He remembers when, at Pack Square, blacks were not allowed to use the restrooms. They had to go underground to a designated area if they needed to use the restroom. This was humiliating and most blacks just "held it" until they got back to their neighborhood.
Mr. Stewart dropped out of school when he was in the fourth grade. However, he has always been an avid reader. When he was around the age of 30 he decided to go back to school. By this time he was married with three children. He wrote a letter to the principal. The principle let him in on the condition that he be willing to start at the bottom and work his way up. So he did just that. He said that although it was hard, he didn't mind sitting in a classroom with a bunch of Stewart 2
15 and 16-year-olds. He knew that he needed to do this to better himself. He also went on to get a degree in theology.
Mr. Stewart beamed with pride as he spoke of his children. He wanted to bring them up in a more "friendly environment" because he did not have that type of relationship with his father. Mr. Stewart wanted to be able to relate to his children. He stressed the advantage of a good education. All four of his children have at least a Bachelor’s degree or higher and they are all successful in their careers. It meant a lot to him that they have a better life than he did. While they were in college he worked three jobs to put them through school
Correspondence from S. P. Houston to James Kirk, Esquire
This correspondence, believed to be from Sheppard P. Houston of Lewes, Delaware, is addressed to James Kirk, Esquire, editor of the Democratic newspaper The Delawarean. In the letter, Houston expresses support for Mr. Saulsbury’s speech on Black suffrage and the “white man’s party.” He also includes $5 to cover a newspaper subscription and requests the advertisement of land he has for sale
Correspondence from S. P. Houston to James Kirk, Esquire
This correspondence, believed to be from Sheppard P. Houston of Lewes, Delaware, is addressed to James Kirk, Esquire, editor of the Democratic newspaper The Delawarean. In the letter, Houston expresses support for Mr. Saulsbury’s speech on Black suffrage and the “white man’s party.” He also includes $5 to cover a newspaper subscription and requests the advertisement of land he has for sale
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