Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences
Found in 19 Collections and/or Records:
C. R. Savage boudoir prints, 1855-1894
Contains boudoir prints produced by Savage, dating from between 1855 and 1894.
C. R. Savage cartes-de-visite and cabinet cards, 1852-1918
Contains cartes-de-visite and cabinet cards produced by Savage, dating from between 1852 and 1918.
C. R. Savage oversize photographs, 1857-1910
Contains large-format photographs produced by Savage, dating from between 1857 and 1910.
C. R. Savage photographs, 1847-1918
Contains photographs produced by Savage, dating from between 1847 and 1918. Also includes photocopies of selected photographs.
C. R. Savage stereographs, 1849-1909
Contains stereographs produced by Savage, dating from between 1849 and 1909.
Drafting tools set of Brigham Young
This collection is an English drafting tools set that was originally owned and used by Brigham Young to design the streets and building plans for Salt Lake City, Utah. The set was also used by Oliver I. Lay for the creation of a studio commissioned by his father-in-law, Mahonri Mackintosh Young, to create the This is the place monument. Materials dated approximately 1847-1877.
Engraving of Brigham Young
Contains one framed engraving taken from a picture taken of Brigham Young around 1870.
A historical and linguistic study of the nineteenth century Mormon attempts to reform English orthography
Typewritten student paper prepared for the Brigham Young University Honors Program. Contains a study of the Deseret Alphabet, its origin, problems, use and failure in Utah society during 1850-1877.
Infatuation : a fiction founded on fact
Typewritten manuscript of an unpublished book entitled; "Infatuation: A Fiction Founded on Fact." This work is a novel based on the author's negative experiences with Mormonism.
Letter and newspaper clipping
Two letters and one newspaper clipping. The clipping was published by the Itahca Journal News on 28 July 1962 and relates to the family of Brigham Young (1801-1877) and to the Salt Lake Theatre. One of the letters is from Dorothy Dye to Ernest L. Wilkinson, president of Brigham Young University, relating to the newspaper clipping. The other letter is from Wilkinson to the Brigham Young University Archives also regarding the clipping.