Showing Collections: 1321 - 1330 of 4808
Governor Gaston Caperton Correspondence
Routine correspondence from the thirty-first governor of West Virginia, Gaston Caperton, about suggestions for government reorganization and changes in finance.
Governor Howard M. Gore, Two Invitations to Inauguration Events
Two invitations to events in connection with the inauguration of West Virginia Governor Howard M. Gore on Wednesday, 4 March 1925. Includes invitation to Inauguration (at noon) and Reception (at 8:30 PM), and separate invitation to the Inaugural Ball (at 10:30 PM).
Governor Jacob Beeson Jackson Extracts of Annual Messages to the State Legislature
Typescript extracts of Governor Jackson's annual messages to the state legislature, 1882, 1883, 1885 dealing with the affairs and requested appropriation of West Virginia University.
Governor John D. Rockefeller IV, Inaugural Invitation
Invitation to the inauguration and inaugural ball of Governor Rockefeller, Jan. 17, 1977. Includes one invitation to swearing-in ceremonies for judges and other elected state officials and a printed card for ordering tickers to the inaugural ball.
Governor Patrick Henry Land Grant
Xerox copy of land grant document signed by Virginia Governor Patrick Henry giving John Reed one thousand acres on the west bank of the Little Kanawha River.
G.P. Gardner, Three Ambrotypes
Three cased ambrotype photographs of members of the Gardner family from Point Pleasant in Mason County, West Virginia. Collection includes portrait of G.P. Gardner (pre-Civil War); G.P. Gardner wearing what is probably a Confederate uniform, including sword and pistol; and a portrait of a small child, probably G.P. Gardner's son. These three items do not include their lids. Gardner was at one time a Kanawha River boat pilot.
Grace E. Waters, Teacher, Papers
Grace Martin Taylor, Artist, Letter regarding Artist Hans Hofmann
Grace Martin Taylor, Artist, Papers
Papers, news clippings, programs, photos, certificates, and artwork of West Virginia artist, Grace Martin Taylor, who taught in Charleston at Mason College, and later at Morris Harvey. Her art, in several media including oils and watercolor, is modernist in style, showing a preference for abstraction. Also included is some material regarding her daughter, Lucie Anne Mellert, and her promotion of Taylor's art.