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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Ms-002: Franklin O. Loveland Papers, Christine M. Ameduri
Ms-002: Franklin O. Loveland Papers, Christine M. Ameduri
All Finding Aids
The Franklin O. Loveland Collection is divided into three Series. I. Charles S. Wake; II. Native American Culture and III. Caribbean Culture. Series I is material Loveland collected while conducting research on British anthropologist Charles S. Wake (1835 - 1910) and includes correspondence between Loveland and other Wake scholars. Series II constitutes the bulk of the collection and includes research, articles and various other materials on Native American cultures. Of special note to researchers is the field research Loveland conducted on Shawnee Indians in Oklahoma during his sabbatical during the summer and fall of 1985. Series III includes research, articles …
Naccs 26th Annual Conference, National Association For Chicana And Chicano Studies
Naccs 26th Annual Conference, National Association For Chicana And Chicano Studies
NACCS Conference Programs
Missionary Positions: Post-Colonialism to Pre-Sexto Sol
April 28-May 1, 1999
Radisson Hotel
Sagwitch, Scott R. Christensen
Sagwitch, Scott R. Christensen
All USU Press Publications
The Northwestern Shoshone knew as home the northern Great Salt Lake, Bear River, Cache, and Bear Lake valleys-northern Utah. Sagwitch was born at a time when his people traded with the mountain men. In the late 1850s, wagons brought Mormon farmers to settle in Cache Valley, the Northwestern Shoshone heartland. Emigrants and settlers reduced Shoshone access to traditional village sites and food resources. Relationships with the Mormons were mostly good but often strained, and the Shoshone treatment of migrants, who now traveled north and south as well as west and east through the area, was increasingly opportunistic. It only took …
Eugenia Mills Fulcher Oral Histories, Zach S. Henderson Library Special Collections
Eugenia Mills Fulcher Oral Histories, Zach S. Henderson Library Special Collections
Finding Aids
This collection consists of oral histories recorded by Eugenia Mills Fulcher from 1997-1998. The oral histories were used in Mills’ doctoral thesis, “Dreams Do Come True: How Rural One- and Two-Room Schools Influenced the Lives of African Americans in Burke County, Georgia, 1930- 1955,” defended in 1999 at Georgia Southern University. Materials include recordings on cassette tape and transcripts.
Find this collection in the University Libraries' catalog.