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Articles 2641 - 2652 of 2652

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 1, No. 11, Wku Student Affairs Jul 1925

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 1, No. 11, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. Articles:

  • Noted Author Speaks at Chapel – Walter Hart
  • Gordon Wilson & L.Y. Lancaster Conduct River Tour
  • Miss Ella Jefferies at University of Chicago
  • Townsend, Arlie. Mammoth Cave Party
  • Sandwich Shop Has Splendid Success
  • A.B. Class of 1925 Much Sought by Schools
  • A Diversity of Sports Holds Forth on the Hill for the Summer
  • Wilson, George. Passing Institutions of the Teachers College – Uncle Ed
  • Dr. Frost Visitor Here
  • Prof. Franz Strahm Receives Notice of Death of Kin – Susan Jones
  • Miss Jane Culbert is Married in Nashville
  • Twilight …


The Open Shop, Number Five, Business Men's Association Of Omaha Jan 1920

The Open Shop, Number Five, Business Men's Association Of Omaha

Digitized Books

No abstract provided.


Letter From Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson To Philander C. Knox, January 4, 1910, Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson Jan 1910

Letter From Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson To Philander C. Knox, January 4, 1910, Francis Mairs Huntington-Wilson

Correspondence With Philander C. Knox

The document is a typed letter from the Assistant Secretary of State to Philander C. Knox concerning the appointment of a new Secretary for the Legation in Liberia.


Ua1a The Illustrated South, Vol. 3, No. 1, The Illustrated South Jun 1901

Ua1a The Illustrated South, Vol. 3, No. 1, The Illustrated South

WKU Archives Records

Single sheet newspaper printed in Louisville, Kentucky.

  • Graduating Class of Potter College at Bowling Green, 1901
  • The Girl He Married Secret
  • Joseph Reed, President Lawyers' Club
  • If You Would Read Character Study Lips
  • After the Quarrel
  • Lynchings
  • O'Malley, Charles. Hush, Hark, the Fairyland Bells Are Ringing


Warren County, Kentucky Abstracted Burial Permits, 1877-1913, Kentucky Library Research Collections Dec 1876

Warren County, Kentucky Abstracted Burial Permits, 1877-1913, Kentucky Library Research Collections

Research Collections

These select records (1877-1913) are equivalent to an early death certificate since similar information is contained on both records. The genealogical data that may be included is the name of the deceased, place of birth, residence, intended interment, name of mother, name of father, doctor/physician present, date, place, and cause of death, cemetery, undertaker, age, sex, race, marital status, and occupation.


Apportionment Of Representation: Speech Of Hon. Lot M. Morrill, Of Maine, In The Senate Of The United States, March 8, 1866, Lot M. Morrill Dec 1865

Apportionment Of Representation: Speech Of Hon. Lot M. Morrill, Of Maine, In The Senate Of The United States, March 8, 1866, Lot M. Morrill

Maine History Documents

A speech given by Maine Senator Lot M. Morrill in 1866 in support of giving the right to vote to freed slaves.


Muhlenberg County, Kentucky Black Marriages, 1866-1872 (Mss 701), Manuscripts & Folklife Archives Dec 1865

Muhlenberg County, Kentucky Black Marriages, 1866-1872 (Mss 701), Manuscripts & Folklife Archives

MSS Finding Aids

Muhlenberg County, Kentucky Black Marriages, 1866-1872. Information include: names of bride and groom, witnesses, and minister along with marriage date and place of residence. An alphabetical index is located at the back of the volume.


Colonization Dec 1862

Colonization

Civil War Text

Speech on Colonization, anonymous, ca. 1863. A speech delivered on the efficacy and possibilities of emancipation with colonization, suggesting the expatriation of American slaves to the Caribbean upon emancipation (Figures 9 & 10.) A fascinating speech, not entirely without compassion, but pretty adamant about removing freed black people from the U.S., possibly to Haiti, so it also falls within our West Indies Collection. String-tied sheets. Handwritten in cursive with some corrections and penciled annotations. Includes several brief newspaper clippings (one clipping lacking). Title at the top of the first page. Date from dealer's catalog. Author anonymous. The transcript for the …


National Anti-Slavery Standard Vol. Xxi. No. 51, Saturday, May 4, 1861 May 1861

National Anti-Slavery Standard Vol. Xxi. No. 51, Saturday, May 4, 1861

Civil War Text

The National Anti-Slavery Standard was the official weekly newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, established in 1840 under the editorship of Lydia Maria Child and David Lee Child. The paper published continuously until the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1870. Its motto was “Without Concealment—Without Compromise.” It contained Volume I, number 1, June 11, 1840 through volume XXX, number 50, April 16, 1870. The digitized issue available at UCF Special Collections is: Vol. XXI. No. 51, Saturday, May 4, 1861.


The Crime Against Kansas: The Apologies For The Crime; The True Remedy. Speech Of Hon. Charles Sumner. In The Senate Of The United States,19th And 20th..., Charles Sumner Dec 1855

The Crime Against Kansas: The Apologies For The Crime; The True Remedy. Speech Of Hon. Charles Sumner. In The Senate Of The United States,19th And 20th..., Charles Sumner

Civil War Text

Loose title page and introduction page of the book: "The Crime Against Kansas: The Apologies for the Crime; The True Remedy. Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner. In the Senate of the United States, 19th and 20th, May, 1856." The introduction page, however, is covered by a clipped article: "Letter of the Hon. Edward Bates of Missouri."


An Address Delivered To The Colonization Society Of Kentucky, Kentucky Library Research Collections Dec 1834

An Address Delivered To The Colonization Society Of Kentucky, Kentucky Library Research Collections

Research Collections

No abstract provided.


History Of The American Colony In Liberia, From December 1821 To 1823, J. Ashmun Dec 1825

History Of The American Colony In Liberia, From December 1821 To 1823, J. Ashmun

Maine History Documents

From page one: A Memoir of the Exertions and Sufferings of the American Colonists, connected with the occupation of Cape Montserado: embracing the particular History of the Colony of Liberia from December 1821 to 1823.

Written by Jehudi Ashmun, one of the first two professors of the Bangor Theological Seminary in Bangor, Maine. He retained his professorship during the period of working in the new colony of Monrovia, Liberia.