1,545,004 research outputs found

    A. Erlebuch to Mary Edwards Walker

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    Letter to Mary Edwards Walker relating to Walker's lecture arrangements. 1 letter

    A. Nimmo to Mary Edwards Walker

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    Letters to Mary Edwards Walker relating to Walker's lecture arrangements. 11 letters

    Dee A. "Butch" Walker Vietnam War collection

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    This collection contains an oral history interview with Dee A. "Butch" Walker from March 2017, as well as documents and photographs related to his military service

    Sara A. Smithson to Mary Edwards Walker

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    Correspondence from Sara A. Smithson to Mary Edwards Walker regarding a visit to see Mr. Harltey's ill son. 1 letter

    James A. Betts to Mary Edwards Walker

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    Letter of authorization from James A. Betts of the Syracuse Medical and Surgical Journal to Mary Edwards Walker. 1 letter

    Mary A. Davies to Mary Edwards Walker

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    Letters to Mary Edwards Walker relating to Walker's lecture arrangements. 2 letters

    The Walker girls

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    Yvonne, Gwen, Dorothy and Carol Walker are seated on a rug

    Carol, Yvonne and Gwen Walker

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    The Walker girls, wearing daisy chains, are in a paddock at 'Riverdale'

    Letter from Mary Walker to her husband, Cyrus Walker, after a bad day

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    Cyrus Walker was the oldest son of the early Oregon Territory missionaries Elkanah and Mary Richardson Walker. He grew up at Tshimakain in the 1830s-40s, where he learned the native Spokane language. After joining the U.S. army during the Civil War and then attempting to make a living as a farmer, he became a teacher at the Warm Springs Indian Agency. These letters, documents and clippings shed light on his experiences as a missionary, a soldier, a pioneer and a teacher at Warm Springs. This collection was donated to Pacific University by Betty Thorne, a descendant of the Walkers

    Samuel A. T. Walker 1881 Diary on the Forest Grove Indian School

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    The 1881 diary of Samuel A. T. Walker (also known as "Saturday Sam" Walker), a resident of Forest Grove, Oregon. He was a shoemaker by trade with a significant side business as a fiddler at dances. At the time he was writing this diary, he was the shoemaking instructor at the Forest Grove Indian School. The diary has brief summaries of his daily activities, often just 1-3 sentences long. It provides insight into the everyday work done by Native students at the school. The diary is written into a blank booklet that was given away as a promotional freebie by Alanson 'Lant' Hinman Jr., who was selling insurance at the time. The diary is accompanied by a transcript of the text related to the Indian School
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