Showing Collections: 341 - 350 of 388
The Artist’s Blacksmith’s Association of North America Periodicals (ABANA)
This collection of The Anvil’s Ring contains issues from 1974 to 2018. An index is included for issues not present in this current collection which can still be ordered from the ABANA organization. The collection of the The Hammer’s Blow, also by the Artist-Blacksmiths’ Association of North America, dates from Spring 1993 to 2018.
The Georgia Association of Historians Collection
The collection consists of a variety of materials which document the history and activities of the Georgia Association of Historians from its inception in 1973 until the present. Types of information included in the collection include, but are not limited to: correspondence of officers, annual meeting notes and reports, financial records, membership lists, organizational bylaws, newsletters, and copies of all extant copies of the Journal of the Georgia Association of Historians.
The Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) Collection
The Roy L. Culliver Family Scrapbooks
This collection consists of three scrapbooks, 2 green, 1 black. The two green ones are very annotated, describing the family members and photos, trips the family took and children’s activities. The Columbus High School photographs of bands, choirs and programs are especially interesting. There is a unique photo of the Muscogee County Elementary Band, no date. All the students are dressed in white clothing, a hat, with a cloak around their shoulders.
Thomas Bethune Wiggins "Blind Tom" Collection
This collection includes original sheet music, as well as recordings and biographical information about Blind Tom.
Thomas Greene Collection
Thomas L. French Collection
This collection is an eclectic assemblage of mostly published secondary materials, including a 78 rpm phonograph record, which reflect French's interests: surveying, archival policy of the University of Alabama, maps, and general history.
3 boxes (2 l.f.)
Thompson Family Collection
The bulk of these letters appear to be between James M. Thompson and his mother, Mrs. Margaret A. Younger, of Columbus, Georgia, with several to the post-Civil War ones to his wife, Lizzie. Also included are scans of photographs, some identified, of family members, as well as of several steamships. The physical objects metioned below, such as the brown wallet, were returned to the family.