1,360,832 research outputs found

    Mayhew Folger, rebuilding a mill, 1824

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    Mayhew Folger received of Arvine Wales from the estate of Rotch "one hundred and fifty dollars in full for Sd Thos Rotch's subscription rebuilding my Mill." context unclear. Arvine Wales acknowledges that Folger was compensated $150 for his work. The owner of the mill in 1824 in unclear. 7.75" X 3.3

    Mayhew Lake "Symphony in Gold" scores collection

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    Mayhew Lester Lake (also known by the pseudonym Lester Brockton) was an American composer, conductor, editor and arranger. Beginning in 1913, Lake was the editor-in-chief of the band and orchestra department at the music publisher Carl Fischer, a position he would hold for 35 years. Many of the manuscripts in the collection were used for Lake's sixteen-piece brass concert band, the Symphony in Gold, which he conducted for NBC Radio. The Mayhew Lake "Symphony in Gold" Collection contains manuscript parts used by Lake for the Symphony in Gold

    Thaddeus Mayhew letter to Thomas Rotch, New York, 20 March 1800

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    Thaddeus Mayhew informs Thomas Rotch that he could not leave New York. He has sent money to settle Rotch's account. Mayhew will explain the delay when he sees Rotch at Bedford. A short accounting of the money owed and paid is included. 7.8" x 9.75" (19.9cm by 25cm

    Mayhew Folger letter to Thomas Rotch, Philadelphia, 10th July 1813

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    Mayhew Folger informs Thomas Rotch that he has sent his belongings and goods on and he and his family intend to follow soon. A duplicate invoice of Folger's goods signed by John Dublin is included. Also included is a note from Dublin stating he received payment for hauling the goods. 8" x 12" (20.3cm by 30.5cm

    Risking the Personal: Academic Friendship, Feminist Role Models and Katherine Mansfield

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    This article celebrates friendship as a valid starting point for scholarly enquiry and uses conversation as a valuable methodology. While completing their doctoral research on modernist short stories and women’s art collectives, co-authors Rydstrand and Mayhew discovered New Zealand author Katherine Mansfield was a contact point between their respective projects. Around 1981, Harridan Screenprinters quoted Mansfield’s injunction to ‘Risk anything’ on a poster, invoking Mansfield as a role model—as a leading modernist author and as a risk-taker. Mayhew later gave Rydstrand a copy of the poster as a thesis submission gift. This article explores interrelations between personal, creative and professional risks, from Mansfield’s avant-garde milieu of the early twentieth century, to the dynamic scene of second-wave feminism in Australia, and finally to the precarious world of the twenty-first century academy, all brought together by the physical artefact of the Mansfield poster. In this threefold engagement, we counter the presumed masculinity of experiment and champion feminine forms of risk.No Full Tex

    James Duncan, Mayhew Folger agreement for repayment to Rotch estate

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    James Duncan and Mayhew Folger agree to the terms of payment of $1500 to the estate of Charity Rotch, with specification that Folger finish improvements on a brick building and out buildings on lot 45 Kendal. 7.5" X 12.25

    Major Christopher Mayhew speaks at a Kalamazoo College convocation

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    Major Christopher Mayhew speaks at a Kalamazoo College convocation in place of Sir Gladwyn Jebb, whose duties rendered him unable to leave Great Britain. He discusses the Korean War, the United Nations, and its contributions, together with Great Britain, to democracy in the world. Addressing the proposal to allow China and Russia into the UN, he states "No doubt its a bad time at present to invite Communist China into the United Nations, but I'm sure that if UN is to have any value of peace in future, then in due course both Russia and China should be there.

    Tim Mayhew Position Statement on Homosexual Liberties prepared for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), December 14, 1971

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    This position statement, written by Tim Mayhew, Chairman of the Education Committee of the Seattle Gay Alliance, discusses two key points on homosexual civil liberties. The first being "all people, and specifically gay people, must have guaranteed to them social, emotional, sexual, and financial freedoms." The second statement states, "gay people especially as an oppressed minority need explicit protection of rights by changes in the law."Tim Mayhew was a member of the Seattle Gay Alliance in the early 1970's and served as the chair of its Education Committee, ca. 1972-1975. He was the SGA's lobbyist in Olympia, ca. 1973, and helped found Seattle's first Gay Community Center in 1971. Mayhew was also involved with the Gay Liberation Front. In the late 1970's he served as Seattle editor of the Northwest Gay Review, a gay newspaper based in Portland, and he was a member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Washington and served on its Sexual Minorities Committee, ca. 1977-1980. Mayhew lobbied in Olympia again, ca. 1981, on behalf of the Dorian Group, and in 1993 he helped found the Harvey Muggy Lesbian/Gay Democratic Organization. Homosaurus subject terms and some Contextual Notes were added to this item during the LGBTQ+ Materials Redescription Project in 2023

    Mayhew Folger letter to Thomas Rotch, Kendal, 1st mo 18th 1816

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    In a short note to Thomas Rotch, Mayhew Folger who settled in Kendal by 1816 advises Rotch that he should keep bags at the mill for persons to use for the collection of corn. 7.75" x 3.8" (19.6cm by 9.8cm

    John Mayhew

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    20Born in Darwin in 1896. He was the son of George Washington Mayhew, Northern Territory Times and Gazette editor, after whom Mayhew Crescent is named. Jack became a journalist in Perth, and enlisted there.2 years with the 88th Infantry. Mayhew embarked from Fremantle, on board HMAT A8 'Argyllshire' on 9 November 1916. He received severe gun shot wound to the thigh 20 August 1917. Returned to Australia 28 February 1919 on 'Anchisis'.JournalistAustralian Imperial Force11th Battalion, 22nd Reinforcemen
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