8,077 research outputs found

    Stars quilt by Pearl Thompson

    No full text
    Image of Stars quilt created in 1840-1850 by Pearl Thompson. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Pat Thompson as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994

    Letter from Pearl Thompson to Mrs. [Eartha] M. White

    No full text
    Thompson, Pearl. Correspondence: Letter from Pearl Thompson, Vero Beach, Florida to Mrs. Martha [Eartha] M. White, M. White, Jacksonville, Florida, regarding adoption appeal. Envelope included. Date: July 8, 193

    Letter from Pearl Thompson to Mrs. [Eartha] M. White

    No full text
    Correspondence: Letter from Pearl Thompson, Vero Beach, Florida, to Mrs. Martha [Eartha] M. White, Jacksonville, Florida, regarding adoption appeal. Envelope included. Date: July 15, 1930

    Oral History Interview with Lester Thompson

    No full text
    The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an interview with Lester Thompson. Thompson worked for a Houston shipyard as a Third-Class Shipfitter, working on liberty ships, prior to the start of the war. He joined the Navy in November of 1942. He volunteered for the submarine force, and served aboard the USS Peto (SS-265). From 1943 through 1944, Thompson completed war patrols four through seven aboard the Peto, traveling to New Guinea and Pearl Harbor, engaging in battle with several Japanese vessels. From mid-1945 through the end of the war, he was assigned to the USS Sirago (SS-485). He was discharged in late 1945

    Box 3, Neg. No. 825: Pearl Thompson

    No full text
    This black and white photograph features a portrait of Pearl Thompson standing. She is wearing a dark dress. Pearl Thompson ; W. M. Thompson - from Macksville, Kansas ordered the photograph.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/stafford_county/1306/thumbnail.jp

    South Thompson Planning Report

    No full text
    The South Thompson River Basin is a major sub-regional area of the Thompson-Nicola Regional District. The South Thompson serves as a pathway for major salmon runs, a corridor for rail and highway transportation, a recreational resource for the Kamloops/Shuswap population, a scenic treasure, an agricultural base, a reservoir of flat land, and a clean water supply. It contains a priceless record of our archaeological and historical past. At the same time, it is obvious that this area is a delicate and vulnerable ecological and aesthetic system. Haphazard or random residential sprawl, ill considered industrial development, or inappropriate land use of any type could endanger and destroy this resource permanently. A policy statement indicating the desired directions in which the Regional District should permit development to proceed is imperative. This document, then, is a statement of policy.Not peer reviewedPlanning documentInterim Repor

    South Thompson Settlement Strategy: Policy Document

    No full text
    The purpose of the South Thompson Settlement Strategy (STSS) is to strike a balance between anticipated settlement pressures and the many other important values in the South Thompson valley.Not peer reviewedPlanning documen

    South Thompson Valley and Pinantan official settlement plan.

    No full text
    The recommended policies contained in this plan provide the Thompson-Nicola Regional District with the means to protect and enhance the agricultural economic base, regulate the supply and location of rural residential growth, guide commercial and industrial development and satisfy the historical, recreational, social and environmental concerns of the settlement plan area.Not peer reviewedPlanning documen

    Thompson, Jeannie

    No full text
    Thompson is a librarian and archivist at North Pontotoc High School in Ecru, MS

    Mountain landscape

    No full text
    This unidentified mountain landscape in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park was photographed by Jim Thompson. This image is from the collection of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club, a group formed in the fall of 1924 after a group of outdoor enthusiasts hiked up to Mount LeConte. Enjoying the spectacular views, they decided to form a hiking club. The club was formally organized in Knoxville, Tennessee. Early club members included Carlos Campbell; Paul Adams, builder of Mount LeConte Lodge; author Laura Thornborough; Paul Fink, who served on the Park’s nomenclature committee; and Albert “Dutch” Roth. Jim Thompson was their “official” photographer
    corecore