(Go directly to the index.)
Entries are arranged alphabetically by title of the collections. Each entry includes a descriptive term for the entire collection, such as "papers" or "scrapbooks;" inclusive dates, the size of the collection, and annotations about the scope and content of the material.
Researchers should contact the department for more specific information about these collections or other resources.
Andrea E. Cantrell, Head of Research
Services
Special Collections
Univerisity of Arkansas Libraries
365 North Ozark Avenue
Fayetteville AR 72701-4002
Telephone: (479) 575-5577. FAX (479) 575-6656
2. Arkansas Council on Human Relations Records, 1954-1968; 18
linear feet.
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, clippings, pamphlets, newsletters,
and sound recordings created or received by the Arkansas Council on Human
Relations, organized in December of 1954 and incorporated in July of 1955,
in Little Rock (Pulaski County). This social change organization was created
to improve equal opportunities for all peoples and to make continued progress
in race relations sure and smooth. Of particular interest are materials
pertaining to desegregation of the Little Rock schools, including correspondence,
news releases, and reports of several women's groups such as the Women's
Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools, organized in September 1958; the
Council of Church Women, Little Rock; and the Women's Society of Christian
Service. An extensive index to correspondents lists Ruth Arnold, Thelma
Babbitt, Vivion Brewer, Thelma Engler, Elaine McNeil, Dorothy Nichols,
Floy Sparling, Mrs. David D. (Adolphine Fletcher) Terry, and others.
3. Arkansas Equal Suffrage Central
Committee Records, 1918; 1 item.
Program and list of officers for the First Annual Meeting of the Arkansas
Equal Suffrage Central Committee, held in Little Rock (Pulaski County),
April 2, 1918.
4. Arkansas Federation of Business and
Professional Women's Clubs Scrapbooks, 1933-1938; 5 volumes.
Created by persons holding the office of State Scrap Book Chairman
to document activities of the organization, the scrapbooks include newspaper
clippings, photographs, and programs. Materials pertain primarily to state
and local events, with occasional inclusion of regional and national activities.
5. Arkansas Female College Broadside,
1882-1883; 1 item.
Notice for the ninth annual session of the Arkansas Female College
in Little Rock (Pulaski County) for the year 1882-1883. Lists trustees,
faculty, costs, and information on examinations and boarding. Finding
aid available online.
6. Arkansas League of Women Voters
Records, 1953-1987; 9 3/4 linear feet.
Annual reports, minutes, correspondence, publications, clippings, and
photographs for the state organization and twenty-two local leagues. Although
local groups were active as early as the 1920s, the statewide league was
established in 1955.
7. Arkansas Music Collection Miscellaneous
collection, 1921-1980; 5 1/2 linear feet.
Correspondence, musical scores, sound recordings, clippings, photographs,
and other materials pertaining to preparation of James R. Pebworth's Directory
of 132 Arkansas Composers (Fayetteville: University Library, University
of Arkansas, 1979), collected with the cooperation of Dr. Barbara Garvey
Jackson, professor of music, University of Arkansas. First series consists
of correspondence from 1976 to 1979 between Pebworth and Arkansas composers
considered for inclusion in the directory. Remaining series include other
materials collected for the project. Indexes identify arrangers, composers,
lyricists, classifications of music, and titles. The final section lists
sources pertaining to Arkansas music located in the Special Collections
and Audiovisual departments of the University of Arkansas Libraries. Thirty-five
women are included representing a wide range of contributions to music,
among them: Florence Price, recipient of the 1932 Wanamaker Award for her
Symphony in E Minor; Lorraine Apple, a Little Rock teacher and writer of
popular and sacred songs; Nola Arndt, opera singer who performed at Carnegie
Hall, with the St. Louis Symphony, and with other orchestras; Mabel Bean,
who collaborated with her daughter, Margaret Bean Jasper, William Grant
Still, and others; Hattie May Butterfield, professor of music, College
of the Ozarks; Imogene Carpenter, who performed in High Kickers and Ziegfield
Follies of 1941; Sylvia Dee, composer of Too Young, recorded by Nat King
Cole, and for the Broadway show Barefoot Boy with Cheek; Dale Evans, who
completed high school in Osceola (Mississippi County) before going on to
her singing and acting career; Margaret June Hendrickson, co-composer of
the score for Wonder Valley, a 1950 film about Arkansas; Olga Livesay,
the first female singer to have a million-selling record, I Want to Be
a Cowboy's Sweetheart; Lily Peter, composer and patron of the arts; Virginia
Queen, professor of music, Ouachita Baptist University; Lillian Robbins,
associated with television station KFOX in Hot Springs (Garland County);
Jule McIver Wood, who was active in the American Federation of Women Composers.
8. Arkansas State Music Teachers Association Records, 1921-1968;
7 linear feet.
Correspondence, minutes, reports, examinations, certification data,
membership lists, and clippings pertaining to the Arkansas State Music
Teachers Association, founded in 1915. In addition to activities directed
at improving and expanding music education in the state's public schools,
the organization developed standards and tests for music teacher certification.
Finding
aid is available online.
9. Arkansas State Nurses Association District
9 Records, 1956-1983; 1 linear foot.
Correspondence, minutes, reports, and bylaws of the Arkansas State
Nurses Association and of the association's District 14 for northwest Arkansas.
The state association was organized in 1912. Finding
aid is available online.
10. Arkansas Woman's Suffrage Association
Records, 1915-1916; 5 pages.
Typescript minutes of the association's organizational meeting, May
13, 1915; its October 25, 1915, meeting; and an executive board meeting
of July 16, [1916], held in Little Rock (Pulaski County) with representatives
from across the state.
11. Virgil Lyle Baker Papers, 1926-1940,
1965, 1968; 1/2 linear foot.
Correspondence, notes, lists, clippings, photographs, playbills, and
other material pertaining to the careers and professional interests of
Baker, professor and head of the University of Arkansas Department of Speech
and Dramatic Arts; and of his wife, Lillian Bay Baker (1898-1978), instructor
and acting head of the department during 1936-1937 and 1943-1944. One file
contains materials copied from a scrapbook created by Lillian Baker. Items
include playbills and clippings about productions she directed at the University
of Arkansas and information about presentations she made to clubs. Other
files contain references to Mrs. Baker.
Finding
aid is available online.
12. Ida G. Barr Scrapbook, ca. 1896; 1
volume.
Scrapbook created by Ida G. Barr, an Arkansas Industrial University
student in 1896. Includes an 1896 graduation program, manuscript of a senior
class song written by Barr, clippings, and a photograph of Old Main dated
1904-1906.
13. Daisy Bates Papers, 1948-1986; 7 1/2 linear feet.
Correspondence, photographs, memorabilia, newspaper clippings, audio tapes,
and film primarily from the 1960s and 1970s, pertaining to the publishing and
civil rights activities of Daisy Lee Gatson Bates and her husband, L.C. Bates
of Little Rock (Pulaski County). The Bateses published the weekly Arkansas
State Press from May 9, 1941, through October 1959. Mrs. Bates revived the
paper in April 1984 and sold it in December 1987. She was elected president
of the Arkansas State Conference of NAACP branches in 1952, and her husband
served as the NAACP state field director, 1960-1971. She may be best known as
advisor to the Little Rock Nine and as author of The Long Shadow of Little
Rock, originally published in 1962 and reissued in 1986 by the University
of Arkansas Press. This collection also contains correspondence and working
files for Mrs. Bates's involvement as project director of the Mitchellville
Office of Equal Opportunity Self-Help Project (Arkansas County), 1968-1974.
The collection contains over four hundred photographs of the Bateses, the Little
Rock Nine, public figures, entertainers, family, and friends. Of special interest
is a photograph of Mrs. Bates with Eleanor Roosevelt. Notable correspondents
include Beryl Anthony, Harry Ashmore, Wiley Branton, Dale Bumpers, Jimmy Carter,
Steve Clark, Bill Clinton, Gloster B. Current, Max Delson, Orval Faubus, Joan
Ganz, Ernest Green, John Howard Griffin, Benjamin Hooks, Elizabeth Huckaby,
Fannie Hurst, Edith Irby Jones, Kivie Kaplan, Alfred Baker Lewis, Thelma Mothershed,
Pauli Murray, Paulene Myers, Ellis Thomas, and Roy Wilkins. See also
description from Brochure Series published by Special
Collections. Finding
aid available online.
14. Margaret Bebee Scrapbook, 1929-1930; 1 item.
Clippings, invitations, and photographs collected by Margaret Bebee,
a 1930 graduate of Fort Smith Senior High School (Sebastian County). The
photographs include some family pictures. Finding
aid available online.
15. Evalena Berry Papers, 1980-1985;
1 linear foot.
Research notes, publisher's proofs, and photographs pertaining to Berry's
books Time and The River, A History of Cleburne County (Rose Publishing
Co., 1982) and a history of the health spa Sugar Loaf Springs (River
Road Press, 1985).
16. Emma Stevenson Black Papers, 1829-1986; 199 items.
Correspondence, clippings, legal documents, and photographs pertaining
to members of the Wheeler, Carnall, and Stevenson families of Arkansas,
Indian Territory, and Oklahoma. Correspondents include Fannie Carnall,
Alice I. Hogan, Corrie Foster Wheeler Kobel, Daisy Wheeler Stevenson, Abbie
Carnall Warren, and Emma Carnall Wheeler. Also includes a handwritten memorial
resolution from the Arkansas Industrial University faculty honoring Ella
H. Carnall, for whom the University of Arkansas's Carnall Hall is named.
Finding
aid available online.
17. Amanda Malvina Fitzallen McClellan Braly
Papers, 1860-1865, 1908, 1920; 145 items.
Correspondence, diary, notebook, clippings, photographs, and other
records pertaining to the Braly family of Cane Hill (Washington County).
Correspondents include Mary Frances Braly, Laura Elizabeth Hagood Braly,
Sallie B. King, and Etta Lewis Braly McColloch.
18. Jennie E. Brander Letter, 1863;
1 item.
Four-page letter written by Jennie E. Brander to an unnamed friend
at Bellevue, [Louisiana], from Bolivar, Mississippi. She describes her
activities as a teacher, the impact on her and other townspeople when Union
troops burned Bolivar in the fall of 1862, rumors of conditions in Vicksburg,
and attitudes toward international sympathy for the Southern cause.
19. Mary Susan High Casey Brisco Papers,
1954; 4 items.
Copy of a manuscript text and a typewritten transcript of autobiographical
information pertaining to folk singer Mary Brisco (1875-1958) of Berryville
(Carroll County). Includes a three-page introduction by Mary Celestia Parler,
University of Arkansas folklorist, and a photograph of Brisco.
20. Lola Brown Diary, 1923-1930; 1 item.
Copy of a forty-page transcript of a diary recording the personal and
family life of Mrs. Lola Brown of Coal Hill and Clarksville (Johnson County).
The time period covered by the diary includes her courtship and early years
of married life, from December 26, 1923, to November 29, 1930. The transcript
was prepared by Walter Mooney.
21. Butler and Paisley Families Papers, 1829-1890s; 2 linear
feet.
Correspondence, business records, and photographs pertaining to members
of the Butler and Paisley families. William Paisley operated a general
store in Dobyville and, later, in Gurdon (Clark County). A selection of
the letters has been edited and published by Elizabeth Paisley Huckaby
and Ethel C. Simpson in Tulip Evermore: Emma Butler and William Paisley,
Their Lives in Letters, 1857-1887 (University of Arkansas Press, 1985).
Finding
aid available online.
22. Mary Byroade Papers, 1808-1946; 3 linear feet.
Correspondence, legal documents, business papers, clippings, and photographs
pertaining to the Vincenheller family of Fayetteville (Washington County),
the Austin family of Van Buren (Crawford County), and the Byroade family
of Fayetteville. Includes courtship letters and a bride's book of Miriam
Austin Vincenheller dated 1902 and year books for 1927 to 1930 of the Fayetteville
Twentieth Century Club. Other correspondents include Mrs. W. G. Vincenheller,
Mary Virginia Vincenheller Byroade, and Margaret Seals (who was a prisoner
of war in the Phillipines during World War II). Finding
aid available online.
23. Cora Pinkley Call Papers, 1885-1977; 5 linear feet and 2
volumes.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, diaries, scrapbooks, pamphlets,
clippings, artwork, photographs, and post cards pertaining to the life
and career of writer Cora Elizabeth Pinkley Call (1892-1966) of Eureka
Springs (Carroll County). She was founder and president of the Ozark Writers
and Artists Guild and published, with Edith Bestard, the nationally distributed
periodical Ozark Gardens. Call and lyceum performer Thomas Elmore
Lucey operated Ozark News, Features and Pictures Syndicate, a manuscript
and clipping service. Manuscripts and clippings pertain to her short stories,
essays, and articles on gardening, nature, and the Ozarks. Her books include
Pioneer
Tales of Eureka Springs and Carroll County (n.p. 1930),
From My
Ozark Cupboard (Kansas City, Missouri: Allan Publications, 1950), and
True
Stories of Birds and Animals (Berryville, Ark.: Braswell Printing Co.,
1960). Finding
aid available online.
24. Ellen Maria Harrell Cantrell Manuscripts,
1895-1897; 4 items.
Four manuscripts of speeches and articles, including an article Ellen
Maria Harrell Cantrell of Little Rock (Pulaski County) prepared for the
woman's edition of the Arkansas Democrat, November 18, 1895, and
the paper she presented on Arkansas Day at the Tennessee Centennial Exposition
in 1897. Cantrell was active in several women's clubs, serving as the second
Regent for the Arkansas Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
25. Hattie Wyatt Caraway Papers, 1884-1950; 83 items.
Correspondence, journal, scrapbooks, and photographs pertaining to
the political career and family affairs of Hattie Caraway (1878-1950) of
Jonesboro (Craighead County). She was the first woman elected to the United
States Senate. Includes a ten-page memoir of her childhood and adolescence
in Tennessee and a journal she kept from 1931 to 1934. The journal has
been edited and published with an introduction by Diane D. Kincaid, Silent
Hattie Speaks (Greenwood Press, 1979). Notable correspondents include
Grace Coolidge, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Harry S. Truman. Finding
aid available online.
26. Ruth Carr [pseud.] Scrapbook, ca.
1911; 1 volume.
Contains twenty-nine pages of clippings, most of which are stories
and articles published by Martha Alice Caruth Robertson (1864-1929). A
copy of an undated paper about Ruth Carr read by Mrs. Shearer at the Woman's
Club in DeValls Bluff (Prairie County) indicates that Robertson was born
in Washington (Hempstead County). Robertson's articles appeared in several
publications including the Western Methodist and Epworth Era.
The only dated article in this collection appeared in the March 22, 1911,
issue of the St. Louis Advocate.
27. Lorna Lack Cates Papers, 1853-1919; 81 items.
Correspondence, farm account book, legal documents, receipts, and photographs
pertaining to the Woolverton and Halbrook families of Henry County, Tennessee,
and Van Buren and Conway counties in Arkansas. Includes photographs of
Sarah Elizabeth Woolverton Halbrook and Alice Woolverton. Finding
aid available online.
28. Maude Coffin and Fairy Coffin Lynd Papers, 1860-1988; 134
items.
Reminiscences, family papers, clippings, and photographs pertaining
to Maude Kendrick Coffin (1888-1988) of Fayetteville (Washington County)
and to her daughter, Fairy Coffin Lynd (1922-1986) of Stillwater, Oklahoma.
Born in Virginia, Maude Kendrick spent her adolescence in St. Paul (Madison
County). She and her husband operated bakeries in Fayetteville and Lincoln
(Washington County). The collection includes Mrs. Coffin's family history,
Pioneer Days, her reminiscenses, and numerous photographs taken during
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in St. Paul and Fayetteville.
Fairy Coffin Lynd and her husband, J. Q. Lynd, researched in the fields
of antibiotics in soil micro-organisms and cancer. The collection includes
a 1987 radio transcript of a Paul Harvey news story about Fairy Lynd's
contributions. Finding aid available online.
29. Gertrude Fallin Cook Papers, 1830-1878; 24 items.
Correspondence, legal documents, receipts pertaining primarily to the
Bloyd family of Washington County. Includes two letters from Hester McMurtry
of Newburg, Indiana, and recipes for nine household products.
30. Florence Brown Cotnam Collection,
1885-1968; 1 1/4 linear feet.
Correspondence, notebooks, speeches, clippings, and pamphlets pertaining
to the public speaking and political activities of Florence Brown (Mrs.
T. T.) Cotnam (1865-1932) of Little Rock (Pulaski County). Mrs. Cotnam
was the first woman to address the Arkansas legislature and the first woman
in Arkansas selected as a delegate to a national political conventiont--the
national Democratic convention in San Francisco in 1920. She was active
in numerous women's clubs including the Equal Suffrage Association, the
League of American Pen Women, Arkansas League of Women Voters, United Daughters
of the Confederacy, the Arkansas Democratic Women's Club, and others. Finding
aid available online.
31. Josephine B. Crump Papers, 1894-1920; 26 items.
Journal of personal reminiscences, correspondence, and literary manuscripts
of Josephine Bonaparte Wright Greenlee Crump (1840-1920) of Harrison (Boone
County) and Little Rock (Pulaski County). Includes information about events
during the Civil War and Crump's activities in the Woman's Missionary Society
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Crump's books of published verses
include Echoes from the Ozarks (Muskogee, Okla.: Hoffman-Speed Printing,
1913) and By the Fireside (Harrison, Ark.: n.p., 1920). Finding
aid available online.
32. Crump and Garvin Families Papers, 1866-1985; 58 items and
1 roll of microfilm.
Correspondence and scrapbooks pertaining to members of the Crump and
Garvin families of Harrison (Boone County). Includes an 1886 wedding book
for Mintie Crump and Ford M. Garvin and a 1917 fifty-first wedding anniversary
book for Colonel George J. and Josephine B. Crump. Correspondents include
Josephine Bonaparte Wright Greenlee Crump, Lulu Garvin Fitton, and Mintie
Helen Crump Garvin. Finding aid available
online.
33. Currie Family Papers, 1852-1891; 137 items.
Correspondence and financial documents pertaining to the Currie family
of Woodruff County. Most of the letters concern post-Civil War issues and
family matters. Correspondents include Kate Currie, Mary P. Currie, Dora
Currie Monroe, Alice Currie, and Fannie Moore.Finding
aid available online.
34. Daphne Dailey Papers, 1923-1947;
2 1/2 linear feet.
Correspondence, school papers, church papers, and photographs pertaining
to the student activities and teaching career of Daphne Lowell Dailey (born
1913). A 1932 graduate of the University of Arkansas, she taught English
and journalism in high schools in Fayetteville (Washington County) and
Fort Smith (Sebastian County). Also includes materials pertaining to the
Fayetteville Church of Christ, in which her father served as an elder.
35. Jeff Davis Papers, 1849-1896; 6 linear feet.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, speeches, legal and financial
documents, clippings, scrapbooks, and photographs pertaining to the career
and life of politician Jeff Davis and his family of Russellville (Pope
County), including his wife, Ina McKenzie Davis; his mother-in- law, Janie
Norment McKenzie Thatch; and his daughters, Bessie, Lynah, Janie, Ina (Polly),
and Lucille. Finding
aid available online.
36. Delta Delta Delta. Delta Iota Chapter Records, 1914-1959;
1 linear foot.
Minutes, reports, bylaws, and other records pertaining to the Delta
Iota Chapter of Delta Delta Delta sorority at the University of Arkansas.
Organized in 1910 as a local sorority, Alpha Upsilon, the group was incorporated
in the national Delta Delta Delta organization in 1913. Notable chapter
alumnae include Louise McPhetridge Thaden, aviatrix and winner of the 1936
Bendix Transcontinental Air Race; Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni, named poet laureate
of Arkansas in 1953; and Donna Axum, Miss America in 1963. Finding
aid available online.
37. Delta Kappa Gamma Society International. Iota Chapter Records,1961-1962,
1973-1984; 82 items and 1 volume.
Scrapbook and newsletters of Delta Kappa Gamma, women's education honor
society. The University of Arkansas chapter was organized March 24, 1944.
Louise Bell served as first president. Finding
aid available online.
38. DeWitt Mothers' Club Records, 1916-1986; 3 rolls of microfilm.
Minutes, reports, yearbooks, scrapbooks, and other records of the DeWitt
Mothers' Club (Arkansas County). Organized in 1916 as the Twentieth Century
Mothers Club, this group has sponsored numerous social and civic projects,
including the DeWitt City Library which was established in 1926. Finding
aid available online.
39. Belle A. and James Dinwiddie Architectural
drawings, [1920-1955]; 100 items, estimated.
Blueprints of preliminary working drawings, schematic designs, sketches
of structural details, and construction specifications for architectural
projects developed by Belle A. Dinwiddie (1895-1978) of Rogers (Benton
County) and her uncle, James Dinwiddie of Fayetteville (Washington County).
The collection includes items pertaining to eight of her projectsthe Farm
Bureau Co-Operative, the First Baptist Church Education Building, three
private residences, and three other commercial buildings.
40. George Washington Donaghey Papers, 1870-1947; 356 items.
Correspondence, photographs, speeches, and clippings related to the
political, business, and personal lives of Governor Donaghey and his wife,
Martha Louvenia Wallace Donaghey (1862-1947), of Conway (Faulkner County).
Numerous items in the first three series of this collection pertain to
Mrs. Donaghey, especially photographs, and the fourth series of eighty-
four items consists of her correspondence and related materials.Finding
aid is available online.
41. Crescent Dragonwagon Papers, 1981-1986; 2 linear feet.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, and other papers pertaining to
the writing career of Crescent Dragonwagon of Eureka Springs (Carroll County).
Sub-collections received to date include papers related to her books, To
Take a Dare (Harper & Row, 1982) and Half a Moon and One Whole
Star (Macmillan, 1986). Unprocessed.
42. Beverley Githens Dresbach Papers, 1890-1971; 3 linear feet
and 1 volume.
Correspondence, manuscripts, scrapbooks, and photographs pertaining to the lives
and literary careers of Dresbach (1903-1971) and her husband, Glenn Ward Dresbach,
of Eureka Springs (Carroll County). Her published books include Novitiate
(privately published, 1938) and No Splendor Perishes (Dierkes Press,
1946). She was also a feature writer for a number of Arkansas newspapers as
well as the Kansas City Star and the Christian Science Monitor.
Finding aid available
online.
43. Fontaine Richard Earle Letters, 1861-1908; 77 items.
Photocopies of seventy-seven letters, forty of which were written to
Amanda Buchanan Earle (1834-1894) of Cane Hill (Washington County), by
her husband, Fontaine Richard Earle. She graduated from Union Female College,
Oxford, Mississippi, in 1858, then taught in Cane Hill, Clarksville (Johnson
County), and Van Buren (Crawford County). Thirty-seven of the letters were
edited by Robert E. Waterman and Thomas Rothrock and published as "The
Earle-Buchanan Letters, 1861-1876," Arkansas Historical Quarterly
33 (Spring 1974): 99-174. A lengthy letter written by Amanda on February
28, 1864, describes to her cousins significant changes at Cane Hill since
the previous November. Also includes letters written by Katie Johnson,
Laura G. Boxley, and Clara Earle. Finding aid
available online.
44. Nanette Williams Elsass Papers, 1903-1969; 28 items.
Scrapbooks, literary manuscripts, travel journals, and other documents
created or collected by members of the Purkins, Williams, and Delony families
of Hope (Hempstead County). One scrapbook pertains to the kindergarten
established and operated by Marie Antoinette Purkins (born 1883) from 1938
to 1962. A travel journal describes Nannie Purkins's train trip to California
in September, 1928. The second scrapbook records family affairs of Sophia
Purkins Williams (born 1895) from 1902 to 1943. A 1912 memory book records
the honemoon trip of Mr. and Mrs. William Edgar Briant of Hope. An undated
travel journal by Lucy Elise Delony describes her visit to Japan soon after
World War I. Finding aid available online.
45. Clara Bertha Eno Collection, 1830-1947; 176 items and 1 roll
of microfilm.
Correspondence, bills of lading, legal and financial documents, reminiscences,
and other papers collected by Clara Bertha Eno (1854-1951). Much of the
material pertains to businesses in Van Buren (Crawford County) in the 1840s
and 1850s, to steamboats on the Arkansas River, and to the affairs of David
C. Williams, John Henry and Edward Cunningham, and Dr. Henry Pernot. Teacher,
writer, and collector, Clara Eno made many contributions to Arkansas history
research. She was also active in numerous organizations, including the
first Arkansas History Commission, the Arkansas Federation of Women's Clubs,
and the Women's Literary Club of Van Buren, of which she was a charter
member in 1896.
46. Fayetteville Business and Professional
Women's Club Scrapbooks, 1929-1946 and 1964-1984; 27 volumes.
Newspaper clippings, photographs, and programs pertaining to activities
of the Fayetteville chapter of the National Federation of Business and
Professional Women's Clubs (Washington County). The Fayetteville chapter
was organized in 1924.
47. Fayetteville Council of Garden Clubs Records, 1960-1982;
140 items and 1 volume.
Minutes, constitutions, and scrapbooks pertaining to the Fayetteville
Council of Garden Clubs (Washington County), organized to coordinate the
interests of the city's garden clubs. Finding
aid is available online.
48. Fayetteville Garden Club Records, 1955-1987; 295 items and
1 volume.
Minutes, yearbooks, and scrapbooks recording activities of the Fayetteville
(Washington County) Garden Club, established in 1932. Projects have included
park cleanups and other city beautification projects. Finding
aid is available online.
49. Fayetteville Outlook Club Records,
1925-1978; 3 volumes.
Minutes of the Fayetteville Outlook Club (Washington County), organized
February 27, 1925. The first program of study selected by the club members
was a current events course through the University of Arkansas Extension
Department.
50. Fayetteville Perennial Garden Club Records, 1930-1976; 1
linear foot.
Minutes, reports, program booklets, membership lists, photographs,
and clippings pertaining to the Perennial Garden Club of Fayetteville (Washington
County). Organized June 18, 1930, the club's goals were to promote home
gardening, city beautification, and protection of forests and wild flowers.Finding
aid is available online.
51. Alina Fernandez Papers, 1980-1984; 3 linear feet.
Reports, office files, clippings, educational materials, audio recordings,
and photographs pertaining to Alina Fernandez's work for the Cuban Haitian
Task Force at Ft. Chaffee (Sebastian County). The documents refer to camp
operations and resettlement. Also includes materials prepared and collected
in the educational program to help the Cuban refugees learn English and
prepare for life in the United States, as well as five cassette recordings
of interviews. Finding aid available online.
52. Charlie May Fletcher Papers, 1945-1973; 258 items.
Correspondence and literary manuscripts pertaining to writer Charlie
May Hogue Simon Fletcher (1897-1977) of Little Rock (Pulaski County). She
published twenty-nine major works during her literary career, including
Johnswood
(Dutton, 1953), an autobiographical account of her marriage to John Gould
Fletcher; Joe Mason (Dutton, 1969), winner of the 1947 Boys Club
Junior Book Award; A Seed Shall Serve (London: Hodder & Stoughton,
1960), winner of the 1958 Albert Schweitzer Book Prize; and Martin Buber
(Dutton, 1969), winner of the 1970 Jewish Book Club Award. Manuscripts
in the collection pertain to
Johnswood, two short stories noted
as African Legends, an untitled collection of Cherokee legends, and her
speech accepting the award for Joe Mason. Correspondents include
Helen Jo Adkisson, May Edwards, Alletah Glasier, Joyce Goodwin, Mary D.
Hudgins, Barbara Slatter Jones, Marilyn McCarthy, Elizabeth F. McFarland,
June Mathers, Edna Means, Edna Neidelman, Linda F. Neslage, Mary Jane Newcomb,
Phyllis Old, Pamela W. Quiers, Marguerite J. Reese, Virginia Rock, Diane
Shluger, Edna B. Stephens, and Adolphine Fletcher Terry.Finding
aid is available online.
53. John Gould Fletcher Papers, 1881-1960; 26 linear feet.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, lectures, and other professional
and personal papers of John Gould Fletcher, who was born in Little Rock
(Pulaski County). Fletcher was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1938 for Selected
Poems. The collection is supplemented by microfilm of Fletcher's letters
preserved in other repositories. An extensive correspondents' index lists
numerous women with whom Fletcher and his wife, Charlie May Simon Fletcher,
corresponded concerning literature, mutual interests, and family matters.
Correspondents include Hilda Doolittle Aldington, Rita Benton, Gabriele
Brezina, Ruth Campbell, Ina Sizer Cassidy, Alice Corbin, Kathleen Coyle,
Katharine Murdoch Davis, Mary Drennan, Ora Dusenbury, Florence Emily Fletcher,
Mary P. Fletcher, Elsie Freund, Dorothy Hobson, Lorna Hyde, Clara B. Kennan,
Amy Lowell, Mary MacDowell, Rosa Marinoni, Harriet Monroe, Eleanor Risley,
Ada D. Russell, Vera Snook, Catherine Steele, Sara Teasdale, Adolphine
Fletcher Terry, Ruth Tuthill, Helen A. Vinton, Ann Winslow, and Dorothy
Atwood Yarnell. See also description from Brochure
Series published by Special Collections.Finding
aid is available online.
54. Susan Bricelin Fletcher Memoir, 1908; 1 item.
Personal reminiscence of experiences on a plantation located about
20 miles west of Little Rock (Pulaski County) during the Civil War and
in Little Rock during the years immediately following. Susan Bricelin Fletcher
(born ca. 1838) began writing this memoir in August, 1908.
55. Folklore Collection, 1949-1982; 54 1/2 linear feet.
Audio tape recordings, transcriptions, class reports, and bound typescripts
collected primarily under the direction of Mary Celestia Parler Randolph
(1904-1981). The 442 reels of sound recordings include folk songs, both
vocal and instrumental, and oral folk tales, anecdotes, and reminiscences.
The class reports consist of seventy-two boxes of papers submitted for
folklore classes at the University of Arkansas, 1958-1982, taught first
by Mary Celestia Parler Randolph and now by Robert B. Cochran. Twenty-two
bound volumes of typescripts contain folk beliefs, proverbs, riddles, songs,
and ballads.
56. Edsel Ford Papers, 1928-1971; 28 linear feet.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, scrapbooks, photographs, and
other material pertaining to the life and work of poet Edsel Ford (1928-1970)
of Rogers (Benton County). One series of correspondence is primarily between
Ford and Kathryn Kruger Post (1890-1972) of Arlington Heights, Illinois,
pertaining to his career, his writings, the art of poetry, Post's writings,
and her contributions to his career. Also includes significant correspondence
with Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni, Beverley Githens Dresbach, Elsa Vaught, Blanche
H. Elliott, Harriet Monroe, Vaida Stewart Montgomery, Sue Abbott Boyd,
and others.
57. Fort Smith Fortnightly Club Records, 1888-1986; 2 linear
feet and 8 volumes.
Correspondence, minutes, yearbooks, scrapbook, study papers, clippings,
and photographs pertaining to the Fort Smith Fortnightly Club (Sebastian
County), founded in 1888. Its members created the Fortnightly Club Library
Association which was responsible for the opening of Fort Smith's first
public library during the summer of 1889. The club's first president was
Mrs. Isaac C. Parker. Finding aid available
online.
58. Futrall Family Papers, 1831-1985; 3 1/4 linear feet.
Correspondence, clippings, programs, memorials, genealogical records,
and photographs pertaining to the Futrall family of Washington County.
Women of this family for whom materials can be found in the collection
include Helen Gaines Duke, Annie Duke Futrall (for whom the University
of Arkansas's Futrall Hall is named), Alma Futrall, Emily Futrall Donaldson,
Helen Futrall Stough, and Joan Futrall Lines. Finding
aid available online.
59. William A. Gilbert Papers, 1923-1969; 1 1/2 linear feet.
Correspondence, essays, business papers, clippings, newsletters, pamphlets,
and photographs pertaining to the political, socialist, and business activities
of Gilbert and his wife Viola Demaree Hendricks Gilbert (born 1889) of
Ink (Polk County). Two typewritten essays provide autobiographical information
about Viola Gilbert's experiences at Newllano Co- Operative Colony located
in Vernon Parish, Louisiana. Photographs include pictures of the Gilberts,
as well as scenes and persons at Newllano Co-Operative Colony and Commonwealth
College (Polk County) including Kate Richards O'Hare, Ivy Van Etten, Mrs.
J. C. Crawford, and Mabel, Laura, Ruby, and Lillie Synoground.Finding
aid is available online.
60. Marguerite Gilstrap Papers, 1918-1988;
4 1/2 linear feet.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, speeches, news releases, memoranda,
clippings, and other papers created or collected by Marguerite Gilstrap,
originally from St. Paul (Madison County). Writer and teacher, Gilstrap
was employed as editorial assistant with the University of Arkansas News
Bureau from 1937 to 1942, and as public information specialist and technical
writer with the United States Department of Agriculture from 1942 to 1966.
She was active with the Women's National Press Club, serving as vice president
in 1960-1961 and as a regular participant in their annual dinners and stunt
parties during the period 1953 to 1966.
61. Ariel Idella Hottel Gist Papers, 1892-1898, 1923-32, 1968;
63 items.
Journal, correspondence, photographs, and clippings pertaining primarily
to experiences of Ariel Idella Della Hottel Gist (1870-1928) in St. Croix,
Virgin Islands, from June 1892 through June 1893 while she was governess
to the children of the United States Consul, Major W. F. Moore. She came
to Phillips County after marrying Bogan Gist in 1900.
62. Jewel Sigman Hare Papers, 1940-1960; 16 items.
Letters, clippings, and manuscripts written by local historian, Jewel
Sigman Hare, pertaining to the history of Cross County. Includes eleven
newspaper articles published in the Wynne Progress, 1940-1959, and
three historical sketches written 1956, 1959, and 1960.
63. Lawrence Brooks Hays Papers, 1844, 1915-1972, 1978; 93 linear
feet.
Correspondence, diaries, notes, literary manuscripts, reports, speeches,
clippings, photographs, sound recordings, and other materials pertaining
to the career and personal life of politician Lawrence Brooks Hays, originally
of Pope County, and to members of his family. Correspondents include Marion
Prather Hays, his wife; Sallie Butler Hays, his mother; Betty Brooks Hays
Bell, his daughter; as well as Bernie Smade Babcock, Hattie Wyatt Caraway,
Margaret Truman Daniel, Edith Green, Sarah Tilghman Hughes, Claudia Alta
Taylor (Lady Bird) Johnson, Harryette Morrison, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt,
and Margaret Chase Smith.
64. Helena Women's Library Association
Program, 1894; 1 item.
Printed program for a benefit performance of A Spanish Evening held
April 24, 1894. The Helena Women's Library Association (Phillips County)
was founded in 1888.
65. Lynn Hornsby Collection, 1958-1961;
36 items.
Reports, bulletins, and miscellaneous publications pertaining to the
League of Women Voters of Pine Bluff (Jefferson County) and to the statewide
league. Materials include budgets, agendas, programs, newsletters, membership
rosters, clippings, and other items collected by member Lynn Hornsby.
66. Lula Jane Howell Papers, 1858-1948; 20 items.
Correspondence, diary, manuscripts of histories of the Uniontown Christian
Church and of the Poage family, and photographs collected or created by
church secretary Lula Jane Howell of Crawford County. The papers also contain
a history of Uniontown written by Ruby Yancy Howell. Finding
aid available online.
67. Elizabeth Paisley Huckaby Papers, 1957-1958; 1 1/2 linear
feet.
Journals, correspondence, notes, memoranda, reports, interview transcripts,
school publications and other materials created or collected by Elizabeth
Huckaby, teacher and administrator at Little Rock Central High School (Pulaski
County) from 1930 to 1969. Appointed to the position of Vice Principal
for Girls in 1954, she was active in the school's administration during
the first year of integration, 1957-1958. This collection pertains to her
experiences during that period. Also includes two rough drafts of her book
Crisis
at Central High, Little Rock, 1957-58 (Louisiana State University Press,
1980). Finding aid
available online.
68. Mary Dengler Hudgins Collection, 1800-1986; 55 linear feet.
Correspondence, research files, maps, sheet music, clippings, photographs,
post cards, and other papers created or collected by Mary Dengler Hudgins
(1901-1987) of Hot Springs (Garland County). Writer, librarian, and collector,
Hudgins began transferring sub- collections of her materials to the University
of Arkansas Libraries in 1972 with the largest portion arriving in 1984.
Hudgins's wide ranging interests are reflected in the variety and depth
of her collection of Arkansiana, with a special emphasis on Arkansas music
and composers. Finding aid available
online. See also description from Brochure Series
published by Special Collections.
69. Roy G. Hutcheson Collection, 1837, 1845, 1864-65; 14 items.
Letters and a fragment of a diary written by an unidentified woman,
June 13 to November 6, 1837, describing a journey from Camden, [New York]
to [Peoria County], Illinois. Later entries were added to the diary, January
1 to November 29, 1845, apparently by another unidentified person in Camden.
Finding
aid available online.
70. Irby Family Papers, 1905-1941;
105 items and 4 volumes.
Family and business papers pertaining to the Stephen W. Irby family
of Desha County. Includes four volumes of unattributed poetry written and
copied by Mrs. Mattie E. Moore of Refuge (Desha County).
71. Nannie Stillwell Jackson Diary,
1890-1891; 4 items.
Copies and a transcript of a diary kept by Nannie Hudson Stillwell
Jackson (1854-1908) of Desha County. Margaret Jones Bolsterli edited and
wrote an introduction to the diary which has been published as Vinegar
Pie and Chicken Bread: A Woman's Diary of Life in the Rural South, 1890-1891
(University of Arkansas Press, 1982).
72. Lighton Family Papers, 1828-1987; 15 linear feet + 33 volumes.
Diaries, correspondence, literary manuscripts, clippings, scrapbooks,
financial records, and photographs pertaining to the lives, careers, and
research interests of the William Rheem Lighton family. Laura McMaken Lighton
(1869-1948) was a land developer in Fayetteville (Washington County). Two
of her businesses were the Green Tree Inn tea house and the Green Tree
Apartments. She was active in the Perennial Garden Club, the Friday Social
Club, and the city library. Materials in the collection also pertain to
the lives and careers of their three daughters. For Dorothy Lighton Benton
(1893-1967), this consists primarily of family correspondence. Suzanne
Lighton (1905-1978) was a writer and lawyer who was active in numerous
civic organizations, including the Arkansas State Democratic Women's Club.
Marjorie Betty Lighton (born 1912) has been active in a number of arenas.
She worked in community theater and dance, was a court reporter, joined
the Red Cross during World War II, worked as a Girl Scout executive, and
served as associate director of the YWCA in Dayton, Ohio. Upon her retirement
in 1964, she returned to Fayetteville. Finding
aid available online.
73. Alice E. Lincoln Scrapbook, 1939-1940; 1 volume.
Clippings, photographs, notes, and other papers collected by Alice
E. Lincoln while she was a student at the University of Arkansas, 1939-1940,
pertaining primarily to her activities in Chi Omega sorority.
74. Pearl Mary Lone Scrapbook, 1912-1913;
1 volume.
Handwritten notes, lists, invitations, clippings, programs, and photographs
created or collected by Pearl Mary Lone, who graduated from Rogers Academy,
located in Benton County, on May 28, 1913. She placed these materials describing
her and her classmates' activities into a bound scrapbook entitled The
Girl Graduate: Her Book, with drawings and sections identified for various
categories of keepsakes. The book was designed and illustrated by Louise
Perrett and Sarah K. Smith (Chicago: Reilly and Britton Co., n.d.).
75. Robert McCollum and Sephronia
Clark McCollum Papers, 1835-1958; 126 items.
Correspondence, business papers, and other documents pertaining to
the Robert and Sephronia McCollum family of Washington County. Twenty-seven
of the letters were written home by their son, Albert, while he served
in the First Arkansas Cavalry, C.S.A. These letters were published in the
Washington County Historical Society Bulletin 40 (May 1961). Other correspondents
include Sephronia Clark McCollum, Jane Booth, Jennie E. Henderson, Rosetta
Clark Smith, and Martha A. Walling.
76. >McIlroy Family Papers,
1846-1968; 2 1/2 linear feet and 1 volume.
Letters, photographs, and business records pertaining to the Powell, Rhea, and
McIlroy families of Washington County. Correspondents include Sarah Burns Powell,
Elizabeth Cornelia Rhea, and Sarah Ann Rhea McIlroy. One photograph presents
thirteen members of the Idle Hour Club of Fayetteville, which was organized
in 1902. Finding
aid is available online.
77. Magnolia Joint Stock Company for
the Education of Females Records, 1869; 1 item.
Articles of agreement and regulations for the establishment of a stock
company to organize a Female School at Magnolia (Columbia County). This
nine-page document provides for membership, meetings, voting, election
of officers, and other business of the company.
78. Martin Family Papers, 1847-1945; 1 linear foot.
Correspondence, diaries, photographs, and miscellaneous papers pertaining
to the family of Benjamin Wilson Martin and Martha Elizabeth Bond Martin
of Bradley County. Includes correspondence and/or diaries for three generations,
Mary Bacon Bond, Martha Elizabeth Bond Martin (Mrs. Bond's daughter), Benjamin
Wilson Martin (Martha Elizabeth Bond's husband), and Virginia Martin Wilson
(Mr. and Mrs. Martin's daughter). Other correspondents include Martha Washington
Martin, Mary Clay Martin, M. E. Hughey, and Elizabeth Martin Elliot. Finding
aid available online.
79. Mena Women's Literary Club Records, 1912-1954; 3 items.
Scrapbook and photographs from the Mena Women's Literary Club, founded
in Mena (Polk County), in 1898. This club was instrumental in the establishment
of the Mena Public Library in 1900. Finding
aid available online.
80. Modern Literature Club Records, 1926-1988; 3 linear feet.
Minutes, yearbooks, correspondence, photographs, and audio cassette
tapes of the Modern Literature Club of Fayetteville (Washington County),
founded in 1926 as a book study group within the Fayetteville chapter of
the American Association of University Women. The audio cassette tapes
consist of oral interviews with thirty-two club members about their own
lives; the history of the club, of Fayetteville, and of the University
of Arkansas; and about modern literature. Women interviewed include Peg
Anderson, Diane Blair, Sarah Burnside, Georgia Clark, Rita Davis, Sonia
Decker, Carolyn DeLille, Genie Donovan, Judy Fowler, Marguerite Gilstrap,
Eunice Hamilton, Ellen Hayward, Harriet Jansma, Portia Kernodle, Eloise
Baerg King, Louise Russert Kraemer, Louise Lane, Helen Leflar, Marcia McIvor,
Elaine McNeil, Eunice Noland, Jessie O'Kelly, Marjorie Rudolph, Gabriel
Schafer, Sylvia Schwartz, Ellen Shipley, Betty Siegal, A. Martha Sutherland,
Nancy Ellen Talburt, Gene Tweraser, Frances Vaile, and Doris Drake Wigglesworth.Finding
aid available online.
81. Dwight Moore Papers, 1896-1975;
12 linear feet.
Correspondence, notes, sketches, photographs, scrapbook, and other
papers pertaining to the family and career of Dwight Munson Moore, who
taught botany at the University of Arkansas from 1924 to 1975. His first
wife, Elizabeth French Moore (1897-1965), founded Ozark Mountain Crafts
in Fayetteville (Washington County). She was active in the Red Cross, the
Salvation Army, and Delta Gamma sorority. A scrapbook for the years 1934
and 1935 as well as seventy-one photographs from the 1930s record activities
of the handicrafts house.
82. May Hope Moose Papers, 1863-1980; 1 linear foot.
Correspondence, memoirs, photographs, and miscellaneous family papers,
mostly photocopies, pertaining to the Cazort, Garner, Hodnett, Huddleston,
McClurkin, and Moose families of Johnson, Jackson, and Conway counties.
Includes photocopies of genealogies and memoirs by May Hope Moose, Florence
Cazort Byrd, and May Cazort McClurkin. Finding
aid available online.
83. Morrilton Pathfinder Club Records, 1897-1985; 5 linear feet.
Minutes, yearbooks, programs, clippings, correspondence, financial
and legal documents, scrapbooks, and photographs pertaining to the Pathfinder
Club of Morrilton (Conway County). Organized in 1898, this literary club
established the public library in Morrilton in 1913. Its achievements also
include acquiring William H. Porter's personal library and securing, in
1916, a Carnegie grant for construction of a new public library building.
The Pathfinder-Porter Collection of rare books is now housed in the Special
Collections Division, University of Arkansas Libraries, Fayetteville.Finding
aid available online.
84. Mary Hannah Johnston Morrow Papers,
1847-1876; 14 items.
Diaries, school essays, one letter, and a memorial tribute pertaining
to the life of Mary Hannah Johnston Morrow (1847-1876) of Dardanelle (Yell
County). The diaries describe family life of the Johnstons and community
interests during the period from June 1, 1864, through November 3, 1866.
85. Moss Family Student papers, 1910-1914; 2 volumes.
Scrapbooks of two University of Arkansas students, Lowell R. Moss and
his sister Mildred Moss. Miss Moss, who graduated in 1914, was a member
of Pi Beta Phi sorority and was assistant editor of the University Weekly.
Her scrapbook includes clippings and photographs of dances, other social
activities, and the student strike in 1912 protesting the expulsion of
students involved with the underground newspaper X-Ray. Finding
aid available online.
86. William O. Munson Letters,
1861-1862; 27 items.
Correspondence between William O. Munson, a soldier serving in Kentucky
and Tennessee with Company E, Third Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
and members of his family in Putnam County, Ohio. Five letters were written
to him by his mother, whose name is not identified, and one letter from
each of his sisters, Julia and Mary A. Munson.
87. National Collegiate Association for Secretaries. University of
Arkansas Chapter Records, 1967-1975; 1 linear foot.
Minutes, correspondence, reports, membership data, and scrapbooks for
the University of Arkansas Chapter of the National Collegiate Association
for Secretaries, established in April 1970. The organization's goals are
to promote business teacher education, to encourage the exchange of information
among students planning secretarial careers, and to provide contact for
the students with business professionals. The first president was Pamela
Payne. Finding
aid available online.
88. Mary Virginia Norris Scrapbook, 1922-1925; 1 volume.
Correspondence, clippings, souvenirs, and photographs collected by
Mary Virginia Norris, a 1924 graduate of the University of Arkansas. The
scrapbook pertains to her student activities and her first year of teaching
at Fort Smith High School. While in school she was a member of Delta Delta
Delta, Girls Glee Club, YWCA, Black Friars dramatic club, and the honor
societies Lambda Tau and Kappa Delta Pi. Finding
aid available online.
89. Willie Oates Papers, 1928-1985;
2 linear feet.
Correspondence, clippings, and photographs pertaining to Willie (Mrs. Gordon
P.) Oates (born 1910) of Little Rock (Pulaski County). She served as state representative
from Pulaski County, 1958-1960. Selected as Greater Little Rock Woman of the
Year in 1955, she has been active in numerous civic organizations including
the Little Rock branch of AAUW, the City Beautiful Commission, Friends of the
Library, the Salvation Army, the Woman's City Club, and the Arkansas Federation
of Women's Clubs. Finding
aid is available online.
90. Organized Independent Women Scrapbooks, 1947-1957; 2 volumes.
Clippings, programs, photographs, and other materials pertaining to
the Organized Independent Women, a University of Arkansas women's organization.
Materials describe activities of the organization
only slightly; emphasis is on the achievements of its members.
91. Ozark Gardens Records, 1956-1967; 50 items. 92. Minnie Pahotski Essay, no date;
1 item.
93. Myrtle McCormick Parks Papers, 1865-1945; 1 linear foot and
3 volumes.
94. Ruth Polk Patterson Papers,
1954-1988; 4 linear feet.
95. Peace Links Records, 1977-1989; 21 linear feet.
96. Zillah Cross Peel Papers, 1898-1980; 1/2 linear foot and
1 volume.
97. Petentes Women's Club Records ,1928-1973; 30 items and 4
volumes.
98. Philomathic Club Records,
1888-1892; 2 volumes.
99. Pine Bluff League of Women Voters
Records, 1952-1983; 1 1/2 linear feet.
100. Poetry Day Broadside, 1948; 1 item.
101. Political Equality League Records,
1914; 2 items.
102. Delia Wagner Price Family papers,
1928-1952; 60 items.
103. Florence Beatrice Smith Price Papers, 1906, 1927-1968, 1974-1975;
164 items.
104. Ida Pace Purdue Scrapbooks, 1884-1958;
2 volumes. 105. Lida W. Pyles Papers, 1948-1986; 47 items.
106.Lorraine Blore Ragland Collection,
1863-1981; 2 1/2 linear feet.
107. Lessie Stringfellow Read Collection, 1913-1924, 1940-1945;
809 items.
108. Reynolds and Thomas Research Collection, 1908-1910; 160
items.
109. Eleanor de la Vergne Risley Papers,
1895-1945; 1 1/2 linear feet.
110. Roots Family Papers, 1842-1907,
3 linear feet.
111. Lee A. Seamster Papers, 1880-1981; 2 linear feet.
112. Emma Eugene Ramsaur Shuford Papers,
1850, 1859-1863, 1873, 1893, 1899-1900; 21 items.
113.Siloam Springs Woman's Fortnightly Club
Records, 1907-1932; 9 volumes.
114. Alfred E. Smith Papers, 1920-1984; 6 linear feet.
115.Lucille Isabelle Smith Papers, 1905-1912;
25 items.
116. Sara Jane Smith Papers, 1864-1865; 4 items.
117. Southland College Records, 1872-1925; 11 linear feet.
118. Glaphyra Stafford Scrapbook, 1917-1926; 1 volume.
119. William Grant Still & Verna Arvey Papers, ca. 1920-1987;
90 linear feet.
120. Frank Arthur Swinnerton Papers, 1899-1964; 22 linear feet.
121. Thomas E. Tappan, Jr. Collection, 1811-1930; 218 items and
12 volumes.
122. Adolphine Fletcher Terry Memoirs, 1973-1974; 1 item.
123. David Yancey Thomas Papers, 1872, 1890-1895, 1905-1943;
1 1/2 linear feet.
124.Ruth Harris Thomas Papers, 1948-1975;
1 linear foot.
125. Marnelle Thomsen Papers, 1922-1973;
28 items.
126. Virginia Tidball Papers, 1942-1944,
1959; 315 items.
127. James W. Trimble Family Papers, 1854-1984; 10 1/2 linear
feet.
128. Virginia Tyler Papers, 1946-1987; 2
1/2 linear feet.
129. University Dames Scrapbook, 1945-1951;
1 volume.
130. University Infirmary Association Records, 1895-1908; 1 volume.
131. Upchurch Family Papers, 1879-1984; 5 linear feet and 1 volume.
132. Mary Elizabeth Birnie Coster Vann Papers,
1853-1869, 1874; 3 items.
133. Constance Wagner Audio recordings, 1977; 5 items.
134. Walker Family Papers, 1833-1962; 63 items.
135. Sue H. Walker Collection, 1818-1936; 1 linear foot.
136. Washington County Extension Homemakers
Council Records, 1916-1987; 1 1/2 linear feet and 23 volumes.
137.Washington County League of Women Voters
Records, 1920-1921, 1941-1947, 1952-1983; 4 1/2 linear feet and 12
volumes. Minutes, correspondence, annual reports, treasurers' reports,
research files, and scrapbooks pertaining to activities of the Washington
County League of Women Voters, organized in 1901 in Fayetteville.
138. Elizabeth Bassett Williams Papers, 1882-1982; 56 items.
139. Arabella Lanktree Wilson Papers,
1823-1876; 1 linear foot.
140. Thyra Samter Winslow Papers,
1900-1970; 76 items.
141. Woman's Book Club of Harrison Records, 1900-1987; 1 1/2
linear feet and 16 volumes.
142. Young Women's Christian Association Scrapbook, 1916-1923;
1 volume.
Copy of an essay, Early History of Fort Smith, written by Minnie Pahotski,
elementary school supervisor in Fort Smith (Sebastian County).
Correspondence, diary, ledgers, genealogical material, and photographs
pertaining to the McCormick and Parks families of Prairie Grove (Washington
County). Myrtle McCormick Parks served as vice president of the Prairie
Grove Telephone Company from 1958 to 1978. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, research notes, photographs,
and slides pertaining to the teaching and writing careers of Ruth Polk
Patterson (1930-1988). She began her teaching career in Little Rock (Pulaski
County) in 1962, where she implemented an Afro-American Studies program
between 1973 and 1980. Includes manuscript versions of her articles and
her book, The Seed of Sally Good'n (University Press of Kentucky,
1985). Also includes materials about her activities in professional and
civic organizations such as the Association for the Study of Afro-American
Life and History, the Arkansas Commemorative Commission, and the Arkansas
Sesquicentennial Commission.
Correspondence, annual reports, newsletters, clippings, articles, photographs,
videotapes, and audio recordings pertaining to the organization Peace Links.
Founded in 1982 by Betty Bumpers as a grassroots women's network to promote
peaceful alternatives to nuclear war, Peace Links grew from a statewide
to a worldwide organization in one year. Some of its important contributions
to date include establishing the U.S./Soviet Women's Exchange in October
1985, symbolic wrapping of the Peace Ribbon around the Pentagon on August
4, 1985, sponsoring the Peace Quilt to promote dreams of peace for participating
United States senators, and adding peace issues to the agendas of linked
organizations around the world. Special Collections has been designated
the official repository for the permanently valuable records of Peace Links
and, as such, will receive future records of the organization. See also
description from Brochure Series published
by Special Collections. Finding aid available
online.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, clippings, and photographs pertaining
to the career of Zillah Cross Peel (1874-1941) of Benton and Washington
counties. She was managing editor, and later owner, of the
Benton County
Sun from 1915 to 1922. In 1923, she became associate editor of the
University of Arkansas Alumni Magazine. She was a columnist for newspapers
in Fayetteville and Fort Smith, participated in the Federal Writers' Project
of the Works Progress Administration, and contributed essays to national
periodicals such as
Country Gentleman and Scribner's. Correspondents
include Zillah Peel Dunlap, Carolyn Thomas Foreman, and Grant Foreman.
Finding
aid available online.
Minutes, yearbooks, scrapbook, and other records of the Petentes Women's
Club of Little Rock (Pulaski County). Organized January 24, 1912, to study
literature, history, and current events, the club held its last meeting
on May 24, 1973. Finding
aid available online.
Minutes, membership lists, financial records, and constitution for
the Philomathic Club, the name of which was later changed to Pacaha Club.
This club was informally organized in January of 1888 in Helena (Phillips
County), by Maude Sanders and Margaret Redford. The club name was changed
in the fall of 1892 to Pacaha Club, to honor the name of an Indian village
which formerly occupied the site of Helena.
Correspondence, minutes, annual reports, financial records, membership
lists, and research files pertaining to the Pine Bluff League of Women
Voters. Founded in 1952 by women from Pine Bluff and Jefferson County,
this group has been inactive since 1983. See also Lynn
Hornsby Collection.
Printed broadside announcing Arkansas' First Poetry Day, to be held
October 15, 1948, sponsored by the Arkansas Branch of the National League
of American Pen Women. Includes a halftone portrait of writer and poet
Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni. Finding
aid available online.
Handwritten list of members, partial minutes, and resolutions of the
organizational meeting for the Political Equality League held May 2, 1914,
in Fayetteville (Washington County). Also, a mimeographed yearbook for
1914-1915, listing officers and the programs planned for the year with
speakers and topics, which included Practical Arguments for Equal Suffrage,
by Isabell McCartney, and Progress of the Equal Suffrage Movement in Arkansas,
by Martha H. White.
A collection of correspondence, biographical sketches, clippings, and
other genealogical materials, mostly photocopies, pertaining to members
of the Bean, Quesenbury, Russell, and Wagner families and to other early
settlers in and around Mulberry (Crawford County). Includes a typescript
of a diary kept by Adaline Parks Quesenbury (1827-1894) of Cane Hill (Washington
County). The diary covers the period from January 1 to May 23, 1853, with
the family living in Fayetteville (Washington County). This diary was edited
and published with explanatory material by Pat Donat in Flashback
28 (November 1978): 37-46. Subsequent issues of Flashback contain
portions of her husband William's diaries.
Correspondence, published and unpublished musical scores, photographs,
and other records created or received by composer Florence Beatrice Smith
Price (1888-1953), originally of Little Rock (Pulaski County). Price's
works have received numerous honors, including 1925 and 1927 Holstein Prizes,
a 1928 Schirmer Prize, and the 1932 Wanamaker Award. Her
Symphony in
E Minor, performed by the Chicago Symphony at the Century of Progress
Exposition in 1933, was the first symphony by a black woman composer to
be performed by a major American orchestra. Finding
aid available online.
Clippings, programs, and other material pertaining to the social, literary,
and other interests of Ida Pace, who became Mrs. Albert H. Purdue in 1898.
She was a graduate, in 1888, and associate professor of English, 1895-1898,
of the Arkansas Industrial University. She was involved with the founding
of Chi Omega Fraternity, a national women's social organization established
in 1895 in Fayetteville (Washington County). Serving as the first president
and then as first editor of the group's official publication, Eleusis,
Pace served as national president again from 1906 to 1912. The collection
also includes an autograph book with inscriptions written primarily by
students at Arkansas Industrial University, 1884-1886, while she was a
student.
Papers and photographs pertaining to the career of Lydia Lida Wilson
Pyles (born 1906) who published folk tales and local color articles and
books. Her stories were published in newspapers in Mountain View (Stone
County) and Eureka Springs (Carroll County); Springfield, Joplin, and Carthage,
Missouri; and Tulsa, Oklahoma. Her books include
Stranger at the Gates
(n.p., 1976) and Sense and Nonsense in Verse ([Pineville, Mo.: The
Pineville Democrat], 1950). She was active in Ozark Creative Writers, Inc.,
and in the Ozark Writers and Artists Guild. The photographs include Mrs.
Pyles, Cora Pinkley Call, and May Kennedy McCord. Finding
aid available online.
Journals, letters, literary manuscripts, clippings, photographs, and
other documents pertaining to the Cowgill, Smithee, Blore, and Ragland
families of Little Rock (Pulaski County); Denver, Colorado; and Pasadena,
California. Includes a three-generation series of journals kept by Annie
Eliza Cowgill Smithee from 1863 to 1865, with a few later entries; by her
daughter, Ray Smithee Blore from January to July, 1901; and by her granddaughter,
Lorraine Blore Ragland from 1917 to 1918 and 1924 to 1928. Smithee's diaries
and letters contain information about life in Little Rock during the Civil
War; about her friend David O. Dodd, who was executed for espionage in
January, 1864; and about her husband, newspaperman James Newton Smithee.
Other correspondents include Lettice M. Blore, Mary Cook, Eliza R. Davis,
Mary M. Knighton, Mrs. Ann McWilliams, Miss Annie L. McWilliams, and Edith
Smithee.
Correspondence, scrapbooks, photographs, reports, speeches, and other
records created or received by newspaper editor Lessie Stringfellow Read
(1886-1971) in conjunction with her activities in the Arkansas Federation
of Women's Clubs and the publicity committee of the General Federation
of Women's Clubs. Materials also relate to the Women's News Service, Inc.;
the Authors and Composers Society of Arkansas; the League of American Pen
Women; and the National American Woman Suffrage Association. One file contains
Ethel Estes Sure's 1940-1941 correspondence related to the International
Association of Altrusa Clubs.
Biographical sketches of University of Arkansas presidents, trustees,
and faculty requested by John Hugh Reynolds and David Yancey Thomas in
preparation of their book History of the University of Arkansas
(University of Arkansas, 1910). Items included pertain to Mary Gorton,
a faculty member from 1872-1877; Sara Eugenia Harris, 1877-1885; Jobelle
Holcombe, 1901-1903 and 1907-1942; and Ida Pace Purdue, 1895-1898. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, and photographs pertaining to
writer Eleanor de la Vergne Risley (1876-1945) of Eureka Springs (Carroll
County) and Ink (Polk County). Risley published stories about mountain
people and pioneer life in Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Missouri, and Arkansas.
Her books include Real Fairhope Folks (Fairhope, Ala.: Courier Press,
1928), The Road to Wildcat (Little, Brown, and Co., 1930), and An
Abandoned Orchard (Little, Brown, and Co., 1932). She also published
numerous stories in the Atlantic Monthly, most during the years
1928-1931 and 1939. The collection includes a manuscript for a novel, The
Jackson Family, and full drafts or fragments of several short stories,
poems, and plays. See also the Louis
and Elsie Freund Papers.
Copies of correspondence, diaries, photographs, and other papers created
or collected by Logan Holt Roots, Philander Keep Roots, and members of
their families in Arkansas, Illinois, and Nevada. Correspondents include
Emily Blakeslee (Mrs. Logan Holt) Roots, Frances Maria Fannie Blakeslee
Roots, and Martha E. Roots. Mrs. Emily Roots was active in numerous patriotic
and social clubs in Little Rock (Pulaski County), including Colonial Dames,
Daughters of the American Revolution, Aesthetic Club, and the Woman's Auxiliary
and Ladies' Aid of the Episcopal Church.
Correspondence, documents, and photographs pertaining to Judge Lee
A. Seamster and Fannie Presley Seamster of Bentonville (Benton County).
Contains two files of materials Mrs. Seamster collected for genealogical
research and membership in the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, school autograph book, and other papers created or
collected by Emma Eugene Ramsaur Shuford (1846-1905). Of particular interest
are letters she wrote to her father, John Franklin Ramsaur, in Hamburg
(Ashley County), while she attended school in North and South Carolina
during the Civil War. She graduated from Converse College in Spartanburg,
South Carolina, circa 1864.
Minutes, attendance, and financial records of the Woman's Fortnightly
Club of Siloam Springs (Benton County), organized in 1901 as a study club,
this organization has also been active in community improvement projects,
including Brighten the Night, which resulted in placing street lights at
a dangerous highway intersection.
Correspondence, reports, clippings, photographs, and other materials
pertaining to the professional and personal interests of Alfred Edgar Smith
(1903-1986), born in Hot Springs (Garland County). Journalist, press advisor,
and civil rights activist, Smith founded the Capitol Press Club in 1940
for black journalists. Unlike the National Press Club, which excluded women
until 1971, the Capitol Press Club welcomed women journalists. Correspondents
include Lula L. Jackson Smith, his wife; psychologist Mamie Clark, his
niece; Mary McLeod Bethune, and Hattie Caraway. Finding
aid available online.
Poems, programs, grade report, leaflet, and other memorabilia pertaining
to Lucille Isabelle Smith's activities as preparatory student, 1905-1907,
and as university student, 1908-1912, at the University of Arkansas.
Photocopies of proceedings of a military trial and other papers pertaining
to charges against Sara Jane Smith of Washington County. She was accused
and convicted of destroying telegraph wires to sabotage Union actions during
the Civil War. She was sentenced to be hung by the neck till dead on November
25, 1864, in St. Louis, Missouri. Her execution was delayed due to illness
and she was released after the war. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, student records, minutes, and photographs pertaining
to Southland College, located at Helena (Phillips County). Originally established
as an orphanage and school in 1864, Southland added a normal course in
1869 to train black teachers. Primary support was supplied by the Missionary
Board of the Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends. The first superintendent
and the first matron of the school were Calvin and Alida Clark. Other matrons
included Irena Beard, Anna B. Wolford, and Cecelia Jenkins. Numerous women
served on the teaching faculty at Southland and the school attracted a
high percentage of women students. See also description from Brochure
Series published by Special Collections. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, clippings, programs, photographs, and other memorabilia
created or collected by Glaphyra Bucket Wilkerson Stafford, a 1922 graduate
of the University of Arkansas. Items pertain to her university activities,
especially as a member of Delta Delta Delta, and to her marriage to Edward
Raven Marty Stafford. She has written feature articles for the family-owned
newspaper, the Springdale News. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, diaries, scores, scrapbooks, photographs, audio tapes,
and memorabilia pertaining to the life and career of America's first major
black composer of serious orchestral and operatic work. Raised in Little
Rock (Pulaski County), Still (1895-1978) spent most of his adult life in
California where he met Verna Arvey (1910-1987), a native of Los Angeles;
they were married in 1939. Verna Arvey Still, a concert pianist and distinguished
accompanist, was collaborator and librettist for her husband. Her career
as a journalist included contributions for many newspapers and journals,
including Musical America, Musical Courier, and Etude. She
is also the author of Choreographic Music (E. P. Dutton, 1941) and
In
One Lifetime (University of Arkansas Press, 1984), the latter of which
is her story of William Grant Still. She is listed in the first edition
of Who's Who of American Women (1941), and the third edition of
The
World Who's Who of Women (1976). Correspondents include Mabel Bean,
Dolores Calvin, Rudolph Dunbar, W. C. Handy, Mary D. Hudgins, Langston
Hughes, Teru Izumida, Eva Jessye, Sally Kamin, Clara B. Kennan, Alain Locke,
Mary Spalding Portanova, Marie Powers, Muriel Rahn, Willard Robison, Josephine
Schuyler, Irving Schwerk, Geneva Southall, Kay Swift, Deems Taylor, Carl
Van Vechten, Edgar Varse, Elisabeth Waldo, Clarence Cameron White, Pura
Belpr White, Walter White, and Paul Whiteman. See also description from
Brochure
Series published by Special Collections.
Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, literary manuscripts, clippings, scrapbooks and other
materials pertaining to the life, literary career, and works of English
novelist and critic, Frank Arthur Swinnerton. Includes significant correspondence
between Swinnerton and Irish novelist, Norah Hoult (421 letters); English
mystery writer, Marie Belloc Lowndes (96 letters); English novelist, Margaret
Storm Jameson (26 letters); and others. An extensive correspondents index
lists numerous other women with whom he exchanged information about literature,
publishers, mutual friends, and family matters. Most of the latter pertains
to the period after his marriage in 1924 to his second wife, Mary Dorothy
Bennett. Finding
aid available online.
Scrapbooks, photographs, and other material pertaining to steamboats
on the Mississippi River, particularly in the Helena (Phillips County)
and Memphis areas. Includes clippings about Captain Mollie Johnston (born
ca. 1871) of Helena, a licensed river pilot, and photographs and clippings
about Sue Bradford of Harrisburg (Poinsett County), who paints river boats.
Finding
aid available online.
Photocopy of a manuscript of the autobiography of Adolphine Fletcher
(Mrs. David D.) Terry (1882-1976) of Little Rock (Pulaski County). The
memoirs are entitled Life is My Song, Also as told to Carolyn J. Rose.
Terry was active in numerous organizations including the Association of
Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching and the Women's Emergency
Committee to Open Our Schools, Little Rock. She was the author of Courage
(E. P. Dutton and Co., 1938), Cordelia: Member of the Household
(Fort Smith, Ark.: South and West, 1967), and Charlotte Stephens: Little
Rock's First Black Teacher (Academic Press of Arkansas, 1973). Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, speeches, manuscripts, clippings, and other material
created or collected by David
Yancey Thomas, University of Arkansas professor of history and political
science, 1908-1941. Includes correspondence from 1923 to 1925 between Thomas
and members of the United Daughters of the Confederacy regarding his publication
Arkansas in War and Reconstruction, 1861-1874 (Arkansas Division, United
Daughters of the Confederacy, 1926). Also includes an undated paper about,
and photograph of, aviatrix Katherine Stinson from San Antonio, Texas.
Correspondence, research notes, photographs, and card file pertaining
to the research of Ruth Harris Thomas (1900-1973) of Morrilton (Conway
County). An ornithologist who wrote "The Country Diarist", a nature and
bird watchers column for the Arkansas Gazette from 1933 to 1973,
she also authored two books, Crip Come Home (Harper, 1952) and Brush
Goat, Milk Goat (Sterling, 1957). The collection includes bird banding
returns and research files on bluejays and purple finches.
Scrapbook created by Marnelle Thomsen while she was a student at the
University of Arkansas from 1949 to 1952. Materials pertain to her activities
as a student, especially as a member of Delta Gamma sorority, and to the
career of her father, Fred C. Thomsen, Razorback football coach from 1928
to 1942.
Correspondence, student essays, administrative memoranda, clippings,
and other materials created or received by Virginia Tidball during and
subsequent to her teaching assignment at the Jerome Relocation Center School
(Drew County). Most of the 179 essays by Japanese- American students are
autobiographical, describing their lives before evacuation as well as experiences
in the relocation program.
Correspondence, papers, and photographs pertaining to the James W.
Trimble family of Berryville (Carroll County). His wife, Ruth Maples Trimble,
was a member and officer of the Seventy-ninth Congress Club, for which
the collection includes minutes for the period 1946 to 1969. Several women
related to the Trimbles were active in the Twentieth Century Club of Berryville,
for which the collection includes minutes from its organizational meeting
on November 20, 1914, through March 26, 1920, and program yearbooks for
1950-1951 and 1960-1961. Also includes correspondence of Mrs. Trimble's
sisters (Ree Maples Howe, Jo Maples Martin, and Katherine Maples Price)
and genealogical materials pertaining to the Trimble, Maples, McQuown,
Peeke, Atchley, Boyd, Hand, Sapp, Tate, and Price families.Finding
aid is available online.
Correspondence, scrapbooks, and photographs pertaining to Virginia
Tyler of Eureka Springs (Carroll County). Writer, artist, antique shop
owner, and civic promoter, Tyler has written a variety of weekly columns
during the past twenty years for the Eureka Springs Times Echo.
Scrapbooks contain clippings of three of her weekly columns, "The Alpine
Hiking Club," 1967-1987; "Around Town," 1967-1987; and "Ukulele Club,"
1970-1984, which became "1890 Sing-along," 1984-1986. Photographs pertain
to people and topics included in her columns.
Clippings, programs, photographs, and other material pertaining to
activities of the University of Arkansas chapter of University Dames, a
club for wives of students and married women students, organized November
15, 1945.
Minutes of the University Infirmary Association, from its organization
November 18, 1895, to March 13, 1908. The goal of this women's group was
to assist in rendering more comfortable the students who may fall sick
in the dormitory at the University of Arkansas.
Correspondence, family papers, photographs, and other papers pertaining
to the Upchurch family of Fort Smith and Hackett (Sebastian County). Fredrica
Upchurch taught in elementary schools in Stuttgart (Arkansas County), Hackett,
Fort Smith, and Belle Point (Sebastian County) during the years 1920 to
1968. Grace Upchurch worked in the University of Arkansas Libraries, first
as a student assistant in 1927 and later as a librarian. She retired in
1970 from her position as head of the Circulation Department. Finding
aid is available online.
Two receipts and a notebook, 1853-1869, recording recipes, verses,
finances, genealogical notes, and miscellaneous memoranda recorded by Mary
Elizabeth Birnie Coster Vann of Fort Smith (Sebastian County). Other, unidentified
persons also may have made entries in the notebook.
Three audio cassette recordings of an interview, one audio cassette
recording of a presentation to a University of Arkansas seminar, a file
of interview notes, and a bibliography pertaining to Eureka Springs (Carroll
County) novelist, Constance Wagner. The interview was conducted by Ellen
Compton Shipley in November 1977. Wagner's books include Sycamore
(Knopf, 1950). Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, genealogical materials, photographs, and other papers
pertaining to the family of Judge David Walker and Jane Washington Walker
of Fayetteville (Washington County). Includes four letters written between
1833 and 1835 by Lucy Elizabeth Washington and Rebecca Washington of Green
Ridge, Kentucky, to the Walkers. Also includes a photograph and description
of a white quilt finished in 1812 by Rebecca Washington, whose father-in-law,
Warner Washington, was George Washington's first cousin. Sue H. Walker,
Rebecca Washington's great-granddaughter, donated the quilt to the Mt.
Vernon Association in 1913. Finding aid available
online.
Correspondence, documents, pamphlets, and miscellaneous papers collected
by Susan Howard Walker (1857-1939), of Washington County, and her grandfather,
Judge David Walker. Includes clippings of newspaper articles from the Fayetteville
Daily Leader written by Sue Walker about Arkansas pioneers. Finding
aid available online.
Annual reports, minutes, yearbooks, scrapbooks, photographs, and other
records pertaining to activities of the Washington County Extension Homemakers
Council, formally organized in December 1926. Home demonstration work began
in Washington County in March of 1916 with Harriet B. King as the first
home demonstration agent. Scrapbooks describe activities of local clubs
in the county. Records also pertain to the 1968-1969 project in which members
prepared histories and lists of tombstone inscriptions for cemeteries in
the county. Finding
aid available online.
Broadsides, photographs, clippings, pamphlets, letters, and other material
collected by Elizabeth Bassett Williams, a 1941 graduate of the University
of Arkansas. The most notable group of items in the collection consists
of nineteen photographs by J. H. Field, including portraits of Dorothy
Lighton and of Mrs. Williams's grandmother, Ida Corbett Knerr. Finding
aid available online.
Correspondence, journals, notebooks, and miscellaneous materials pertaining
to the Lanktree and Wilson families. Arabella Lanktree Wilson (1814-1866)
lived in Dardanelle (Yell County), where she and her daughter Anna taught
in the Dardanelle Academy for Young Ladies, and, later, in Pine Bluff (Jefferson
County). Correspondents include Arabella Wilson, Anna L. Wilson, Catherine
Lanktree, Mary T. Lanktree, Arabella Lanktree Gaaffe, and Eliza Wilson
Quitton Radford.
Correspondence and photocopies of stories and articles pertaining to
writer Thyra Samter Winslow (ca. 1885-1961) of Fort Smith (Sebastian County).
Materials were collected by Richard Clarence Winegard in preparation of
his doctoral dissertation, Thyra Samter Winslow: A Critical Assessment
(University of Arkansas, 1971). Her books of short stories include Picture
Frames (Knopf, 1923), Show Business (Knopf, 1926), and People
Around the Corner (Knopf, 1927).
Minutes, yearbooks, scrapbooks, correspondence, photographs, and other
records pertaining to the Woman's Book Club of Harrison (Boone County),
organized in 1900. The club's primary goal was to establish and operate
a city public library. Materials also document fundraising efforts, the
bookmobile program, local essay contests, and other community projects.
Finding
aid available online.
Includes memory books for the Young Women's Christian Association at
the University of Arkansas for the years 1916-1917 and 1917-1918. Also
includes clippings, notices, programs, photographs and other memorabilia
pertaining to the group's activities.
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