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The state papers and letters of Sir Ralph Sadler, knight-banneret

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    Ralph Arnold papers

    Manuscripts

    The collection contains letters, documents, including 190,000 reports, 1200 maps, 500 photographs, and 8200 pieces of printed material related to the life and career of geologist and petroleum engineer Ralph Arnold. Subjects represented in the collection include: mining, petroleum, and seismology in the Western United States as well as Canada, Mexico, Cuba, and South America; political papers from 1914 to 1956, mostly concerning the campaign of Herbert Hoover for president; family and personal papers from 1836 to 1961 of Arnold and his father, Delos Arnold, containing source material on Pasadena and Southern California local history. The collection also contains Arnold's field books, including those made at Stanford University with the U.S. Geological Survey from 1900 to 1909. Arnold's petroleum reports, numbering about 1,000 reports, extending all over the United States, Alaska, Canada, and Mexico, are a valuable resource for studying the Petroleum industry during this period.

    mssArnold

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    Ralph H. Cameron Papers

    Manuscripts

    This collection consists of materials relating to Ralph H. Cameron's political and business activities, mostly in the years between 1903 and 1912. Box 1 consists of manuscript files, including land and mining claims, financial documents, and political documents, including press releases regarding statehood and ranching. Also included with the manuscripts are materials related to bills introduced by Cameron, Letters Protesting the Statehood Bill, and Congratulatory telegrams. It was decided to group these materials together, rather than separating them among the correspondence, because of the close thematic connection among these items. The Bills Introduced includes depredation claims reported to Cameron, for which he sought Congressional consideration, and consist of correspondence with the claimants and Commissioner of Indian Affairs Robert G. Valentine, copies of the legislation Cameron sponsored, and Congressional Committee reports on the proposals. Also included with Bills Introduced is material relating to a bridge over the Little Colorado River in Arizona for which Cameron sought Congressional funding. The letters protesting statehood consist almost entirely of letters, many of them mechanically reproduced or copied verbatim, demanding that Arizona be allowed to maintain its provisions for a literacy requirement in voter registration. One file consists of congratulatory telegrams sent on the occasion of Arizona's statehood. Some correspondence related to these topics may also be present in the main correspondence section filed under the name of the author. The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence. Among the most prominent subjects is Cameron's business activity at the Grand Canyon, including the Bright Angel Trail and the Cameron Hotel and Camps, and the conflicts that his interests triggered with the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad (ATSF), the Santa Fe Land Improvement Company, the Fred Harvey Company, the Hotel El Tovar, the United States Department of Interior, and the United States Forest Service. There is some discussion of travel and tourism to the Grand Canyon, including discussions by Cameron's agents of competing with the ATSF and Fred Harvey Company over visitors, but the bulk of the Grand Canyon-related materials deal with Cameron's tenuous land and mining claims and water rights in the canyon region. Cameron had many partners, agents, and competitors in his endeavors, and the collection reveals Cameron's struggles to have his land and mining claims recognized by the United States Forest Service, and his efforts to prevent the designation of the Grand Canyon as a National Park. Prominent individuals represented in the collection include attorneys Horace F. Clark and E. M. Doe, Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh, Charles N. Fowler, Ethan A. Hitchcock, T. E. Pollock, Gifford Pinchot, James Garfield, James Wilson, and Martin Buggeln. A second major subject represented in the correspondence is Cameron's involvement in Republican politics in the early twentieth century. As Arizona's territorial delegate to Congress, Cameron fielded a variety of complaints and requests from constituents and other favor seekers. Prior to the final passage of Arizona's statehood enabling act, Cameron was deeply involved in debates over Arizona's proposed constitution, particularly the question of English literacy requirements in voting. Also of particular note are numerous letters between Cameron and his allies and opponents over Arizona political appointments, including court seats, local postmaster positions, and the Arizona Territory's governorship. Furthermore, the collection reveals Cameron's deep involvement with the Republican Party's organization at territorial and national levels. The collection includes materials related to the 1912 race for the Republican nomination for President, between William H. Taft and Theodore Roosevelt. Cameron and his fellow Taft supporters wrote back and forth often in the Spring of 1912 as they worked to ensure that Arizona "went with Taft." A few items deal with Cameron's failed campaign for the new state's Senate seat in 1912, but most illuminate aspects of Cameron's political activities during his Congressional period. Prominent correspondents on political issues include Cameron's secretary, B. W. "Bernie" Zachau, Arizona Governors Joseph H. Kibbey and Richard E. Sloan, Arizona Republican Party Chair Hoval Smith, Republican National Committee Chair Frank Hitchcock, Cameron's predecessor as Territorial Delegate, Marcus A. "Mark" Smith, and George U. Young. John Lorenzo Hubbell was involved heavily in Arizona politicsThe collection also includes correspondence with Reed Smoot, William H. Taft, Charles D. Hilles, Albert J. Beveridge, Dwight B. Heard, James H. McClintock, and E. B. Perrin. There is one letter from Jane Addams, as well as a response from Cameron's secretary, regarding the establishment of a Federal Children's Bureau, and telegrams from Alexander O. Brodie responding to Cameron's requests to move the Navajo Indian Reservation's boundaries. Cameron also kept letters of introduction written on his behalf to prominent politicians and business leaders. Authors of these include William Dunseath Eaton, Isaac Taft Stoddard, George Mauk, and Fletcher M. Doan, while recipients include Robert E. Doan, Coert DuBois, Henry Clay Hansbrough, Henry B. F. Macfarland, William E. Mason, Arthur Murray, Harry S. New, Thomas Ryan, William Alden Smith, and George Sutherland. The collection also includes a small ephemera section, which consists of tourism-related materials, invitations, bulletins, Congressional Bills, newspaper clippings, and tickets to the 1912 Republican National Convention.

    mssCameron papers

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    United States. Surveyor General. 2 letters (1909) to Ralph H. (Ralph Henry) Cameron, b. 1863

    Manuscripts

    This collection consists of materials relating to Ralph H. Cameron's political and business activities, mostly in the years between 1903 and 1912. Box 1 consists of manuscript files, including land and mining claims, financial documents, and political documents, including press releases regarding statehood and ranching. Also included with the manuscripts are materials related to bills introduced by Cameron, "Letters Protesting the Statehood Bill," and Congratulatory telegrams. The "Bills Introduced" includes depredation claims reported to Cameron, for which he sought Congressional consideration, and consist of correspondence with the claimants and Commissioner of Indian Affairs Robert G. Valentine, copies of the legislation Cameron sponsored, and Congressional Committee reports on the proposals. Also included with "Bills Introduced" is material relating to a bridge over the Little Colorado River in Arizona for which Cameron sought Congressional funding. The material protesting statehood consist almost entirely of letters, many of them mechanically reproduced or copied verbatim, demanding that Arizona be allowed to maintain its provisions for a literacy requirement in voter registration. One file consists of congratulatory telegrams sent on the occasion of Arizona's statehood.

    mssCameron papers

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    United States. Dept. of Justice. 2 letters (1909) to Ralph H. (Ralph Henry) Cameron, b. 1863

    Manuscripts

    This collection consists of materials relating to Ralph H. Cameron's political and business activities, mostly in the years between 1903 and 1912. Box 1 consists of manuscript files, including land and mining claims, financial documents, and political documents, including press releases regarding statehood and ranching. Also included with the manuscripts are materials related to bills introduced by Cameron, "Letters Protesting the Statehood Bill," and Congratulatory telegrams. The "Bills Introduced" includes depredation claims reported to Cameron, for which he sought Congressional consideration, and consist of correspondence with the claimants and Commissioner of Indian Affairs Robert G. Valentine, copies of the legislation Cameron sponsored, and Congressional Committee reports on the proposals. Also included with "Bills Introduced" is material relating to a bridge over the Little Colorado River in Arizona for which Cameron sought Congressional funding. The material protesting statehood consist almost entirely of letters, many of them mechanically reproduced or copied verbatim, demanding that Arizona be allowed to maintain its provisions for a literacy requirement in voter registration. One file consists of congratulatory telegrams sent on the occasion of Arizona's statehood.

    mssCameron papers