166,038 research outputs found
Emily Smith Stewart correspondence, 1943
Emily Smith Stewart correspondence from 1943. Includes a letter from her father, George Albert Smith, to A. J. Lobb, manager at the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minnesota, concerning Emily\u27s impending visit to the clinic for an operation; a long letter from Emily to son Bob for his nineteenth birthday; a letter from daughter Martie (Martha ReJune) Stewart to Emily at the Mayo Clinic; transcript of an "Excerpt from Arthur Garth\u27s broadcast, October 8, 1943" about public statements by J. Reuben Clark, First Counsellor to the President of the L.D.S. Church, and Duane G. Hunt, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake; a letter from Mrs. Arthur L. Beeley, Chair of the Women\u27s Civilian Naval Personnel Committee and Lieutenant LeRoy D. Simons, Utah Public Relations Officer, to Emily Stewart, inviting her to serve as a member of the state advisory Board of the Women\u27s Civilian Naval Personnel Committee; and follow-up letters from personnel at the Mayo Clinic concerning her recent treatmen
[Letter from C. L. Stewart to Aaron B. Quinby, September 10, 1841]
Letter from C. L. Stewart to Aaron Balderston Quinby
Professor A. L. Kroeber 1939
Black and white photograph from Omer C. Stewart Album 2, page 33, showing UC-Berkeley Anthropology Professor Alfred L. Kroeber in 1939
When Races Collide: Willie Stewart and the Voluntary Desegregation of Tacoma Public Schools
On the heels of the Brown v. Board of Education decision and the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Tacoma School District took voluntary measures to desegregate a select number of schools with high non-white enrollment. The district superintendent, Dr. Angelo Giaudrone, drew attention to the de facto segregation, and primarily focused on two elementary schools: Stanley Elementary, with a black population of 64 percent and McCarver Elementary, with a black population of 84 percent. In 1963, a subcommittee was formed to analyze and study the de facto segregation and provide recommendations for potential solutions. On July 8, 1966, a plan was announced by the school board for an optional enrollment program that relied on closing McCarver Junior High and to provide limited open enrollment to students affected by the closing. The district hired its first black principal, Willie Stewart, in 1970 in order to bridge the divide between the school district and the black community. Stewart led the summer counseling program to work with families on the transition between the closing of their neighborhood school and their new school of their choice. According to the United States Commission on Civil Rights a decade later, the summer counseling program was pivotal to the success of the voluntary desegregation program in the Tacoma School District.The oral history interview with Willie Stewart forms the core of a class project by Katherine L. Jennison for the Community History Project under the supervision of Professor Michael K. Honey. The main contents of Jennison's project are contained in a looseleaf binder, which includes the sound recording and transcript of the interview, Jennison's research paper, and related research materials
Letter from Lewis J. Stewart to Laurence L. Doggett (August 12, 1918)
A letter from Lewis J. Stewart to Laurence L. Doggett dated August 12, 1918. In the letter Stewart tells Doggett that he is applying to an Officers Training Camp and they would like to have a letter from the school stating his Qualifications and Education, Stewart asks if Doggett could send a letter verifying this information.Lewis J. Stewart graduated from Springfield College in 1918. After graduating he would enter the service for WWI until 1919. After the war, he would become an Agent for the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. until 1920. He was an Insurance Broker/Agent from 1920 to 1962
Letter from Lewis J. Stewart to Laurence L. Doggett (August 12, 1918)
A letter from Lewis J. Stewart to Laurence L. Doggett dated August 12, 1918. In the letter Stewart tells Doggett that he is applying to an Officers Training Camp and they would like to have a letter from the school stating his Qualifications and Education, Stewart asks if Doggett could send a letter verifying this information.Lewis J. Stewart graduated from Springfield College in 1918. After graduating he would enter the service for WWI until 1919. After the war, he would become an Agent for the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. until 1920. He was an Insurance Broker/Agent from 1920 to 1962
Emily Smith Stewart correspondence, 1927
Emily Smith Stewart correspondence from 1927. Includes a note from Nell Sumsion with a typescript giving the lineage of the Woodruff family in England and America; a letter from "Mother" [probably Lucy Woodruff Smith] at Orangeville, Utah; typescript copy of a warranty deed in which Lucy Woodruff Smith conveyed to daughter Emily Smith Stewart a tract of land in Salt Lake County; a letter from Wanda H. (Mrs. Robert L.) Reed of Twin Falls, Idaho; and a series of letters signed "Kallie," then on leave in New York City but planning to return to work in Salt Lake Cit
Torzi, Kupse, Fechser, Charney, Play: L\u27ete de St Martin
Black and white photograph from Omer C. Stewart Album 2, page 2, showing four associates of Omer C. Stewart, identified as Torzi, Kupse, Fechser, and Charney, in a play in 1930
Interview with Jamie Stewart, Downwinders of Utah Archive, September 6, 2017, Audio
Audio (27 minutes, 2 seconds) of an interview conducted by Justin Sorensen with Jamie Stewart. Interview includes a prepared statement where Stewart discusses traveling to the first Radiation Victims Conference, and attempts to develop support for further research on the topic of the effects of radiation to the autoimmune system. Stewart also discusses family medical issues
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