72,724 research outputs found

    A. W. Thompson Civil War letters

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    This collection contains letters written to his family in South Carolina by Pvt. A. W. Thompson of Company G, 6th Arkansas Infantry, CSA

    Letter from James Thompson, El Paso, Illinois, to W. O. Ensign, Rutland, Illinois, March 5, 1889

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    A letter from James Thompson of El Paso, Illinois, to W. O. Ensign of Rutland, Illinois, about business and the illness of a mutual friend

    Interview with Daniel W. Thompson - OH 208

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    In his interview with Michael Cooke, Daniel W. Thompson discusses his involvement with the Progressive Democratic Party. Mr. Thompson details his involvement in the start of the Party and his role as the Secretary of the Columbia South Carolina Chapter. Mr. Thompson discusses the local chapter of the Progressive Democratic Party and its impact on the Columbia South Carolina area and African American voter registration.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/oralhistoryprogram/1234/thumbnail.jp

    South Thompson Planning Report

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    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

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    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

    [Telegram from R. A. Piehl, Jr. to Clark W. Thompson - Undated]

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    Telegram copy from R. A. Piehl, Jr. of Clear Lake Shores to U.S. Representative Clark W. Thompson, discussing the disruptive construction of a dirt road by a real estate developer that has inadvertently dammed Jarbo Bayou and "placed in jeopardy" the town's water sanitation. He mentions that engineers were "courteous but" provided "no immediate help", and asks Thompson for help to provide "immediate relief"

    South Thompson Valley and Pinantan official settlement plan.

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    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

    Kenneth W. Thompson Note to D. Allan Bromley

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    A short note for D. Allan Bromley from Kenneth W. Thompson, Director of The Miller Center at the University of Virginia. Thompson thanks Bromley for his willingness to join him at The Miller Center to discuss science and technology advising

    Letter from Fred Somerbey, Long Beach, California, to Haydn Thompson, Los Angeles, California, December 14, 1924

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    This letter is from the Haydn Neal Thompson Letter Collection. Contents of the collection include correspondence, primarily handwritten and of a personal nature. The bulk of materials are from Thompson's family members, including his mother, Marie Thompson, and sister, Janet Thompson, with a few letters from aunts and cousins. The remaining majority consists of letters from friends, primarily girlfriends. The conversation across letters emphasizes school and social happenings. Politics and the economy (Great Depression) do not receive much notice, though a change in the tone of letters is noticeable from the 1920's to the 1930's, becoming more sober and fatalistic
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