Margaret Carlson Winchell diary, 1942-1945
1 volume (in 1 box)
Diary detailing daily experiences as a nursing student during World War II era. Entries mention aspects of training, work in the hospital, and student life.
1 volume (in 1 box)
Diary detailing daily experiences as a nursing student during World War II era. Entries mention aspects of training, work in the hospital, and student life.
0.5 linear feet
The Margaret Elliott collection, arranged alphabetically, pertains to her professional career. Most of the papers focus on her research of women's roles in business and professional careers in the World War II era. The papers provide valuable insight into the way women viewed their role in higher education and the workforce in the 1930s and 1940s. One folder in the papers, "Dissertations and thesis critiques," contains interesting information about the topics students were choosing for their dissertations in the World War II era. This file is closed to researchers for seventy five years from the date of creation because it contains personally identifiable student information.
1 volume
Scrapbook contains programs of events attended; photographs informal and of groups of which she was a member; and other student memorabilia.
0.25 linear feet
The collection consists of portraits and other photographs of Washington Irving Keal, Nellie Annetta Keal, Thomas Keal, Lucy Ann Wyman Smith, and other members of the Keal, Crandell, Smith, and White families of Ann Arbor and Dexter, Michigan. Apart from portraits, the collection also includes photographs of buildings in Dexter, Michigan, the store of John L. Crandell in Rochester, Michigan, and the Orin White house in Ann Arbor.
6.5 linear feet
The Margaret L. Clay Papers are significant for their illustration of late twentieth-century public health concerns in rural Northern Michigan. The documents demonstrate collaborative efforts to eradicate health outcome disparities in Alpena and Montmorency Counties. Additionally, the Papers constitute a rich source of material related to alcohol and drug prevention at the regional, state, and federal levels.
The Margaret L. Clay Papers provide evidence of her involvement with several health organizations in Northern Michigan. The collection is arranged into two series, Public Health Initiatives and Substance Abuse Prevention.
1 microfilm
Margaret Leutheuser collected a variety of materials pertaining to her ancestors, notably among the Leach, Waterman and Armstrong families. The collection dates from the 1850s to the 1930s, and includes family correspondence, newspaper articles written by Morgan (M.L.) Leach, and farm account books. The materials are arranged in one Family Papers series by the originator/author of the item.
1 envelope
This collection contains photographs of halftime band formations at an unidentified University of Michigan football game.
1 envelope
The collection consists of a photograph, dated circa 1900, of Glazier Way in Ann Arbor and a house that probably belonged to Richard Glazier. Also included are photographs, dated circa 1920-1929, of Hill Auditorium as well as the orchestra and other employees of Ann Arbor's Majestic Theater. Some of the photographs dated in the 1920s were taken by Underwood's father, Jacob Hanselman (1853-1948). Hanselman was a professional Michigan photographer who worked in East Saginaw, Manistee, and Ann Arbor.
1.5 linear feet
The Margie J. Van Meter Papers are divided into three series relating to her education and work as a clinical nursing specialist: Administrative, Clinical Nursing Specialist records, School of Nursing, Patient Logs and Records.
1.5 linear feet
The Marguerite Babaian Harms Papers consist of materials largely relating to her career at the University of Michigan School of Nursing dating from 1954 to 1985. The collection is arranged in a single topical files series. The bulk of these files fall under the headings of Committees, Correspondence, and Course Materials. There is, in addition, biographical information, a folder on the ENACT (Environmental Action) teach-in, and files relating to her interest in Cobblestone Farm, a historic Ann Arbor landmark. The collection includes three 8mm films: tentatively identified as footage of Sonya Henie on her 1938 visit to Detroit with the Hollywood Ice Review; footage of infancy of (daughter?) Lynn, and a short film from the Detroit Tigers spring training camp at Lakeland (1960s?)