9,925 research outputs found
Letter: Kate A. Thompson to Mrs. Hitchcock, April 6, 1923
Handwritten letter to Caroline Hitchcock, 6 page
Letter with attachment: Kate A. Thompson to Ida M. Tarbell, April 6, 1923
Handwritten letter, 8 pages, with typed transcript of Lincoln-Hanks lette
Letter, Catherine Thompson to Kate Thompson
April 15, 18??. Letter from Catherine Thompson to her niece Kate Thompson.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/wml_corr/1022/thumbnail.jp
Letter, Catherine Thompson to Kate Thompson
October 12, 1890. Letter from Catherine Thompson to her niece Kate Thompson.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/wml_corr/1019/thumbnail.jp
Letter from Virginia Kate Bowers, Marion, Indiana, to Haydn Thompson, Indianapolis, Indiana, August 16, 1928
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
Letter from Virginia Kate Bowers, Marion, Indiana, to Haydn Thompson, Alton, Illinois, February 2, 1929
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
Letter from Virginia Kate Bowers, Marion, Indiana, to Haydn Thompson, Alton, Illinois, January 4, 1929
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
Letter from Virginia Kate Bowers, Marion, Indiana, to Haydn Thompson, Indianapolis, Indiana, August 15, 1928
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
Letter from Virginia Kate Bowers, Marion, Indiana, to Haydn Thompson, Alton, Illinois, January 10, 1929
This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
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