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Showing 2521 - 2530 of 5602 Records

It is made the duty of each Principal Recruiting Officer to exercise especial care, that his subordinate officers work faithfully and diligently
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    • Creator: Vermont. Adjutant and Inspector General's Office.
    • Date Issued: 1862
    • Parent Collections: Civil War Broadsides and Ephemera


    (Alva) Catalogue
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      • Creator: Prospect Archives and Center for Education and Research
      • Description: The catalogues are year-by-year summaries of (Alva‚Äôs) original collection preceded by an overall summary, all prepared by Prospect Archive Scholars/Fellows working with the original material.
      • Parent Collections: Prospect Archive of Children's Work, (Alva)
      Part of: (Alva)


      Catalogue
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        • Creator: Prospect Archives and Center for Education and Research
        • Description: The catalogues are year-by-year summaries of (Virginia‚Äôs) original collection, preceded by an overall summary, all prepared by Prospect Archive Scholars/Fellows working with the original material.
        • Parent Collections: Prospect Archive of Children's Work, (Virginia)
        Part of: (Virginia)


        Writings
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          • Creator: Prospect Archives and Center for Education and Research
          • Description: The selected writings are transcriptions of a child‚Äôs writing. They were made by various people working with the file, at different times, generally in preparation for a workshop or institute at which the child‚Äôs work was to be studied. Other than the use of pseudonyms and the removal of other identifying elements, no consistent guidelines for handling spelling, punctuation, or other idiosyncrasies were applied.
          • Parent Collections: Prospect Archive of Children's Work, (Virginia)
          Part of: (Virginia)


          Mary Farnham Diary, 1862-1863
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            • Creator: Farnham, Mary Elizabeth Johnson, 1828-1913.
            • Date Created: 1862-1863
            • Description: Mary Elizabeth (Johnson) Farnham, the daughter of Ezekiel and Nancy (Rodgers) Johnson, was born in Bath, NH, on January 19, 1828. She came to Bradford with her parents at a young age and was educated at Bradford Academy and the Newbury Seminary. On December 25, 1849, she married Roswell Farnham (1827-1903) in St. Albans, Vt. They returned to Bradford to teach in the Bradford Academy, Farnham as the teacher of painting and French, and her husband as principal of the academy. The couple joined the Bradford Congregational Church in 1854 and participated in a number of its activities: both Farnhams taught in the church’s Sunday school, and Mary Farnham held a chair on its music committee and was active in its missionary efforts. Farnham spent several months during the winter of 1862-63 in Union camps near Fairfax Court House and Wolf Run Shoals, VA, with her husband, who had been appointed Lieutenant Colonel and placed in command of the 12th Vermont Volunteer Regiment. Farnham returned to Vermont in April 1863 and her husband was discharged later that year, after which he entered into a career in politics. When Roswell Farnham was elected governor of Vermont in 1880, Mary Farnham became the state’s first lady and played an active role in gubernatorial social events. Farnham was involved in a number of civic organizations in her town, including Bradford’s Relief Corps. She helped found the Ladies’ Public Library and was its librarian for many years. Her interest in literature led her to enroll in the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Course, from which she graduated in 1884. She went on to earn one hundred and forty seals on her diploma and was recognized for this achievement at the 1906 Chautauqua Assembly in Chautauqua, NY. Three of Farnham’s four children lived to adulthood: Charles Cyrus Farnham (1864–1937), Florence Mary Osgood (1866–1958), and William M. Farnham (1869–1927). Her first child, Roswell Phelps Farnham Jr., died in infancy in 1861. Mary Farnham died on June 13, 1913, having suffered a stroke two weeks prior. Topics in Farnham’s diary include living conditions in Union camps and towns near the front lines, the roles and expectations of women during the American Civil War, Washington D.C. in the 1860s, mid-century modes of travel, and health and medicine during the Civil War.
            • Parent Collections: Diaries
            Part of: Diaries


            Long Pond: A History and a Diary - Westmore, VT, 1886-1903
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              • Date Created: 1886-1903
              • Description: The Long Pond Westmore diary, which spans the years 1889 to 1903, contains a partial history of a summer camp on Long Pond in Westmore, Vt., as well as inventories of the camp’s supplies and accounts of property maintenance and recreational activities undertaken by its caretakers. Topics in this diary include local flora and fauna and outdoor recreational activities, such as hiking and fishing.
              • Parent Collections: Diaries
              Part of: Diaries


              Vermont Cynic, 1991, August
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                • Creator: University of Vermont
                • Date Issued: 1991, August
                Part of: Vermont Cynic


                Vermont Cynic, 1991, March
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                  • Creator: University of Vermont
                  • Date Issued: 1991, March
                  Part of: Vermont Cynic


                  Vermont Cynic, 1992, October
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                    • Creator: University of Vermont
                    • Date Issued: 1992, October
                    Part of: Vermont Cynic


                    The Vermont Cynic
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                      • Creator: University of Vermont
                      • Date Created: 1929
                      • Description: Pages 3-6 missing
                      • Parent Collections: Kake Walk at UVM
                      Part of: Kake Walk at UVM