245,012 research outputs found

    C. Bracebridge to Mary Edwards Walker

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

    Jane C. Andrews to Mary Edwards Walker

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

    Walker, Robert C. - An inaugural dissertation on catamenia

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    Handwritten inaugural dissertation on catamenia by R. C. Walker, of Alabama.Inaugural dissertation; no. 373

    Telegram from Frank C. Walker to Amon G. Carter, Jr.

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    Telegram from Frank C. Walker to Amon G. Carter, Jr. upon the death of Amon Giles Carter. The telegram expresses condolences about his death.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_meachamcarterpapers/1470/thumbnail.jp

    Letter dated 16 March 1936 from Josephine C. Walker to friends, Part 2

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    Page 2 of a letter from Josephine C. Walker at Foochow, China, describing cold weather making things even harder for the poor, beggar

    Photograph of Bernard Ridley Walker, Hobart, c.1886

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    Photograph of Bernard Ridley Walker, Hobart, c.1886

    Receipt for Cyrus Walker from C. E. Brownwell, Proprietor of the Post Office and Grocery

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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

    Correspondence regarding Horace Kephart collection

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    This 1973 correspondence, between Congressman Roy A. Taylor, Ronald Walker, Lawrence C. Hadley, discusses the transfer of Horace Kephart collection from the library of Great Smoky Mountains National Park to Western Carolina University. Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author and promoter of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park

    Introduction: New perspectives on Fama

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    The essays in this collection demonstrate how Fama and her sisters, gossip and rumour, were central in private and public discourses about state and society in early modern Europe.Claire Walker and Heather Ker
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