1,771,114 research outputs found

    Bob Ott

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    Photograph of man labeling ballot boxes. Robert Ott was the county district clerk

    Log cabin in the Hoodoos [01]

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    Peggy [Mrs. Clifford M. Ott] and a miner's log cabin located in the Hoodoos. Picture by Clifford M. Ott in 1976

    Skattaboe farm showing shocked fall wheat

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    Looking west at the Skattaboe farm north of the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1925 when farmed by Clifford M. Ott showing shocked fall wheat. Dark strip at right was the old channel of Paradise Creek. Picture by Clifford M. Ott

    Ott Wilson Interview, July 2011

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    Ott Wilson\u27s family purchased a house in Bath, Ohio in the early 20th century, and rented farm land from C.O. Hale, of the Hale Farm, during the 1920s and 1930s. Ott, his father and brothers did farmwork on their land and for Mr. Hale, as well as Hale\u27s neice, Clara Belle Ritchie, who later owned the property. This is Ott\u27s second interview on the topic. He shares more information on farming activities and working on the Hale Farm. He also provides information about the Hale and Ritchie families

    Ott Wilson Interview, 02 May 2011

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    Vernong Ott Wilson was born in 1916 in Bath, Ohio, and grew up in the summer house of the Hale Farm property. Ott\u27s family worked the Hale farm during the years when C.O. Hale was alive, as well as when Clara Belle Ritchie and her father took over the farm. Ott provided many memories of life on a farm during the Great Depression, and jobs he shared with his father hauling milk and farming. Ott also shared memories of bootlegging activities in Peninsula and Everett. His story gives a picture of what life was like subsistence and tenant farming during the early twentieth century

    Ott Wilson Interview, 02 May 2011

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    Vernon Ott Wilson was born in 1916 in Bath, Ohio, and grew up in the summer house of the Hale Farm property. Ott\u27s family worked the Hale farm during the years when C.O. Hale was alive, as well as when Clara Belle Ritchie and her father took over the farm. Ott provided many memories of life on a farm during the Great Depression, and jobs he shared with his father hauling milk and farming. Ott also shared memories of bootlegging activities in Peninsula and Everett. His story gives a picture of what life was like subsistence and tenant farming during the early twentieth century

    Oral History Interview: Julie Ott (1161)

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    In her 2009 interview with Emma Schroeder, Julie Ott shares her memories of the Eagle Heights Community Garden. Ott discusses her pre-UW gardening background, how she ended up in Eagle Heights, and taking a master gardening course. Ott discusses the Community Garden?s weed problems, organic gardening, pesticides, her tenure as chair of the garden committee, interacting with multilingual students, and what she has been doing since leaving UW-Madison. This interview was conducted for inclusion in a Master?s thesis on the Eagle Heights Community Gardens

    Ott Wilson Interview, 02 May 2011

    No full text
    Vernong Ott Wilson was born in 1916 in Bath, Ohio, and grew up in the summer house of the Hale Farm property. Ott\u27s family worked the Hale farm during the years when C.O. Hale was alive, as well as when Clara Belle Ritchie and her father took over the farm. Ott provided many memories of life on a farm during the Great Depression, and jobs he shared with his father hauling milk and farming. Ott also shared memories of bootlegging activities in Peninsula and Everett. His story gives a picture of what life was like subsistence and tenant farming during the early twentieth century
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