C Caffey, Stewart Includes a printed article on professional womens basketball from the Messenger which serves the De Leon and Central Texas area published in 1997. Stewart Caffey is a member of the West Texas Historical Association and the Texas Oral History Association. Cagle, Ola O'Keefe Item is a manuscript entitled Cowbells and Buttercups by Ola O'Keefe Cagle, 54 pages, spiral bound. The short stories are of Ola Cagle's life on the Waggoner Ranch. The stories were typed and edited by family members. Ola O'Keefe Cagle, grandmother of Jo Ellen Taylor, lived her life in the West Texas region. At the age of nine her family moved to the Waggoner Ranch along Rock Creek. She graduated from Harrold High School in 1928 and eventually married. Her stories reflect the life she and her family lived during the early 20th Century and on through the 1980s. Cain, Frank Includes a photocopy of answers and deposition of Frank Cain concerning Pacific Finance Corporation and its financial affairs with Billie Sol Estes. Cain, Joseph Alexander Includes correspondence, printed material, and scrapbook material concerning Cain's
activities in the art field. The collection bulks with correspondence between Cain and art
societies and associations. Calvert District Conference, Methodist-Episcopal Church, South Collection contains records of the Calvert District Conferences from 1892 to 1898. Calvin, Ross Consists of an 8 volume log book describing the plant and animal life of southwestern
New Mexico, especially the area around Silver City, as well as diaries of travels made to
other areas of the United States over a sixty year period. Camfield, Earnest Ross Materials concern the Camfield and Bates families of Thurber, Texas. It includes photocopied newspapers and genealogy. Thurber, Texas is now a ghost town and was at one time a prosperous coal mining town. Camp, Joseph The collection consists of correspondence from J. Evarts Whittlesey to Joseph Camp
describing weather conditions, towns, schools and churches. The letters also chronicle an
eastern family's reactions to the so-called mythic "West," and describe their
financial difficulties. The reference file for this collection contains a photocopy of
Camp's journal from his 1859 trip. Campbell, Henry Harrison Includes correspondence, financial records and a journal. The collection bulks
(1879-1890) with an unidentified journal and cash book, and with a weather diary from
1890. Of particular interest is a letter from A. M. Britten. For further
details, click here:
HHCampbell. Campbell, Martha E.
Items include personal
correspondence (1870-1926), genealogy notes (1930s), miscellaneous notes
(1859-1967), news clippings on the Campbell family (1929-1971), a diary of
Martha E. “Mattie” Campbell (1893-1894), and a photograph of Mattie Campbell
with her dog “Cutie” (1890s). The descriptive diary was written while
Mattie was twelve to thirteen years old and describes in detail her life in
Denver, Colorado. Campbell, Mrs. R. T. Contains the diaries written by Mrs. Campbell while living on the Campbell Ranch in
Texas. Campbell, William Lindsey, Family The
collection includes correspondence, bank records and receipts, genealogic
material, sales contracts and deeds, class notes, text books, and
memorabilia and scrapbook material. Letters Lindsey Campbell wrote to his
family while away at college comprise the bulk of the collection. For
further details, click here:
WLCampbell.
Canadian Presbyterian Church (Texas) Contains a record of church business meetings and a list of members as of November 1, 1895. Canadian Women's Christian Temperance Union (Texas) Contains minutes of meetings, scrapbook materials, songs, and correspondence dealing
with the Canadian, Texas, chapter of the Women's Christian Temperance Union. Canadian-Hemphill County Chamber of Commerce (Texas) Contains minutes of meetings of the Canadian-Hemphill County Chamber of Commerce. Cantonment Burgwin Project Contains correspondence, newsclippings, printed and scrapbook material, two
photographs, and William Wallace Anderson's diary-account books. The collection bulks
(1858) with the bound photocopies of William Wallace Anderson's diary-account books
concerning Cantonment (Fort) Burgwin. Caraway, T. G. Collection contains a variety of materials documenting the
activities of the American Agriculture Movement, including the organization of the
farmers march on Washington and other protests during the late 1970s. Also
included is a selection of material on Lubbock music, with special attention to the Maines
Brothers Band. Caraway, T. G.
Collection of general files on the activities of T. G. Caraway with the Texas Young
Democrats in Lubbock and state-wide such as agenda, announcements, correspondence,
financial documents, membership, memos, minutes and reports, news clippings, and outreach
and convention materials. Card, Lottie Holman Includes correspondence, financial and legal material, printed material, diary,
scrapbook material, literary productions, and photographs of the Burnham family of Stephen
F. Austin's colony, and of the Burks, Card, Dunn, and Holman families of Comanche,
Texas. The collection bulks (1825-1964) with correspondence, financial and legal material,
scrapbooks, scrapbook material, photographs, literary productions, sketches and drawings,
and genealogical material of Lottie Holman Card. Cardona, Geronimo
The item is a bulletin in Spanish from Brigadier General Geronimo Cardona Carey, Clay Parks Contains correspondence, diplomas, historical records, a scrapbook, a journal,
photograph albums, loose photographs, and miscellaneous items pertaining to the
Weakley-Watson-Miller Hardware Company of Brownwood and also to the Watson, Parks,
Weakley, Carey, Miller, Dildy, Sater, Dyer, McColloch and other Brownwood pioneer
families. Carlisle, W. A. Includes financial material (1894-1919) and legal material (1880-1919) pertaining to
land purchases and sales in Lubbock, Texas. Also includes correspondence concerning
financial matters. Carlsbad Irrigation District No. 1. (New Mexico) Contains correspondence, financial material, legal material, minutes of meetings, reports, and scrapbook material pertaining to the Carlsbad, New Mexico, Irrigation District No. 1. Carlson, Erik D. Item is a manuscript titled Ellington Field: A Short History, 1917-1963 by Erik D. Carlson, Ph.D. Dr. Carlson is a historian from Houston, Texas. He compiled a brief history of Ellington Field currently Ellington Air Force Base located 25 miles south of Houston, Texas. It was named after Lt. Eric Lamar Ellington. Carlson, Paul Howard Contains research material and hand notes used in Pecos
Bill, Carlson's published doctoral dissertation on William R. Shafter. Shafter was a
Civil War commander of black troops and an officer of the Southwest frontier and the
Spanish-American War. Includes materials on the Shafter Mine and the Presidio Mining
Company. In addition there are materials related to Dr. Paul
Carlsons research on Empire Builder and The
Plains Indians. Items include
photocopied map of Texas designating the Frying Pan Ranch and photocopies of William H.
Bush. For further details, click here:
PCarlson. Carmona, Adan "Danny" Segura The wallet contains a handwritten genealogy of Danny Carmona and his family as well as a genealogy of Julia Segura Garcia's descendants compiled by a family member. Julia is Adan's mother. Adan Segura Carmona was born in Ralls, Texas in 1920. The family moved to Lubbock in 1926. When Adan was only five years old, his father died. His mother remarried in 1927. Adan was a member of the first group of Hispanic students to cross the railroad tracks and attend North Ward School. He left Lubbock and returned after a forty-five year absence. Carousel Club (Lubbock, Texas) Contains printed material and correspondence pertaining to the Carousel
Club. The collection bulks (1959-1966) with club directories giving lists of members,
officers, and club by-laws. The collection includes correspondence, financial and printed material,
literary productions, scrapbook material, and photographs relating to the Brownwood
Chamber of Commerce, and Carpenter's personal interests, civic activities, and field work
for the Southwest Collection. The collection bulks (1882-1970) with printed material and
Brownwood Chamber of Commerce material. The printed material mainly concerns Carpenter's
personal interests and activities. Also contains photocopies of correspondence from
Stephen F. Austin concerning the establishment of a colony near Bastrop, Texas, circa
1830. Includes correspondence, financial material, legal material, printed
material, and scrapbook material dealing with events occurring in or near Lubbock, Texas,
and with the Texas Tech University Medical School. Also includes material on the Texas
Tech name change. Carpenter, Mrs. Hurley The wallet contains a box of stereographic photographs featuring pictures of the world. Carpenter is the widow of former Texas Tech football star and Lubbock, Texas civic leader, Hurley Carpenter. She has been a leader in area womens organizations, including the Womens Division of the Lubbock Chamber of Commerce and the West Texas Museum Association. Carr, Betty This is a collection of bibliographies, biographical sketches, book excerpts, and copies of various articles for a research class taken by Betty Carr. Mrs. Carr was a student at Texas Tech. In 1982 she performed research and wrote a paper on the Supreme Court Case, Lone Wolf vs. Hitchcock, for Dr. Paul Carlsons graduate history class. Carr, Joe The collection contains
research materials and manuscript drafts for Carr and Munde’s publication,
Prairie Nights to Neon Lights. The book is a history of country music in
West Texas spanning the genres from country and western and Texas Swing to
rockabilly and even modern rock and roll. Included are correspondence,
manuscript notes and drafts, printed material, photographs and an extensive
collection of oral history interviews, some with printed transcripts, with local
musicians that play heavily in the book. It bulks with printed materials
dealing with the local music and various individual
artists. For further details, click here:
JCarr. Carr, Waggoner Includes correspondence, speeches, campaign material,
financial and legal material, newsclippings, literary productions, printed material,
legislative materials, photographs, slides, and media productions pertaining to the life
and political activities of Waggoner Carr. Of note are papers relating to the
investigation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy; the 1966 United States Senate
Campaign; the Watergate Conspiracy, the Crime Investigating Committee of Texas
(1950-1953), and coverage of the Sharpstown Scandal Trials. Notable correspondents include
Lyndon B. Johnson, Hubert Humphrey, George Mahon, Sam Rayburn, J. Edgar Hoover, Price
Daniel, and Jimmy Durante. The collection bulks (1950-1975) with materials concerning
Texas politics, and Carr's career as a politician. For further details, click here:
WCarr. Carr, Waggoner
Collection of 33 plaques, awards, and artifacts from Waggoner Carr’s
personal collection. Most items were awarded for his service to
organizations like the American Legion and Peace Officers Association;
others awarded for his leadership in education and law practice. He has
been recognized numerous times for his influence in politics and law. Also includes one wallet
of news releases from the Assassination Records Review Board concerning John
F. Kennedy (1993-1998).
Bulks with two financial materials in ledgers of the Carr Wagon Sales
from 1906-1908. The collection bulks with business correspondence generated during Amon
Carter's tenure as President of the Board of Directors and concentrates entirely on Texas
Technological College and Carter's affiliation with the school. These letters are filed in
nine bound volumes and divided into 62 categories. Each volume has a table of contents. In
addition, the collection houses an assortment of photographic prints of proposed Texas
Technological College building blueprints, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous
material. Consists of a journal and scrapbook material from an early-day Bell
County, Texas, farmer. Carter was a farmer in Bell County, Texas.
Collection of two literary
productions: "Roaming Down Broadway: Lubbock, Texas, 1937-1942" and "War in
the Pacific: A Personal Experience"
written by William H. Carter in 1999 and 1997, respectively. Carter-Houston Dry Goods Company (Plainview, Texas) Contains a cash book (1914-1916) and an account ledger (1917-1918)
pertaining to the Carter-Houston Dry Goods Company in Plainview, Texas. Consists of scrapbooks concerning the Reynolds and Matthews families of
Albany, including newsclippings, correspondence, programs, and photographs concerning
friends, social activities, ranches, Fort Griffin and the Fandangle, and events in San
Antonio. There are also several invitations, certificates, and proclamations. Includes correspondence, financial and legal materials, photographs,
scrapbook and printed materials, biographies and interviews, maps, and literary
productions gathered for Casey's book on the establishment and development of Shallowater,
Lubbock County, Texas. Includes literary productions, printed material, and class notes
pertaining to Texas, Latin American, and Mexican history. The collection bulks (1938-1947)
with class notes on Spanish and Mexican history. Also includes an unpublished textbook
manuscript, a partial work of fiction, and two articles by Cecil Johnson and Fray Jose
Franco Lopez. Casto, Stanley D. Collection of 17 publications written by Dr. Stanley
Casto on the history of ornithology in Texas. Most articles appear in the Bulletin
of the Texas Ornithological Society. Collection contains materials concerning the early history of Castro
County, Texas, and its communities and early pioneers, including William C. Dimmitt and
Hilory Green Bedford. Contains records from the Castro County Cemetery. This is a
society organized to study the genealogy of Castro County, Texas. Includes newsclippings, diaries, scrapbooks, pictures, and commentaries
relating to the founding of schools, towns, and hospitals by Catholic nuns and priests in
West Texas. Contains brand books detailing and identifying
earmarks, brands, ranch names, owner's location, and post office addresses of ranches
primarily in Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. Other surrounding Southwestern states and
Northern Mexican ranches are identified less extensively. Mostly photocopies of news clippings of Bobby Cavazos All-American Football career at Texas Technological College from 1953-1954. Bobby Cavazos is a Texas Tech Alumnus and an All-American Football player during the early 1950s. His brother, Lauro Cavazos, was President of Texas Tech during the 1980s and later became U. S. Secretary of Education for Ronald Reagan and George Bush. Cavazos, Lauro F. Collection consist of personal papers as well as
records from his tenure as president of Texas Tech University, Secretary of Education
(U.S.) and as professor at Tufts University. For further details, click here:
LCavazos. The collection is divided into three series: the
University of Virginia and Tufts University, 1958-1987 (2 linear feet) which contains
medical documents, correspondence, newsclippings, printed material, and student
dissertations; Texas Tech University, 1943-1988 (23 linear feet) which includes
correspondence, business documents, legal materials, printed materials, newsclippings,
speeches, and scrapbook material; and the U.S. Department of Education, 1969-1991 and
undated (38 linear feet) which consists of correspondence, legal material, appointment and
budget books, congressional testimony, educational programs and policies, speeches,
honorary doctoral degrees, newsclippings, photographs, and miscellaneous material.
For further details, click here:
LCavazos. Contains correspondence, literary productions,
printed and scrapbook materials, and 100 slides pertaining to Cawthon's ten years at Texas
Tech and the reunion held November 1, 1975 in Lubbock, Texas. The collection bulks with
slides prepared for the reunion and information sheets on former players. Item is a manuscript entitled Unpublished Epilogue to H. W. Caylor, Frontier Artist by Joe Pickle. Harvey Wallace (H. W.) Caylor was an artist from Big Spring, Texas. His paintings represented frontier scenes such as cattle drives, horses, and cowboys. Cemetery Association (Hearne, Texas) Contains a hand-written ledger book containing minutes of the
association. The group maintains the community cemetery. Center for Historic Preservation and Technology
Contains materials generated by research programs conducted by the Center for
Historic Preservation and Technology (formerly History of Engineering Program).
Includes files on sites identified in Historic Engineering Site Inventories
undertaken in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, and Utah with files
arranged alphabetically by site name. Documentation of specific sites ranges
from simple identification to in-depth documentation. Documentation can include
photographs (contemporary and historic); historic sources (photocopies),
bibliographic material, blue prints, mechanical drawings, maps, informant
questionnaires, and interview transcripts. Files also include nominations to
the National Register of Historic Places and the Historic American Engineering
Record (HAER) as well as American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Historic
Civil Engineering Landmark recognition. Additional materials in the collection
were generated by Historic Building Inventories in Greenlee County and Douglas,
Arizona; various New Mexico cities and counties; and Cleburne and Pampa, Texas.
Other projects represented in the collection are the Florida Historic Bridge
Survey and Lubbock County Historic Farm Equipment Research. Also includes
correspondence and administrative material relating to the program, a User’s
Guide for the original computerized Historic Engineering Site Inventory (HESI)
database, and a recently prepared CD-ROM containing the database and a visual
basic program for accessing the information. Bulks with material generated by
the Historic Engineering Site Inventory projects in various states. For
further details click here:
CHPT_Inv. Center for Women and Their Work (Austin, Texas) Collection of brochures featuring women artist and samples of their works, which were displayed at the Center for Women and Their Work in Austin, Texas. The Center for Women and Their Work a statewide non-profit cultural art organization presents over 50 events a year in visual art, dance, theater, music, literature, film, educational workshops, and programming. It was founded in 1978. They feature women artists from Texas and from throughout the nation reflecting the cultural and ethnic diversity from this region.
The collection consists of annual reports,
stockholder meeting reports, dividend letters, and prospectuses pertaining to the Central
and South West Corporation and its subsidiaries. Contains and bulks (1929-1933) with legal material pertaining to the
operation of the Central Benevolent Association of Texas in Comanche, Texas. Also includes
the incorporation document (1903), constitution and by-laws (1908), and a brief history of
the association. Contains news clippings on Mattie Lee Harris Chambless including her obituary as seen from the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal (1973). Mrs. Chambless was the great aunt of Wanda Arnold. She owned several Lubbock Hat shops in the 1930s. Chamberlin, Don Alonzo Includes correspondence, tax receipts for the Chamberlin estate; a
receipt relating to the Chamberlin Bros. Bank; and miscellaneous notes concerning the
history of Belton, Texas. Consists of a hand-written ledger of customer
transactions over a 20 year period. Includes correspondence, financial and legal material, printed material,
scrapbook material, photographs, and literary productions concerning Dr. J. A. Chatman's
personal and professional activities as a physician in Lubbock, Texas. The collection
bulks (1911-1962) with materials on the Lone Star State Medical, Dental, and
Pharmaceutical Association, which includes biographies of Afro-American doctors in Texas
(1941-1962). For further details, click here:
JAChatman.
The collection contains photocopies of the letters of Francois Chauveaux, including the
original correspondence in French, and English translations. Chaves County, New Mexico Consists of Grand Jury testimonies concerning illegal activities in
Chaves County, New Mexico. Includes correspondence, legal material, literary productions,
photographs, printed and scrapbook material, and research and miscellaneous material. The
collection bulks (1923-1972) with correspondence and literary productions concerning the
history of San Angelo, Tom Green County, and Fort Concho, Texas. Consists of primarily photocopies of biographical and genealogical
information about members of the Chenowth Family. Consists of five scrapbooks that contain photographs, newsclippings and
cards concerning family, friends, and travels of Mr. and Mrs. Hervey Chesley of Hamilton,
Texas. Contains meeting minutes of the Chicago Colorado Colony Trustees, along
with a day book, records of land payments and ownership, and records of land sales. The item is souvenir booklet entitled A Century of Progress of the Chicago International Exposition of 1933. The fair was held in Chicago, Illinois as a celebration of the 100th anniversary of the city. The fair included exhibits from American and World History, natural history, art, medicine, and science and technology. Childress Chamber of Commerce (Texas) Contains minutes of the meetings of the Childress Chamber of Commerce
for the years 1956-1960 and 1972-1976. Consists of a ledger recording types and prices of goods purchased by
customers. Notable customers include the Matador Land and Cattle Company, Childress Land
and Cattle Company, Frank Collinson, S. M. Swenson and Son, and Charles Goodnight. Donor
of the material is unknown. Chilocco Indian School (Oklahoma) Collection includes the
original Chilocco Indian Boarding School’s student rosters for the years
1968-1975. It provides such information as student names, grade level, sex,
birth date, tribe, name of guardian or parent, community address, and agency.
Also includes a 1963 Baccalaureate and Commencement Program, news clippings
concerning the history of the school, and a list of former school employees.
For more information, see the Chilocco Indian School microfilm collection
(1940-1996) on 2 reels and the Papers of Arlie Willis. For further
details, click here:
Chilocco.
The items include automobile insurance papers, income tax returns, liability insurance, property and employee insurance, receipts and bills, and miscellaneous papers detailing Mr. Christians work in New Mexico. H. F. Christian had ties with the Carlsbad, New Mexico region dealing with real estate. Christian, Paul and Nora Contains a photocopy of a diary which highlights the daily activities of
the Christians from January to September, 1902. A trapper, rancher, and author, Christie was born in 1898 and worked as
a trapper in the vicinity of Garden City, Glasscock County, Texas, while his ranch was
located in Barksdale, Texas. He authored Longfang Talks (1968) and Orphan of the
West (1973). Contains correspondence, financial material, minute books, printed
material, and scrapbook material pertaining to the organization. The collection bulks
(1933-1957) with correspondence concerning the social conditions of Lubbock, Texas. Contains correspondence and a court journal pertaining to the activities
of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Jefferson, Texas, and matters related to the
maintenance of the courthouse and post office. Bulks (1881-1911) with correspondence of
the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Consists of seven volumes of "minute books" from the meetings
of the Cisco Chamber of Commerce. The collection also includes scrapbook material. Contains correspondence, general files, printed material, scrapbook
material, sketches and maps dealing primarily with Lubbock's response to the 1970 tornado. Collection includes general files of the City of Lubbock Government.
Included are papers on its annual banquet and the 1965-1966 annual report. Is comprised of newsletters, reports and minutes of meetings of the city
government and city managers. Also included is miscellaneous printed material on the
actions of the city government/city managers. Collection contains a copy of the United States Employment Service,
"Guide to Community Facilities," Lubbock, Texas, 1945. Bulks with financial reports on Lubbock in the 1950s. The collection consists of the bank's annual reports for 1953, 1954,
1955, 1959, and statements of condition from 1953 to 1962. The bank was founded in
1900 in Colorado City, Mitchell County, Texas. The area's main industries are agribusiness
and oil. Contains correspondence, newspaper clippings, printed material, and
literary productions concerning the Planning Department of the City of Lubbock, Texas.
Bulks with newspaper clippings pertaining to Lubbock. Of particular interest are clippings
dealing with redevelopment of parts of Lubbock after the tornado of 1970.
Collection of biographical information
on Civil War veterans from the Confederacy and Union who moved to Lubbock County, Texas
after the war. Accompanied by some gravestone
photographs (color 4 x 5). Also includes a
photocopy of Lydia Dicksons article Stories on Stone from Texas Historian (Vol. 51, Sept. 1990). Clark, Ann M. Is comprised of newsclippings on the West Texas counties. The
newsclipping consist of information on local residents and obituaries. There is also
printed material on local events at the time. Consists of typed manuscripts of Paco's Miracle,
This for That, Bear Cub, and Medicine Man's Daughter. Clark, Ann Nolan Collection contains some correspondence between H. S. Adler and Ann Nolan Clark as well as a manuscript titled A Handful of Days. The manuscript is an autobiographical recording of Mrs. Clark. Ann Nolan Clark of Tucson, Arizona is an author of Childrens books. Mrs. Clark was also a teacher on several American Indian reservations. H. S. Adler is the owner of Adobe Booksellers in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Clark, Bob Mennonite Collection, 1977-1980 405 leaves Includes correspondence, newspaper clippings and
printed material. The collection bulks (1977-1980) with correspondence written by
concerned citizens throughout the United States to Seminole, Texas, Mayor Bob Clark
supporting the Mennonites in their struggle against deportation. Includes correspondence, photographs, printed material and scrapbook
material. Bulks (1934-1943) with materials related to Clark's involvement with the Kemas
Club at Texas Technological College, Lubbock, Texas. Clark, Vicky Item is a pastel painting portfolio of Vicky Clark, PSA. It contains samples of her work, news articles, and a resume. Vicky Clark is a West Texas native, born in Lamesa, Texas. As a child, she drew on a blackboard or tablet. She studied at Abilene Christian University, but did not receive a degree. Her education continued through workshops, such as going to Mexico with Conny Martin. Mrs. Clark's paintings are found throughout the United States, and she is often recognized and featured in art journals and other publications. Mrs. Clark is married and has three children. Her sister, Kathy Thompson Davis, is also an artist. Clark and Plumb Company The collection contains two abstracts of title (1876-1891) for land in
Archer, Clay, and Cooke counties concerning the sale of land originally belonging to John
K. Parker of Tipton County, Tennessee, to William Kuhlman and Ernst Hoff. Also contains a
copy of the will of James Morrow of Clay County, Texas, and powers of attorney. Includes a copy book of poetry, minutes of the Teachers' Reading Circle
of Dublin Graded Schools, and other printed items relating to the Higginbotham family and
their business and activities in Dublin, Texas. Contains financial and legal material of the Clay Building Material
Company. Includes scrapbook material pertaining to Erath County and other nearby Texas counties. The Clays were a pioneer family from Dublin, Erath County, Texas.
Collection contains correspondence and printed materials on Texas Techs history. Evelyn Clewell was born in Buffalo, Kansas. She graduated with a degree in journalism from the University of Oklahoma. She was employed at the Registrars Office at Texas Tech University for 45 years. She was also a statistician so after Mrs. Clewell retired she compiled statistical information on every phase of Texas Tech University into eight bound volumes. These statistics are a source information for researchers inquiring about Texas Tech. Clifton, Edna Matthews Consists of a photograph of Edna Clifton and handwritten
autobiographical materials, including notebooks and an essay about Clifton's childhood
near Albuquerque, Wilson County, Texas (1868-1890). Contains a manuscript and an article dealing with the history of
Clifton, Texas. The city of Clifton was settled in 1854 in Bosque County, Texas. Contains correspondence, financial and printed materials, literary
productions, and photographs pertaining to Clowe & Cowan, Inc. The collection bulks
with financial material. Also includes a printed history of the company and a price book.
Clyde Young Wool Company, Inc. This
collection contains mostly business files of the Clyde Young Wool Company,
Inc. Their records consist of business correspondence, telegram cables,
shipping notes, and other financial transactions between the company and
their buyers. There is a section concerning the Southwest Mohair, Inc., a
company whom Clyde Young conducted business with from 1973-1980. For
further details click here:
CYWoolCompany. Includes correspondence, financial material, photographs, printed
material, lists, advertising media material, memorabilia, newsclippings, and a film
pertaining to the Coaches All-America Game. The collection bulks with financial material
and printed promotional material. Includes correspondence, financial materials, and legal materials
pertaining to the Yellow House Land Company and Malcolm H. Reed. Also includes course
syllabi and grade sheets from the American Institute of Banking courses. Includes correspondence, legal documents, literary productions, a diary,
newsclippings, and genealogical histories belonging to Coffin family members, plus a
sketch and photographs of Itasca in 1892. Among the family treasures are a copy of
execution by Davy Crockett (1818) and a bond issued by the Confederacy (1862). Includes correspondence, financial records, photographs, cards,
certificates, printed material, class notes, and poetry, all pertaining to the Coffin
family, their farming and ranching interests, their social and civic activities, and the
Itasca Cotton Manufacturing Company. Includes genealogical material and reminiscences pertaining to the
Coffin family. Helen T. Coffin was a daughter of Charles Ignatius Coffin. Includes correspondence, financial material, legal documents, and
printed material from W. J. Collinson, and the financial documents of the W. F. Taber
family. Contains correspondence, financial material and legal material
pertaining to the business activities of the Coggin brothers and their business
associates. The collection bulks with records of the Coggin Brothers Ranch (1848-1910),
Coggin Brothers and Collinson (1884-1898) and Coggin Brothers and Ford, Bankers (1874-1930). Of special note are materials pertaining to
Indian Depredation Claims made by the Coggins against the U.S. Government (1872-1902).
For further details, click here:
Coggin. Consists of unclaimed documents stored in the safety deposit boxes of
Coggins National Bank by residents of Brownwood, Texas and the surrounding area. Bulks
with financial material including deeds, bills, and similar material. Includes correspondence, interview abstracts, a literary production, and
scrapbook material primarily concerning college football. The collection bulks (1940) with
the literary production, Football Through the Years, by Dean Hill. Of special
interest is correspondence between former Texas Tech coach, Pete Cawthon, and Cole. Items such as news clippings, family tree, historical marker, and medicine concerning Preston C. Coleman. Dr. Coleman is considered the Father of Texas Tech University. He was born in Tennessee in 1853, and he died in Colorado City, Texas in 1932. He made house calls with his buckboard through the rural country side as a physician seeing isolated cowboys and farmers in the middle of nowhere. Collier, Anna Belle Consists of undated manuscripts of poetry and several short stories for
children, plus a few illustrations. Contains minutes of the Wellington (later Collingsworth) Chamber of
Commerce meetings and reports of its board of directors. Collection contains letters from Frank Collinson about frontier events
and personalities such as Randal Slidell Mackenzie, William H. Bonney (Billy the Kid), Pat
Garret, Jesse James, etc. The collection also contains a letter from Frank Collinson and
tells of some of his experiences as a buffalo hunter on the South Plains. Contains the records of six clubs and a gymnasium in Colorado City,
Texas. Includes financial records for the Colorado Club (1905-1906); a literary production
of the Kimona Club (1904); minutes and financial records of the Ladies Park Association
(1896); membership lists of the Mitchell Lodge No. 563 (1882-1955); correspondence,
literary productions and financial materials of the Shakespeare Club (1947-1961);
financial material, literary productions, and minutes of the Standard Club (1896-1942);
and financial material and membership lists for the gymnasium (1901-1902). The collection
bulks (1882-1961) with materials pertaining to the Shakespeare Club and the Standard Club. Includes genealogical materials on the Kjolvig (Colwick) and Jenson
families and material on the centennial anniversary of Norse, Texas, and its Our
Saviors Lutheran Church, including the memoirs of Reverend John Knudson Rystad. Contains minutes of meetings, financial documents,
and articles dealing with the Comanche, Texas, Chamber of Commerce. The Comanche
Chamber of Commerce is located in Comanche County, Texas. Contains minutes of meetings, operation statements,
and managerial reports dealing with Comanche County Electric Cooperative. The
cooperative was established to provide Comanche County, Texas, with electricity. Comanche County, Texas
Collection consists of election returns for Precinct No. 6, Gustine,
Bulks with the photocopy of a rare book concerning
the history of Comfort, Texas (written in German). Contains correspondence, legal material, annual
reports, minutes of meetings, and miscellaneous items relating to the Lubbock Committee
for Women. Established by the Lubbock city council in June 1984, the Committee
serves as an advisory body concerning the needs, problems, and contributions of women in
the community. It recommends and coordinates social, economic, and vocational women's
programs and serves as a clearinghouse of information relating to women. The collection bulks with printed material, including
reports from agencies, newsclippings and a history of the organization. The correspondence
is primarily "thank you" letters to Mrs. Halcyon Baggett. The collection consists of printed programs for each of the concert
series from 1962 to 1972, which consisted mainly of orchestral, classical, and chamber
music. Ballets and ethnic music were also presented. Consists of a photocopy of a typescript of Comstock's reminiscences
entitled, "Some of My Experiences and Observations in the South Western Plain During
the Summers of 1871-1872." Consists of a scrapbook containing photographs and news clippings of
Lubbock's history.
Contains photocopies of proceedings of the Confederate Military Commission (July 2 - October 10, 1862) concerning Union sympathizers in Texas at the beginning of the Civil War. This was a military commission appointed in 1862 by General P. O. Hebert to hear cases in San Antonio, Texas, of persons arrested because of Union sympathies, chiefly among German Texans, during the Civil War. For further details click here: Confederate.
Consists of four bound notebooks containing the papers of the Annual
Turnover Conference of Academic Deans of 1952. There are also several memos concerning
faculty affairs at Texas Tech University and correspondence to R. C. Goodwin. Connecticut Letters
This collection contains letters written by several individuals who migrated
to the American west detailing their life experiences. Some letters come
from Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin,
Missouri, and Texas and mailed
to Calvin Crossman, Abel Gunn, and others of Northville, Litchfield County,
Connecticut from 1835-1871.
Includes correspondence, general files, literary productions,
photographs, printed material, and research material concerning Connor's work and research
about Texas and Southwestern history. Also contains the preliminary study, general
information, printer copy, galley proofs, page proofs, picture proofs, and the make-up and
layout examples for Builders of the Southwest, a special, limited publication on
pioneer builders of Lubbock, Texas and the South Plains area. The collection bulks
(1948-1979) with literary productions primarily concerning ethnic groups in Texas, United
States-Mexico relations, and Texas history. Conselman, Frank B.
Professional and personal papers
collection of Frank B. Conselman, consisting of correspondence, national and international
geologic information, and records of his relationship with several professional societies. Additionally, his affiliation as a Texas Tech
University professor and key figure at ICASALS, officer and member of several professional
societies and consultant for the oil industry are documented by this collection. Personal correspondence is also prominently
represented.
Cook, Enoch Jasper Includes correspondence, scrapbook material, and photographs. The
collection bulks with scrapbook material concerning the opening of the South Plains Museum
and the history of Levelland, Texas. Dr. Cook is the subject of correspondence and
photographs. Includes correspondence, research files, literary productions, printed
and scrapbook material, lists, and photographs pertaining to Gertrude Harris' books on
education and travel, her writing career, and with research on Southwestern history. The
collection bulks with research files on Texas and New Mexico history, and literary
productions on Texas and Southwestern history. Items of note are a Texas Tech Anniversary
Diploma and reunion material.
Cook, William C. The Civil War Memoir by William C. Cook includes descriptions of his experiences with Company C, 41st Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry from 1861 to 1865. The account includes descriptions of battle as well as how the men dealt with lack of supplies and food. The company saw duty in Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Louisiana, and Texas. Cooper, Clyde L. Files include genealogy of the Sudduth, Cooper, and
Lawrence Families, written and typed manuscripts on the history of the Cooper family,
biography of Clyde Cooper, "Standing on the Promises" newsletters and responses,
miscellaneous short stories and poems, diplomas and certificates of Clyde Cooper. The
Cooper Family came from Estelline, Texas.
Includes photographs and newsclippings pertaining to Cooper's career.
Cooper was a high school athletic coach and worked in several West Texas
towns, including Idalou, Tulia, and Smyer. Includes correspondence, general files, literary productions, scrapbooks
and scrapbook material, and photographs concerning Cope's personal and professional life
as a journalist and historian of Texas. Also includes historical material on Texas. The
collection bulks (1880-1974) with general files and scrapbooks that include newsclippings,
literary productions, photographs, and printed material concerning journalism, Texas
history, and Millard Cope. Notable correspondence includes letters from Sam Rayburn,
Lyndon B. Johnson, Lady Bird Johnson, General Lucius Clay, Herbert Hoover, and Richard
Nixon. With the exception of 52 leaves of literary productions, the collection is on
microfilm. Includes correspondence, legal and financial material, medical records
and journals, literary productions, printed and scrapbook material, photographs, diaries,
and a genealogy of the Boyd Cornick Family. The collection bulks (1878-1964) with
individual family members' correspondence. Items of note include a weather diary
(1928-1933), materials on the American Relief Administration in Russia (1921-1922), the
Red Cross-YMCA Mission to Paris (1919), the Civil War in Tennessee, Texas politics, the
establishment of Texas Technological College, mining and banking in Mexico, and the
Women's Missionary Society of San Angelo (1907-1918). Cornick, Boyd Collection consists of medical pamphlets mostly written by Boyd Cornick. Dr. Cornick, M.D., held a practice in San Angelo, Texas in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. His pamphlets cover topics such as tuberculosis, appendicitis, and medical ethics. Collection contains printed material on the Coronado Cuarto Centennial
Committee from 1940 and undated. Includes correspondence, financial and legal material, genealogical
material, literary productions, photographs, and printed and scrapbook material concerning
Coryell's business and personal activities, and the Coryell family. The collection bulks
with correspondence concerning the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair and treatment of
tuberculosis. Other correspondence concerns the Texas Telegraph and Telephone Company and
the San Saba Valley Realty Company. Also included is an extensive genealogy of the Coryell
family. Includes correspondence, financial and legal material, literary
productions, and printed and scrapbook material concerning the personal business
activities of Robert G. Coryell of San Saba, Texas, and the Coryell family. The collection
bulks (1901-1936) with material concerning Coryell's business interests in San Saba,
Texas. Contains correspondence, financial and legal material, printed material,
literary productions, photographs, and scrapbook material. The collection bulks
(1937-1963) with the financial, legal, and operational affairs of the Cosden Petroleum
Corporation. The collection also includes a clipping file and U.S. District Court
transcripts pertaining to R. L. Tollett's 1943 trial for his violation of the Connally
"Hot Oil" Act. All defendants were found not guilty on charges of producing
excess oil or withdrawing excess oil from storage.
Cotton Bowl
The collection has
agenda, directories, strategic planning, policy manuals and meeting reports
used by a member of the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association during the early
1990s. Some materials are media guides and newsletters.
Couch, Mary K. Collection contains the hand notes of Mary Couch when she took an Economics Class in 1935-1936 at Texas Technological College. She attended the college between 1933-1937. Dr. J. O. Ellsworth taught the course she took.
Couch, R. C. The
bulk of the collection consists of correspondence sent and received by R. C.
Couch. The material relates to Couch’s activities in his various business
enterprises, civic affairs, and some family and personal matters. Topics
include agriculture, agricultural and oil industry leasing, banking, finance
and credit, and land sales. Couch-Stanley Families Includes correspondence, financial material, literary productions, and
printed material pertaining to the Couch and Stanley families from 1878-1945. The
collection bulks (1881-1945) with correspondence reflecting the social and economic life
of tenant farmers. Also includes letters from World War I and World War II soldiers and
from migrant workers in the 1920s and 1930s. Collection contains correspondence with the West
Texas County Judges and Commissioners Association, membership directories, publications of
the County Progress, graphics editing work, West Texas County Judges and
Commissioners Association material, information on county courthouses and Texas
Association of Counties. The collection covers the publication of the County
Progress magazine. County Progress is the official publication of the
County Judges and Commissioners Association of Texas. County Welfare Committee (Lubbock, Texas) Bulks with printed statements of policy, functions of the department,
and material for the County Child Welfare Unit. Includes the family history of William Lyon Harris, the Brownwood
Methodist Episcopal Church directory for 1908, and correspondence and newsclippings of
Clark Coursey concerning his book, Courthouses Of Texas. Also includes scrapbooks
that contain clippings on the Brown County Commissioners' Court, the Brownwood Chamber of
Commerce, crime, highway accidents, the city council, the Jaycees, instances of polio,
roads and highways, and the Southwestern States Telephone Company. Cowan, W. C. Papers, 1966-1988 and undated 10 boxes (11 linear feet)
This collection consists of foreign and domestic correspondence, scrapbook material,
posters, brochures, color transparencies, artwork, literary production, and printed
material of Fred Cowart. Of the scrapbook
material, the collection contains envelope art and personal writings. Some materials pertain to various military
precision flight teams such as the Thunderbirds and Blue Angels. Cowart, Ruth E.
The collection has personal
correspondence addressed to three people: Ruth E. Cowart, Beulah Evans
Cowart, and Roscoe Cowart. The collection also has a photo album of Ruth
Cowart showing friends and family members in 1941-1942. There is also a
specifications bulletin for a school building for the Grovesville
Independent School District of Lubbock County (1925). For further
details, click here:
RCowart. Cowboys Contains printed material and news clippings of cowboy life in the early
1900s. Includes John B. Cowden's Southern Cowdens
(1933), a Cowden Encylical, and W. C. Cochran's "Uncle Walter Cochran, Prior to his
Recent Death Related to the Early History of Midland Cowmen," all of which concern
the history and genealogy of the Cowden family. Consists of a Carlsbad, New Mexico Diamond Jubilee Souvenir program and
an early history of Eddy County, New Mexico. Consists of a journal kept by John S. Cox in Jack County, Texas.
Collection includes news clippings
written by Mike Cox on the Lubbock, Texas tornado of May, 1970 and the Lubbock garbage
strike of 1969. Cox, Paris Consists of correspondence and legal material (photocopied) concerning
the sale and settlement of land at the Quaker Colony in Estacado, Crosby County, Texas.
Includes letters received by Paris Cox, George M. Hunt, and J. W. Dalton. Craig, Adele Smith Collection has two property abstracts of 2401 14th Street in Lubbock, Texas. One abstract was issued by Standard Abstract Company and the other by Guarantee Abstract and Title Company. The 2404 14th Street address was once the home of Rollie C. Burns, a subject of one of Dr. William C. Holdens books. At one time, the house was one of the oldest homes in Lubbock. Mrs. Craigs parents, the Smiths, purchased the home in 1937 and lived there until 1976. The home was later purchased by Dub Rushing and then demolished.
Collection consists of a play written by Paul Patterson titled Ups and Downs of Crane Town and a promotional brochure on Crane, Texas. Paul Patterson is a West Texas fictional writer currently living in Pecos, Texas. Crane, Newton Consists of news clippings and legal material that reveals how the
northern boundary of Texas was established. Crane, R. C. (Royston Campbell), Sr. The
collection contains mostly business correspondence concerning his law
practice, real estate and investments in Sweetwater, Nolan County, Texas.
Few letters deal with his family. There are ledgers of his financial
ventures, land abstracts and deeds, and two dozen family scrapbooks. Some
files deal with the Texas Tech Locating Board, whose efforts decided the
location of a new college in West Texas. Other items are files with printed
materials, speeches and literary production, and research materials as well
as files on West Texas Historical Association. For further details,
click here:
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