The Special Collections & University Archives Department contains materials related to the history of Kansas and Pittsburg State University. Special Collections includes printed material, manuscripts, correspondence, business records, and memorabilia which document the culture and inhabitants of Southeast Kansas. University Archives acts as the official repository for Pittsburg State University.
This gallery provides downloadable finding aids for the department's processed collections, and links to available digitized collections in Digital Commons.
SEARCH TIP: Keywords associated with each collection were drawn from the following list. These terms can be entered into the search box on the right.
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Items in Special Collections cannot be checked out but may be used on-site with the assistance of staff. Business hours are from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
For more information about the collections highlighted here or to schedule a visit, please contact Special Collections & University Archives at: | (620) 235-4883
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15th Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, Company F, records, 1862-1864
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of volunteer enlistments, payroll accounts, certificates of release, company descriptive book, company clothing book, quarterly return of clothing and camp garrison equipment for the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th quarters of 1863, ordnance and ordnance stores reports for the 3rd quarter of 1863 and the company muster roll for the 15th Kentucky Volunteer Cavalry, Company F.
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Alderman, Barbara J., collection, 1998-2008
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of personal materials and various research materials related to the author and historian Barbara J. Alderman. Barbara J. Alderman (1948- ) was born in south central region of Kansas. She attended and graduated in 1970 at Pittsburg State University when it was still under the name of the Kansas State College of Pittsburg. She has been working as a freelance writer and a photographer for local, regional, and national publication since 2002. Alderman has been also working as a researcher-for-hire since 2010. She is known for her book “The Secret Life of the Lawman’s Wife.” She has also published multiple books on the Kindle and articles in various magazines.
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Allan, Glenn, scrapbook, 1944-1946
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A scrapbook of Mr. Glenn Allan’s World War II years training in the United States, and service in Guam and Saipan. Newspapers (Wichita Eagle) from May and August 1945 dealing with the surrender of Germany and the bombing and surrender of Japan.
Floyd Glenn Allan (1918-2007) was born in Wichita, Kansas. He grew up in Hutchison, Kansas and Neosho, Missouri. Prior to the war he worked as a sheet metal worker for Beechcraft in Wichita. He joined the United States Army Air Force in 1944 and trained in the United States before being assigned a post in Guam and Saipan, where he was a member of the 500th Bomb Group of the 881st Air Crew (AKA “Rogers Crew”), flying B-29 bombers. He flew in eight missions over Japan. After the war, Allan married Hermeone Gherke in 1946 but they divorced several years later. In 1949 Allan married Dorothy Lee Chitwood. Both he and Dorothy passed away in Pittsburg, Kansas in 2007.
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Allegro Music Club collection, 1937-1967
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This is collection consists of newspaper clippings, yearbooks, photographs, and organization documents related to the Allegro Music Club of Parsons, Kansas
The Allegro Music Club was a women’s musical organization formed in 1937 in Parsons, Kansas. Their intent was to “bring together lovers of music and to maintain an interest in all music forms.” Often meeting in the home of one of the members, the club presented multiple music programs throughout the year, both privately and for the public. The club mainly focused on classical music, however they did present other genres of music on certain occasions. The Allegro Music Club worked closely with the Parsons Junior College (now Labette Community College) in order to foster and support music students hoping to subsequently attend four-year colleges, especially those who intended to major in music. After several decades of active work in Parsons, the Allegro Music club eventually disbanded due to aging members and a lack of availability of new individuals able to devote the needed time to the club’s mission.
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Allen family collection, 1883-1976
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Clifton Ellis Allen Sr. (1883-1980) born in Wayne County, Indiana. He married Myrtle S. Redmond and together they had two sons, William Redmond Allen (1905-1914) and Clifton Ellis Allen Jr. (1912-1963). Clifton Sr. and his family relocated to Pittsburg, Kansas in 1921. While living in Pittsburg, Clifton Sr. opened a company by the name of the “Allen Plumbing and Heating Company.” Clifton Jr. married Emma Lee Redding and together they had a son and a daughter, Clifton Ellis “Trip” Allen (1951- ) and Jean Louise Allen (1952- ). Clifton Jr. was in the Navy during World War II where he served as a pipefitter Petty Officer 2nd Class. “Trip” was able to collect the personal correspondence that had been sent between various family members and friends through the years of 1883 to 1975.
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Altrusa Club scrapbook, 1966-1967
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A scrapbook of activities, photographs, clippings, programs, minutes, and other documents related to the Altrusa Club of Pittsburg, Kansas, 1966-1967. Altrusa International is an organization committed to community service. It was founded in 1917 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Pittsburg Club was active in the 1960s but is no longer active today.
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American Association of University Professors collection, 1956-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection includes personal correspondence, membership lists, accounting forms & records, receipts and other miscellaneous materials related to the Pittsburg State University chapter of the AAUP.
The AAUP was founded at an organizational meeting held at the Chemists’ Club in New York City in January 1915. The mission of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) is to advance academic freedom and shared governance; to define fundamental professional values and standards for higher education; to promote the economic security of faculty, academic professionals, graduate students, post‐doctoral fellows, and all those engaged in teaching and research in higher education; to help the higher education community organize to make our goals a reality; and to ensure higher education's contribution to the common good.
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American Association of University Women, Pittsburg Branch, records, 1926-1973
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Records of the Pittsburg, Kansas, branch of the American Association of University Women. The records consist of newsletters, scrapbooks, membership lists, programs, histories, correspondence, financial records, photographs, by-laws, and related materials.
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American Business Women’s Association records, 1968-2002
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains newsletters and meeting minutes of ABWA (American Business Women’s Association), newspaper articles about the group and women’s fairs, ABWA yearbooks and advertisements, workshop information and speakers, photographs of members, meetings and celebrations 1968-2002, guest books of members and visitors to meetings.
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Anderson, Bill J., collection, 1880-1986
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains late 19th century bank checks, biographical information on Bill J. Anderson, and the history of the National Bank of Pittsburg.
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Andrade, Audrey B., collection, 1862-2014
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of genealogical records, school records, work documents, music, photographs, and books related to Audrey Andrade and her friends and family.
Audrey Beatrice Edge Andrade was born in Stockton, Missouri on January 15, 1917 to George W. and Maud Ritter Edge. Andrade grew up in Pittsburg, Kansas, attended Lakeside Elementary School, and graduated from Pittsburg High School in 1934. She received her two-year education degree from Kansas State Teachers College (now Pittsburg State University) in 1936. She married John F. Andrade who served as a staff sergeant in the US Army during World War II. They had five children. Mr. Andrade worked for product distribution companies like Milhender and sold household appliances. Mrs. Andrade had an interest in music including piano, violin, and singing. John Andrade passed away in 1978 and Audrey Andrade passed away in 1996. The couple are buried in Rhode Island Veterans Memorial Cemetery, in Exeter, Rhode Island.
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Angwin, Maynard, collection, 1932-1977
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Maynard Angwin (1903-1980) was a prominent businessman in the Pittsburg, Kansas area. His collection consists of bound publications and athletic programs (of Pittsburg State University and other school teams), magazines, clippings, and photographs. The collection contains programs and magazines of various sporting events.
Maynard Angwin was born on July 30, 1903 in Ozark, Missouri. He married Marjorie Coles in Fort Scott, Kansas, on Oct. 10, 1928. After Marjorie Angwin passed away in 1958, Angwin married Mary Deane Jones in 1962. Angwin had two daughters, named Marjorie Dean O’Hara and Carol Sue Heflin, a son, Frederick B. Angwin, and a stepson, Roy Jones. Angwin graduated from Kansas State Teacher’s College, now Pittsburg State University, in 1933. On June 5 of that year, Angwin and his brother, Gordon, started the Gordon Transit Company, which was a city (Pittsburg) bus service. In 1950 he purchased the Jack G. Cherry Insurance Agency, that eventually became known as Angwin Ryan Stanley Inc. After his retirement, Angwin maintained an office on the third floor of the National Bank Building in Pittsburg. He served as president on the Pittsburg Insurance Board and the Kansas Association of Independent Insurance Agents. Angwin was an active and supportive alumnus of Pittsburg State University. He offered his busses for the transport of athletic teams at PSU as they traveled to games around the country. He was the president of the Alumni Association, and of the PSU Endowment Association. In 1970, he received the PSU Alumni Meritorious Achievement award.
Angwin was also active in the Pittsburg community. He was a member of the First United Methodist Church and also held memberships in Masonic orders including the Pittsburg Masonic Blue Lodge, the York Rite bodies and Scottish Rite. He was a member of Mirza Temple of the Shrine, and the Royal Order of Jesters. He was a president for the Pittsburg Area Chamber of Commerce, MoKan Area Boy Scout Council, and the Elm Acres Home for Children. Angwin passed away on March 11, 1980 in Pittsburg, Kansas.
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Arcadia Christian Church collection, 1894-1994
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection consists of history papers, photographs, handouts newspapers, a letter, and a plat map all in relation to the Arcadia Christian Church, Arcadia, Kansas.
The original Arcadia Christian Church was built in 1893, although the congregation surrounding the church was started in the 1880s as a Sunday School class. In 1892, the State of Kansas granted the congregation a charter which resulted in the building’s construction. The church cost $1,600 and had an organ, a church bell (installed in 1897), and a seating capacity for 300 people. The Sunday School held at the church brought about the most participants. For its first ten years, the church had difficulty in finding a regular pastor. One traveling pastor that was briefly appointed was popular writer and pastor Harold Bell Wight (1872-1944), who held bible studies on Friday nights and occasionally a Sunday service. In 1909, Arcadia saw an early revival of Pentecostalism or “holiness people.” In 1914, after 21 years, the church became the First Church of Christ. In August 1915, G. W (George William) Corporon (1887-1969) became pastor, holding the position until 1919. By 1918, the Sunday School had reached 300 attendees and the yearly average of conversions and ascensions were approximately 200. After Corporon’s first resignation in 1919, the church went through a series of pastors, and saw a decline in membership. When G. W. Corporon returned in 1925, the church began to uptake home mission work, and the church once again saw an increase in members. In 1929, Reverend Corporon resigned for a second time. After a brief period of temporary pastors, Reverend. H. G. Kenney became pastor from 1930-1932. The church saw another brief period of steady growth. In 1933, Reverend Corporon returned for his third and final tenure, and was the church’s minister until his final retirement in 1943.
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Ascension Via Christi Hospital collection, circa 1940-2004
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of documents, photos, scrapbooks, and other items regarding Mt. Carmel Hospital and Ascension Via Christi Hospital in Pittsburg, Kansas.
In 1903, the Mt. Carmel Hospital was opened to the public in Pittsburg, Kansas by the Sisters of St. Joseph, of Wichita, Kansas, serving local citizens and miners. The hospital was operated by the Sisters, who performed the cooking, cleaning, nursing, and other tasks while doctors donated their services and time. Throughout the years, many additions were added to the hospital. Though the final expansion was finished in 1951, by 1960 it showed signs of needing its own doctor and was having trouble accommodating the needs of the community with much-needed repairs and often being over capacity. This led to the 70-acre location on Rouse and Centennial Streets where a $6.5 million hospital was built and opened in 1971. The hospital became a part of Via Christi Health Systems in 1995 and added an $18 million surgery center in 2014.
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AuBuchon, James M., collection, 1968-2007
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
James AuBuchon was an administrator at Pittsburg State University for the majority of his professional career. He obtained two of his degrees at PSU before going into the Army, where he served for 36 years. This collection contains correspondences, resumes, university policies and other related materials, materials on the colleges and buildings within the university, the Veteran’s Memorial, materials related to organizations, committees, businesses that AuBuchon was involved with.
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Bailey, Jessie Marie, collection, 1950-1985
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains replica American Revolution and American flags, Confederate flags, English, French and Spanish flags; era of Columbus and other American Colonial flags along with information cards for most of the flags; books about the history of flags; American State flag description cards; Native American flag description; and other flag histories.
Jessie Marie Bailey was born in El Dorado Springs, Missouri in 1897 and died in Pittsburg, Kansas in 1983. She taught in the Pittsburg, Kansas public school system for forty years. After her retirement she restored, researched, and gave presentations about flags.
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Banzet, Warren K., correspondence, 1915-1946
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection is comprised of personal correspondence, two newspapers, and a typewritten copy of a poem. The correspondence makes up the majority of the collection and consists of 74 letters written by Warren K. Banzet to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Banzet, from February 1945 through August 1946, while serving in occupied Japan following World War II.
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Barnard, Gerald, photographs, 1936-1938
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Five photographs of the football team of the Kansas Teachers College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) from the 1930s, taken by student photographer Gerald Barnard.
Gerald W. (Jerry) Barnard was born in Oswego, Kansas in 1918. Barnard attended the Kansas Teachers College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) from 1936-1940 and after graduation, worked as an accountant. He worked with the Deming Investment Company and then the First National Bank of Oswego. He also served as the president of Oswego Industries, chairman of Mid-America, Inc., vice-president of the Kansas Bankers Association, chairman of the Kansas Development Credit Corporation, and president of the Tri-County Bankers Association. Barnard married Jane Weeks in 1939 and she passed away in 2002. They had three daughters and one son. Gerald Barnard passed away in Oswego in 2007.
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Barnes, Debra Dene collection, 1965-2008
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of materials relating to Debra Dene Barnes, a native of Moran, Kansas and student at Kansas State College of Pittsburg, who was chosen as Miss Kansas 1967 and then went on to win the Miss America 1968 Pageant. The collection consists of newspaper clippings, scrapbooks of news clippings, photographs, various pageant programs, and other papers and photographs relating to the time she spent as a student at Kansas State College of Pittsburg and her tenure as Miss Pittsburg State 1967, Miss Kansas 1967, and Miss America 1968.
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Barney, Louie, collection, 1984-1989
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Louie Lee Barney was born in 1943 at Pittsburg, Kansas. He attended Pittsburg State University (then Kansas State College of Pittsburg), University of Kansas, and Washburn University School of Law. He practiced law in Cherokee and Crawford counties in Kansas throughout his career. A police supporter, Barney served as a volunteer police reservist for twenty years. His interest in police work is reflected in his fascination and creation of Dick Tracy material. He passed away in 2003 at the age of 60.
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Baron, Frank, collection, 1903, 1955-2011
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Frank Baron was a professor in German Studies at the University of Kansas. He was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1936 and immigrated to the United States with his parents. This collection contains correspondence, educational materials, papers, newsletters, publications, programs, travel materials, catalogues, photographs, clippings, CDs, cassettes, DVDs and VHSs.
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Bartolini, R. Paul, collection, 1918-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The R. Bartolini Collection is primarily related to Nolie Mumey’s works and the history of Colorado. The contents of this collection consist of correspondences, bibliographies, biographical material, magazines, journals, articles, clippings, research and ordering material, and some miscellaneous papers and objects.
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Baxter, Frances, collection, 1912-1981
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection gives an overview of Baxter’s education at Pittsburg State University, her professional positions, and organizations she in which she was involved, and her many travels. The collection includes materials that Baxter saved over the years and reflect life and culture of both Mexico and Southeast Kansas from the late 1910s to the 1980s.
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Bays, Bertie Cole, collection, 1899-1972
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of records relating to Bertie Cole Bays that includes correspondence, poetry manuscripts, newspaper clippings, programs, and miscellaneous materials.
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Bean, Kenneth E., collection, 1949-2002
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Biographical materials, research reports, lists of patents and publications, certificates, awards, and photographs of Kenneth Bean, a 1950 graduate of Pittsburg State University, engineer for Eagle-Picher and Texas Instruments corporations, and pioneer in silicon technology.
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Beasley, Francis A., collection, 1977-2007
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Francis A. “Bud” Beasley was born June 2, 1923, in Chase, Louisiana, and died September 21, 2010, in Pittsburg, Kansas. After graduating from high school in 1941, Beasley found work at the Southern Pacific Railroad in south Texas, working until 1943. In 1943, he joined the U.S. Army Air Corps. During World War II, he was a Staff Sergeant and flew thirty-nine missions in the European Theater with the 8th Air Force, 492nd Bomb Group, 856 Bomb Squadron, 2nd Air Division. He was awarded the Air Medal with 5 Oak Leaf Clusters, Good Conduct Medal, Victory Medal, and European African Middle Eastern Campaign Ribbon with four Battle Stars. He served until 1945. After the war, he enrolled in Texas A&I University and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration in 1949. Beasley worked in the railroad industry, and with the Farmers Insurance Group, where he stayed until he retired in 1984. This collection includes personal, military related materials, correspondence, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous items.
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Beeler, Joe Neil, collection, 1958-2006
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Joe Neil Beeler was an illustrator, painter and sculptor for most of his life. He helped bring international attention to Western art when he rose to fame during the 1960’s. He co-founded the Cowboy Artist of America and held several art shows. The papers in this collection include correspondences (personal and professional), news clippings, magazines, articles, photographs, and programs.
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Bender Crimes photographs, 1873
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Three photographs taken in rural Labette County, Kansas in 1873 at the Bender family house and property shortly after the discovery of the murders of approximately 12 individuals.
Roger O’Connor (1941-2006) ran a bookstore, Mostly Books, in Pittsburg, Kansas, selling books, papers, and photographs. He previously had bookstores in Lawrence, Kansas and Omaha, Nebraska before coming to Pittsburg. He previously had attended Pittsburg State University, where he received a master’s degree. The Bender Family crimes occurred in 1872-1873 where a mysterious family going by the name of Bender (aka “Bloody Benders”) murdered, apparently for their money, approximately a dozen travelers in remote Labette County, after they had stopped at a make-shift inn they operated. The family escaped shortly before their crimes were discovered and were never caught nor brought to justice. In 2022, Roger O’Connor’s daughter, Shannon O’Connor, donated the three photographs to Pittsburg State University that had been in her father’s possession, from his own research on the Benders.
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Benelli family collection, 1919-1963
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Benelli Family Business Papers cover the business lives of Desiderio Pompey Benelli, a Pittsburg, Kansas jeweler and optometrist, and his son David P. Benelli, an optometrist. This collection consists of ledgers of expenses, correspondences, certificates, legal documents, receipts, clippings, a photograph, and miscellaneous items.
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Berkey, Vernon A., collection, circa 1940-1960
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of medical equipment of Dr. Vernon A. Berkey, who worked in the medical field from 1943-2000.
Elizabeth Berkey Moore, daughter of Dr. Vernon Atkeson Berkey, donated the collection. Dr. Berkey (1918-2012) studied at Kansas University and graduated from KU Medical School in 1943, joining the US Army Medical Corps shortly after. He worked at a field hospital in the Philippines before being transferred to Fort Devin, Massachusetts as a Hospital Commander. Afterwards, he completed a fellowship in radiology at Washington University, St. Louis. Dr. Berkey then began working at Wadsworth Hospital in Leavenworth, Kansas during which he met his wife, Suzanne Anderson. In 1954, Dr. Berkey began working at Mt Carmel Hospital, where he would work for nearly 50 years, and the Ft. Scott and Chanute Radiology Departments for the first seven years. He retired in 2000. Elizabeth B. Moore followed in her father’s footsteps to pursue a career in the medical field, becoming a Family and Marriage Counselor.
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Bezinque family collection, 1989
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains family trees and information for the Bezinque, LaSalle, Gomez, Chiolino, Merciez, Souply, and DeGruson families.
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Bissell, Jewell Myers, collection, circa 1907-1923, 1970
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of materials relating to Jewell Bissell, a native of Cherokee County, Kansas. The collection consists of a memoir of her childhood, artwork, photographs, letters, and a graduation announcement.
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Black, Bob, photographs, 1978
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Bob Black Photographs are polaroid photographs showing the immediate aftermath of the July 1978 fire in Girard, Kansas which destroyed the former Haldeman-Julius Publishing Company building.
Bob Black was born in 1943 in Nashville, Tennessee, to John and Mary (Collins) Black. Bob graduated from Ottawa High School (Kansas) in 1961 and went on to earn a Computer Science degree from Kansas State University in 1972. In 1972 he began his career at Missouri Pacific as a programmer analyst. Shortly after this, he moved to Pittsburg, Kansas to start the first ServiceMaster franchise in Pittsburg. He later formed Alternate Systems, initially a mail distribution service and later a cleaning company. He would go on to own and operate several other small businesses throughout the years. Bob married Judy McLain in 1969, and they had three children, Michelle, Tim and Belinda. Bob "Blue" was known for his vintage Harley motorcycles. He enjoyed traveling to blues festivals and motorcycle events. Bob served in the U.S. Marine Corp from 1964-1967, with 13 months of foreign service during the Vietnam War. He was decorated with multiple medals and badges. For years Bob lived in Carona, Kansas (Cherokee County) in the old historic Gay Parita Ballroom building, which had been renamed the Blue Parita. He passed away in 2021.
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Black Jack, Kansas scrapbook, 1930-1974
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Black Jack, Kansas Scrapbook includes newspaper clippings telling the account of the battle and town of Black Jack, as well as some history of Black Jack-area families including O’Neil, Von Tries, Black, and Pearson. Most clippings are from the Wellsville Globe and the Ottawa Herald. Photographs are included.
The Battle of Black Jack was the first armed conflict between proslavery and antislavery forces in the United States. The battle near Baldwin City on June 2, 1856, had implications far beyond Kansas Territory. Some call it the first battle of the Civil War. The Kansas-Nebraska Act had opened Kansas Territory in 1854 and allowed citizens to determine whether Kansas would be a free or slave state. The territory soon became a battleground between those who supported slavery in the territory and those who opposed it. On May 21, 1856, Sheriff Samuel Jones, the first sheriff of Douglas County, and a posse of 750 proslavery men raided Lawrence. In retaliation, John Brown and a small group of men—including some of his sons—violently murdered five men living on Pottawatomie Creek on May 24, 1856. Accompanied by a proslavery militia, Henry Pate set out to find Brown. He captured two of Brown's sons and held them prisoner. On June 2, Brown's free-state militia attacked Pate's men encamped on the grounds. About 100 men engaged in a three-hour battle, which led to Pate's surrender. The battle further divided the nation’s already-polarized abolitionist and proslavery factions. As politicians, newspapers, and citizens watched the story of “Bleeding Kansas” unfold, hints of a larger potentially violent conflict to come became increasingly evident. The Battle of Black Jack is significant for its association with abolitionist John Brown. Both the battle and the coverage of the battle in the nation’s newspapers introduced John Brown, who called for armed insurrection to end slavery.
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Blunk, Robert and Katie, collection, 1890-1930, 1951
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of magazines from the 1890s and 1900s.
Robert Blunk was born in Salyard, Kansas on December 14, 1923. He attended multiple colleges but received his Bachelor of Fine Arts at the Kansas City Institute of Arts in 1950 and a Masters of Fine Arts in Sculpture at the Kansas Teacher’s College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) in 1952. Robert worked as an art professor at colleges for 40 years and taught at Pittsburg State University from 1962 until his retirement. While teaching, Robert painted and sculpted many works, taking inspiration from landscapes, seascapes, Egyptology and art, and inventors like the Wright Brothers. His website http://www.robertblunkartist.com/ showcases his work from the 1940s to 2017. Katie Blackwood Blunk was born on January 14, 1923 in Buffalo, Kansas. She received a Bachelor of Arts from Pittsburg State University and became a teacher and director of adult education for Pittsburg Public Schools. She was active in many local organizations and worked in Africa with Robert teaching kids to read English. Katie passed away in 2007. The magazines and periodicals in this collection were published in the 1890s and 1900s. Most of the magazines stopped publishing around the 1920s, although a few published for longer. A few like the Frank Reade publications are dime novels which are weekly or monthly printed stories following a certain character or theme. Others are home and fashion magazines like the Delineator which was published by Butterick, known for its sewing patterns.
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Bonar, Harlan, collection, 2011-2015
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection contains artwork, papers, and a recording of an interview of Kansas City-based artist Harlan Bonar.
Harlan Bonar was born in 1952 in Warrensburg, Missouri. His family settled nearby in the small town of Knob Noster, where Bonar would live for most of his life. He graduated from Knob Noster High School in 1970 and was stationed in Thailand during the Vietnam War between 1972 and 1976.
After the war, Bonar returned to Missouri and began to paint. He was self-taught and eventually became known for the unique style and vivid imagery in his paintings, referred to sometimes as “outsider art.” Subject matter for his paintings ranged from biblical themes to Civil War battles.
Bonar passed away in April 2021. He is buried in the Knob Noster cemetery.
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Booklover’s Club, Pittsburg, Kansas, records, 1921-1988, 2000
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Minute book, history, by-laws, membership lists, financial records, and related materials of a women’s reading club in Pittsburg, Kansas, organized in July 1921.
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Bowen, Sarah R., ledger, 1897-1908
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Sarah R. Bowen Ledger consists of a ledger book, three loose ledger sheets, three deposit receipts, five new clippings, three photograph negatives, and a letter.
Sarah R. (Baird) Bowen was born in 1843 in New York. She married Thomas C. Bowen (1841-1875) in 1867. They ran a shipping company together in Colfax, Illinois. Sarah died in 1919.
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Bowyer, Lawrence L., Collection, 1949
Brent McDowell
The collection contains a typewriter that belonged to Lawrence L. Bowyer, a resident of Pittsburg, Kansas.
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Box, Richard M., papers, 1863-1905
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Papers of Captain Richard M. Box, a Union veteran of the American civil war who served in the Seventh Cavalry regiment of the Missouri State Militia from 1862 to 1865.
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Bozick, Frank J., collection, 1927-2008
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Frank J. Bozick was born February 11, 1903 in Frontenac, Kansas. Frank was one of six children born to Frank and Teresa (Yartz) Bozick. At age 38, and at the beginning of the United States’ involvement in World War II, Frank volunteered for the US Army. He joined an Ordnance Battalion mostly made up Kansas volunteers. After the war, Frank return to Frontenac, Kansas. He was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church and the Frontenac American Legion. He was an avid fisherman, and outdoorsman, and traveled to locations such as Alaska, and to Slovenia and Croatia, to visit his parents’ birthplace. On February 11, 2008 he was awarded Proclamation from the Kansas Governor, Pittsburg, Frontenac, and the Frontenac American Legion for being the oldest living WWII veteran in Kansas at the age of 105. Frank Bozick died August 9 2008 at 2:40 a.m. at the Sunset Manor Nursing Home in Frontenac. A collection of biographical information, World War II correspondence, financial documents, education material, photos, books, newspapers, textiles, and other media relating to Frank J. Bozick (1903-2008) of Frontenac, Kansas, and his family, especially John Bozick.
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Bradley, Fay, collection, 1958-1974
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Fay Bradley Diplomas consists of four diplomas, two for the Independence Community College (Independence, Kansas), one for the Kansas State College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University), one for Howard University (Washington DC).
Fay Bradley was born on January 13, 1938 to Henry and Irene Ransom Bradley in Independence, Kansas. Fay had three sisters and three brothers. His mother worked as a maid and his father worked as a mail router for the Union Gas Station, and as a porter at the Independence Train Depot. Fay started school at the Washington Grade School in Independence. After graduating from Independence High School, he then began attending Independence Community College in 1956. Fay developed an interest in medicine and helping others. Fay subsequently enrolled at Kansas Teachers College of Pittsburg (today’s Pittsburg State University) in 1958 on a track and field scholarship. During college, Fay was involved in the Biology Club, Alpha Psi, and the track and field team. In 1958 and 1959, Fay won the CIC high hurdle championship, and the KU relays in 1958. After graduating with a Bachelor of Arts, Fay joined the Army in January, 1960. He was sent to Atlanta, Georgia where he would eventually be sent to Fort Benning, also in Georgia. At Fort Benning, Fay worked as a laboratory technician inside the Martin Army Hospital. After the Army, Fay returned to Kansas to work at a laboratory at Ascension Via Christi St. Francis Hospital in Wichita, Kansas. He also attended Wichita State University and became certified to teach. Fay taught biology at Wichita Heights High School, and at John Marshall Middle School from 1961-1962, becoming that school’s first African American teacher. After leaving the school systems in 1967, Fay and his brother were offered scholarships to go to graduate school at the Howard University School of Law in Washington D.C. Fay started working as a teaching assistant and as a laboratory technician in the laboratory in the Howard University Hospital. After graduating medical school in 1974, Dr. Fay Bradley went to work in public health. In 1982, Dr. Bradley began donating regularly to the PSU Foundation. Dr. Bradley retired from health service in 1992. After retiring, Dr. Bradley became the president of the American Running and Fitness Association. In 2013, Dr. Bradley donated $1,000,000 to Pittsburg State University’s Nursing Department to create the Irene Ransom Bradley School of Nursing, to honor his mother’s legacy and hopes to become a nurse herself. Dr. Fay Bradley passed away on January 14, 2021 at the age of 83.
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Brady family collection, circa 1900-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Correspondence, clippings, recordings, programs, and photograph about Eva Jessye collected by Karen and Kenneth Brady.
Born in Coffeyville, Kansas, on January 20, 1895, Eva Alberta Jessye started her academic career in the public schools of Coffeyville and Iola, Kansas. At age 13 she attended Western University in Quindaro, Kansas. She graduated from Western University in 1914 and went on to Langston University in Oklahoma where she received a lifetime certificate in teaching.
Jessye taught in elementary schools in Taft, Haskell, and Muskogee, Oklahoma before she became a reporter and columnist for the Baltimore (Maryland) Afro-American in 1925. In 1926 she joined a choral group in New York called the Dixie Jubilee Singers. This group would eventually become the world-renowned Eva Jessye Choir. The choir performed spirituals, work songs, ballads, ragtime, jazz, and light opera in a variety of mediums, such as radio, film, and stage. They were regulars on the “Major Bowes Family Radio Hour” and the “General Motors Hour.” In 1927 the Dixie Jubilee Singers worked in Harry A. Pollard’s film, Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The same year, Dr. Jessye compiled and published a critically acclaimed collection of songs titled My Spirituals. In 1929 King Vidor directed “Hallelujah”, the first musical motion picture with an all-Black cast. The film featured the Dixie Jubilee Singers with Jessye as choral director.
Dr. Jessye was appointed choral director for the New York production of the Virgil Thomson and Gertrude Stein opera, “Four Saints in Three Acts” in 1934. In 1935 Jessye was selected by George Gershwin to be choral director for the original production of his 1935 folk-opera, “Porgy and Bess.” For the next three decades, Jessye was associated with almost every Porgy & Bess production worldwide, earning the unofficial title of 'curator and guardian of the score’.
Eva Jessye was also involved in humanitarian efforts. Her experiences as a black woman during the Jim Crow era influenced her involvement in the later Civil Rights movement. She collaborated with African-American notables Marian Anderson, Mary McLeod Bethune, Julia Davis, Eubie Blake, Langston Hughes, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Paul Robeson. In August 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. selected the Eva Jessye Choir as the official chorus of the historic March on Washington. The choir performed “We Shall Overcome” and “Freedom Is the Thing We’re Talking About.” Tom Mboya, founder of Kenya’s Independence Movement Council and president of the People’s Convention Party, later used the recordings of these songs during Kenya’s struggle for independence. During the 1960s Eva Jessye also appeared in the motion pictures Black Like Me and Slaves.
Dr. Jessye returned to academia in her later years. She established the Eva Jessye Afro-American Music Collection at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1974. She established the Eva Jessye Collection at Pittsburg State University in Pittsburg, Kansas in 1977 and served as that University’s Artist-In-Residence from 1978 to 1981.
During her lifetime Jessye received honorary degrees from Wilberforce University, Allen University, and Southern University, including an honorary doctorate. She also received numerous citations from government, educational, and musical organizations. In 1981, Governor John Carlin of Kansas declared Dr. Eva Jessye to be Kansas Ambassador for the Arts.
Dr. Eva Jessye died on February 21, 1992 at the age of 97 in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
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Branaman, Maurice, collection, circa 1900-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of photographs taken by Branaman Studio of Pittsburg, Kansas including portraits of various sizes, school photos, wedding and event photos, child photos, and couple and group photos.
Maurice Branaman was born on March 20, 1904 in St. Mary’s. Kansas. He married Dorothy Lois Dennis and had a daughter in 1938. Maurice worked at the Lawrence Photo Supply Company in the early 1940s before registering for the war in February of 1942 in Wichita, Kansas. After the war, Maurice became the owner and operator of Ferguson’s Studio in Pittsburg, Kansas in 1945. In 1953, the company moved to a new studio and in 1954 the name changed to Branaman’s Studio. The studio’s last operational year was 1982. Maurice Branaman passed away on February 27, 1983.
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Brandenburg, William Aaron, collection, 1911-1942, 1989
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of materials relating to William Brandenburg’s time as the president of the Kansas State Teachers College (now Pittsburg State University). The collection consists of university documents, celebrations, and basic biographical information.
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Bridgman, Laura Dewey, correspondence, 1879-1883
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Letters from Laura Bridgman, the first deaf-blind person to be successfully educated in the United States, to Abbie Forest. Included are six letters, typed transcripts of the letters, and a piece of lace knitted by Laura Bridgman.
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Brinkerhoff, Fred, papers, 1905-1930
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of correspondence and newspaper clippings related to Fred Brinkerhoff and the Pittsburg Headlight- now the Morning Sun.
Fred W. Brinkerhoff, born in 1885, was the editor for the
Pittsburg Headlight (now the Pittsburg Morning Sun) for approximately fifty years. Brinkerhoff first began working for newspapers while in high school, working under Henry J. Allen at the Ottawa Herald. He studied at the University of Kansas before working at Fort Scott and Chanute papers as well at the Kansas City Star. Brinkerhoff moved to Pittsburg in May 1911 and became the editor of the newspaper four months later. In 1961, a large celebration was held for him to mark his work and contribution to the area. He was the third recipient of the William Allen White award, president of the Kansas Press Association, chairman of the Kansas Associated Press, and president of the Kansas State Historical Society to name a few of his accomplishments and affiliations. Brinkerhoff wrote an estimated hundred editorials per month during his career. Brinkerhoff passed in 1966.
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Brooker, George R., collection, 1959-1992
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
George R. Brooker (1929-1992) was born in Ft. Scott, Kansas where he attended high school and community college. He received his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from the Kansas State Teacher’s College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) in 1956 and 1957, respectively. He earned a Doctorate of Education from the University of Arkansas (Fayetteville) in 1970. Dr. Brooker was on faculty in the Department of Technology at Pittsburg State University from 1959 until his death in 1992. Prior to working at PSU, he taught Automotive Studies at Bradley University in Illinois. During his career, he consulted with Walt Disney and Universal Studios, particularly in constructing the shark from the 1975 movie Jaws. He also was involved with NASA in designing the moon rover used in the lunar Apollo missions, and alloys for the Department of Defense. He also collected barbed wire and researched its effect on the West.
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Brooks, Anne Tedlock, collection, 1927-1980
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection consists of personal correspondence, newspaper clippings, journal and magazine clippings, manuscripts, photographs, programs, publications, awards, and other miscellaneous materials.
Anne Tedlock Brooks was born in Columbus, Kansas in 1905 to Mary Alice Hall and James Matthew Tedlock. She attended the Kansas State Teachers College (now Pittsburg State University) and received a life teaching certificate in 1927. She graduated magna cum laude from the University of Oregon, and attended graduate school at the University of San Francisco. She worked as a school teacher for a number of years. She was a writer who sometimes published under the pen names of Ann Carter and Cynthia Milburn. She married Mark L. Brooks in 1924 and had one son. She wrote many serialized stories for newspapers, was editor of Tips Universal, wrote for The Christian Herald and published many novels for young readers which earned her several awards. She passed away on October 17th, 1980.
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Brooks, Louise, collection, 1924-2005
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of clippings, writings, images, and miscellaneous materials of silent screen actress Louise Brooks.
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Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers of America collection, 1907-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains meeting minutes, official business, trials of union members, financial paperwork, financial ledgers and dues books, Constitutions and By-Laws of the Brotherhood, and miscellaneous pamphlets and booklets about the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers and associated organizations.
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Brown, Ruth W., collection, 1949-1979
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The papers in this collection pertain to Ruth W. Brown, the head librarian at Bartlesville Public Library from 1929 to 1950. The collection focuses on an issue in the 1950s which ultimately led to the dismissal of her job. This collection contains correspondences, clippings, legal documents, professional publications, and autobiographical pieces by Brown.
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Bruner, Sylvan, collection, 1890-1985
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of personal records, legal records, financial records, correspondence, photographs, newspaper clippings, media, publications, and miscellaneous materials of concerning Pittsburg, Kansas attorney, Sylvan Bruner.
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Callery, Phillip and Ida Hayman, collection, 1880-1976
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The collection is comprised of the papers and collected materials of Philip Henry Callery (1880-1954) and Ida Hayman Callery (1886-1917), lawyers for the United Mine Workers of America, and Socialist lecturers and organizers. The collection consists of biographical materials, photographs, correspondence, and Socialist Party materials.
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Call, Henry Laurens, collection, 1895-2003
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of clippings, photographs, research materials, writings, and publications pertaining to Henry Laurens Call and his airship venture in Girard, Kansas, known as the Aerial Navigation Company.
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Carlson, Paul, papers, 1944-2013
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Music, papers, and photographs relating to the career of PSU music professor Paul Carlson.
Paul Carlson (1932-2019) was born to Rev. Carl Carlson and Ava B. Carlson in Chicago, Illinois. Throughout his childhood he played violin for the school ensembles including Roosevelt Middle School and Chicago Christian High School. After graduating high school in 1950, he immediately began pursuing his bachelors of music at the Chicago Conservatory of Music. After receiving his diploma in 1954, he taught at the Messiah College is Harrisburg, Pennsylvania for two years. In 1957, he received a master’s degree in music from Northwestern University. That same year he married Laura Bond. From 1958 - 1962 he taught at Drury College in Springfield, Missouri and was the concert master of the Springfield Symphony.
In 1962, he earned his Doctorate of Musical Arts from the Conservatory of Music of the University of Missouri at Kansas City. In 1965, he joined the faculty at the Kansas State College of Pittsburg. He founded the Waddill Chamber Music Competition and helped establish the Waddill Scholarship Program. He was a member of Phi Mu Alpha (honor music fraternity), first violinist in the Faculty String Quartet and served as a chair member in the Timmons Chapel Series. He served as a co-chairperson in the Kansas-Paraguay Partners. He was the first American musician to be invited to teach and perform in the Hanoi National Conservatory of Music, Vietnam after the Vietnam War. He also taught and performed in England, South Korea, Taiwan, The Peoples Republic of China, and India.
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Carney, Helen Kelso, collection, 1965-1978
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Helen Kelso Carney (1916-1997) was born in Cherokee, Kansas to Claire Payne Kelso and Nigh Kelso. She received her B.A. from Kansas State Teacher’s College (now Pittsburg State University) and her M.A. from Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. She did doctoral studies at Middlebury College in Vermont, Tulsa University in Oklahoma, and Mills College in California. She was the Supervisor of Foreign Languages in the Tulsa, Oklahoma public schools, and taught at Edison High School for 12 years. She published in several language magazines and was the first American to write a beginning French textbook for Americans for situations in America, not France. The French government awarded her with the “Chevalier des Palmes Academiques,” the highest award given for service to the French language. She is listed in Who’s Who of American Women and was accorded “Distinguished Alumni” by Pittsburg State University. She passed away in 1997.
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Carthage, Missouri collection, 1861-1972
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of newspaper articles and photographs covering aspects of history of Carthage, Missouri including the Battle of Carthage (1861), early downtown to the 1960s, transportation, fire and police departments, government, and schools.
Carthage, Missouri was platted in 1842 when it was chosen as the county seat for Jasper County, formed in 1841. By the Civil War, the town had 500 residents and many businesses. It, like many areas in Missouri, was divided over the issue of slavery and on July 5, 1861 Union troops, led by Frank Sigel, and Confederate troops, led by Claiborne F. Jackson and Sterling Price, fought in the Battle of Carthage. Frank Sigel and his 1000 troops encamped in Carthage which Governor Jackson discovered and sent 4000 troops down to deal with. Starting ten miles north of Carthage, the battle ended with Sigel’s retreat in the town square and a victory for the Confederacy. Following the war, the population grew and in 1872, the Missouri Western Railroad arrived. A foundry, factories, and other businesses were founded with help from the nearby mines and quarries adding to the town’s wealth. Residents began building Victorian-style homes and the Carthage Court House was built between 1894 and 1895 of stone from the quarries. Ward L. Schrantz of the Carthage Press was interested in Carthage and Jasper County history and wrote Jasper County, Missouri, In the Civil War and many articles in the newspaper.
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Carver Social League, Pittsburg, Kansas, records, 1949-1993
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Records of the Carver Social League of Pittsburg, Kansas. The records consist of minute books, a history, correspondence, clippings, ownership and operation records, financial records, United Way of Pittsburg records, social and rehabilitation service records, and related materials.
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Casad, Orla Samuel, collection, 1858-1938
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of correspondence, family history, biographical information, clippings, photographs, and other related materials pertaining to Orla Samuel Casad and his family. The majority of the materials pertain to Casad’s life in Pittsburg, Kansas. See also Collection 28, Ethel E. Casad Larkin, Papers, 1882-1967.
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Cayton, Mary C., collection, 1974-1977
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A scrapbook on the Pittsburg Centennial in 1976 and Mary Cayton’s creation of the scrapbooks for the celebration described by a summary of each page.
Mary Catherine Cayton was born to Will and Lillie Ingles on April 30, 1903 in Missouri. She married Sam E. Cayton and they moved to Pittsburg, Kansas between 1935 and 1940. Mary compiled a scrapbook on Pittsburg for the Centennial celebration in 1976. Lois Bellm, donor of the scrapbook, lived and studied in Pittsburg. She graduated from Kansas State Teachers College with a music degree and worked and owned the Ernie Williamson Music House in Joplin, Missouri.
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Centennial Choir and “The Messiah”, concert programs, 1915-1998
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Concert programs of the Centennial Choir and community-wide “Messiah” concerts, held in Crawford County, Kansas.
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Chambers, Gene, collection, 1952-2013
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Gene Chambers Collection includes personal and professional papers and documents, including work from his time as a professor at Pittsburg State University and consulting work he did on engineering matters.
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Christian, Shirley, collection, 1968-2000
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The majority of the collection are newspaper clippings about governmental conflicts in Central and South America. There are three series in this collection: Education, Clippings, Publications, and Photographs.
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Cicero, Charles, collection, 1922-1938
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Charles Cicero was born in 1911 in Frontenac, Kansas. He graduated from Frontenac High School in 1929. Mr. Cicero served in the U. S. Army during World War II as a member of the 70th Infantry Division. During his time at Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburg, Kansas he majored in printing and helped to publish the weekly Collegio student newspaper and the KANZA yearbook. Charles married Effie Ellena on April 30, 1932 in Frontenac. Mr. Cicero worked for the Kansas City Southern Railway in Kansas City, Missouri, and worked for Moore Brothers Printers from 1931-1934. In 1934 he formed a partnership with Frank Borgna and published The Frontenac Press until 1942. From 1950 to 1971 he owned and operated Baker Printing. He was postmaster of Frontenac Post Office from 1940 until his retirement in 1971. Mr. Cicero was also mayor of Frontenac from 1975-1977, city clerk in 1979, city treasurer 1981-1985, treasurer of Frontenac school board from 1978-1981, and on the Crawford County zoning board from 1978-1981. He was a member of the International Typography Union. Charles Cicero previously donated his complete collection of The Frontenac Press to Pittsburg State University archives to be preserved. Charles Cicero died at the age of 88 on July 23, 1999.
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Clark, Robert R., collection, 1929-1954
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Collection of Robert R. Clark, Sergeant, United States Army. Collection consists of personal correspondence between family members from 1929 through 1954. Smaller sections of the collection are letters from WWII to Harold and Mary Clark, Robert’s parents. The bulk of the collection covers Robert Clark’s service in the United States Army during his tour of duty in Korea during the Korean War. Much of the correspondence is between Robert and his mother.
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Clemens, Ira, photograph album, 1923
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of photographs, postcards, and notes compiled in 1923 by Ira Clemens. The materials concern mining communities and towns in Crawford and Cherokee Counties in Kansas and Mindenmines, Missouri. The photographs consist primarily of street scenes, churches, public buildings such as libraries and schools, recreational buildings and parks, and residences of miners. The notes typically define the physical location of the community, indicate the population characteristics, identify the major buildings, disclose bank holdings, and other features of the community.
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Cliggitt, Morris, papers, 1854-1919
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection contains 16 boxes of personal and legal papers belonging to former Pittsburg, Kansas mayor and city attorney, Morris Cliggitt. The Cliggett, Morris (1854-1909), Papers contains the personal and professional papers of Morris Cliggitt, former Pittsburg, Kansas city attorney and mayor. The collection consists of sixteen boxes and arranged into twenty series: Correspondence; City of Pittsburg, Kansas, Correspondence and Ordinances; Democratic Party; Historical Manuscripts; Manuscripts; Certificates; City of Pittsburg, Kansas Licenses; Cards; Personal Publications; Financial Records; Photographs; News Clippings; Legal; State of Kansas Publications; State of Kansas Legislature; Other States Publications; Miscellaneous States Publications; Federal Publications; General Miscellaneous; and Oversized.
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Clugston, Glen, collection, circa 1881-2010
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Glen Clugston is a conductor for off-Broadway musicals and a concert pianist. He has conducted several famous shows around the country, such as “Annie”, “My Fair Lady”, “Fiddle on the Roof” and “Oklahoma!”. He has traveled to most of the world as first an accompanying John Sebastian, a concert harmonicist. The contents of this collection consists of scripts, scores, biographical material, articles, reviews, clippings, music books, recordings and miscellaneous items.
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Cochell, Shirley Holmes, papers, 1950-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Publications, unpublished manuscripts and research materials of Shirley Holmes Cochell, an educator and free-lance journalist. Includes book manuscripts, essays, short stories, poems, research materials, a bibliography of published works, and promotional materials for her book, Land of the Coyote.
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Cochran, Elizabeth, collection, 1900-1987
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Mary Elizabeth Cochran taught history at Kansas State Teachers College, now Pittsburg State University from 1930 - 1962. She was born in 1891 in Fremont, Iowa and received her undergraduate degree from Missouri Valley College. She received her graduate degrees (including Ph.D) from the University of Chicago. Prior to coming to Pittsburg State University, she taught in junior colleges and public schools in Nebraska, Missouri, and Oklahoma. After her retirement from PSU in 1962, she taught for five years at Cumberland College in Williamsburg, Kentucky.
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Coffeyville, Kansas Schools collection, 1915
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Photographs of various grades in the Coffeyville, Kansas Schools from 1915 depicting students in classes and clubs.
Beginning in 1907, the National Education Association began a movement to combine industrial and commercial education with the present education systems to prepare students for jobs within their communities. By 1914, Kansas incorporated “Industrial Training” into the standardized Course of Study for Graded Schools Having Nine Month Terms. The classes were implemented at every grade level to “train constructive imagination” and “to prepare more directly for industrial efficiency.” Though schools in Coffeyville were not officially integrated in 1915, four African American students appear in two of the photos in this collection.
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Coffman, Ernest E., collection, 1943-2001
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
“A Collection of This ‘N That ‘N Sumthin’ Else,” a binder of Ernest E. Coffman’s accounts of his time during World War II, poetry on experiences and his perspectives of everyday life, and other writings.
Ernest E. Coffman was born on a February 23, 1925. He grew up in the mountains of Arkansas and on a family farm in Columbus, Kansas. He registered at his local draft board on his 18th birthday in 1943. Ernest kept a deck of cards with him which he used to mark down dates and events during his service. He was inducted to the army on July 7, 1943 and in February of 1944 sailed out from New York. From New York, the ship sailed to India and landed March 29. Ernest was in charge of teaching the Chinese soldiers how to handle equipment and weapons before being transferred to teach them carpentry. Afterwards, he was put in the First Provisional Tank Group and was an assistant driver in a light tank. In this group, Ernest travelled from Brahmaputra, India through Burma to south central China alongside the Chinese army and “Merrill’s Marauders.” The Tank Group chased the Japanese army through the jungles of Burma, catching up with them in Kutkai where the tanks began battling, ending with major damage to the Japanese and minor damage to the allied tank group. Ernest was never injured in the service, though his tank ran over a mine and flipped over. The war in the CBI Theater ended early 1945 and after Japan surrendered, Ernest was sent home, arriving in Columbus, Kansas on December 13, 1945.
After the war, Ernest finished high school at Riverton, Kansas where his younger sister attended before working at Ford Motors for four years. Coffman then transferred to Southern Bell where he worked as an installation and repair technician for just over 34 years. Ernest retired in 1986. He was an outdoorsman, hunting, fishing, and gardening. He and his wife, Helen Hockett, who he married in 1949, had a daughter and grandson. Ernest passed away on July 20, 2016.
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Cole, Homer G., collection, 1943-1989
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of publications, maps, photographs, newspaper clipping and materials that were in relation to World War II collected by Homer G. Cole, of Pittsburg, Kansas. Homer G. Cole was born 1926 and raised in Carthage, Missouri until 1939, when he moved to Pittsburg, Kansas. He graduated from Pittsburg High School in May 1943 and enrolled at the Kansas State Teacher’s College (now Pittsburg State University) in the naval college training program that was known as the V-7 program. In September 1943, Cole was drafted into the U.S. Army Air Force, and trained in navigation and gunnery techniques. He then served in the Army Air Force as a tail gunner on a B-17 Flying Fortress with nineteen missions over Europe. He remained in the U.S. Army Air Force until 1945, and during his service was awarded the Good Conduct Medal, American Campaign Medal, World War II Victory Medal, Purple Heart, Air Combat Medal, European-African-Middle East Campaign Medal, and an Air Medal with Three Oakleaf Clusters. After Cole returned home, he completed his college education at Pittsburg State University. While a student he played basketball and set a school record for career basketball games played (110). After graduation, he coached at Goddard, Kansas for three years, served as the Parks and Recreation Director for Joplin, Missouri, and managed several bowling alleys. Cole also served on the Pittsburg City Commission from 1987 to 1991 and served one term as the Mayor of Pittsburg. The Pittsburg Community Center was constructed with help of Cole with Cole playing an active role in the promotion, the funding, and the development of the facility that now bears his name.
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Conner family collection, 1945-1959
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection is comprised of personal correspondence, photographs, newspaper clippings, and a calendar, all during the World War II years. The correspondence makes up the majority of the collection with approximately 600 letters between Dale & Kathryn Woods Conner written from April 1943 through December 1945. The photographs include a composite of the July 19, 1944 graduation class of the Naval Reserve Midshipmen School.
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Conrad, Jane Kathryn, collection 1989-1996
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The papers in this collection pertain to Jane Kathryn Conrad, who was known as an Atheist activist. These papers focus on the last years of her life. The collection consists of correspondences, publications, articles, and clippings.
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Cormack, Herbert, collection, 1926-1988
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of photographs, yearbooks, and newspaper clippings related to Herbert Cormack, his college years, and his career as a coach in Iowa.
Herbert Cormack (1900-1994), was born on June 2 in Kinsley, Kansas and grew up in Garden City, Kansas. He graduated from the Kansas State Teachers College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) in 1928. During his time at KSTCP, Cormack lettered in basketball for the 1926-1928 seasons. In 1928 Herbert and Elizabeth Cornelius were married on September 29. After graduating, Cormack coached for one year in Mound City, Kansas and five years at Pleasanton, Kansas before moving to Iowa City, Iowa in 1935. There, he taught mathematics and coached football at City High School, losing only ten games in eight years. From 1943-1945, Cormack served as a lieutenant commander in the Navy during World War II before returning to coaching in 1946. Cormack was an assistant coach at Iowa State University for eight years, a backfield coach for Kansas State University, then a football coach and athletic director in Keokuk, Iowa from 1961 until his retirement in 1974. Herbert Cormack talks about his coaching career in the Pittsburg State University 1988 Reunion Yearbook where he says his wife, Elizabeth, helped him coach and would teach the athletes how to dance. Starting in 1973, City High School in Iowa City began holding a breakfast for Cormack where he would present the Herb Cormack Award to a student-athlete. Cormack was awarded a Lifetime Membership into the Keokuk Football Boosters. Herbert Cormack passed away at the age of 93 on January 22, 1994.
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Cormany and Pilkington families photographs, circa 1880-1940
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of photographs of the Cormany and Pilkington families along with photos of friends and family from Nebraska and California.
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Cornish, Dudley T., collection, 1859-1999
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Biographical information, correspondence, manuscripts, writings, research, newspaper clippings, photographs, of a Pittsburg State University history professor and author. Included are original documents of research, a personal insight into academic life, various public lectures, and the publication of two books. Materials within these papers encompass Dr. Dudley T. Cornish’s academic life as it relates to his time spent working at Pittsburg State University.
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Cowgill family collection, 1861-1880
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection consists of the personal writings of Mary Alma (Stevens) Cowgill, Paulena (Stevens) Janney, and Lillian (Cowgill) Blair.
Henry Clay Cowgill (1844-1914) was born in Ohio. He married Mary Alma (Stevens) Cowgill (1845-1907) in Ohio on September 19, 1865. They moved to Carthage, Missouri in November 1868. Henry owned milling, banking and mining operations in and around Carthage, including the Cowgill Milling Company. He and Mary Alma had three children: Lillian (Cowgill) Blair (1866-1931), Henry Stevens Cowgill (1877-1946), and Lloyd Cowgill (1881-1930). Mary Alma & her sister Paulena (Stevens) Janney (1840-1873) attended Earlham College in Indiana. Paulena married William Janney and they also lived in Carthage. Lillian Cowgill, daughter of Henry and Mary Alma, grew up in Carthage and attended Ohio Wesleyan College in Ohio. She married Charles Blair in 1868 and they lived in Carthage, and had three children.
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Crawford County, Kansas Court records, 1912-1975
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection of documents is comprised of Crawford County District Court records, Justice of the Peace records, City Court of Pittsburg records, City Court of Girard, and City Court of Frontenac records. The documents in this collection pertain to various types of cases including murder, rape, arson, fraud, child endangerment, insufficient funds, welfare, simple assault, speeding and illegal trash dumping. There are many types of documents in this collection including transcripts of hearings and sworn statements, warrants, complaints, journal entries from the courts, testimonies, and coroner’s inquisitions. In addition to the names of plaintiffs and defendants, listed within the index are the names of Crawford County judges, county attorney’s, court appointed and hired attorney’s, court reporters, stenographers, sheriffs, undersheriffs, and attorney firms.
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Crawford County, Kansas, Sheriff's Department, jail ledger, 1922-1935
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A ledger book containing a handwritten account of names of persons booked into the Crawford County Jail as required by Kansas State statute during the period from March 1, 1922 to September 1, 1935.
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Cuendet, Harry, collection, 1923-1988
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of documents, papers, publications, and items related to Harry Cuendet, his work, and Pittsburg State University.
Harry B. Cuendet, born in 1944, grew up in Mt. Vernon, Missouri and received his business degree from the Kansas State College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) in 1967. Living in Frontenac and Pittsburg, Kansas, Cuendet worked with insurance companies such as the Fidelity Union Insurance Company, the Principal Financial Group, as well as with the Pittsburg Area Chamber of Commerce, the United Way, YMCA, and the Salvation Army. In 1986 Cuendet married Karen Clark. Cuendet passed away in 1988 during heart surgery.
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Cundiff, Roy, collection, 1941-1945
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Roy Cundiff Collection contains two items from Nazi Germany, acquired by Mr. Cundiff while he was stationed in Germany during World War II. These are a German-language edition of Mein Kampf, by Adolph Hitler, and a Nazi flag. These items were donated by Mr. Cundiff’s widow after his death in 1978.
Roy Cundiff was born in Kansas City, Kansas in 1911. He grew up in Osawatomie, Kansas, and graduated from high school there in 1931. In the 1930s Mr. Cundiff worked as a salesman. In 1939 he married Inez Grace Miner, in Fort Scott, Kansas. They had one son. He served in the US Army during World War II, achieving the rank of major. After the war, he was office manager of Merker Machine Shop in Fort Scott, and in 1957 was a rural mail carrier. Roy Cundiff passed away in 1978 at the age of 66 and is buried in the Fort Scott National Cemetery.
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Curran, Andrew Judge, papers, 1878-1923
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Papers and collected materials of Andrew J. Curran, a lawyer from Crawford County, Kansas, who served as judge for the 38th District Court of Kansas during the period of 1911 to 1922. The collection consists of personal and professional correspondence; court documents; information on the topics of elections, naturalization, and Americanization; pamphlets and printed materials; a scrapbook pertaining to the subject of bimetallism; speech notes; and other materials.
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Cuthbertson and Bruce families collection, circa 1885
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection consists of photographs, tintypes and a bible relating to the Cuthbertson and Bruce families.
Alexander Cuthbertson was born on April 29th, 1849 in Sparta, Illinois to Alexander Cuthbertson (1813 - 1860) and Janet Kirkwood (1814 - 1908). Cuthbertson married Margaret Young Gemmell, together they had 7 children. Those seven children, were Arthur, Robert, Fred, Raleigh, Nellie, David & George. Cuthbertson passed away on December 6th, 1927 in Girard, Kansas.
Emily H. Bruce was born on February 12th, 1865 in Ohio to James W. and Sarah A. Bruce. She had a brother named Walter J. Bruce. She passed away on December 9th, 1960.
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Cuthbertson family diaries, 1874-1981
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Cuthbertson Family Diaries contain personal diaries of a long-time Girard, Kansas family with Scottish roots.
There are diaries from three individuals from the Cuthbertson Family: Mary Kirkwood; Jessie Smith Cuthbertson; and William C. Cuthbertson.
Mary Kirkwood (1858-1945) was born in Illinois in 1858 to native Scots, Matthew J. Kirkwood and his wife, Janet Craig Kirkwood. At an unknown date, the family moved to Girard, Kansas in southeast Kansas. Mary Kirkwood married Andrew W. Smith, and their daughter, Jessie Smith, was born in 1889 in Kansas. In 1924, Jessie Smith married Charles A. Cuthbertson, and their son, William C. Cuthbertson, was born in 1927. William Cuthbertson was a local historian and genealogist, and wrote several books of local history. Jessie Smith Cuthbertson died in 1975. William C. Cuthbertson died in 1986.
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Cuthbertson, William C., collection, circa 1850-1986
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library and Brent McDowell
The William C. Cuthbertson Collection contains Cuthbertson’s personal research on the history of Crawford County, Kansas and, in particular, Girard. This collection includes genealogical information, correspondence, research notes, maps, photographs, publications, clippings, and miscellaneous items. William Charles Cuthbertson was born on July 9, 1927 in Girard, Kansas to Jessie Smith and Charles Albert Cuthbertson. He was a life-long resident of Girard and well-known for designing and constructing houses and quilts. He studied the history of Girard and Southeast Kansas and wrote two books on the subject. A third book covered his family history. He would often answer individuals who wrote to the Crawford Country Courthouse to learn about the area, or conducting genealogical research. Cuthbertson never married. He passed away on January 13, 1986 after several years of poor health.
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Daniels, Percy, collection, 1868-1976
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of correspondence, financial and legal records, photographs, newspapers, writings, and miscellaneous materials pertaining to Percy Daniels and family.
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Davidson, Lallah S., manuscript, 1939
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Typed manuscript of “Children of Lead,” published in 1939 as South of Joplin: Story of a Tri-State Diggin’s (W.W. Norton). This manuscript was donated by Lallah Davidson Blanpied to Pittsburg State University in 1975. This copy belonged to famous literary agent, Marion Saunders, who was also Margaret Mitchell’s agent for Gone With the Wind. This copy does show some changes from the published version, notably in the Introduction, and the original title.
Lallah Sherman Davidson Blanpied was born in 1897and grew up in Southeast Kansas and Southwest Missouri. She attended the Kansas State Teachers’ College in Pittsburg, Kansas (today’s Pittsburg State University). She graduated in 1925, and with a master’s degree in 1927 from Columbia University (New York). In 1921 she married Merle Lee Gustin, who died in 1923. In 1924 she married her classmate in Pittsburg, Cecil Cline Blanpied (1897-1976). After they graduated they moved to New Rochelle, New York, where Cecil worked as an educator. Lallah studied anarchist philosophy and met anarchist Harry Kelly, who set her up as the director in the Mohegan Modern School in 1935, which he had founded. This position only lasted one year. In 1939 she published a “non-fiction novel,” South of Joplin: Story of a Tri-State Diggin’s” (W.W. Norton & Co., NY) a social-protest work based on her knowledge and observations of the mining fields and communities in Southeast Kansas, Northeast Oklahoma, and Southwest Missouri growing up. It was published under her maiden name, L. S. Davidson. Lallah also worked as a teacher, and as a writer, writing articles for magazines and for television. She retired from teaching in 1964. Lallah Blanpied passed away in New Rochelle in 1982. There is more material related to Lallah Blanpied in the Gene DeGruson Collection.
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Davis, Edna Elizabeth, collection, 1909-1960
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of documents, records, and items pertaining to the teaching career of Edna Elizabeth Davis. Edna Elizabeth Davis, a teacher in Kansas public schools, was born February 22, 1892 and died January 8, 1986. Her first post as a teacher was in a one room schoolhouse in 1909 in Greely County, Kansas. She attended State Manual Training Normal School, now called Pittsburg State University, and graduated in 1926 with a B.S. in Education. While at the Kansas State Teacher’s College (Pittsburg State University) she was a member of the Delta Sigma Epsilon sorority. Edna Davis taught from 1909 to 1960 in Greeley County and Elk County, Kansas; in the Eureka school district, and several other towns in Kansas. After teaching for 51 years she retired in 1960.
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Davis family collection, 1889-2005
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of biographical information, photographs, and tribute information related to George Sweatt and Walter Johnson, baseball players from Humboldt, Kansas. Also included is correspondence between Randy Roberts and Richard Davis about the collection and research.
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Davis, Hiram S., collection, 1946-1957
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of publications and works written by Hiram S. Davis and other authors covering wages, production, and unions in the 1940s and 1950s.
Hiram Simmons Davis, born on October 8, 1903 and brother of Edna Davis (see collection MS 180), grew up in Longton, Kansas. He was a graduate of the Kansas State Teachers College (1924), now Pittsburg State University. Hiram became a professor of economics and business at the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce at the University of Pennsylvania, and from 1945 to 1953 was the director of the Industrial Research Department at the school. He later became Director of Economic Research for Western Business Consultants, Inc., of Phoenix, Arizona. Hiram passed away in 1980.
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DeGruson, Eugene, papers, 1841-1997
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
This collection documents the professional and personal activities and research interests of Eugene DeGruson, who was Curator of Special Collections and University Archivist at Pittsburg State University from 1968 until his death in 1997.
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Department of Music, Pittsburg State University, collection, 1919-2015
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Recital Programs from the Department of Music at Pittsburg State University. The collection also includes some photos of opera productions, high school festivals, as well as photos, recital guest books, and correspondence from Miss Margaret Thunemann’s vocal master classes.
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Dickinson, Cecil, collection, 1937-1956
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
A collection of programs, newspapers, and documents for Kansas State Teachers College groups’ events and art exhibitions, primarily for Industrial Arts. Epsilon Pi Tau, founded in 1929, is an honors society for students studying industrial arts and technology. Kappa Pi International Art Honor Society was founded in 1911. Both of these institutions were active at Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburg, Kansas (now Pittsburg State University). The college had an Industrial Education Club which partnered with the Art Department to hold art exhibitions at the school. Kansas State Teachers College also sponsored the Four-State Conference on Industrial Arts and Vocational Education and the Kansas Painters Exhibition which featured painters from Kansas and set up galleries in multiple places.
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Dillard, William Peake, collection, 1883-1931
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Personal papers and materials collected by William P. Dillard, a lawyer, judge, and democratic politician from Fort Scott, Kansas. Includes personal correspondence with lawyers and judges; speeches; and printed materials relating to women's suffrage, temperance, prohibition, Sabbath reform, and religion. Thirty-eight additional pamphlets, leaflets, and other printed materials on these subjects were removed from the Collection for cataloging. A list of the catalogued materials is appended to this guide.
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Dittman, Dean, collection, 1954-1993
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
The Dean Dittman Collection contains playbills, newspaper clippings, photographs, scrapbooks relating to the performing career of Gus Dean Dittmann, donated by Mr. Dittmann’s niece, Diane Vaught.
Gus Dean Dittmann was born in Frontenac, Kansas and had a successful career as an actor on the stage, movies, radio, and television, performing as Dean Dittman (sometimes listed as Dean Dittmann). He was born in 1931 and attended the public schools in Frontenac and in the early 1950s, the Kansas Teachers College of Pittsburg, today’s Pittsburg State University. In 1953 he won the Lauritz Melchior Award which led to his studying at the Sorbonne in France, and with the Paris Opera. This resulted in a successful career as an actor and singer, first in Kansas City, Missouri then on to Broadway. He performed before Presidents Truman and Eisenhower. His several-decades long career included Broadway and touring productions of The Music Man, Annie, Oklahoma, My Fair Lady, Hello Dolly, L’il Abner, On the Twentieth Century, and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. He appeared onstage with such actors as Forrest Tucker, Madeline Kahn, Imogene Coca, and Martha Raye. He won the coveted Obie Award in 1968 for an off-Broadway production, The Cradle Will Rock. He also appeared in movies and television shows such as Bachelor Party, Designing Woman, Who’s the Boss, Cheers, Dukes of Hazzard, and T. J. Hooker. Dittmann lived in Los Angeles and in his free time he enjoyed gardening and gourmet cooking and entertaining. He died of heart failure in Los Angeles in 1989.
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Dragoo, Earl, collection, 1928-1939
Special Collections, Leonard H. Axe Library
Contains student papers from Pittsburg State University, book and textbook catalogues, Industrial Arts resources, teaching plans, proposals, drafting drawings, and printed patterns.