Showing Collections: 501 - 510 of 4807
Charles Mortimer Bishop (1827-1896) Papers
Charles N. Brown Medical Journal
Medical journal of Dr. Charles N. Brown, a Preston County doctor and son of Dr. Ashford Brown. Entries include date of visit, patient's name, services rendered, and payment received. Some entries include case notes. There are also notes on how to cultivate ginseng.
Charles P. Harper Letters
Two letters from the auditor of the state of West Virginia, John C. Bond, and the treasurer, W.S. Johnson, relating to payment of money out of the state treasury. Charles H. Ambler asked Harper to solicit these letters.
Charles Peters, Editor and Author, Papers
Charles R. Nuzum, Collector, Surveyor's Compass
Surveyor's compass from the collection of Charles R. Nuzum, late of Cumberland, Maryland. Includes brass compass, two sight vanes, and wooden mount. The compass was made by "F.W. and R. King"; the maker's mark is visible on the compass face. Frederick W. and Richard King operated as makers of mathematical and nautical instruments between the years of 1851 and 1875 in Baltimore, Maryland.
Charles R. Sleeth, Professor, Typescript Autobiography of Life in West Virginia
Typescript of 563 pages by Charles R. Sleeth regarding his childhood and youth in West Virginia in the 1920s, including stories about Summersville in Nicholas County.
Charles R. Williams, Collector, Papers
Charles S. McElroy Papers
Collection includes correspondence, deeds, stock certificates, and miscellaneous material of a Fairview, W. VA. Businessman. Included is a typescript carbon copy of the bylaws for the Retail Merchants Protective Association of Amos, W. Va. The correspondence centers mostly on property matters involving an oil lease.
Charles Shetler, Curator and Historian, Papers
Material written and collected by a former curator of the West Virginia and Regional History Collection that includes bibliographies, transcripts, photostats, papers and historical sketches on various aspects of West Virginia history. Items deal with prominent West Virginia University historians, the Civil War, early settlement, industrial growth, and West Virginia University. A number of letters and circulars discuss the West Virginia Historical Society in 1869.