Showing Collections: 21 - 30 of 141
Henry Brown papers
This collection contains the personal reminiscences of Methodist minister Reverend Henry Brown, who ministered in Iowa and eastern Washington State. The collection includes scrapbooks and newsclippings.
T.H. Callaway letter to James R. Callaway
T.H. Callaway writes to his uncle, James Callaway, four-pages recounting his participation in the Battle of Cornith, October 2-3, 1862, as part of the Confederate army.
Calvin Brewster Coulter, Jr. papers and lantern slides
John M. Canse pamphlet collection
John M. Canse was pastor for the University Methodist Episcopal Church in Seattle, Washington, during the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition of 1909. This collection contains booklets, pamphlets, and maps on the history and development of cities and counties in Washington, Oregon, and other states. It also includes materials on railroads, highways, bridges, expositions, national parks and forts, and George Washington.
Chancellor's Office
Chinese Reconciliation Project Foundation records
Chism Lecture in Humanities and Arts Recordings
History and Purpose: Named after Catharine Gould Chism, a Seattle businesswoman and patron of the arts. When Chism died in 1978, she left Puget Sound $1.25 million for an endowment that provides permanent support for the arts and humanities at the university.
Schedule: Lectures are scheduled in various disciplines throughout each academic year, in conjunction with residencies and/or master classes.
Civil Marriage Agreements
This collection contains four original, mostly handwritten documents from Mexico pertaining to civil marriage arrangements. Collection materials are in Spanish; Castilian.
Civilian Exclusion Order posters
Civilian exclusion order notices were posted in highly visible spots within designated exclusion areas to notify Japanese Americans of their impending removal and incarceration by the United States government during World War II. This collection contains two examples of civilian exclusion order notices titled “Instructions to All Persons of Japanese Ancestry."