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A. B. and Hattie Kotula Stephens
Photograph shows studio portrait of Hattie Kotula Stephens standing next to her husband, A. B. Stephens, who is seated in chair
[Letter from Russell S. Stephens to Major T. N. Carswell - September 16, 1941]
A letter written to Major T. N. Carswell, Schroeder Hotel, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from Russell S. Stephens, Abilene Printing & Stationery Co., Abilene, Texas, dated September 16, 1941. Stephens outlines a plan discussed by the executive meeting of the American Legion for the Armistice Day program requesting Carswell's thoughts and suggestions on the plan
Marriage record of Stephens, Henry T. and Stephens, Minnie
Marriage license for Henry T. Stephens and Minnie Stephens. I.W. Bearss was the officiant
[Letter from Russell S. Stephens to T. N. Carswell - April 12, 1938]
A letter written to Mr. T. N. Carswell, Clifton Forge, Virginia from Russell S. Stephens, Abilene Printing & Stationery Co., dated April 12, 1938. Humorous gab regarding his own reaction to Charlie Barnes' oil deal. He expresses his dismay that Carswell has flu deeming it unwise to undertake a return trip until he has recovered. He advises that heavy snow killed the fruit but that in spite of the loss they "will have a fine year in West Texas". He expresses his hope that Carswell has an early recovery and returns soon "full of enthusiasm and zeal for your adopted West Texas home"
Letter of Marcus C. Stephens (Quincy, Florida, 1835)
The writer of the above letter was Marcus Cicero Stephens of Newbern, North Carolina. During the early years of territorial Florida, many settlers came to the region from the Carolinas and Virginia, due, partly, to the desire to establish pioneer plantations as speculative ventures and, partly, to the need of expansion to take care of the surplus slave property. Stephens was apparently a member of this group. His family was well connected, as his mother was the niece of Commodore James Barron of the “Chesapeake” fame. The plantation which was being established was located near Quincy, Florida ; and here the group, consisting of father, mother, and eight children, took its part in the development of the new state. One of the sons, Samuel Barron Stephens, was a lieutenant of a Florida company during the War for Southern Independence and fought at the Battle of the Old Men at Natural Bridge. The original letter is in the possession of Mrs. Caroline Stephens Scott of Tallahassee, to whom acknowledgment is made. To Dr. Kathryn T. Abbey, of Florida State College for Women, is due the suggestion of its publication, its transcribing, and this note
Funeral Notice, Captain Pearl T. Stephens, May 16, 1919
This funeral notice announces the funeral services of Captain Pearl T. Stephens of Kosciusko, Mississippi on May 16, 1919 with Reverend E. H. Cunningham and R. S. Lawson officiating.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-webb-collection/1230/thumbnail.jp
Sitona suturalis Stephens 1831
* Sitona suturalis Stephens, 1831 Records. LUG [Yunakov et al., 2018: 336]. Localities. Donetsk Region. Donetsk, 3.06.2010, 3.05.2011. Lugansk Region. Melovoe Distr.: Strel’tsovskaya steppe NR, 2.05.2000.Published as part of Arzanov, Yu. G., Martynov, V. V. & Nikulina, T. V., 2021, A contribution to the fauna of weevil beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionoidea) of the Central Donbass, pp. 5-44 in Caucasian Entomological Bulletin 17 (1) on page 34, DOI: 10.23885/181433262021171-544, http://zenodo.org/record/814564
Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt
Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.
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