1,139 research outputs found

    John Bascom & Mary Lilly Mercer

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    John Bascom Mercer and Mary Lilly Mercer at the photographer's studio. John Bascom Mercer (1855-1913) was a respected shoe merchant in Wilmington, NC. His older brother died at Gettysburg. He invented and patented a metal coin holder. John's wife, Mary E. Lilly Mercer (1868-1935), was born in Albemarle, NC. Both are buried in Oakdale Cemetery

    Miss Mary Ellen Lilly

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    Miss Mary Ellen Lilly will be marrying Mr. Joseph Edward McCarthy on January 8, 1942. Miss Lilly is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Daggett. She is shown sitting on a bench in front of a fireplace. She is wearing a button-up blouse, skirt, and a pearl necklace. There is a mirror hanging above the mantel.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/12066/thumbnail.jp

    Marriage record of West, Lesley and Clark, Mary Lilly

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    Marriage license for Lesley West and Mary Lilly Clark. T. Gurley was the officiant

    As I go home tonight I'll smoke my long stemmed pipe

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    VoiceCollected by: Mary A. Mitchell Mary Eva Davis Altus, Arkansas Fall, 1963 As I go home tonight I'll smoke my long stemmed pipe No one to call me darlin No one to say good night No one to say good night No one to say good night No one to call me darlin No one to say goodnight Her cheeks was fair as a lilly and her age was just sixteen Her cheeks was fair as a lilly and her age was just sixteenFunding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation

    Oh she's very neat and tidy

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    VoiceCollected by: Mary A. Mitchell Mary Eva Davis Altus, Arkansas Fall, 1963 Oh she's very neat and tidy And I meet her every Friday She's as pure as the lilly in the dell She's as pretty as the heather pretty purple heather Molly my Scotoch BluebellFunding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation

    Lilly Henderson, Nancy Pudvin, Cynthia Davis and Mary Ann Ellefson during ceremony

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    Lilly Henderson of Alabama, Cynthis Davis of Massechusetts and Mary Ann Ellefson of Minnesota smile as Nancy Pudvin of Georgia is announced the winner of MWA 198

    Lilly Yorozu letter to Mary Farquharson regarding the coming release of Japanese-Americans from interment, December 29, 1944

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    Lilly Yorozu writes with news of her family and her reflections on the news that the interment camps will close in a year. "I feel sorry for the thousands of older Issei who will be pushed out of camp with no where to go and too broken in spirit and body to strike out anew." She also writes of her anticipation at seeing her mother who she has not seen in a year.Mary Farquharson was a State Legislator, a civic leader and Christian pacifist. Her papers document activities of Caucasian-Americans who did not agree with the policy of evacuating the Japanese-Americans to relocation camps during World War II, and who worked in aid of the evacuees as well as correspondence with Japanese Americans in the internment camps

    Mary E. Morton, Dean of College of Arts and Sciences, Named to Board of Lilly Fellows Program in Humanities and the Arts

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    News release announces that Mary E. Morton has been named a member of the National Network Board of the Lilly Fellows Program in Humanities and the Arts
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