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    Letter from Lucius D. Whaley, Frankfort, Kentucky, to Mary M. Whaley, Cleveland, Ohio, November 23, 1862

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    A letter from Lucius D. Whaley, wounded Union soldier at Frankfurt, Kentucky, to his sister, Mary M. Whaley of East Cleveland, Ohio, 23 November 1862

    [Affidavit In Any Fact by William Wayne Whaley #1]

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    Affidavit In Any Fact by William Wayne Whaley, a cab driver. He describes picking up a young man around 12:30 pm and taking him from a Greyhound Bus Station to the 500 Block of North Beckley. He later identified the man in a line up and discovered he was Lee Harvey Oswald

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Letter from I. H. Kempner to Whaley-Eaton Services expressing interest in the weekly letters from Whaley-Eaton and mentions a letter received from a European business associate. He also discusses a letter provided by a party, temporarily residing in a neutral country, who was an officer in the British Army and shares his experiences and observations

    [Statement by William Wayne Whaley]

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    Handwritten statement by William Wayne Whaley. He states that he was driving a cab when he picked up a passenger who was later identified as Lee Harvey Oswald

    Lucius D. Whaley letter, MSS.1769

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    Abstract: Letter from Lucius D. Whaley, wounded Union Civil War soldier at Frankfurt, Kentucky, to his sister Mary M. Whaley of East Cleveland, Ohio, 23 November 1862.Scope and Content Note: This collection consists of one letter from Lucius D. Whaley at Frankfort, Kentucky, to his sister Mary M. Whaley of East Cleveland, Ohio, 23 November 1862. The letter is written on stationery with an engraving illustrating "Desperate Bayonet Charge at the Battle of Winchester" [today labeled the First Battle of Kernstown], March 23 1862. The accompanying envelope is also illustrated with a scene depicting a soldier bidding his wife or girlfriend farewell, the words "The Girl I Left Behind Me" beneath it, and below them a stanza from an unattributed poem. Whaley was evidently a convalescing soldier about to be discharged and sent home, and that subject occupies the bulk of his letter.Biographical/Historical Note: Union Civil War soldier, 1862

    Richard I. Whaley, 88

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    Richard "Dick" Whaley, a civil engineer who had his own business for many years and worked as a utility inspector for the city of Palo Alto, has died

    Robert Bob Whaley Interview, October 14, 2011

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    Bob Whaley of Missoula, Montana, discusses his joining the Officer Candidacy Program, while attending Carroll College, as a U.S. Marine. He speaks to his crashes in helicopters, his experiences in Vietnam, and his thoughts on Operation Dewey Canyon, as well as his travels to Ireland. The interviewee\u27s full birth date has been restricted in this interview.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/gathering/1072/thumbnail.jp

    Robert Whaley Interview, June 27, 1984

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    Robert Whaley relates anecdotes from the three years he worked as a smokejumper in Missoula, Montana, from 1956 to 1958. In particular, he describes the physical nature of the training, smokejumper equipment, and firefighting procedures and signals.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/smokejumpers/1105/thumbnail.jp

    Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)

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    Ditto copy of Whaley-Eaton Service letter no. 22 providing a summary of current political events in Woodrow Wilson's admnistration

    [Statement by William Wayne Whaley, concerning Lee Harvey Oswald]

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    Handwritten statement by William Wayne Whaley, concerning a passenger in a taxi cab identified as Lee Harvey Oswald
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