Military
Found in 758 Collections and/or Records:
Vernon Gurnsey Liston autobiography, scrapbook, and other materials
Materials include an autobiography, scrapbook, photocopy of the scrapbook, and a photograph of Liston in military uniform. Dated approximately 1943-2001.
J. Walter Low letter
The folder contains a handwritten letter dated 24 March 1915 and addressed O. A. Kirkham. J. Walter Low writes about the Boy Scouts of Canada, the possibility of Italy entering World War I, and that "Hugh Brown looks fine in his new field uniform and has an excellent squadron of well trained mounted rifles."
Fern Maurine Lowery autobiography
Typed autobiography. Lowery joined the cadet nurse program during World War II. She talks about her classes and work shifts during the war. She later worked at the Utah Valley Hospital.
Loyal, no matter what : Jim and Kimiko Tazoi
Collection contains a booklet called Loyal, No Matter What: Jim and Kimiko Yagi Tazoi. The booklet describes Jim's experiences serving as a Japanese American in Europe during WWII and Kimiko's experiences in a Japanese internment camp in Arizona. Dated 2006.
Thomas C. Luckett papers
Includes letters of introduction, personal correspondence, a will, and muster and payroll records for four companies of Illinois volunteer infantry at the beginning of the Civil War (1861-1865). Contains 28 items (112 pages).
Barbara Jean Bowman Mace autobiography
Typewritten autobiography. Mace was born in Colonia Juarez in Mexico, and she always wanted to be a nurse. She served as a Cadet Nurse from Jan. 1945 to Jun. 1945. At that time, she was stationed in the Bushnell General Hospital in Brigham City, Utah. She married Ward Mace in 1946.
Marine Corps recruitment posters
Collection includes forty posters printed in 1942 advertising the U.S. Marines.
Nina Maughan Marsh autobiography
Typed autobiography. She writes about her training as a nurse and about meeting her husband. She married Stanley P. Marsh in 1951. She died of a massive heart attack in 2002.
The Masonic underground railway
Typewritten biography of the author's father, A. L. Camp, during the American Civil War (1861-1865). A. L. Camp, a Georgian, evaded conscription in the Confederate army, was captured and released by the Union Army, and returned to the devastated city of Savannah, Georgia, in 1865.