7,748 research outputs found

    Ralph Johnson Residence

    No full text
    Copies of individual photos from the 1917 Bradentown and Manatee County Board of Trade folder. This is from page 2, the residence of Ralph Johnson on the corner of 3rd Avenue West and 16th Street West

    Multi print blouse

    No full text
    Blouse: wool challis; Multi-colored print; bow tie; long sleeves with button on barrel cuffs; small buttons down front placket. Note: completes a Ralph Lauren camel hair jacket and gray flannel pleated skirt suit donated October, 1982. Worn to the first fashion show at Hall's Crown Center by Sandy Morris and was the first Ralph Lauren fashion show in Kansas City. It was from Ralph Lauren's first major fall collection. Woven in Switzerland

    Ralph Johnson

    No full text
    Donald Ralph Johnson is pictured his school year at Lapoint Elementary. He is the son of Quince D. and Chloe Johnson

    Ralph Johnson

    No full text
    Ralph Johnson is pictured his freshman year at Roosevelt High School

    Schoolhouse, Ralph, Harding County

    No full text
    4 x 6 photograph, one-story schoolhouse with a gable roof and a swing set in the yardH2010-041 Elevators School Houses Courthouses Vernell Johnson Coll. Box 3 SD Country School Houses[stamp] No. 25A 229 [photographer stamp] Photo By: Vernell Johnson, S. D. Ralph, S. D

    Interview with Ralph Johnson

    No full text
    An interview with Ralph Johnson about the Vietnam War. Audio is on tape MS016_14-3_73-042https://scholars.fhsu.edu/koh/1274/thumbnail.jp

    AWAS Signals Alice Springs

    No full text
    "AWAS Signals Alice Springs SF 84065 Jean (Drop) Johnson SF 84071 Joan Ralph SF Olga Virgo".Auatralian Women's Army Service Signals Alice Springs, SF 84065 Jean (Drop) Johnson, SF 84071 Joan Ralph, SF Olga Virgo.Date:199

    Ralph Johnson

    No full text
    Ralph Johnson is an x-ray technician at the City County Hospital. He was surprised when an x-ray revealed an obstruction in the head of his patient. The icepick had been in the man\u27s head for around ten years. Mr. Johnson is holding the icepick next to the ruler in his right hand. The pick measures more than four inches long. Mr. Johnson is wearing a dress shirt with cuffed sleeves, a necktie, and trousers. The x-ray is hanging on the wall behind him.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/2192/thumbnail.jp

    Oral History Interview with Ralph McLain, April 4, 2003

    No full text
    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an oral interview with Ralph O. McClain. McClain was born in Lone Wolf, Oklahoma 30 June 1925. He joined the Navy in March 1943 and went to San Diego for boot training. From there, he was sent to Honolulu. He tells of going aboard the Japanese midget submarine HA-19, which was tied along the dock. He comments on seeing it again during his visit to the National Museum of the Pacific War. After undergoing some training related to submarine duty he was sent to Midway and assigned to the USS Aspro (SS-309). On night watch during his first war patrol McClain sighted a silhouette and reported it to the captain. It was the Japanese submarine I-43 which was engaged and sunk by torpedoes from the Aspro in February 1944. McLain made five more patrols while on board the boat and he tells of some actions, including life guard duty, which involved picking up downed flyers. He was discharged soon after returning to the United States following the surrender of Japan

    Oral history interview with Ralph S Johnson, 2007 Feb. 20

    No full text
    Johnson was born in 1906 in Goodland, Indiana as the fourth in ten children. Johnson's uncle, Hartley Rowe, a graduate from Purdue who worked on the Panama Canal influenced Johnson's decision to attend Purdue. Johnson participated in ROTC, Acacia (Masonic fraternity), debate team, Kappa Phi Sigma (literary society) and boxing. His brother, Max Johnson, also attended Purdue in the Engineering department. He discusses how he met his wife. When he graduated from Purdue, he went to Marsh Field, California for pilot training during the Great Depression. After pilot school, he taught and worked in Muncie, Indiana with the Ball Brothers. He spent the summer of 1932 at the Chicago World Fair giving airplane rides. Johnson was offered job at Midway Airport in Chicago. He discusses the general public’s fear of flying at that time. When World War II began, Johnson was working as a test pilot for United Airlines. He discusses his achievements in aviation and his role in developing standards for flight and landing
    corecore