229,499 research outputs found
[Photograph of C. B. Morgan With Pointer]
Photograph of C. B. Morgan pointing a stick at portions of his Dr. Pepper mural which have been repainted during its restoration. An A-frame ladder is partially visible to the right, with a horizontal scaffold balanced on the lowest rung
N. C. (Norman C.) Morgan Collection
Typed copy of a poem about Jasper B. Chapin, referred to as the "Father of Fargo," written in 1896 by N.C. (Norman C.) Morgan after Chapin's death. Poem appeared in Fargo Forum & Daily Republican
[Photograph of C.B. Morgan and a Construction Worker]
Photograph of C. B. Morgan standing on an A-frame ladder near the right side of a Dr. Pepper mural near the completion of its restoration. An unidentified construction worker wearing a flannel shirt and yellow hard hat is standing on the right side of the image, facing Morgan
[Photograph of C.B. Morgan Restoring Dr. Pepper Mural]
Photograph of C. B. Morgan, the original artist, standing on a ladder scaffold to repaint portions of a Dr. Pepper mural
Announcement of the Morgan High School, Morgan, Texas.
Publication includes courses of study for the elementary, intermediate, high school, and music departments, along with rules and regulations and other basic information about the school and the town of Morgan.Includes advertising matter. Covers the school year of September - May
[Photograph of C.B. Morgan]
Photograph C.B. Morgan, the original artist, smiling, and standing near the right side of a Dr. Pepper mural near the completion of its restoration. An A-frame ladder is visible next to him, on the right side of the image
UA94/6/1 Clinic Covid-19 Reflections - Morgan
Reflections of Covid-19 pandemic by WKU Communication Sciences & Disorders undergraduate student C. Morgan
William G. Morgan, c. 1895-1896
A cabinet card of William G. Morgan, the inventor of Volleyball, taken while he was working as a physical director at the Auburn, Maine YMCA. The card is signed by Morgan and dated 1896. It was given to the college by Morgan in 1932.For more information on William G. Morgan see https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/723
Identified Converts (to the L.D.S. Church) of John H. Morgan. unidentified convert of Elder Morgan [02]
Black and white photograph of an unidentified woman, one of John H. Morgan\u27s converts to the L.D.S. Church
Morgan Hall, Penland, N.C.
This photographic postcard depicts the fireplace in the large living room of Morgan Hall on the campus of the Appalachian School in Penland, North Carolina, circa 1920s-1938. The scene includes many handmade items such as wrought iron andirons and lighting fixtures, broom, and stool. The photograph for this postcard was taken by Bayard Wootten sometime during the 1920s-1930s. Morgan Hall was built in 1917 as a rectory for the school and served many functions for the school, including faculty residence, dormitory, classroom, and weaving room for the Division of Fireside industries (c. 1923-26). Several years after its construction the structure was named Morgan Hall in honor of the Rev. Rufus Morgan, the mission school's director from 1914 to 1918. From 1923 to 1938 the Appalachian School served as the umbrella institution under which the Penland Weavers and Potters were organized and the Penland School of Handicrafts (now Penland School of Crafts) was established
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