8,770 research outputs found
Letter from the Mother of Charles C. Hartman to Laurence L. Doggett (January 18, 1918)
A three page letter from the mother of Charles C. Hartman to Laurence L. Doggett dated January 18, 1918. In the letter Ms. Hartman writes to Doggett and tells him about what she knows of her sons passing and what they did for his funeral.Charles C. Hartman was a student at Springfield College from 1910 to 1914. He left the college before he graduated. After leaving school he became a assistant physical director for the Y.M.C.A. in Rochester, N.Y and then for Schenectady for a year. In 1917 he joined the a medical corp. in World War I. On November 26, 1917, he died of Lobar Pneumonia
Letter from the Mother of Charles C. Hartman to Laurence L. Doggett (January 18, 1918)
A three page letter from the mother of Charles C. Hartman to Laurence L. Doggett dated January 18, 1918. In the letter Ms. Hartman writes to Doggett and tells him about what she knows of her sons passing and what they did for his funeral.Charles C. Hartman was a student at Springfield College from 1910 to 1914. He left the college before he graduated. After leaving school he became a assistant physical director for the Y.M.C.A. in Rochester, N.Y and then for Schenectady for a year. In 1917 he joined the a medical corp. in World War I. On November 26, 1917, he died of Lobar Pneumonia
Children playing on farm equipment, Hartman farm, Medina County, Texas
Photograph shows children seated on farm equipment near house.''(L. to R.'' Harold Hartman, Elnor Westfall, Elmer Hartman, John Hartman, and Jay Hartman.Information from lender: Hartman farm was about four or five miles northeast of Hondo on Quihi Road
Google Scholar and the Library Web Site: The Early Response by ARL Libraries
With the introduction of Google Scholar in November 2004, research libraries faced the decision of whether to integrate this “blended” resource into their collections and services via their library Web sites. The authors are members of a Web Advisory Committee and present a case study detailing Rutgers University Libraries’ experience with integrating Google Scholar onto the library’s Web site. A descriptive study of all ARL university members’ library Web sites also was undertaken to determine how other academic libraries were treating Google Scholar in July 2005. Did ARL libraries place Google Scholar on alphabetical lists of indexes and databases, subject guides, or in OPACs, for instance? Results from this study are presented and implications of putting Google Scholar on the Web site are discussed for all major user groups.This article was published in College & Research Libraries, March 2006. The published version is open access and available at: http://crl.acrl.org/content/67/2/106.abstractPeer reviewe
Interview with Dr. James A. Hartman
Dr. James A. Hartman was the 2014 recipient of the L. Austin Weeks Memorial Medal from the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG). According to the AAPG, this prestigious award recognizes members of the geological community who have made extraordinary contributions to philanthropy and the association’s mission. Over a distinguished career spanning many decades, Dr. Hartman worked at the Reynolds Jamaica Mines and the Union Carbide Ore Company before retiring with Shell Oil in the early 2000s. Born in Lanark, Illinois in January 1928, he now lives in Des Moines, Iowa. In this field interview, Dr. Hartman, who is accompanied by his wife, Molly, and his son, Lester, recounts his own life and career, and also tells the story of his father’s service in the first World War. Later in the interview, Molly offers a perspective on growing up during the Great Depression and working at her family’s roadside motel during World War II, as well as her life as the stay-at-home mother in the 1950s and 1960s. Finally, Jim and Molly describe how, after attending the same elementary school and having marriages and careers that lasted until the twenty-first century, they met and married just a few years ago, as Jim was dealing with the damage to his New Orleans home caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Llewelyn Hartman, Jim Hartman’s father, served as a “runner” delivering messages between Allied outposts, frequently crossing the gunfire, artillery, and mustard gas of the deadly area known as “no man’s land.” The French government awarded him a Croix de Guerre for battlefield valor. Later in his interview, Jim describes his experience visiting the battlefields upon which his father fought nearly a century before. In all, this interview provides an interesting perspective into the life of an extraordinary Iowan.
Interviewer: Eric Zimme
Hartman, Ethel L.
Obituary of Ethel L. Hartman born Feb.10, 1902 in Dundee, Michigan. Resided in Petersburg, Michigan
Feasibility study on the production of a seamless three-piece can from tin plate. Properties and service performance. EUR 15157 EN. Technical steel research
Letter from Laurence L. Doggett to Mrs. Hartman (January 17, 1918)
A letter from Laurence L. Doggett to Mrs. Hartman, mother of Charles C. Hartman, an alum of Springfield College. The letter is dated January 17, 1918. In the letter Doggett thanks Mrs. Hartman for a letter she sent to him in regards to her son. Doggett also asks if she can find a good sized picture for the college to use. In the letter, there is reference to a letter from Ms. Hartman that letter is Item rg104-01-a-01-05-010.Charles C. Hartman was a student at Springfield College from 1910 to 1914. He left the college before he graduated. After leaving school he became a assistant physical director for the Y.M.C.A. in Rochester, N.Y, and then for Schenectady for a year. In 1917 he joined the a medical corp. in World War I. On November 26, 1917, he died of Lobar Pneumonia
Letter from Laurence L. Doggett to Mrs. Hartman (January 17, 1918)
A letter from Laurence L. Doggett to Mrs. Hartman, mother of Charles C. Hartman, an alum of Springfield College. The letter is dated January 17, 1918. In the letter Doggett thanks Mrs. Hartman for a letter she sent to him in regards to her son. Doggett also asks if she can find a good sized picture for the college to use. In the letter, there is reference to a letter from Ms. Hartman that letter is Item rg104-01-a-01-05-010.Charles C. Hartman was a student at Springfield College from 1910 to 1914. He left the college before he graduated. After leaving school he became a assistant physical director for the Y.M.C.A. in Rochester, N.Y, and then for Schenectady for a year. In 1917 he joined the a medical corp. in World War I. On November 26, 1917, he died of Lobar Pneumonia
Memo from Glen Hartman, Chief of Agriculture, Heart Mountain Relocation Center, to Mr. K. Ichiro Hoshizaki, April 6, 1944
Memorandum of understanding from Glen Hartman to Mr. K. Ichiro Hoshizaki regarding appeal for investigation of Hoshizaki's termination from the "poultry project" at Heart Mountain incarceration camp.The Japanese American Archival Collection documents the people, places, and daily life of Japanese Americans, primarily those who lived in the once thriving community of pre-war Florin in the Sacramento region, as well as the conditions in American incarceration camps during World War II. The approximately 7,000 original items include personal and official letters, photographs, diaries, arts and crafts, newsletters, textiles, camps artifacts, yearbooks and other publications
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