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Letter, 1829 December 26,Archibald McClean to Charles S. Morgan
Letter from Archibald McClean to Charles S. Morgan regarding the 1830 Virginia Convention in Richmond, Virginia. In the letter, McClean talked about giving more representation in Virginia to the majority of residents instead of an oligarchy of the elite class. He ended his letter referring to Andrew Jackson, president of the United States, as a "plain, unostentatious republican in manners and quite accessible. But I could not receive the impression that he is a great man.
Mairéad McClean: Rerecorded Pasts
This was the first retrospective screening in London of the MAC International 2014 art prize winning Northern Irish artist-filmmaker Mairéad McClean. McClean’s films selected for this programme addressed the colliding fallibility of both government policy and personal memory, and the impact of this tension on family life and childhood in 1950s and 1970s Northern Ireland.
The event was supported by Arts Council England as part of the Whitechapel Gallery symposium & screening series titled Object! On the Documentary as Art. The screening was followed by a conversation with Irish art critic and 2013 Turner Prize judge Declan Long.
Selected by Minou Norouzi
Mcclean, A A, 4411160
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/402722Surname: MCCLEAN. Given Name(s) or Initials: A A. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 4411160. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-2574.223377
Item: [2016.0049.35015] "Mcclean, A A, 4411160
McClean - William A. McClean
A.B.; Phi Kappa Psi; Philomathaean. Entered Preparatory, 1876. LL.B., U. of Ga., 1883. Born Feb. 6, 1864, Gettysburg. Parents, Hon. William and Fannie R. (Riggin). For relatives see W.M., ex. 1851. Practicing Law, Gettysburg, 1885- . Publisher, Gettysburg Compiler, 1902-27. Married Oct. 6, 1886, Mary King, Gettysburg. Children: Frances Topper; Sara, b. 1893, d. 1895. Address: Gettysburg. Handwritten on back: ""Yours in '82, Wm Archibald McClean, [illegible], Pa"
W N McClean hydrometric data collection
Beginning in 1912, William Newsam McClean commenced a survey of the river levels and flows, loch levels, and rainfall inputs of the Inverness-shire River Garry catchment in Scotland, later expanding to the whole of the Ness basin, and the adjacent catchments of the Rivers Lochy, Spey and Aberdeenshire Dee. McClean disseminated the results of his survey through articles published by the Institution of Water Engineers, the Royal Meteorological Society and the Royal Geographical Society, as well as through privately publishing richly-illustrated quarterly and other reports of his monitoring programme. An extensive collection of McClean’s papers has been held in the University of Dundee Archives since 1997. Given their value to studies of hydrology and environmental change, time series of McClean’s measurements and calculations are being published online to enhance access and promote utilisation, in line with McClean’s commitment to publishing during the operation of his organisation River Flow Records. Time series of water levels, river flows and rainfall are being published in digital records linked from this record. Future publications of time series, journal articles and other digital objects will be linked to this central record and will be discoverable via digital object identifiers. Access to the archive of McClean papers may be arranged via University of Dundee Archives - see https://www.dundee.ac.uk/archive
Data supporting McClean et al (2022) Intercomparison of global reanalysis precipitation for flood risk modelling. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences.
All figures from McClean el al (2022) can be reproduced using the data provided here. The code used to create the figures is available as a separate item.</p
McClean Terrace
The photograph shows McClean Terrace on campus at Springfield College. The terrace is located behind Alumni Hall overlooking Lake Massasoit. Multiple students can be seen sitting on the steps leading into the building and there are also a few students sitting in the grass
Frank K. McClean flies through Tower Bridge
Francis Frank K. McClean, British aviator and father of British naval aviation, flying a Short Brothers floatplane through the Tower Bridge, London, England. McClean later landed the floatplane on the Thames River at Westminster.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms1_photographs/2058/thumbnail.jp
Code supporting McClean et al (2022) Intercomparison of global reanalysis precipitation for flood risk modelling. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences.
All figures from McClean el al (2022) can be reproduced using the code provided here. The data used to create the figures is available as a separate item. To run the scripts, extract data.zip into the same directory as the scripts then create a Python environment using environment.yml.</p
Fitzwilliam Museum McClean Bequest
Frank McClean (1837–1904) was not only an astronomer and pioneer of objective prism spectrography, but also an accomplished and systematic collector of art, books and manuscripts. McClean's collections, which were left to the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, on his death, were at that time the most notable bequest since the Museum's foundation. The fifteenth- and sixteenth-century printed books in his bequest, most of them produced in continental Europe, are described here in detail, with bibliographical descriptions and information on their provenance. Illustrated books are listed separately. The author of the catalogue, Charles Edward Sayle (1864–1924) was an erudite and popular librarian whose career was devoted to cataloguing and editing rare books in the University of Cambridge. His obituary praised him as 'a fine example of the type of man who likes to catalogue things in the right order'.</jats:p
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