Skip to main content
Banner [Medium]
Sections
Hidden Tiles
expand
Archive Record Descriptions
Tile Short Summary
A list which describes the different types of archive records.

Displaying 3741 - 3760 of 41199
Manuscript Collections Mann, Lawrence. Papers
Description
Mann, Lawrence. Papers, 1862-2013 (bulk 1890-1930, 1946, 1952).1 linear ft. Location: U:309-310, OS:M, Vault. LSU alumnus and retired member of the LSU engineering faculty. Collection is comprised of correspondence related to the relationship of Lawrence Mann, Jr. and Suzanne Alcus before their marriage, and genealogical material and family photographs of their families. Correspondence and photographs of 1945 and 1946 relate to Mann’s military service during World War II. Mss. 5161.
Manuscript Topic
20th Century Wars
Jewish Community
LSU
Women
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1862
Description
Hunt, William H. (William Henry), 1823-1883. Letter, 1844 August 28. 1 letter. Location: MISC:H. William H. Hunt served as a Lieutenant Colonel in the Confederate Army and as Secretary to the United States Navy under President James Garfield. This is a letter from William H. Hunt in New Orleans to Charles Day, Esq. of New Haven, Connecticut. The letter updates Day on common acquaintances, including Charlotte Ewing, a performer in New Orleans, and a duel between a Colonel and Balie Payton. Mss. 5124.
Manuscript Topic
New Orleans to 1861
Performing Arts
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1844
Manuscript Collections Saxon, Lyle Letters
Description
Saxon, Lyle, 1891-1946. Letters, 1919-1928. 2 letters. Location: MISC:S. Lyle Saxon was a feature writer for the New Orleans Times-Picayune (1918-1926), state director of the Louisiana Writers' Project (1935-1942), and author of several books on the history and culture of Louisiana and New Orleans. He also befriended many of the day's writers, including Sherwood Anderson, John Dos Passos, Thomas Wolfe, and William Faulkner. Two letters written to Leslie Leigh Ducros Seltzer. One letter dated August 30, 1919 discusses a marriage certificate. The second letter dated August 22, 1928 discusses getting together and the completion of Saxon's book, "Fabulous New Orleans." Mss. 5111.
Manuscript Topic
Literature
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1919
Manuscript Collections Bedou, A. P. Photograph
Description
Bedou, A. P. (Arthur P.), 1882-1966. Photograph of Dillard University, between 1935 and 1952. 1photograph; 8 x 39.5 in. Location: OS:B. Arthur P. Bedou was a black photographer in New Orleans during the early and middle 20th century. He was a photographer for Xavier University and Booker T. Washington. A panoramic photograph of Dillard University depicting Rosenwald Hall on the left and Kearney Hall in the center. The photograph was taken from Gentilly Boulevard shortly after the university was founded in 1930. It was taken after 1935, but before 1952 based on the buildings depicted in the photograph. Mss. 5142.
Manuscript Topic
African Americans
Education
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1940
Description
Morgan, Elemore. Photographs of Caroline Dormon, 1967-1970. 3 Photographs. Location: MISC:D. Caroline Dormon (1888-1971) was an artist, author, and a naturalist. She worked for the Louisiana Forestry Department as their public relations representative; she aided in establishing Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana; and she wrote numerous works including Bird Talk, Flowers Native to the Deep South, and Southern Indian Boy. The photographs are three photographs featuring Caroline Dormon. One photograph depicts Dormon in her home at 'Briarwood,' Louisiana and is taken by an unknown photographer. Another features Dormon by a magnolia macrophylla and is photographed by Elemore Morgan. The third picture is photographed by John C. Guillet and is a head shot of Dormon by a tree. Mss. 5139.
Manuscript Topic
Education
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1967
Manuscript Collections Logsdon, Joseph letter
Description
Logsdon, Joseph. Letter, 1968 April 29. 1 letter. Location: MISC:L. Joseph Logsdon was a department chair and history professor at the University of New Orleans. With Sue Eakin, a professor of history at Louisiana State University in Alexandria, Logsdon researched materials and annotated the book "12 Years a Slave" by Solomon Northrup, which made it a scholarly text. Charles L. Dufour was a journalist and author from New Orleans, Louisiana. He wrote a weekly column called "Pie Dufour's A La Mode" for the New Orleans States-Item. This is a letter written by Joseph Logsdon to Charles Dufour regarding Louisiana State University's publication of "12 Years a Slave" written by Solomon Northup with annotations researched and added by Logsdon and Sue Eakin. Logsdon asks Dufour if he can write about the publication in his column for the newspaper. It is likely a copy of the book accompanied the letter. Mss. 5157.
Manuscript Topic
LSU
Literature
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1968
Manuscript Collections Louisiana ordinance of secession
Description
Louisiana ordinance of secession, 1861 Jan. 26. 1 ordinance. Location: OS:L. The 130 delegates to the Louisiana secession convention assembled in Baton Rouge on January 23, 1861. On January 26, 1861, it voted 113 to 17 to secede immediately. The Louisiana ordinance of secession is inscribed by hand on a single sheet of vellum, approximately 30 x 24 in., with text written in two columns in both English and French, and bearing 132 signatures. These are positive and negative photocopies made in 1938. In English and French. Mss. 263.
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1861
Description
Audubon, John James, 1785-1851. Manuscript of Children's warbler, before 1831. 1 manuscript. Location: Vault:53. John James Audubon was an American ornithologist, naturalist, hunter, and painter. "Children's Warbler," a short description of the bird of the same name, is from Audubon's "Ornithological Biography, or An Account of the Habits of the Birds of the United States of America" (Philadelphia: Judah Dobson, 1831), 1:180-81. Mss. 5190.
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1831
Manuscript Collections Ware Family papers
Description
Ware Family papers, 1865-1871. 2 items. Location: MISC:W. Henry Ware (1813-1898) was a planter, Democrat, and prohibitionist whose children included Richard Mathis Ware of New Orleans, Louisiana, and James A. Ware of Belle Grove and Celeste plantation, Louisiana. This collection includes a letter sent on behalf of the Corps of Cadets to Richard Mathis Ware from the Committee of Reference in Case of Reinstatement. He was dismissed from Louisiana State University following an incident involving the \"Asylum Bell,\" but the committee investigating the incident rescinded the charges. The second item is two printed letters to the editor of South-Western written by H. Ware in 1865 regarding politics in Harrison County, Texas. Mss. 5127.
Manuscript Topic
LSU
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1865
Manuscript Collections Hancock Club Campaign Ribbon.
Description
Hancock Club. Hancock Club Campaign Ribbon, 1868. 1 Campaign Ribbon. Location: MISC:H, VAULT:1. The St. James Parish Hancock Club was similar to the Knights of the White Camellia and the Ku Klux Klan. The club's primary concern in 1868 was creating a winning Democratic ticket. The central club location was in New Orleans and it was formed in 1868. This is a campaign ribbon for the Horatio Seymour and Frank L. Blair Democratic presidential election ticket of 1868. The Hancock Club of St. James Parish printed the campaign ribbon. Mss. 5137.
Manuscript Topic
African Americans
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1868
Manuscript Collections Cowan, James Letter
Description
Cowan, James, 1788-1864. Letter, 1851 March 15. 1 Letter. Location: MISC:C. James Cowan, son of Captain Thomas Cowan, married Harriette Adelaide Craige (1795-1867) and the couple lived in Jasper County, Ga. and Henry County, Tenn. This letter was written to Catherine St. Pierson while James Cowan was aboard the Steamer, Jamestown and describes plantation life on the Mississippi. Mss. 5123.
Manuscript Topic
Plantations
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1851
Description
Department of Louisiana Headquarters, photograph of, circa 1865. 1 photograph. Location: MISC:D. The Department of Louisiana Headquarters was located on Carondolet and Julia Streets in New Orleans, La. At the end of the Civil War, the three-story building acted as Union Army headquarters. A carte-de-visite style photograph of the Department of Louisiana Headquarters depicting a three story building with an American flag on a third floor balcony. One the back, there is a revenue stamp and an inscription of the building's name and location. Mss. 5103
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
New Orleans in the Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1865
Description
Moore, Thomas Overton, 1804-1876. E.S. Morgan Confederate Captain Commission, 1861 Oct. 8. 1 Certificate. Location: MISC:M. Thomas O. Moore, a sugar planter of Rapides Parish, Louisiana, owned Emfield, Lodi, and Mooreland Plantations with his wife Berthia Leonard Moore. He was a member of the Police Jury of Rapides Parish, a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives, and a State Senator. He served as governor of Louisiana (1860-1864) and called the Secession Convention in 1861. This is a certificate of commission signed by Thomas Overton Moore and [Maurico] Grivot, Adjutant and Inspector General of Louisiana, for E.S. Morgan. Mss. 5133.
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1861
Manuscript Collections Brashear, R. B. Letter
Description
Brashear, R. B. Letter, 1852 January 20. 1 letter. Location: MISC:B. Brashear was a politician from New Orleans. Francis D. Richardson was a member of the Louisiana Senate from Baton Rouge. Richardso built a plantation home called Bayside in Jeanerette, Louisiana. Letter is written by R. B. Brashear to Francis D. Richardson. The letter discusses Whig candidates of Louisiana and the Senate election. The letter also discusses a politician named Benjamin who was accused of having an affair. Mss. 5158.
Manuscript Topic
Politics
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1852
Description
Draft of Louisiana ordinance of secession, 1861, 1936. 1 manuscript, 1 letter. Location: OS:D. This draft of the Louisiana ordinance of secession was prepared by Lemuel Parker Conner Sr. and John Perkins Jr., delegates for Madison, Tensas, and Concordia parishes. A letter from Lemuel Parker Conner Jr., dated March 6, 1936, provides a full account of the creation and custodial history of the document. Positive and negative photocopies. Mss. 405.
Manuscript Topic
Civil War
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1861
Description
Glenk, Robert. Letter and French Opera House Lithograph, 1900-1925. 2 items. Location: Misc.:G, OS:G. Robert Glenk was the Chief Curator for the Louisiana State Museum. Letter from Robert Glenk to the wife of James Gallier, Jr., Algae Villavaso, asking for materials for a Louisiana State Museum exhibit featuring Louisiana architects (Sept. 14, 1925). James Gallier, Jr. was a prominent architect in New Orleans. The letter includes a lithograph by Gallier of the interior of the French Opera House, which was located on Toulouse and Bourbon Streets (circa 1900-1919). Mss. 5169.
Manuscript Topic
New Orleans 1866+
Performing Arts
Record Type
Manuscript Collections
Year
1900
expand
Tile Cover
People troubleshooting on a computer
Ask Us
Service
Tile Short Summary
Check our FAQs, submit a question using our form, or launch the chat widget to find help.