Showing Collections: 581 - 590 of 4807
Civilian Conservation Corps, Camp Bowers, Letters by Roscoe Sigley
Six letters authored by CCC participant from Camp Bowers, Valley Head, West Virginia. Subjects includes projects and recreation at the Camp, and family matters.
Civilian Conservation Corps, Camp Diary
Diary and photographs of Willard C. Westfall of Little Otter, West Virginia, who served with the Civilian Conservation Corps at Camp P-57 at Rupert, West Virginia. The journal begins with his training at Fort Knox and ends with his discharge from the Corps; it details day to day life in the camp. Also included is a songbook, "Standard Songs, Old and New", which was used in camp.
Civilian Conservation Corps, Company 3527, Records
Records of Company 3527 of the Civilian Conservation Corps in Kingwood and Morgantown, West Virginia. Includes a 1936 newsletter "Mountaineer" and an undated photocopy of a Thanksgiving menu and roster from Camp Preston in Kingwood. Also includes a 1937 newsletter "Cooper Crier" and one photocopy of a 1941 newsletter "Rhododendron" from Camp Rhododendron in Morgantown. Newsletter articles include a history of Company 3527, educational news, editorials, sports, camp life, and humor.
Civilian Conservation Corps, Photographs of Camp Cranberry, Webster County
Civilian Conservation Corps, Scrapbook by Ivan C. Owens
Civilian Conservation Corps, West Virginia Camp Newsletters and Radio Program
Clara Hough Diary
Diary of Clara Hough of Morgantown, West Virginia, documenting Hough's social life and activities in 1877 when she was twenty years old. Topics include reading, sewing, skating, calling on friends, attending church, dances, playing croquet, events at West Virginia University (WVU), and news of friends and family. Also includes notes from 1876 on WVU letterhead bearing the name of Miss Mamie Hough.
Clara Mills, Scrapbook by Morgantown Resident
Clarence Edwin Smith (1885-1959), Barns Family Papers
Correspondence, business, and legal papers, and photographs of Thomas Barns (1750-1836) and his son John S. Barns, who operated a grist and saw mill at Polsleys Mill (now Fairmont). Papers deal with a river trip to Indiana, 1837; coal mining in 1839; the money question, 1838; land transactions, farming, and mercantile operations of the Barns family; Rosecrans in Middle Tennessee, 1863; and the poor economic conditions, 1878.