Poster shows image of a man in a wide-brimmed hat stretching his arms up against the background of a tree, mimicking the branches. In front of him, a woman in a headscarf and dress kneels with a box filled with melons, grapes, and other fruit. The eagle symbol of the United Farm Workers of America appears on the front of the box
Description:
Title appears below image. and Image signed "W. Burton '75."
BEIN NOR6 1: Imperfect: 51 cards wanting. From the Cary Collection of Playing Cards., BEIN NOR6 2: Imperfect: Joker wanting. From the Cary Collection of Playing Cards., Title from tuck case., Suit system: French., Type: Original Design., Composition of deck: 52 [A, K, Q, J, 10-2], j, Aces: A:1; AS: N. W. DAMM & SØN / [pip] OSLO / (Norwegian crown, red)., Court Cards: KS with white beard, orb in right hand, sceptre in left; SQ in right profile; JS looks straight ahead, axe at his right; KH has cloak with white cross; QH with right arm raised to face; JH in left profile; KH with lion and axe on breast plate, orb in right hand; QD in left profile, flying red ribbons; JD holds axe in right hand; KC holds sceptre over right shoulder; QC holds fan in right hand; JC has axe to his left., Jokers: seated figure holds up card., Issued in red tuck case., and Tax stamp on Ace of Spades, red: KORT-STEMPEL / Nr. 1 / [crown and shield]
Russell, Charles M. (Charles Marion), 1864-1926, artist
Published / Created:
[not before 1901]
Image Count:
1
Resource Type:
still image and text
Abstract:
Reproduction of the 1901 painting by Charles M. Russell; depicts a group of Native Americans moving camp; women with children on horseback pulling travois from left to right
Description:
BEIN Broadsides Zc12 901ru: On sheet 22.1 x 29.6 cm. and Title from caption printed below image.
Publisher:
publisher not identified
Subject (Geographic):
West (U.S.)
Subject (Topic):
Travois, Indian women, and Indians of North America
Page [2] of cover: "Text adapted from Description of the Sterling law buildings at Yale University, New Haven, 1931.", Page [3] of cover: Editor: Judith Leonie Miller., Includes bibliographical references (page 58)., Also available in original print http://morris.law.yale.edu/record=b212272, Digital reproduction. New Haven, Connecticut : Yale Law Library, 2023. YL 191 W639, and Description based on print record.
Publisher:
Yale Law School
Subject (Geographic):
Connecticut and New Haven
Subject (Name):
Yale Law School and Sterling Law Buildings (New Haven, Conn.)
Subject (Topic):
Buildings, Law schools, and Building, structures, etc
Negative photostatic copy, circa 1912-1924, of an editorial written about William Graham Sumner and another written by him in response, published in the New-York Standard 1871 March 18 and 22. Editorials pertain to Sumner’s views of the Yale Corporation and the future of Yale College. Articles unrelated to Sumner are also present in the copy
Description:
William Graham Sumner (1840-1910) (Yale 1863), American social scientist. From 1870 to 1872, he was Rector of the Church of the Redeemer in Morristown, New Jersey. Sumner returned to Yale in 1872 as professor of political and social science, becoming the first professor in sociology in the United States., In English., and Title supplied by cataloger.
Subject (Geographic):
New York (N.Y.)
Subject (Name):
Sumner, William Graham, 1840-1910. and Yale College (1718-1887)
Autograph manuscript, signed by Clarise Merino, in which Merino defines the goals of Americanization and cultural assimilation of immigrants in the United States. Merino proposes several methods for American women to befriend and mentor immigrant women, who, in Merino's opinion, struggled to learn English and fully assimilate because they rarely socialized outside their homes and immediate families. Merino suggests several methods for "home teachers" to teach immigrant women basic English vocabulary, including visting them in their homes, establishing mothers' clubs, providing health and hygiene advice, and taking an interest in the cultures and customs of the immigrant women
Description:
Clarise Merino (1905- ) was a teacher born in Arizona., In English., and Title from cover.
Subject (Geographic):
United States, United States., and West (U.S.)
Subject (Name):
Merino, Clarise, 1905-
Subject (Topic):
English language, Study and teaching, Foreign speakers, Immigrants, Cultural assimilation, Education, Teachers, Women, and Women immigrants
Volume containing 13 autograph letters, signed, collected by A. Conger Goodyear and pertaining to Yale alumni or employees, 1742-1846, Elisha Williams, Wethersfield, Connecticut, to Reverend Stephen Williams, 1742 July 5., Richard Sill (Yale 1755), New Haven, Connecticut, to Nathan Hale (Yale 1773), New London, Connecticut, 1775 March 5., William Robinson, New Haven, Connecticut, to Nathan Hale (Yale 1773), Roxbury, Connecticut, 1776 February 19., Timothy Dwight (Yale 1744) to George Washington, 1778 March 8., John C. Calhoun (Yale 1804), Washington, D.C., to M. Sterling, Watertown, New York, 1818 April 1., Noah Webster (Yale 1778), Amherst, Massachusetts, to Jedidiah Morse (Yale 1783, MA 1786), New Haven, Connecticut, 1820 September 27., Samuel F. B. Morse (Yale 1810), Washington, D.C., to Jedidiah Morse (Yale 1783, MA 1786), New Haven, Connecticut, 1821 December 7., Samuel F. B. Morse (Yale 1810), Washington, D.C., to Louis McLane, London, England, 1846 March 24., Eli Whitney (Yale 1792), New Haven, Connecticut, to Lieutenant Drummer, 1814 August 28., Roger Sherman, Eliphalet Dyer (Yale 1740), and Silas Deane (Yale 1758), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to “Col. Butler, Esqr. Denison, Esqr. Judd, & Mr. Slumon,” 1775 August 2., Autograph accounts rendered by Richard Morris (Yale 1748) to Lewis Morris (Yale 1746) in New York, 1765. Noted are multiple purchases of enslaved people, Samuel F. B. Morse (Yale 1810) to David Dudley Field (Yale 1802), undated, Jedidiah Morse (Yale 1783, MA 1786), Charleston, South Carolina, to “Dear Sir,” 1818 June 30., and Theodore Dwight Woolsey (Yale 1820), New Haven, Connecticut, to Benjamin F. Thompson, Hempstead, Long Island, 1841 October 25.
Description:
A. Conger Goodyear (1877-1964) (Yale 1899) succeeded his father, Charles W. Goodyear, as director of the Buffalo Academy of Fine Arts in 1912 and was appointed the first president of the Museum of Modern Art in 1929., In English., Title from volume spine., and Some letters accompanied by typescript summaries or transcriptions.
Subject (Geographic):
New York (State) and New Haven (Conn.)
Subject (Name):
Calhoun, John C. 1782-1850. (John Caldwell),, Deane, Silas, 1738-1789., Dwight, Timothy, 1752-1817., Dyer, Eliphalet, 1721-1807., Field, David D. 1781-1867. (David Dudley),, Goodyear, A. Conger 1877-1964. (Anson Conger),, Hale, Nathan, 1755-1776., McLane, Louis, 1786-1857., Morris, Lewis, 1726-1798., Morris, Richard, 1730-1810., Morse, Jedidiah, 1761-1826., Morse, Samuel Finley Breese, 1791-1872., Robinson, William, 1754-1825., Sherman, Roger, 1721-1793., Sill, Richard, 1755-1790., Thompson, Benjamin F. 1784-1849. (Benjamin Franklin),, Washington, George, 1732-1799., Webster, Noah, 1758-1843., Whitney, Eli, 1765-1825., Williams, Elisha, 1694-1755., Williams, Stephen, 1693-1782., Woolsey, Theodore Dwight, 1801-1889., and Yale University. Alumni.
Yellowstone National Park : park season June 15 to Sept. 15 and Wylie Permanent Camping Co.
Description:
BEIN Zc47 909ye: Imperfect: Columns 6 and 10 mutilated, with some loss of text. Stamp: Salt Lake office, 307 S. Main St. and Brochure folds in half, with unnumbered columns 1-2 on final page creating a double title page.
Publisher:
Wylie Permanent Camping Co.
Subject (Geographic):
Yellowstone National Park and Yellowstone National Park.
Subject (Name):
Wylie Permanent Camping Co.
Subject (Topic):
Descriptiong and travel, Tourist camps, hostels, etc, and Camping