Showing Collections: 1 - 6 of 6
- Subject
- Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.)
- Business correspondence
- African American college teachers
- Classical languages--Study and teaching
- Classicists
- College teachers
- Universities and colleges--Alumni and alumnae
- African Americans--Study and teaching
- Architects
- Architecture--Study and teaching
- Civilization, Classical
- Clippings (Books, newspapers, etc.)
- College students
- History
- Instructional and educational works
- Louisiana Purchase Exposition
- Manuscripts
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- Missouri--Saint Louis
- Numismatics
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- Scrapbooks
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- Twentieth century
- Twenty-first century
- University and college faculty members less ...
Roland Bockhorst Correspondence to Irving D. Moy
Irving D. Moy was a former student of Roland Bockhorst and graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 1972. Moy continued to correspond with Bockhorst until his death in 1995. The Roland Bockhorst Correspondence to Irving D. Moy consists of Bockhorst’s side of the correspondence.
Department of Classics Records
The Department of Classics Records consists of a small collection of correspondence from Carl W. Conrad and William Sale (1978-1979), degree requirements for a M.A. and a Ph.D, and information regarding the John and Penelope Biggs Resident in the Classics (1996).
Kevin Herbert Papers
Arthur Hughes Papers
The Arthur Hughes Papers consists of correspondence, notes, photographs, clippings and announcements, and cassette tapes.
Jack A. Kirkland Papers
The Jack A. Kirkland Papers consists primarily of his publications and writings on the American Black family and social and economic development. In addition, the collection includes materials relating to Kirkland’s professional activities, conference materials, correspondence, teaching in the George Warren Brown School of Social Work and the Black Studies Program, and research materials.
Stratford Lee Morton Papers
This modest collection details the early personal development and subsequent professional activities of Stratford Lee Morton. The collection is particularly strong in chronicling the planning for the1953 – 1954 Worlds Fair in St. Louis (which was ultimately not conducted) and for records of the Academy of Science in St. Louis.