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Manuscripts

James Guthrie letter to Richard Hammond

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    James Guthrie letter to Kerrison Preston

    Manuscripts

    A.L.S. from James Guthrie to Ivor Kerrison Preston; written from Flansham, Bognor Regis (Sussex), the location of Guthrie's Pear Tree Press. The letter is in response to a request to obtain a copy of the printing of William Blake's "Songs of Innocence" (first printed in 1937).

    mssHM 83399

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    James Guthrie letter to Ogden Hoffman

    Manuscripts

    Guthrie encloses a letter from the acting Consul at Havana, William H. Robertson, and writes to Hoffman concerning its contents.

    mssHM 19007

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    Richard Koehler letters to Andrew B. Hammond

    Manuscripts

    Enclosed in: 1902 December 16 letter was in letter from Hammond to Huntington, 1902 December 31; 1904 December 14 letter was in letter from Hammond to Huntington, 1905 February 28. Also: copy of letter from Koehler to Thomas H. Hubbard, 1904 January 15; copy of resolution passed by the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad Co.

    mssHEH

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    Andrew B. Hammond letter to Richard Koehler

    Manuscripts

    Enclosed in: Hammond letter to Henry E. Huntington, 1902 December 31.

    mssHEH

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    Drechsler, Richard. 1 telegram to A.R. Hammond

    Manuscripts

    The Ruth Gill Hammond Papers consists of correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, Home Economics books, and ephemera. The collection is organized chronologically within each respective category. The bulk of the papers consist of correspondence to and from Ruth Gill Hammond. Subject matter of the correspondence covers the daily activities of Ruth Gill Hammond and others, family matters, business and professional matters, and brief descriptions of historical events in Siam (Thailand), China, and the United States. Boxes 1 and 2 contain correspondence to and from Ruth's family, friends, and professional associates. Bertha (Blount) McFarland and Ava (Milam) Clark contribute a bulk of the correspondence. Box 3 of the collection contains notable correspondence between Ruth Gill Hammond and A.R. Hammond which recounts their relationship and thoughts about one another in great detail. Their correspondence also provides details of their daily activities and major events in their lives. Other notable correspondences include letters to and from Ava Bertha (Milam) Clark or "Auntie Muz," who was a very close friend to Ruth Gill and A.R. Hammond. She was also a well-known Home Economics professor and dean at Oregon State University. The collection also contains a few correspondences noting historical events in Siam (Thailand), China, and the United States (1932, June 18; 1932, July 2; 1935, Apr. 27; 1935, Nov. 27; 1940, Mar. 18). Other frequent and notable correspondence names include: Myrtle Viola Candell, Charles Keyser Edmunds, Clara H. Groesbeck, Lucille Barnard Hanaford, James M. Henry, Faye Kilpatrick, Catherine E. Reed, Mildred L. Sipp, and M. Ellwood Smith.

    mssHammond papers

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    Henry, James M. 2 letters to Ruth Gill Hammond

    Manuscripts

    The Ruth Gill Hammond Papers consists of correspondence, photographs, scrapbooks, Home Economics books, and ephemera. The collection is organized chronologically within each respective category. The bulk of the papers consist of correspondence to and from Ruth Gill Hammond. Subject matter of the correspondence covers the daily activities of Ruth Gill Hammond and others, family matters, business and professional matters, and brief descriptions of historical events in Siam (Thailand), China, and the United States. Boxes 1 and 2 contain correspondence to and from Ruth's family, friends, and professional associates. Bertha (Blount) McFarland and Ava (Milam) Clark contribute a bulk of the correspondence. Box 3 of the collection contains notable correspondence between Ruth Gill Hammond and A.R. Hammond which recounts their relationship and thoughts about one another in great detail. Their correspondence also provides details of their daily activities and major events in their lives. Other notable correspondences include letters to and from Ava Bertha (Milam) Clark or "Auntie Muz," who was a very close friend to Ruth Gill and A.R. Hammond. She was also a well-known Home Economics professor and dean at Oregon State University. The collection also contains a few correspondences noting historical events in Siam (Thailand), China, and the United States (1932, June 18; 1932, July 2; 1935, Apr. 27; 1935, Nov. 27; 1940, Mar. 18). Other frequent and notable correspondence names include: Myrtle Viola Candell, Charles Keyser Edmunds, Clara H. Groesbeck, Lucille Barnard Hanaford, James M. Henry, Faye Kilpatrick, Catherine E. Reed, Mildred L. Sipp, and M. Ellwood Smith.

    mssHammond papers