Prentiss Marsh Brown Papers, 1902-1973
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Brown, Prentiss M. (Prentiss Marsh), 1889-1973
- Abstract:
- Michigan congressman and senator, head of the U.S. Office of Price Administration; papers include correspondence, legislative files, speeches, political files, business and legal records, diaries and scrapbooks, visual materials, and sound recordings.
- Extent:
-
28 linear feet (in 29 boxes)
2 oversize folders
12 microfilms - Language:
- English.
- Call Number:
- 85837 Aa 2 Ac
- Authors:
- Finding aid prepared by: Thomas E. Powers
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Prentiss M. Brown Collection is rich and full and offers researchers materials on a variety of local and national topics reflecting the diversity of the man's private and public life. The earliest item in the collection is a letter book dated 1902-04 of James J. Brown, like his son a prominent St. Ignace attorney. The collection then picks up Prentiss M. Brown's entrance to the legal profession in 1917, traces his rise to public office, his work in Congress and with the O.P.A., and then concludes with his later business interests and his crusade upon behalf of the Mackinac Bridge.
The Brown Collection comprises approximately twenty-eight feet of correspondence, letterbooks, scrapbooks, diaries, speeches, topical and legislative files, photographs and phonograph records, and legal case files and business records. Covering the period 1917 to 1973, the papers concentrate most heavily in the years 1932-1942 when Brown was in the U.S. Congress. The greatest gap in the collection is in the period of the 1920s when Brown was making his first bids for political office. Also missing are any extensive files for the time of Brown's O.P.A. directorship. What the collection has on the O.P.A. are largely speeches, scrapbooks, and congratulatory letters.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Prentiss M. Brown was born at St. Ignace, Michigan on June 18, 1889. He was the son of James J. and Minnie Brown, his father having been at one time Detroit city attorney and later prosecuting attorney of Cheboygan and Mackinac counties. Brown was educated in the St. Ignace schools, graduating in 1906. He went to Albion College, graduating in 1911 with an A.B. degree. A scholarship in political economy attracted him to the University of Illinois where he worked from 1911 to 1914. In 1914 he returned to St. Ignace and commenced the practice of law with his father. In the fall of 1914, he was elected prosecuting attorney of Mackinac County on the Democratic ticket and was reelected for each succeeding term until 1926 when he voluntarily retired. In 1930 on the recommendation of the Supreme Court of Michigan he was appointed a member of the State Board of Law Examiners. He was reappointed in 1931 and again in 1936 (he declined reappointment in 1941).
In 1932 Brown was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from the 11th District of Michigan, the first Democrat to be elected to Congress from that district. He was reelected in 1934 running approximately 10,000 votes ahead of his ticket. During his service in the House of Representatives, Brown was a member of one of its most important committees: Banking and Currency. Due to the banking crisis of 1933, this probably was the most vital committee in the House of Representatives in the first three years of the Roosevelt Administration. As a member of that important committee, he helped draft the legislation establishing many of the recovery agencies of the Government created to combat the depression. Some of these agencies are the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, the Banking Acts of 1933 and 1935 (including Federal Deposit Insurance). Brown was also active in the enactment of the legislation creating the Civilian Conservation Corps and several of the farm credit agencies which were under jurisdiction of the Banking Committee. In addition, Brown was a member of the first congressional committee created by House resolution to investigate duplication of Executive agencies.
Brown was elected to the Senate on November 3, 1936. Soon after his election, with the death of James Couzens, Brown was appointed to fill that unexpired term and so took office a few weeks early. Brown was chosen chairman of the 1938 Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, also chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Taxation of Governmental Securities and Salaries, where he served from 1938 to 1940. In the Senate, Brown was chairman of the Senate Committee on Claims and a member of the following committees of the Senate: Finance, Banking and Currency, Commerce, Manufacturers, and Special Committee to Investigate Duplication of Executive Agencies of the Government. He was selected to be a member of the powerful Senate Democratic Steering Committee. This committee decides and directs the legislative program of the United States Senate and selects, as vacancies occur, Senators for appointment to the regular standing committees of the Senate.
In 1941, Brown was placed on the Commerce Committee. Also in 1941, he became chairman of the Senate Committee on Claims. As chairman of the Special Senate Committee on Taxation of Governmental Securities and Salaries, Brown was the sponsor of the legislation that brought about reciprocal taxation of salaries. Before, state employees were exempt from federal income tax, and federal employees exempt from state income taxes. Because of the legislation which Brown sponsored, all (both state and federal) were now subject to both taxes. In other words, state employees must pay the federal income tax and federal employees must pay the state income tax in states which have such a tax. His bill also imposed the income tax on all federal judges who had theretofore been exempt. Another piece of legislation which he sponsored did away with tax-exempt government securities. The income from federal government bonds is no longer exempt from taxation. For a long time the senator had advocated passage of legislation to tax the income from state, county, and municipal bonds. His amendment to the Tax Bill of 1939 sought to accomplish this, but was defeated by a narrow margin.
Brown had sponsored and acted as senate floor manager for most of the legislation broadening the lending authority of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. The various corporations set up by the government to construct tank plants, gun plants, to build up rubber reserves, metal reserves, etc., were all created by legislation that Senator Brown sponsored in the Senate.
Brown also sponsored legislation continuing and broadening the Federal Housing Administration and was in charge of the price control legislation. He had been active in the work of the Senate Finance Committee and had been a vital factor in every tax bill written since 1936. He was in charge of the legislation authorizing issue of defense bonds and was insistent upon the inclusion in the Public Debt Bill of authority to sell bonds of small denominations, commonly known as baby bonds. This legislation was passed in March of 1941. His fight to enact a Price Control bill for the benefit of the American consumer had been highly commended by most informed authorities. Brown was chairman of the conference between the two houses of congress which put the bill in final shape.
Senator Brown was active in the "Aid to Small Business" bill. It came out of the Banking and Currency Committee, of which he was a member, and he was, as a member of the committee, active in support of the bill on the floor of the Senate. It provided for relief to small businesses through loans to assist them in getting work in the war program.
Senator Brown reported from the Banking and Currency Committee the bill entitled, "For the relief of dealers in certain articles or commodities rationed under authority of the United States." He also handled this bill on the Floor of the Senate and steered it to adoption by the Senate. This bill afforded relief to anyone dealing in rationed articles, but was primarily a measure of relief for the automobile and tire dealers who had been so adversely affected by the auto and tire curtailment.
Although he supported the Roosevelt Administration in its general policies, Senator Brown had by no means been a "yes" man in his service in Congress. Among the more important measures with which he had taken issue with the Administration was the following: the proposal to increase the membership of the Supreme Court; the first proposal to reorganize the Executive agencies of the Government; and the proposal to place the Civil Aeronautics Authority under the Commerce Department. Chief credit for defeat of the proposal to pack the Supreme Court was given to Senator Brown by Joseph Alsop and Turner Catledge, chief correspondents for the New York Herald Tribune and the New York Times respectively.
The Senator's opposition to the Reorganization Bill was based on his belief that it gave legislative authority to the executive. He proposed a compromise which was rejected. It is commonly said that the rejection of this compromise caused the defeat of the bill. Subsequently, the bill was reintroduced with Senator Brown's amendment which left final authority in the congress, although giving the President primary authority. The bill as amended was then passed.
Brown ran for re-election in 1942, but was narrowly defeated by Homer Ferguson. He attributed his defeat to two things. First, his sponsorship of the OPA Act had made elements within business and industry extremely unhappy. Price fixing and rationing in particular had upset a lot of people, especially within the business community. Second, the small voter turnout in the 1942 election was below average. The nation was at war; the voter turnout was light, particularly among the working classes; the Democrats simply did not go to the polls.
After the election, President Roosevelt selected Brown as the new administrator of the Office of Price Administration. He worked in this position from January to October of 1943, and only then returned to Michigan to pick up the threads of his law practice and many business interests. In 1944, Brown was elected chairman of the board of the Detroit Edison Company, a position he held until his retirement in 1954.
In some ways, Brown's "retirement" years were his most rewarding. Long a proponent of a bridge uniting Michigan's two peninsulas, Brown, as chairman of the Mackinac Bridge Authority, worked long and hard to obtain the necessary financing for the Bridge. In 1954, in what he always considered his greatest achievement, Brown received from the Union Securities Corporation a check for 96 million dollars. Construction began soon thereafter; and on November 1, 1957, the Mackinac Bridge opened for traffic. Brown spent the remainder of his life in bridge related activities, business affairs, and historical pursuits.
Brown was married June 16, 1916, to Marion E. Walker of St. Ignace, a graduate of Michigan State College. They had seven children: Mariana F., Ruth M., James J., Barbara J., Patricia J., Prentiss M., Jr., and Paul W.
Senator Brown died on December 19, 1973.
- Acquisition Information:
- The collection was donated by Prentiss M. Brown (donor no. 4421 ) and his family (donor no. 5760 ) in three accessions in 1966 and 1975.
- Arrangement:
-
Wherever possible, the materials are preserved in the order maintained by Brown and his staff in St. Ignace and Washington. With the series of political papers, speeches, and legislative case files, this presented no problem. With other materials, however, an arrangement system had to be imposed since the materials came to the library unarranged. These papers were sorted chronologically and placed into a Correspondence series (boxes #1-3). Though such material might originally have belonged to one of the established series in Brown's filing system, it was unclear which was the appropriate category. Rather than disrupting the integrity of the other series, therefore, this unordered material was put into its own separate series. When processing was completed, the collection comprised twelve different series.
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
Selective index to correspondents
Abbott, Horatio J. (Harold Johnson), 1876- - Jan. 1934, Nov. 1934, July 1935, Mar. 1936, Apr. 1936
Andrews, Roger Mercein, 1874-1943 - (Pres.: Mackinac Island St. Park Comm.) Jan. 1934, Apr. 1934, Feb. 1935, Apr. 1935, Sept. 1935, Oct. 1935, Dec. 1935, Jan. 1936, Mar. 1936, Apr. 1936, Sept. 1937
Averill, George R 1893-1971. - 1942 [In folder 4-1]
Avery, Sewell - (Montgomery Ward Executive) Oct. 5, 1942, Oct. 28, 1942, Dec. 3, 1942, Dec. 12, 1942
Barkley, Alben William, 1877-1956. - July 1937, Sept. 1938
Bell, Jack L., 1904 - (Associated Press, Senate Gallery) Dec. 24, 1942, Jan. 5, 1943
Bennett, Harry Herbert, 1892 - Apr. 21, 1942, May 11, 1942
Byrnes, James Francis, 1879- - May 1, 1943
Cady, Claude Ernest, 1878-1953. - (6th District, U.S. Congress) May 1935
Cleary, Gerald J. - (Chairman - Delta County. Democratic Comm.) Mar. 1933, May 1933, May 1934, June 1934, Nov. 1936, Aug. 1937, Sept. 1937, Feb. 23, 1939 in folder 3-46, Mar. 11, 1939 in folder 3-47
Comstock, William Alfred, 1877-1949. - Sept. 17, 1940 [In folder 3-51]
Couzens, Frank, 1902-1950. - Nov. 1936, Feb. 1938
Couzens, James Joseph, 1872-1936. - Jan. 1936
Debo, Alfred - May 1933, May 1934, June 1934, Jan. 1935
DeFoe, Murl Holcomb, 1879- - Mar. 1937, Apr. 1937, May 1937
Diggs, Charles Coles, 1922- - Sept. 11, 1940 in folder 3-51
Dingell, John David, 1894-1955. - (15th District, U.S. Congress) Nov. 3, 1937, Nov. 8, 1937
Downey, Sheridan, 1884-1961 - (Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate from California) Oct. 1938 [In folder 3-42]
Eccles, Marriner Stoddard, 1890- - (Chairman, Federal Reserve System) Dec. 19, 1942
Farley, James Aloysius, 1888- - June 1934, Nov. 1937, Dec. 1937, Mar. 1938, Aug. 1938, Aug. 30, 1940
Fead, Louis H 1877-1943. - (Michigan Supreme Court) Mar. 1933, June 1933, Mar. 1934, May 1934, Nov. 1934, July 1937
Fenlon, Edward H. - (State Representative - St. Ignace/Law Partner) May 1933, June 1933, Feb. 1934, Mar. 1934, May 1934
Fitzgerald, Frank Dwight, 1885-1939. - Oct. 1935, Nov. 1935
Garner, John Nance, 1868-1967. - Oct. 1938 in folder 3-42
Gomon, Josephine - May 1937
Green, Fred Warren, 1872-1936. - Dec. 1935
Guffey, Joseph F 1870-1959. - (U.S. Senator, Pennsylvania) Dec. 22, 1942
Hatch, Carl A 11889-1963. - Feb. 16, 1942
Hatfield, Malcolm Keith, 1900-1961. - (Judge - Probate and Juvenile Courts, St. Joseph) June 28, 1938, Feb. 8, 1939 (P), Apr. 7, 1939 [In folder 3-47]
Henderson, Leon, 1895- - (Administrator - OPA) Sept. 22, 1942, Dec. 12, 1942
Hook, Frank Eugene, 1893 - Aug. 22, 1943
Hoover, John Edgar, 1895-1972 - Mar. 23, 1942
Hull, Cordell, 1871-1955. - Mar. 1933, Apr. 1933, Sept. 1939, Oct. 11, 1939, Apr. 5, 1940
Hurja, Emil Edward, 1892 - June 1934, Aug. 1935
Jackson, Robert Houghwout, 1892-1954. - (U.S. Attorney General) May 25, 1940
James, William Francis, 1873-1945. - Jan. 1934, Feb. 1934
Jones, Jesse Holman, 1874-1956. - (Chairman - RFC) June 20, 1936 (P)
Kennedy, George Donald, 1909 - Apr. 1935, Feb. 25, 1935 (P)
Kimmerle, Charles H 1860- - Feb. 1936
Kresge, Sebastian Spering, 1867-1966. - Sept. 20, 1945
Lederle, Arthur F, 1887- - (U.S. District Judge) Feb. 1937, Nov. 1937, May 31, 1940, Aug. 7, 1940
Lehr, John Camillus, 1878-1958. - (U.S. Congress - 2nd District, Michigan) Feb. 1935, Mar. 1935, Apr. 1935, Aug. 1935, Dec. 1935, June 1936
Luecke, John, 1889-1952 - (State Senator -Escanaba) Apr. 1936, May 1936, June 1936, May 1940
McAllister, Thomas Francis, 1896- - (U.S. Supreme Court) 1938?, Nov. 1938, 1941? Nov. 4, 1941, July 29, 1943, Apr. 20, 1939 in folder 3-47
McKay, Frank Donald, 1883-1965. - Dec. 1937
Mershon, William Butts, 1856-1943. - May 1934
Morgenthau, Henry, 1856-1946. - Oct. 10, 1942
Murphy, Frank, 1890-1949. - Dec. 4, 1934, Jan. 7, 1935, July 30, 1935, Sept. 23, 1935, Oct. 2, 1935, Nov. 2, 1935, Dec. 19, 1936, Feb. 10, 1937, May 20, 1937, Aug. 1937 Jan. 28, 1938, Feb. 4, 1938, Apr. 28, 1938, Apr. 1938, May 10, 1938, May 16, 1938, Nov. 7, 1938, Dec. 21, 1938, Jan. 12, 1939, Jan. 14, 1939, Jan. 19, 1939, Feb. 1939, Mar. 1939, Feb. 27 1940, June 10, 1942, Jan. 11, 1943; Feb. 13, 1939 letter from Frank Picard in folder 3-46; Apr. 7, 1939 Report on politics from M. Hatfield in folder 3-47
Musselwhite, Harry Webster, 1868-1955. - (U.S. Congress, 9th District) Aug. 1934, Sept. 1934, Oct. 1934, Nov. 1934, Dec. 1934, Jan. 1935
Norris, George William, 1861-1944. - Nov. 27, 1942
Osborn, Chase Salmon, 1860-1949. - Nov. 1934, July 1936, Aug. 1936, Nov. 1936, Dec. 1936, Jan. 1937, Feb. 1937, Mar. 1937, May 1937, Aug. 1937, Sept. 1937, Aug. 1938, Jan. 1939, Oct. 1939 Jan. 1940, Mar. 1940, June 12, 1940, Aug. 1940, Dec. 1940, Apr. 1941, Dec. 5, 1942, Mar. 11, 1943, Apr. 8, 1943 (Brown for Pres.), May 21, 1943, Jan. 26, 1945, Jan. 28, 1946, Apr. 17, 1942 in folder 4-14, May 1942 in folder 4-15
Osborn, Stella (Brunt), 1894- - Dec. 5, 1945
Picard,Frank A., 1889-1963. - Feb. 1936, Dec. 1937, Jan. 1940, Feb. 8, 1939 13-461
Reichert, Rudolph Edward, 1887-1965. - Nov. 1934
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, Pres. U.S., 1882-1945. - Jan. 7, 1942, Oct. 3, 1942, Oct. 7, 1942, Nov. 7, 1942, Nov. 12, 1942, Dec. 7, 1942, Dec. 21, 1942, Dec. 17, 1942, May 29, 1936 in folder 3-39, 2 undated drafts of letters to FDR in folder 1-5, undated letter in folder 3-48, Oct. 28, 1940 in folder 3-52, Oct. 31, 1940 in folder 3-52, Oct. 29, 1940 in folder 3-52, Nov. 4, 1940 in folder 3-53, Nov. 7, 1940 in folder 3-53
Shields, Edmund Claude, 1871-1947. - (Lansing lawyer and politician) May 1933, Nov. 1934, Mar. 1936, Dec. 1936, 1937?, Jan. 1937, Feb. 1937, Mar. 1937, May 1937, Aug. 1937, July 23, 1940, Oct. 20, 1941, Apr. 8, 1942, May 5, 1943, Oct. 1943, Feb. 20, 1934 (P), Feb. 13, 1935 (P), Jan.-Feb. 1939 in folder 3-46, Mar. 1939 in folder 3-47, June 1940 in folder 3-50
Smith, Gerald Lyman Kenneth, 1898- - 1942 in folder 4-4, 1942 in folder 4-5
Smith, Shirley Wheeler, 1875-1959. - Nov. 14, 1942
Spence, Brent, 1874-1967. - (U.S. Congress, 5th District, Kentucky) Sept. 26, 1934, Nov. 1935, Dec. 1935
Stack, John K., 1884-1935. - (Michigan Auditor General) Mar. 1933, Apr. 1933
Starr, Raymond Wesley, 1888-1968. - Dec. 1936
Steagall, Henry Bascom, 1873-1943. - (U.S. Congress, Alabama) Oct. 1934
Toms, Robert M (Judge) - Feb. 1939
Treanor, Arthur R. - (Booth Newspapers) Dec. 31, 1942
Truman, Harry S1884-1972. - Mar. 29, 1948 in folder 14-31, Nov. 8, 1940 in folder 3-53
Vandenberg, Arthur Hendrick, 1884-1951. - Aug. 17, 1939, Aug 26, 1943, Nov. 14, 1940 in folder 3-53
Van Wagoner, Murray Delos, 1898- - Nov. 1935, Mar. 1940
Wagner, Robert Ferdinand, 1877-1953 - Mar. 27, 1941
Welsh, George Wilson, 1883-1974. - (Mayor, Grand Rapids) Apr. 12, 1938, Mar. 11, 1942, Apr. 3, 1942
White, Walter Francis, 1893-1955. - Oct. 14, 1942 (re. Brown's record on black issues)
Woodfill, W S - Feb. 1933, Mar. 1933, July 23, 1943, Apr. 22, 1951
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Banks and banking -- Michigan.
Bridges -- Michigan.
Depressions -- 1929 -- United States.
Ferries -- Michigan.
New Deal, 1933-1939.
Taxation -- United States.
World War, 1939-1945.
Legislators -- United States.
Offices.
Ships -- Great Lakes. - Formats:
-
Caricatures.
Cartoons.
Diaries.
Photographs.
Scrapbooks.
Sound recordings.
Videotapes. - Names:
-
Arnold Transit Company.
Democratic Party (Mich.)
Mackinac Bridge Authority (Mich.)
Michigan. Mackinac Straits Bridge Authority.
United States. Congress -- Elections, 1938.
United States. Congress -- Elections, 1940.
United States. Congress -- Elections, 1942.
United States. Congress. House.
United States. Congress. Senate.
United States. Office of Price Administration.
Albion College.
City Hall (Detroit, Mich.)
Brown, Prentiss M. (Prentiss Marsh), 1889-1973.
Brown, James J.
Dodd, Thomas J. (Thomas Joseph), 1907-1971.
Douglas, Paul H. (Paul Howard), 1892-1976.
Freeman, Orville L.
Gore, Albert, 1907-1998.
Harriman, W. Averell (William Averell), 1891-1986.
Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978.
Javitz, Jacob K. (Jacob Koppel), 1904-
Kefauver, Estes, 1903-1963.
Kennedy, Edward M. (Edward Moore), 1932-2009.
Long, Edward V. (Edward Vaughn), 1908-1972.
McNamara, Patrick Vincent, 1894-1966.
Mansfield, Mike, 1903-2001.
Moss, Frank E., 1911-2003.
Proxmire, William.
Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003.
Saltonstall, Leverett, 1892-1979.
Shriver, Sargent, 1915-2011.
Tufty, Esther Van Wagoner, -1986.
Udall, Stewart L.
Abbott, Horatio J. (Horatio Johnson), 1876-1936.
Andrews, Roger, 1874-
Averill, George R., 1893-1971.
Avery, Sewell Lee, 1873-1960.
Barkley, Alben William, 1877-1956.
Bell, Jack L., 1904-
Bennett, Harry Herbert, 1892-1979.
Byrnes, James Francis, 1879-1972.
Cady, Claude Ernest, 1878-1953.
Cleary, Gerald J.
Comstock, William Alfred, 1877-1949.
Couzens, Frank, 1902-1950.
Couzens, James, 1872-1936.
Debo, Alfred.
DeFoe, Murl Holcomb, 1879-
Diggs, Charles C.
Dingell, John D. (John David), 1894-1955.
Downey, Sheridan.
Eccles, Marriner S. (Marriner Stoddard), 1890-1977.
Farley, James A. (James Aloysius), 1888-1976.
Fead, Louis H., 1877-1943.
Fenlon, Edward H.
Fitzgerald, Frank Dwight, 1885-1939.
Garner, John Nance, 1868-1967.
Gomon, Josephine Fellows, 1892-1975.
Green, Fred W. (Fred Warren), 1872-1936.
Guffey, Joseph F., 1870-1959.
Hatch, Carl A., 1889-1963.
Hatfield, Malcolm Keith, 1900-1961.
Henderson, Leon, 1895-1986.
Hook, Frank Eugene, 1893-1982.
Hoover, J. Edgar (John Edgar), 1895-1972.
Hull, Cordell, 1871-1955.
Hurja, Emil, 1892-
Jackson, Robert Houghwout, 1892-1954.
James, William Francis, 1873-1945.
Jones, Jesse H. (Jesse Holman), 1874-1956.
Kennedy, G. Donald (George Donald), 1900-1988.
Kimmerle, Charles H., 1860-
Kresge, Sebastian Spering, 1867-1966.
Lederle, Arthur F., 1887-
Lehr, John Camillus, 1878-1958.
Luecke, John, 1889-1952.
McAllister, Thomas Francis, 1896-
McKay, Frank, 1883-1965.
Mershon, Wm. B. (William Butts), 1856-1943.
Morgenthau, Henry, 1856-1946.
Murphy, Frank, 1890-1949.
Musselwhite, Harry Webster, 1868-1955.
Norris, George W. (George William), 1861-1944.
Osborn, Chase S. (Chase Salmon), 1860-
Osborn, Stellanova, 1894-1988.
Picard, Frank A., 1889-1963.
Reichert, Rudolph Edward, 1887-1965.
Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945.
Shields, Edmund Claude, 1871-1947.
Smith, Gerald L. K. (Gerald Lyman Kenneth), 1898-1976.
Smith, Shirley Wheeler, 1875-1959.
Spence, Brent, 1874-1967.
Stack, John K., 1884-1935.
Starr, Raymond Wesley, 1888-1968.
Steagall, Henry Bascom, 1873-1943.
Toms, Robert Morrell, 1886-1960.
Treanor, Arthur Ryan, 1883-1956.
Truman, Harry S., 1884-1972.
Vandenberg, Arthur H. (Arthur Hendrick), 1884-1951.
Van Wagoner, Murray Delos, 1898-
Wagner, Robert F. (Robert Ferdinand), 1877-1953.
Welsh, George Wilson, 1883-1974.
White, Walter Francis, 1893-1955.
Woodfill, W. Stewart, 1896- - Places:
-
Mackinac Island (Mich.)
Mackinac Island (Mich.) -- Businesses.
Saint Ignace (Mich.)
United States -- Politics and government -- 1929-1933.
United States -- Politics and government -- 1933-1945.
Mackinac Bridge (Mich.)
Mackinac Island (Mich.)
Saint Ignace (Mich.)
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Donor(s) have transferred any applicable copyright to the Regents of the University of Michigan but the collection may contain third-party materials for which copyright was not transferred. Patrons are responsible for determining the appropriate use or reuse of materials.
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
item, folder title, box no., Prentiss M. Brown Papers, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan