168,245 research outputs found

    Malcolm MacGregor, Saving the legacy: an oral history of Utah\u27s World War II veterans, ACCN 2070, American West Center, University of Utah

    No full text
    Transcript (121 pages) of an interview by Benjamin Bahlmann with Malcolm J. MacGregor on January 3, 2002. This is from tape numbers 476, 477, and 478 in the "Saving the Legacy Oral History ProjectMacGregor (b. 1923) recalls his childhood in rural New York and describes learning about Pearl Harbor and attempting to enlist in the Air Corps. He was drafted into the army and was assigned training as a combat engineer. Shortly after that he was transferred to the 8th Air Force and sent to bombardier school. MacGregor talks about his training and the trip to England. His first mission was on D-Day with the 702nd Bomber Squadron. He was shot down over Germany and describes his capture and treatment as a prisoner of war. 121 pages

    Stowell - MacGregor Division J. P. Coats, Inc (1952)

    No full text
    Plan of a Stowell - MacGregor Division J. P. Coats, Inc site in Dover - Foxcroft, Maine from September 24, 1952.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/oml-athm-collection/1143/thumbnail.jp

    Bruce and MacGregor

    No full text
    Bruce Moffit and MacGregor are pictured outside behind Hogle Hall in this photograph. Bruce Moffit is pictured to the left of the photograph wearing a plaid shirt and khakis, kneeling down next to MacGregor the dog. MacGregor is sitting with a stick in his mouth and a Westminster College Student ID card attached to his collar. The photograph is in good condition

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #1]

    No full text
    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    [Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author #2]

    No full text
    Report to Chief J. E. Curry, by an unknown author. The report contains a list of officers who gave depositions to the United States Attorney

    [Letter from Vicki J. Rosenberg to Sheila Brown, Anne Lindsey, R. William McCarter, D. Jack Davis, Nancy MacGregor and Michael Parsons, August 29, 1994]

    No full text
    A letter from Vicki J. Rosenberg to Sheila Brown, Anne Lindsey, R. William McCarter, D. Jack Davis, Nancy MacGregor and Michael Parsons about the National Specialty Program grant guidelines and status of the grant request

    The Campbells: lordship, literature and liminality

    No full text
    The Campbells have the potential to offer much to the theme of literature and borders, given that the kindred’s astonishing political success in the late medieval and early modern period depended heavily upon the ability to negotiate multiple frontiers: between Highlands and Lowlands; between Gaelic Scotland and Ireland, and, especially after the Reformation, with England and the matter of Britain. This paper will explore the literary dimension to Campbell expansionism, from the Book of the Dean of Lismore in the earlier sixteenth century, to poetry addressed to dukes of Argyll in the earlier eighteenth century. Particular attention will be paid to the literary proclivities of the household of the Campbells of Glenorchy on either side of what appears to be a major watershed in 1550; and to the agenda of the Campbell protégé John Carswell, first post-Reformation bishop of the Isles, and author of the first printed book in Gaelic in either Scotland or Ireland, Foirm na n-Urrnuidheadh (‘The Form of Prayers’), published at Edinburgh in 1567
    corecore