Historical Manuscripts
Continued . . . T -- Z
<< Historical Manuscripts
A-B << Historical
Manuscripts C-D << Historical
Manuscripts E-G << Historical
Manuscripts H-K
<< Historical Manuscripts L-M
<< Historical Manuscripts N-R
<< Historical Manuscripts S
Manuscripts Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Guide to the Collections
Historical Manuscripts Collection Texas Labor Archives
Texas Political History Collection University Archives Historical Photographs Collection
Unprocessed Collections Guide Index
- Tarrant County, Texas
- Collection, 1837-1971, bulk 1837-1865; 9 folders (.33 linear ft.)
- Tarrant County, located in north central Texas, was originally
included in the Peters Land Company grant that became Peters Colony. The first settlement
in the area was in 1841 at Fort Bird. The county was founded December 20, 1849, and named
after Gen. E. H. Tarrant who was instrumental in driving the Indians out of the area.
- Correspondence, legal documents, military records, county records, broadsides, Indian
agency reports, poem, script, newspaper clippings, maps, photograph, articles, programs,
booklets, and excerpts from historical works. These are photocopies of manuscripts,
documents, and historical works that relate to the history of Tarrant County and the
founding of Fort Worth. Also included is material on Texas emigration and other counties
in the north central Texas area. Subjects are, American Indians, the Civil War, the
military, the Peters Colony, politics, and transportation. The materials were collected by
Albert Williams and Jenkins Garrett.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA48, GO2
-
- Tarrant County, Texas
- Legal Documents Collection, 1871-1945, bulk 1871-1917; 2 folders (61
items)
- Tarrant County, located in north central Texas, was originally
included in the Peters Land Company grant that became Peters Colony. The first settlement
in the area was in 1841 at Fort Bird. The county was founded December 20, 1849, and named
after Gen. E. H. Tarrant who was instrumental in driving the Indians out of the area.
- Legal documents. Primarily deeds, but also includes notes with
vendors liens, bills of sale, powers of attorney, affidavits, receipts, a probate
statement, and a surveyors statement, possibly collected by L. B. Comer. All
documents were filed or registered in Tarrant County with the exception of four filed in
Hunt County, Texas. The families involved were residents of or owned property in Tarrant
County. Among those mentioned were: the W. J. Boaz Family, Mrs. Frances C. Terrell, and
George H. Mulkey.
- The collection is also known as: L. B. Comer Collection.
- Gift, 1977.
- Finding aid available.
- GA157
-
- Taylor-Darby Family
- Papers, 1823-1940, bulk 1823-1906; 5 boxes (2 linear ft.)
- The Taylor and Darby families were among the early pioneers who
settled East Texas in the nineteenth century. They were related by the marriage of
Archibald Van Darbys daughter, Leodocia, and Duncan William Henry Taylor. Darby and
Taylor were business partners and owned property in and around Mount Pleasant,
Daingerfield, and Jefferson, Texas. Taylor served in Company B of the Twenty-third Texas
Cavalry during the Civil War.
- Correspondence, financial and legal documents, literary works, and
printed material. These papers reflect the personal correspondence and business records of
Duncan Taylor and his wife, Leodocia Darby Taylor, and Archibald Van Darby and his wife,
Leodocia Bolton Darby, and their extended families. Business records include documents
related to transactions in the operation of the families plantations and merchants
Taylor & Darby, later Graham & Taylor. Also included are military documents and
correspondence from the Civil War period and the estate papers of Archibald Van Darby,
Bryant Taylor, John Bolton, and Spencer Thigpen. Correspondents include members of the
Levin B. Gray family; the John Bolton family, especially Mary T. Bolton; and the Perry M.
Graham family. Letters between family members provide interesting commentary on historical
events of the nineteenth century.
- The finding aid includes a name index to Taylor and Darby family
members and acquaintances and a genealogical history of the Taylor and Darby families
provided by the donor.
- Gift, 1987.
- Finding aid available.
- GA174-GA178, GO8
-
- Terrell Family
- Collection, ca. 1854-1997; 1 folder (.08 linear ft.)
- The Terrell family were early Tarrant County settlers. Joseph C.
Terrell was a lawyer, businessman, and Civil War officer who published his memoirs in Reminiscences
of the Early Days of Fort Worth in 1906. His wife, Mary Peters Young Terrell, was a
teacher, club woman, and library advocate. She founded the Texas Federation of
Womens Clubs. Alexander W. Terrell was a jurist, Civil War officer, and statesman.
- Correspondence, legal documents, biographical data, photographs, and
newspaper clippings. The materials, collected by Catherine Terrell McCartney, pertain to
Joseph C. Terrell, Alexander W. Terrell, and various members of the Terrell family.
Correspondence and newspaper clippings are related to the inclusion of Mrs. Joseph C.
Terrell in an exhibition, "Texas Women, A Celebration of History," in 1981.
Photocopies of letters and legal documents include deeds to Tarrant County property; a
newspaper clipping of an address delivered by Alexander W. Terrell at the dedication
ceremonies of the Texas capitol building in 1888, with a critique by a San Antonio
newspaper; a letter to Alexander W. Terrell, while with the U. S. Legation in
Constantinople, Turkey, in the 1890s; and a newspaper article by J. Frank Dobie in which
he mentions Joseph C. Terrells book. Photographs are of the Terrell family and their
home in downtown Fort Worth, later the site of the Fort Worth Club; Fort Worth women; and
the Fort Worth Kindergarten College. Biographical information describes the lives of
McCartneys relatives, Judge Chadwell Ross Bowlin and Mayor John B. Hawley.
- Gift, 1987, 1989.
- GA28
-
- Texas
- Currency and Land Scrip Collection, 1835-1916, bulk 1835-1875; 3
boxes, l folder (445 items)
- Letters, land scrip, notes, bonds, treasury warrants, notary
documents, certificates, drafts, and forms. The collection consists of currency issued and
exchanged in Texas during the periods of the provincial government, the Republic of Texas,
the Confederate States of America, and the state of Texas. Also included is a public
notice of the appointment of Thomas Toby as lawful agent for the Republic in New Orleans,
Louisiana; letters from Sam Houston regarding his signature on exchequer bills and the
engraving of Republic notes in New Orleans, 1842-1843; and an updated copy of "an act
to improve the currency of the country" from Republic of Texas laws. The collection
was accumulated and donated by Jenkins Garrett.
- Gift, 1974-1995.
- AR382, OS292-OS294, GO4
-
- Texas
- Ephemera Collection, 1927-1928; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- Graduation exercises announcements for Desdemona High School,
1927-1928.
- Note: This is an ongoing collection that will be added to as individual items are
received.
- Gift, 1996-[ongoing]
- Inventory available.
- AR414
-
- Texas
- General Manuscripts Collection, 1654-1905; 3 boxes and oversize (1.25
linear ft.)
- Correspondence, legal and financial documents, military records,
ecclesiastical records, and land documents pertaining to Texas and Texans dating from the
Spanish period through the early twentieth century. The collection is essentially in two
parts. The first part consists of the Heartsill Collection, which includes documents of
the signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence and other documents signed by famous
early-day Texans. Included are plantation records, slave bills of sale, land deeds and
contracts, court documents, affidavits, military orders and requisitions, election
returns, amnesty oaths, poetry, and letters. The second part of the collection consists of
early Spanish and Mexican ecclesiastical and government records pertaining to church
activities in Nuevo Leon and the government response to a flood in the lower Rio Grande
Valley, 1802-1803. Also included are Spanish land documents, presidential decrees, orders
and laws relating to the province of Tejas (1808-1829), church directives regarding
sanctuary in New Spain, and reports on the priests in the region.
- Gift and purchase, 1974- [ongoing]
- GA30-32, GO8
-
- Texas
- Railroads Record of Rights-of-way, 1887-1899; 1 volume (696 p.)
- Ledger organized chronologically. A record of the right-of-way
acquisitions of the Texas and Pacific Railway Company, the Dallas and Wichita Railway
Company, and the Denison, Bonham, and New Orleans Railway Company in twenty-five North
Texas counties. Included is a Texas & Pacific Railway agreement form and a historical
sketch of Old Boston, Texas.
- This collection is also known as: Texas and Pacific Railroad Record
of Right-of-Way.
- Gift, 1979.
- AR369; OS188
-
- Texas
- Sesquicentennial Collection, 1981-1986; 2 boxes (.67 linear ft.)
- The Texas sesquicentennial of independence was celebrated in 1986.
- Correspondence, minutes, agreements, proposals, brochures, photographs, postcards,
clippings, guidebooks, newspapers, commemorative coins, and artifacts. This collection
includes the Project 150 files of Charles C. Colley, along with artifacts and printed
material collected about the Texas sesquicentennial celebration. Project 150 was a
consortium of five Texas repositories organized to design one comprehensive exhibition of
the states history from its pre-history to the 1901 discovery of oil.
- Gift, 1986.
- GA158, OS296
-
- Texas
- Sheet Music Collection, 1835-; 10 drawers and 1 box
- Sheet music. The collection includes songs written about Texas or
Texans. In 1998 there were approximately 250 pieces of music.
- Chronological arrangement. Access is by card file.
- Gift and purchase, 1974-[ongoing]
- GO11-GO20, OS212
-
- Texas
- Stock Certificates Collection, ca. 1900-1955; 1 folder (9 items)
- Stock certificates of nine inactive Texas companies: Jim Hogg Oil
Company, Hubb Diggs Company, Fort Worth Country Club, Glen Garden Country Club, Lake Como
Amusement Company, I C T Insurance Company, Lone Star Amusement Company, Phoenix Number
Two Company, and Texas Electric Railway.
- Gift, 1974, 1991, 1998.
- GA198
-
- Texas & Pacific Railway Company
- Letters, 1921-1926; 1 folder (4 items)
- The Texas & Pacific Railway Company was originally chartered by
Congress in 1871 to build a line from Marshall, Texas, to San Diego, California. It became
a potent factor in the development of West Texas.
- Four form letters completed in manuscript. These letters are from auditors at the
Mississippi Central Railroad Company, the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, and the
International-Great Northern Railroad Company to various officials at the Texas &
Pacific Railway Company.
- Gift, 1996.
- GA34
-
- Texas Bureau for Economic Understanding
- Records, 1926-1984, bulk 1948-1979; 48 boxes (19.4 linear ft.)
- A non-profit educational organization, the Texas Bureau for Economic
Understanding was chartered in June 1954, after its officers, membership, and activities
withdrew from the Better Business Bureau of Texas. The bureaus concern is teaching
freedom and economics with emphasis on free enterprise to Texas youth.
- Correspondence, minutes, financial documents, statistics, speeches,
photographs, maps, newsletters, lists, newspaper clippings, charter, programs,
certificates, reports, and printed material. These are the files of the executive
directors of the Texas Bureau for Economic Understanding, especially longtime directors,
R. H. Lawrence, 1950-1969, and Leon B. Blair, 1970-1979. Included are records of the
Better Business Bureau of Texas, 1948-1954, and correspondence with the Texas Education
Agency and the Texas Education Association.
- Gift, 1983.
- Finding aid available.
- AR266
-
- Texas Centennial
- Scrapbook Collection, 1935-1937, 2 boxes (.5 linear ft.)
- The Texas Centennial marked one hundred years of Texas independence
from Mexico. It was officially celebrated in 1936, with local observances beginning in
1935. The Texas Centennial Central Exposition, Dallas and the Frontier Centennial, Fort
Worth continued through 1937.
- Two scrapbooks, letterhead stationery, broadsides, commemorative
envelopes, and a commemorative coin. The scrapbooks contain clippings from Fort Worth and
Dallas newspapers on Texas history and the centennial celebrations, maps, postcards,
illustrations, and photographs.
- Gift, 1985, 1990-1991.
- 85-141
-
- Texas Confederate Gravesite Project
- Records, ca. 1988-1991; 3 boxes (2.9 linear ft.)
- Jim Bryan, a history major at UTA whose primary interests are the
Civil War and Texas history, compiled the materials.
- Correspondence, research files, books, and printed material. The
focus of the project was to compile information on the Confederate veterans of the Civil
War who are buried in Texas cemeteries. Sources include individuals, institutions, and
organizations. The project includes an alphabetical ledger, files of contributor
correspondence, and information filed by county name. Information was contributed both on
forms and in letters and includes names with birth and death dates, rank, service record,
and place of burial as well as biographical sketches and family information of many of the
veterans.
- Gift, 1995.
- 95-63
-
- Texas Girls Choir
- Collection, 1992-1993; 1 folder (10 items)
- The Texas Girls Choir was founded in 1962, by Shirley Carter,
who also served as director. The choir was the first girls choir to be incorporated.
- Printed material and 33 1/3 r.p.m. sound recording . Texas
Girls Choir materials include the September and December 1992, issues of the Texas
Girls Choir Gazette; a program annual, 1993; flyers, a bumper sticker,
and a booster sign; and an undated recording by the choir.
- Fielder Museum transfer, 1995.
- GA224
-
- Texas Missions
- Research Notes, ca. 1928-1932; 4 folders (.33 linear ft.)
- The missions served to Christianize and civilize the frontier Indian
and extend, hold, and civilize the frontier for the Spanish in Texas.
- Notes and clipping. These are research notes from various sources
compiled possibly for writing a thesis about mission architecture in Texas, using San
José y San Miguel de Aguayo in San Antonio, Texas, as the main example.
- The collection is also known as: Missions of Texas Research Notes.
- Provenance unknown.
- GA153
-
- Texas Navy
- Collection, 1836-1961, bulk 1836-1856; 5 folders (.17 linear ft.)
- The Texas Navy was organized in November 1835, to protect the lines
of supply between New Orleans and Texas during the Texas Revolution. It ceased to operate
in 1843.
- Correspondence, financial and legal documents, typescript
transcriptions of letters, government publications, memorials, supply lists, biographical
sketches, and newspaper clippings. The collection includes records of the Texas Navy and
its officers, 1836-1856; Texas Sloop-of-War Austin, 1840-1842; Texas Brig-of-War
Jim Bowie commission, 1842; and transcriptions of the letters of John Grant Tod,
1835-1839, by Louis Lenz, 1956-1961. Also included is the Army and Navy
Chronicle, 1836-1840; lists with descriptions of the ships; histories; and
biographical sketches of officers. The materials all pertain to the Navy and individuals
associated with it and the Navy Department, including Samuel Murray Robinson, Thomas
McKinney, John W. Moore, Edwin Ward Moore, Samuel May Williams, and others.
- Some items are photostat copies.
- The originals of the John Grant Tod Letters are in the San Jacinto
Museum.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA37
-
- Texas (Republic)
- Collection, 1835-1846; 19 folders (100 items)
- The Republic of Texas was created during the Convention of 1836,
which framed the Declaration of Independence, drew up the Constitution of the Republic,
and established an ad interim government. Texas was officially annexed to the
United States on December 29, 1845.
- Correspondence, financial documents, legal documents, proceedings,
literary productions, and printed material pertaining to the Republic of Texas. The
documents include a first printing of the Texas Declaration of Independence, land grants
and contracts of Peters Colony, and manuscripts from the Fourth Congress pertaining to
slaves, taxes, land deeds, organization of the militia, wills and testaments, and common
law. Other papers reflect the organization and operation of the volunteer militia, and
include orders, affidavits of service, appointments, muster rolls, casualty lists, and
accounts of service and goods. Financial records and documents include a variety of
promissory notes, receipts, drafts, statements, and land script. Individuals represented
in the collection include N. Perry Brewster, Asa Brigham, Edward Burleson, Drew Burn,
Matthew Caldwell, William Leslie Cazneau, Thomas Jefferson Chambers, R. M. Coleman,
William Mosby Eastland, Sam Houston, John C. Hunt, Memucan Hunt, Mirabeau B. Lamar, Robert
Merritt, John Henry Moore, I. A. Perry, Juan Seguín, Henry Smith, Noah Smithwick,
Alexander Somervell, and John A. Wharton.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA36
-
- Texas (Republic)
- Finances Collection, 1836-1844, n.d.; 9 folders (142 items)
- The Republic of Texas was created during the Convention of 1836,
which framed the Declaration of Independence, drew up the Constitution of the Republic,
and established an ad interim government. Texas was officially annexed to the
United States on December 29, 1845.
- Correspondence and financial documents addressed to Asa Brigham,
treasurer of the Republic of Texas during Sam Houstons presidential administrations,
which pertain to the Executive Contingent Fund and the Indian Appropriations Fund.
Included are ledgers, bills, statements, receipts, and affidavits signed by a number of
Texans, including: Branch T. Archer, William Leslie Cazneau, Alanson W. Canfield, Joseph
C. Eldridge, Thomas Green, J. A. Greer, Robert S. Hamilton, Sam Houston, Thomas Hawkins,
Charles Mason, Ashbel Smith, J. Snively, and Hamilton Stuart. The documents reflect the
financial and economic problems that President Houston dealth with to feed his army,
protect the Indian frontier, and run his office.
- Gift, 1974.
- Finding aid available.
- GA36
-
- Texas (Republic)
- Land Document, August 19, 1845; 1 folder (1 item)
- The Republic of Texas was created during the Convention of 1836,
which framed the Declaration of Independence, drew up the Constitution of the Republic,
and established an ad interim government. Texas was officially annexed to the
United States on December 29, 1845.
- Printed form on vellum 35 x 41 cm., completed in manuscript, August
19, 1845, and signed by Anson Jones, President of the Republic of Texas. The document
describes a grant of land to H. Barksdale and T. S. Clayton in Fannin County on Six Mile
Creek, a tributary of the Pilot Grove Fork of the Trinity River. The verso of the document
states that it was filed November 17, 1882, and recorded December 11, 1882, in Collin
County by J. N. Waddell, county clerk.
- This item is part of the Texas Republic Collection (GA36).
- Gift, 1996.
- OS300
-
- Texas Veteran Association
- Twenty-sixth annual reunion program at Temple, Texas, April 20 and
21, 1899; 1 folder (2 items)
- The Texas Veteran Association was comprised of soldiers, seamen, and
citizens who could produce proof of service in Texas between 1820 and annexation in 1845.
The association dissolved during its thirty-fifth convention in 1907.
- Program and pin. Includes an unidentified portrait on front cover and red, white, and
blue cloth label pin.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA48
-
- Texas Wagon Train Association
- Collection, 1985-1986; 1 folder (7 items)
- The Texas Wagon Train traveled 3,000 miles around the state of Texas,
January 2-July 3, 1986, to commemorate the Texas Sesquicentennial and to experience once
again the state's "Western Heritage."
- Commemorative calendar brochure, four drawings, and printed material.
The brochure advertises the sesquicentennial wagon train event and calendar. The drawings,
which are prints by Carol Dickie, depict the Wagon Train School. An explanation of the
drawings and an article by Linda Mast provide a short history of the Wagon Train School
and the founding of Cooke County College at Gainesville, Texas, the official "trail
boss" for the school.
- Arlington Historical Society transfer, 2001.
- OS300
-
- Thurber Historical Association
- Records, 1888-1992; 2 boxes and 1 folder (.63 linear ft.)
- The Thurber Historical Association is an organization wholly devoted
to the restoration, preservation and promotion of the history of Thurber, Texas. Made up
primarily of former residents of Thurber and their descendants, the Thurber Historical
Association holds annual reunions and actively works to raise awareness of the unique
history of Thurber, Texas, and its impact on the history of the United States.
- Correspondence; administrative records; biographical information;
proposals for a museum, a state park, and inclusion in Texas education programs; and
personal memoirs. The bulk of this collection pertains to the various attempts of the
Thurber Historical Association to preserve and promote the towns history.
- Gift, 1993.
- Finding aid available.
- AR399
- Toby, Thomas
- Collection, 1836-1882; 1 folder (5 items)
- Thomas Toby was a New Orleans businessman and purchasing agent for
the Republic of Texas.
- Letter, receipt, and printed materials. Includes statements, a report, and a petition to
the state of Texas on behalf of Tobys widow and children requesting payment for loan
of money, supplies, and munitions of war delivered by Toby to the government of the
Republic of Texas.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA18
-
- Troup, Alexander M., ca. 1954-
- Family Papers, ca. 1850s-1994, bulk ca.1950s-2001; 165 boxes
(87 linear ft.)
- Alexander M. Troup, is an artist and historian of urban history and
culture, especially of Dallas and the Southwest. His great grandparents settled in Oak
Cliff around 1915. His parents, Clarence and Barbara Troup, ran the C. Troup Gallery in
Dallas, Texas, from the early 1960s until 1974. The Troups collection of fine art
was representative of artists nationwide. Their gallery was the first in Dallas to
represent nationally, local printmakers in a commercial setting.
- Correspondence, diaries, legal documents, financial documents,
biographical journals, scrapbooks, photographs, slides, film, newspaper clippings, family
histories, press releases, yearbooks, research materials, art works, directories, sheet
music, printed material, and memorabilia. The papers, collected and preserved by Alexander
M. Troup, represent the lives of Troup, his parents, and their related families,
Doolittle, Gepp, and Hall. Included are the correspondence, photographs, personal records,
and memorabilia of Eva Hall, H. P. Hall, Hazel Hall Troup, Clarence Troup, Barbara Troup,
and Diana Troup. The bulk of the collection relates to Alexander Troup and includes his
correspondence, diaries, school memorabilia, financial records, clippings, biographical
materials, sketches, slides, sheet music, and files on urban archaeology and various
topics of personal interest.
- Restrictions: The following boxes
are closed to researchers until January 1, 2005: Boxes 5-7, 19-24, 44, 163, and 164.
- Gift, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2001.
- Inventory available.
- 94-56
-
- Troup, Alexander M., ca. 1954-
- Cement City, Texas, Research Collection, 1903-2000; 3 boxes (3 linear
ft.)
- William Foster Cowham and Associates of Jackson, Michigan, purchased
500 acres of land in 1907, six miles west of Dallas at Eagle Ford, Texas. They built a
cement plant there around 1908-1909, Southwestern States Portland Cement Company, which
became Trinity Portland Cement in 1913. The area, once part of the original French colony,
La Reunion, 1855-1858, had an abundance of chalky limestone, ideal for making cement. The
company built homes, a grocery store, a hotel, and a school. They also provided medical
and recreational facilities for employees and their families. Most of the plant workers
and residents were Hispanic. When the need arose, the company donated land for a Hispanic
cemetery. The cement company closed down the facility in the 1950s. When the last family
moved from the company homes in 1959, all traces of human occupation disappeared except
for the small cemetery, El Camposanto de Cemente Grande de la Compania, also known as
Trinity Portland Cement Cemetery. The Texas Portland Cement Company was also located in
West Dallas. Postal authorities considered the plants and nearby communities as Cement
City from 1908-1940.
- Correspondence, manuscripts, maps, photographs, oral interviews,
clippings, press releases, newsletters, printed material, research notes and files, and
artifacts. The collection was compiled and produced by Alexander M. Troup for his study
"Beginnings and Evolution of the Mexican-American Hispanic Communities in Dallas
County: People, Places and Folklore." Jim Wheat assisted him in the research for the
study of the Mexican American communities of West Dallas. The focus of the book is Eagle
Ford and the El Camposanto Cemento Grande Cemetery, on the old Trinity Portland Cement
factory grounds, 1907-1985. The collection includes aerial and plat maps of Dallas County;
Hispanic birth and death records in Dallas County; a description of the cemeteries in the
West Dallas area, namely Horton Cemetery, Trinity Portland Cemetery, Eagle Ford Cemetery,
Fish Trap or the Old French Cemetery, and West Dallas or Western Heights Cemetery; and a
list of burials in those cemeteries, 1912-1945. Artifacts include a grinding stone found
on the site and a metal advertising sign of the Trinity Portland Cement Company.
- Inventory available.
- Gift, 2000.
- 2000-43
-
- Trussell Family
- Papers, 1831-1962, bulk 1839-1945; 16 boxes (12 linear ft.)
- James Madison Trussell, Sr., was born in Franklin County, Tennessee,
in 1808. Largely self-educated, he was a schoolteacher, church deacon, businessman,
farmer, postmaster, and politician. Trussell moved to Mississippi in 1834, when he married
Susannah Slaughter Parks. In 1877, he and second wife, Mary Anne Altman, moved to Llano
County, Texas. Several family members and other descendants also moved to Texas and
located primarily in the Hill Country and North Texas.
- Correspondence, diaries, financial and legal documents, literary
works, photographs, transcriptions, genealogies, printed material, and artifacts. These
are the papers of James Madison Trussell, Sr., and his descendants, which relate to family
life and business interests. A family history written by Trussell in 1885, goes back to
the familys activities during the Revolutionary War period in the U.S. Also included
are Trussells family and business papers, 1832-1887; and correspondence of various
family members, primarily James Madison Trussell, Jr., and his wife, Jennie Jones
Trussell, 1887-1950. Of special interest are the letters of Andrew Jackson Trussell about
his experiences during the Mexican War, 1847-1848; the letters of John F. H. Trussell and
William Allen during service in the Civil War, 1861-1865; and the letters of Alvin Aubrey
Trussell, James Howard Trussell, and Jim Snowden during service in World War II,
1941-1946. Correspondence from numerous Trussell family members include: William and
Amanda Altman; Victoria R. McAlister; Nannie and Martin King; Florence Harkrider; William,
Olivia, and Vickie Reynolds; Spencer, Mollie, and Mary Gilbert; Charity Snowden; John and
Ellen Hays; E. H. and Nancy Hicks; George, Martha, Mattie, Florence, and Flora Jones;
Margaret, James, and Lillian Murphey; and many other family members and friends.
- Gift, 1981.
- Finding aid available.
- GA66-GA73, GO35, OS192-OS199, OS203
Manuscripts Index: A B C D
E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Top of Page Guide to
the Collections Guide Index
- Uncapher, Israel
- Papers, 1846-1848; 1 folder (.08 linear ft.)
- Israel Uncapher served in the Mexican War as a corporal in the U.S.
Army, Company E, Second Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers.
- Diary (131 p.), transcription of diary, certificate, and land warrant
request. Uncapher describes military life and battles in Mexico from Vera Cruz to the
storming of Chapultepec and provides details of specific engagements in his diary recorded
December 29, 1846-January 21, 1848. He also relates the effect of the extremes of weather
upon the soldiers, the rigors of an earthquake, and of his attendance at the funeral of a
Mexican colonel. Included is Uncaphers honorable discharge certificate and a
photocopy of the bounty land warrant request filed for Uncapher in Washington, D.C., July
21, 1848.
- Gift, 1989.
- GA48
-
- United States. Army. Infantry, 6th Co. H.
- Muster Roll, 1846; 1 folder (1 item)
- Muster roll. This document describes the Mexican War service of Capt.
Albemarle Cadys Company H, Sixth Infantry Regiment, U.S. Army, October 31,
1846-December 31, 1846. Information includes a register of officers and men, when and
where enlisted; and remarks concerning the health, discipline, and condition of clothing
of selected individuals. Camp locations in Mexico are identified, including Encantada,
site of the inspection by the mustering official.
- This is a reproduction of the original document.
- Provenance unknown.
- GO31/13
-
- University of Texas. Free News Service.
- Press Releases, 1936-1939; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- Typescripts in chronological arrangement. Copies of weekly press
releases written by Lorena Drummond and Antoinette Kretzschmar that feature important
books and documents in the universitys archives. Included is a serial reproduction
of Arthur Ikins Guide to Emigrants, translations from the
Bexar Archive, and excerpts from letters and documents of various family papers,
1800-1865.
- Gift, 1974.
- Inventory available.
- GA24
-
- Utecht, Byron C., ca. 1880-1959
- Scrapbooks, ca. 1914-1946; 2 boxes (1 linear ft.)
- Byron C. Utecht was a newspaper correspondent for the New
York World and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram during
the first half of the twentieth century. His wife, Mable Gouldy Stevenson Utecht, was a
reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
- Three scrapbooks, photographs, a poster, and a Fort Worth bus token.
The scrapbooks were compiled and preserved by Byron C. Utecht and pertain to his work as a
correspondent in Mexico, especially during the Mexican Revolution of 1914, military
establishments in Texas during World War I, and politics in Austin, Texas, in the 1940s.
They contain correspondence, telegrams, photographs, newspaper articles and clippings,
reports, and memorabilia. Additional photographs were collected by Utechts wife,
Mable Gouldy Stevenson Utecht. These photographs were taken in cities around Texas and in
Mexico by Skeet Richardson, a U.S. Navy photographer and a photographer for the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram.
- Purchase and gift, 1988-1989.
- A detailed description of the contents of the scrapbooks is
available.
- 89-2
-
Manuscripts Index: A B C D
E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Top of Page Guide to
the Collections Guide Index
- Vandergriff, W. T. (William Thomas), 1902-1992
- Hooker Vandergriff Family Collection, 1935-1998, bulk
939-1986; 5 boxes (1.4 linear ft.)
- The Vandergriff family has played a large part in the
development of suburban communities in the Dallas-Fort Worth area during the
twentieth century. W. T. Vandergriff, known as "Hooker" came to
Arlington, Texas, in 1937, and established the first Chevrolet car
dealership. His father, J. T. "Tom" Vandergriff, owned the first
garage and gasoline pump in Carrollton and, in 1926, opened one of the first
automobile dealerships in the area combined with what was also his
blacksmith shop. In addition to the Chevrolet dealerships in Arlington,
Carrollton, and Irving, Vandergriff established Vandergriff Buick in
Arlington, Arlington Furniture and Appliance Company, and Vandergriff
Leasing Company. The various companies were sometimes described as
Vandergriff Enterprises.
The Vandergriff family also sponsored Arlington amateur
softball and basketball teams and were boosters of local public schools
sports teams and community events. Hooker Vandergriff's son, Tom J.
Vandergriff, and his daughter, Virginia Vandergriff Hapeman Deering, and
their families were also involved in Vandergriff Enterprises. Tom
Vandergriff was elected major of Arlington in 1951 and served for twenty-six
years. During his career as mayor he is best known for attracting the
General Motors Corp. assembly plant to Arlington in 1953, developing Lake
Arlington in 1957, and bringing the Texas Rangers baseball club to Arlington
in 1971.
Scrapbooks, photographs, certificates, newsletters,
programs, brochures, newspaper clippings, and a variety of printed material.
The bulk of the Hooker Vandergriff Family Collection is newspaper clippings,
photographs, and scrapbooks, 1935-1998. The scrapbooks are comprised of
clippings from area newspapers and photographs and snap shoots that focus on
activities, advertising, promotional events, sports and the employees of the
Arlington Chevrolet and Buick dealerships as well as the Vandergriff family,
1948-1983. The few letters and certificates scattered from 1947 to 1994 are
addressed to Hooker Vandergriff or Tom Vandergriff expressing thanks for
participation in community organizations or events. Other photographs and
snapshots, 1935-1989, depict buildings and employees of the dealership,
district sales and managerial meetings, Vandergriff family members, and
Vandergriff sponsored sports teams. Included are additional clippings and
printed material that publicize or advertise the Vandergriff companies and
activities of the family, 1937-1998.
Arlington Historical Society transfer, 2002.
Inventory available.
2002-15
-
- Vanderlee, John and Ann
- Collection, 1958-1974; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- John and Ann Vanderlee were promoters, preservers, and performers of
authentic ragtime music. They are credited with reviving the music of Scott Joplin, James
Scott, and other early ragtime composers.
- Newsletters, scrapbook, and a tape recording. The scrapbook contains clippings,
photographs, letters, typescripts, and newsletters compiled by Anna C. Leahy about the
Vanderlees, their research on Scott Joplin, and ragtime music. Also included is
biographical information about Scott Joplin and issues of Rag Times.
- Gift, 1975.
- Finding aid available.
- AR100
- Van Zandt, Isaac, 1813-1847
- Collection, 1842-1844; 1 folder (7 items)
- Isaac Van Zandt practiced law in Marshall, Texas, where he settled in
1838. He was a member of the Texas House of Representatives, 1840-1842, and in 1845 was a
member of the convention that considered and approved the annexation of Texas to the U.S.
- Letters and treasury voucher. The letters are primarily to the
postmaster in Washington, D.C., but included is a photostat letter to Wm. W. Holman which
reports the activities of the Texan Delegation and the attitude of Washington toward
Texas.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA47
-
- Vidal, F. S.
- Collection of Muslim Documents, 1960-1968; 2 items
- F. S. Vidal, whose area of expertise is anthropology and the Middle
East, is retired from UTA's Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology.
- Family tree of Al Sa'ud printed on cloth (3' x 7') in Egypt, 1968;
and the Koran displayed on eight calligraphic and pictorial paper panels (each 2.5' x 3')
from Cairo, Egypt, 1960. These items were received with a donation of books, journals, and
pamphlets from Vidal to the Central Library.
- Gift, 1996.
- 96-18, GO1/4; Rolled Map Case 1, Map Room Annex
-
Manuscripts Index: A B C D
E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Top of Page Guide to
the Collections Guide Index
- Waldrop, Gilbert C., 1889-1981
- Scrapbook, 1952-1982; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- In September 1954, Gilbert C. Waldrop served as chairman of a
committee of prominent Arlington, Texas, citizens to assess the need for a hospital in the
city. As a result of the committees work, Arlington Memorial Hospital was chartered
on November 18, 1955, and opened on January 19, 1955. Waldrop was elected chairman of the
board of the hospital, and served until his retirement on May 31, 1968. Waldrops
wife, Camilla, is credited with the formation of the Arlington Memorial Hospital
Womens Auxiliary.
- Scrapbook. The scrapbook contains correspondence, photographs,
newspaper clippings, and other printed materials, which document Gilbert C. Waldrops
work on the establishment and growth of Arlington Memorial Hospital. The Arlington Chamber
of Commerce compiled the scrapbook and presented it to Waldrop in 1957, when he was
honored Arlington Citizen of the Year. It was later updated and enlarged by Waldrop and
members of his family. Included in the printed materials are brochures which describe
Arlington as "The Place to Live in the Southwest," 1957, and "In the Heart
of Americas Future," 1965. Arlington Chamber of Commerce reports describe the
size of the community and the businesses operating in Arlington in 1954. Newspaper
clippings depict Arlington as small town America, report its effort to build a hospital
through social fundraisers, describe items donated to the hospital, and the local business
and community leaders who provided support. Photographs in the newspaper clippings depict
the health care facilities of the era.
- Gift, 1994.
- AR365
-
- Wallace, Ernest, 1906-1985
- "The Howling of the Coyotes," typescript by Ernest Wallace,
[March 1978]; 1 folder (33 leaves)
- Ernest Wallace was a historian of the American West and president of
the Texas State Historical Association, 1977-1978.
- Typescript and letter. Presidential address delivered by Dr. Wallace
at the Texas State Historical Association meeting in Austin, Texas, March 1978, regarding
proposals to divide Texas into a number of new states. The speech was later expanded and
published under the same title by Texas A & M Press, 1979. Included is a letter to J.
P. Bryant [sic], Jr., regarding the address.
- Gift, 1987.
- GA153
-
- Wallace Family
- War Ration Books, 1942-1943; 1 folder (4 items)
- The Wallace family lived on South West Street in Arlington, Texas.
- Three World War II war ration books with stamps, 1942, and one application postcard
(with postage stamp) for a war ration book, 1943. The books were produced by the U. S.
Office of Price Administration. Each book has a physical description of the book holder,
unused war ration and sugar ration stamps, and the signature of the book owner and the
registrar. These books were issued to Tobe B. Wallace, Kate F. Wallace, and George C.
Wallace, 414 South West.
- Purchase, 1994.
- GA17
-
- Walsh, Harold, 1891-1980
- Papers, 1893-1980; 9 folders, 1 oversize item, 4 boxes (1.4 linear
ft.)
- Harold Walsh was an architect in Amarillo, Texas. He grew up on a
farm near Austin, learned drafting and design from an architect in Austin, and worked for
several architects and engineers in Texas and New Mexico from 1912 until the mid-1920s.
Thereafter, Walsh was in partnership with various associates, primarily in Amarillo,
Texas, until his retirement.
- Letters, postcards, autobiography, diaries, certificates, photo
album, photographs, article, birthday book, and architectural plans. These papers were
produced or collected by Harold Walsh from 1908 through 1979. They include his
autobiography, diaries, architectural license, and letters sent to him. Also included are
family photographs from 1893 through the early 1920s; certificates and a description of
Charles D. Walsh's service as a Texas Ranger, 1875 to 1880; and an article about William
C. Walsh, a Texas Land Commissioner. Charles D. Walsh was Walsh's father, and William C.
Walsh was his uncle. A certificate, a letter, and a birthday book, 1917 to 1937, that
belonged to Walsh's mother, Eva Goff Walsh, are also included. The architectural plans are
of a Plainview, Texas, high school building; the Plainview Missionary Baptist Church; the
Baptist hospital in Clovis, New Mexico; a school building in Canadian, Texas; and a
mountain cabin built for Walter David.
- Gift, 1997.0
- GA34, 97-11, GO1/5
-
- Ward, William A. (William Anderson)
- Manuscripts, ca., 1974-1985; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- William A. Ward was a Houston freelance writer.
- Manuscripts, research notes, and clippings. These are the research
notes and manuscripts for three articles by William Anderson Ward: "The Fine Art of
Sleuthing--An Inside Look at a Private Eye," "The Great Galveston Restroom
War," and "Raise the Hatteras." The clippings relate to Wards
research for the three articles.
- The collection is also known as: William Anderson Ward Papers.
- Gift, 1987.
- 87-9
-
- Ward, William Allen, 1893-1959
- Papers, 1918-1960, bulk 1920-1935; 5 boxes (2.08 linear ft.)
- William Allen Ward was a journalist with the Fort Worth
Record, 1917-1920; the Dallas Journal, 1920-1938; and
the Dallas Morning News, 1938-1959. He was also a published author
of fiction, non-fiction, and poetry.
- Correspondence, manuscripts, notebook, newspaper clippings,
periodicals, booklet, and cartoons. These are the business and personal papers of William
Allen Ward. The correspondence is primarily from publishers about his work and about
financial matters. Manuscripts include short stories, childrens stories, poetry, and
non-fiction. Newspaper clippings are his published poems, historical articles about the
settlement of Dallas and Oak Cliff that appeared in the Dallas Journal
and the Dallas Morning News, and short stories published under his
own name and various pseudonyms. The periodicals contain Wards short stories and
original cartoons by Jack "Herc" Ficklen and Bill McClanahan.
- Gift, 1978.
- Finding aid available.
- AR315
-
- Warren, B. W.
- Family Papers, ca. 1863-1952; 4 folders (.4 linear ft.)
- Correspondence, photographs, tintypes, newspaper clippings, and
ephemera. Photographs and tintypes are of family members. Earliest images are from
Charlotte, Michigan, and others show family migration to Mineral Wells, Lone Oak, and
Houston, Texas. Of special interest is a Philopoena Album that belonged to Florence
Warren. It contains engravings and blank pages on which there are drawings, autographs,
poems, and notes contributed by friends and relatives, 1863-1894. Also included is the
volume: Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Jonathan T. Updegraff,
1883.
- Fielder Museum transfer, 1995.
- GA227
-
- Washington County, Texas
- Record of Estrays for Washington County, 1837; 1 volume (207 p.)
- Washington County, located in Southeast Central Texas, was created in
1836. The town of Washington-on-the Brazos, once a Texas capital, developed in that area
in 1830, becoming a municipality in 1835.
- Journal in chronological arrangement. Each entry describes the livestock, appraised
value, and owner. Includes alphabetical index.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA35
-
- Washington, Josie E. Green, 1903-1995
- Papers, 1944-1961, bulk 1947-1956; 2 boxes (.70 linear ft.)
- Josie Eugenia Green Hamilton Washington, an African American home
economics educator, taught in Dallas, Texas, for more than forty years. She graduated with
a Bachelor of Science degree in Home Economics from Prairie View Normal Industrial College
(now Prairie View A & M University), ca. 1926. She first taught at Booker T.
Washington High School and then, 1939 until her retirement in 1971, at Lincoln High
School. She was also very active in activities at the Munger Avenue Baptist Church; in her
sorority, Kappa Zeta, the Dallas chapter of Zeta Phi Beta; the Dunbar Social Club
Womans Auxiliary; and the Maria Morgan Branch of the YWCA of Metropolitan Dallas.
Lovingly referred to as "Miss Zeta," Washingtons attachment and devotion
to her sisterhood were legendary. Josie Washington was a strong advocate of women and
valued education and the responsibilities that the educated have toward the uneducated.
- Programs, minute book, calendars, scrapbook, photographs, manual, and
final examination. The collection contains Zeta Annual Birthday Calendars which include
advertisements of African American businesses, the names and birth dates of the sorority
sisters, candid photographs of families (infants to young teenagers) of the sorority
members children, and dates of importance to the sorority. There are a number of
event programs, which reveal the types of cultural programs of interest to the sorority,
and its members, i.e., there were several programs from performances given by classical
singers, classical pianists, and literary readings. There is a scrapbook of Zeta
memorabilia, 1944-1947. It contains photographs from newspapers and magazines and souvenir
programs of prominent sorority members and events. There is a minute book (Kappa Zeta
Chapter), 1951-1955. A formal color portrait of Washington as a young woman is included in
the collection. Also included are a few items from her years at Lincoln High School; a
teaching procedures manual, a final examination, and commencement programs.
- Purchase, 1995.
- Finding aid available.
- AR404, OS331
-
- Washington, Josie E. Green, 1903-1995
- Papers, 1928-1995; 1 box (.21 linear ft.)
- Josie Eugenia Green Hamilton Washington, an African American home
economics educator, taught in Dallas, Texas, for more than forty years. She graduated with
a Bachelor of Science degree in Home Economics from Prairie View Normal Industrial College
(now Prairie View A & M University), ca. 1926. She first taught at Booker T.
Washington High School and then from 1939 until her retirement in 1971, at Lincoln High
School. She was also very active in activities at the Munger Avenue Baptist Church; in her
sorority, Kappa Zeta, the Dallas chapter of Zeta Phi Beta; the Dunbar Social Club
Womans Auxiliary; and the Maria Morgan Branch of the YWCA of Metropolitan Dallas.
Lovingly referred to as "Miss Zeta," Washingtons attachment and devotion
to her sisterhood were legendary. Josie Washington was a strong advocate of women and
valued education and the responsibilities that the educated have toward the uneducated.
- Photograph, postcards, newspaper clippings, certificates, appointment
book, booklet, and programs. These papers reflect the life and activities of Josie Green
Washington. The photographs are of Washington, her family, and friends. The clippings
reflect her activities and include an announcement of her marriage to W. G. Washington,
1944. A booklet of ceremonies of the order of Calanthe of the Knights of Pythias is
included. Two items created for the Munger Avenue Baptist Church, a family portrait book,
1991, and a diamond anniversary history, 1969, will be cataloged for Special Collections
and housed with the book collection.
- Gift, 1997.
- 97-48
-
- Watson, Patrick Alfred, II, 1810-1894
- Family Genealogical chart, n.d.; 1 folder (1 item)
- Patrick Alfred Watson II was a pioneer settler in the Arlington,
Texas, area.
- Genealogical chart, "Descendants of Patrick Alfred Watson, II." The chart
diagrams Patrick A. Watsons descendants by his two wives.
- Fielder Museum transfer, 1993.
- GO33
-
- Weathers, Ruth Barrett, 1908-1989
- Papers, 1947-1987; 1 box (.4 linear ft.)
- Ruth Barrett Weathers, a native of Trenton in Fannin County, Texas,
owned and managed a ranch near Ira, Texas, with her husband, Ben Weathers, and also after
his death in 1966. Ruth Weathers taught school in Borden and Howard counties from 1929
until the 1960s. She was an active member of the Colonial Hills Baptist Church of Snyder,
Texas; the Home Demonstration Club; and the Order of the Eastern Star. Ruth Weathers
compiled a history of the James Limnel Weathers Family for limited distribution.
- Diaries, letters, a photograph, family history, and newspaper
clippings. The collection contains eleven diaries by Ruth Barrett Weathers, which document
her life as a ranch wife. Financial accounts of agricultural and petroleum activities are
recorded for the Weathers property located in Borden, Fannin, and Scurry counties. Most of
the diaries describe Ruth Weathers management of the ranch, as Ben Weathers died in
1966. Hunting, fishing, and other recreational pastimes are recorded. Scurry County family
names mentioned in the diary are Bartels, Godwin, Sorrels, and Von Roeder. Also mentioned
are a brother, A. R. "Sport" Barrett, and a nephew, Bo Barrett. Included are two
letters laid in the diaries, newspaper clippings, and a copy photograph of Ruth Barrett
Weathers taken around 1935, standing by a Vincent, Texas, school bus. The "James
Limnel Weathers Family History" is also included.
- Purchase, 1992.
- GA179
-
- Webb, Walter Prescott, 1888-1963
- Collection, 1915-1983, bulk 1915-1963; 5 boxes (2.1 linear ft.)
- Walter Prescott Webb was a Texas author, historian, and teacher.
- Correspondence, biographical data, speeches, photographs, articles,
reviews, newspaper clippings, periodicals, booklet, notes, typescripts, and galley sheets.
The collection consists primarily of typescripts and copies of articles, reviews, and
addresses by Walter Prescott Webb. The correspondence includes some of Webbs letters
and letters from historians, politicians, publishers, and history buffs as well as letters
written about him. The materials were collected by Jenkins Garrett and W. Eugene Hollon;
additional items were contributed by Mrs. Walter Prescott Webb.
- Gift, 1974-1976, 1983.
- Finding aid available.
- AR314
-
- Western Navaho Indian School, Tuba, Arizona
- Journal, 1909; 1 folder (31 p.)
- Journal produced by the students of the Western Navaho Indian School,
Tuba, Arizona, May 1909, volume 1, no. 6, and edited by Alice M. Peck. The journal
contains articles and illustrations regarding agriculture, transportation ("The Iron
Horse"), and wildlife. Also included is original and copied poetry, "News of
Tuba," and information about the schools staff.
- Gift, 1993.
- GA159
-
- Western, Thomas G.
- Translation of Samuel Bangs Legal Petitions Regarding His Texas
Land Grant, 1830-1834, 1840; 1 folder (12 p.)
- Thomas G. Western served as commissary in the Texas Army and
commissioner to the Karankawa Indians. In the late 1830s, he served with the Texas Rangers
and during this period also acted as an interpreter and translator for the Texas General
Land Office. Samuel Bangs was the first Anglo printer to operate west of the Louisiana
Purchase boundary. He produced the first imprints in the states of northern Mexico,
including Coahuila and Texas.
- Translation of legal petition for six leagues of land on the west
side of the Colorado River, Texas, in lands held by Col. Benjamin Milam. Thomas Barnett,
alcalde for the Austin Colony District, granted Samuel Bangs two leagues of land on the
east bank of the Brazos River, within the colony of empresario Robert Leftwich, on
November 17, 1830. The petition was translated by Thomas G. Western, February 24, 1840,
and was also signed by William L. Cazneau and John P. Borden. The petition relates
Bangs move from Baltimore, Maryland, September 26, 1816, to Mexico while part of the
Mina Expedition [Francisco Javier Mina]; documents his work as a printer; and describes
the move of his wife and children to Mexico. In addition to the manuscript there is a
sketch of the two leagues awarded to Bangs. Thomas Jefferson Chambers was Bangs
attorney.
- Gift, 1993.
- GA33
-
- White, Frances E.
- Scrapbook, 1941-1945; l folder (32 p.)
- Frances E. White was a secretary at the Dallas Chamber of Commerce
during the 1940s.
- Scrapbook. The scrapbook contains cards, letters, clippings,
photographs, and poetry from and about Whites family and friends.
- Gift, 1985.
- GA85
-
- Williams, Albert
- Research files on Allen Cemetery, Fort Worth, Texas, and Jean-Charles
Houzeau, 1960s; 3 folders (.4 linear ft.)
- Albert Williams was a friend of Jenkins Garrett who frequently did
research for him. The materials related to Jean-Charles Houzeau and Paul Wilhelm, Duke of
Württemberg, were research for a book Williams was writing.
- Research notes, published papers, genealogies, and maps. The materials were collected
for two projects, the Allen Cemetery and the works of Jean-Charles Houzeau, 1820-1888. The
Allen Cemetery is located near Carswell Air Force Base in west Fort Worth. Many early
Tarrant County settlers are buried here. The papers include family histories, maps of the
cemetery, genealogies, and newspaper clippings. In addition to the family of W. T. and
Sarah Allen, the Joseph B. and Melinda Farmer family, the Isaac Thomas family, the William
Thomas and Mattie Tinsley family members are here. Farmers Branch was named for Joseph B.
Farmer, who settled on land in Tarrant County in late 1853. In addition several other
unrelated families are buried in Allen Cemetery.
- The Jean-Charles Houzeau files contain biographical information, drafts of articles
about him, and copies of articles Houzeau wrote. These articles, with English
translations, were published in Revue Britannique and Revue de Belgique.
Albert Williams' correspondence with various libraries in search of Houzeau materials as
well as letters seeking information on Paul Wilhelm are included.
- Gift, 1994.
- 96-9
-
- Williams, Mack, 1918-1995, and Madeline C.
- Papers, 1884-1995, bulk 1976-1995; 1 box (.25 linear ft.)
- Mack Williams was a journalist, both a writer and publisher, for over
sixty years. He worked for fifteen newspapers from coast to coast, including the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram, the Fort Worth Press, the Dallas
Times Herald, and the Fort Worth News-Tribune.
Williams was a member of the White House Correspondents Association, 1939-1941, and served
six years in the army during World War II covering the South Pacific for the army
newspaper, Yank. Madeline Williams was a journalist for over forty years, serving
as a reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the Dallas
Times Herald, and the Denton Record-Chronicle and
managing editor and co-publisher of the Texas Beverage News.
- Speeches, photographs, certificate, program, bulletin, newspapers,
newspaper reproductions, newspaper clippings, and copies of In Old Fort Worth
by Mack Williams. Includes photographs of Mack and Madeline Williams, newspaper clippings
of stories written by Mack Williams and about Williams career. Speeches concern the
exhibit and donation of the Mack Williams Papers during a UTA Friends of the Libraries
event in 1995. Both U.S. Bicentennial and Texas Sesquicentennial publications of In
Old Fort Worth and a reproduction of the Fort Worth Daily Gazette,
August 26, 1884, are included.
- Gift, 1995.
- 97-37
-
- Williams, Stephen, 1760-1848
- Lorenzo de Zavala Colony Land Grant, 1834-1838; 1 item (7 p.)
- Land grant petition number 154. This is a certified copy of the land
grant of Stephen Williams who was awarded a quarter of a league on Nogal (Walnut) Creek,
in present Jasper County, Texas. The grant was issued November 7, 1834, by Jorge Antonio
Nixon, land commissioner for the Lorenzo de Zavala Colony. The grant, adjacent to that
held by John Bevil, was surveyed by Arthur Henrie. James Armstrong, George Washington
Smyth, and others signed the notes attached to the grant, which is in Spanish.
- Gift, 1990.
- GA33
-
- Willit, Paul
- Collection, 1819-1960; 1 folder (4 items)
- Letter, military discharge, ticket, and a clipping. Included is a
baptismal note in German with the English translation, J. L. Schneider to his godson,
March 28, 1819; the military discharge of John N. Fox who served in the Civil War with
Company E, 128th regiment, Indiana Infantry, February 28, 1966; and two items related to
the Kennedy-Johnson Democratic presidential ticket, 1960.
- Gift, 1988.
- GA29
-
- Witt, Hughs
- Austin Colony Land Grant, 1834; 1 folder (1 item)
- Certificate and translation. Spencer H. Jack, agent for Stephen F.
Austin and Samuel May Williams, issued the land grant certificate. It states that Hughs
Witt will receive the land to which he is entitled as a settler under the Austin and
Williams contract, if a land commissioner is appointed for that colony, and if he presents
himself to that commissioner within the proper length of time. The certificate, in
Spanish, was executed at Tenoxtitlan, Texas, February 11, 1834.
- Gift, 1992.
- GA33
-
- Wolfskill, George, 1921-1987
- Papers, 1949-1974; 14 boxes (7.5 linear ft.)
- George Wolfskill was a professor of history at the University of
Texas at Arlington, 1955-1987. He was a noted scholar of twentieth century U.S. history.
- Correspondence, manuscripts, speeches, research notes, reviews,
biographical material, and photographs. These are primarily manuscripts, published and
unpublished, produced by Wolfskill from graduate school days to 1974. The correspondence
relates to the production of his manuscripts and his research. Included is correspondence
with Jouett Shouse, 1959, who was president of the American Liberty League, 1934-1940,
regarding the formation and history of the league; and correspondence of John A. Hudson
concerning the publication of the book he wrote with Wolfskill, All But the
People.
- Gift, 1987, 1990.
- Finding aid available.
- AR347
-
- Woman's Club of Fort Worth
- Papers, 1923-1924; 1 folder
- An umbrella organization for women's clubs in Fort Worth, this group
provides a meeting place for member organizations. It was chartered by the State of Texas
on July 18, 1923, and is still active.
- Meeting minutes and legal documents. The papers include copies of the charter, property
title transfer documents, and minutes from the organizational meeting in 1923.
- Gift, 1994.
- 96-8
- Woodard, Don, 1926-
- Newspaper Clippings Collection, 1940s-2001, bulk 1985-1998; 29 boxes
(29 linear ft.)
- Don Woodard is a Fort Worth, Texas, native and author of Black
Diamonds! Black Gold!: The Saga of Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company. He and
his sons, Don, Jr. and Blake, are partners in Woodard Insurance. Woodard was in the Navy
during World War II. He worked in the oil business in the late 1940s and 1950s when he was
assistant to oilman Neville G. Penrose and later a landman with Texas Pacific Coal and Oil
Company. He was an executive assistant at Texas Electric Service Company until 1972 when
he left to enter the life insurance business. Woodard is active in local, state, and
national politics. He ran for the state senate in 1964, and in 1982, for mayor of Fort
Worth.
- Newspapers, newspaper clippings, letters, memoranda, and personal notes in approximately
200 notebooks, including an index. The clippings chronicle local, state, national, and
world events, ca. 1985-1998, primarily from the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
A few items date back to the 1940s. Personal notes, letters, and memoranda are interfiled
with the clippings. The collection is organized in a numerical system devised by Woodard
and includes an alphabetical index to subjects and quotations from articles. The
newsclippings cover a wide range of subjects including, but not limited to the airline
industry, history (particularly Dallas and Fort Worth), political races and events both
local and presidential, health and medicine, historical figures, entertainers, community
leaders, cultural events, sports, and more.
- Inventory of boxes and subject index are available.
- Gift, 1998, 1999, 2001.
- 98-25
-
- World War II
- Chicago Tribune Clippings, 1942-1944; 1 box
(.25 linear ft.)
- Scrapbook, 77 leaves. The scrapbook is composed primarily of maps of
battlefronts around the world published in color by the Chicago Tribune,
Chicago, Illinois, during World War II.
- Gift, 1994.
- OS189
-
- Worth, William Jenkins, 1794-1849
- Letter to R. K. Call, Tallahassee, Florida, 1841 July 10; 1 item
(3p.)
- William Jenkins Worth was a colonel serving in Florida during the
Seminole War, which ended in 1842. Worth was promoted to brigadier general after the war
and served with distinction during the Mexican War. He was appointed commander of the
newly created Department of Texas after the Mexican War. The city of Fort Worth was named
for him. Worth died in San Antonio in May 1849.
- Signed manuscript letter. This is a reply to the governors
recent letter to Col. W. J. Worth. He reports his activities in the field, advises the
governor of military operations, and reports that Indians committing depredations are
vagrant Creeks committing isolated acts of hostility. "The history of our country
shows that a few cabins tenanted with stout hearts, exert a greater influence in causing
the Indians permanently to abandon their resistance, than the bayonets of our troops--the
later they regard as a transient inconvenience--the former as indisputable evidence of
determined occupancy." Worth also reports that every effort has been made to protect
the frontier and asks Governor Call for rations, arms, and a soldiers pay for those
willing to take occupancy, especially on the St. Johns and in the neighborhood of St.
Augustine.
- Gift, 1999.
- OS300
Manuscripts Index: A B C D
E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Top of Page Guide to
the Collections Guide Index
- Yaxcopoil (Hacienda), México
- Records, 1883-1977; 40 boxes (34 linear ft.)
- Yaxcopoil, established in 1703, as a small cattle ranch (estancia) in
Yucatán, México, was gradually transformed into a cattle and maize estate. It was
purchased from the Vado Ruz family in January 1864, by Don Donaciano García Rejón
(1817-1869). During the late 1880s, the García Rejón family converted it into a henequen
plantation.
- Correspondence; financial records including accounting books; legal
records; and weekly production, sales, and salary records. Yaxcopoils records
document the diverse aspects of its administration by the descendant heirs of Don
Donaciano, 1883-1977. They are comprised of the private papers and administration records
of Fernando Cervera (1850-1904) and his family: Fernando Cervera García Rejón
(1876-1952) and Armando Cervera Cámara (1916-1977). This is a diverse and extensive
collection of records, which is of great value for studying the effects of the
post-revolution labor reforms on the configuration and economic functions of the henequen
hacienda in Yucatán as well as the repercussion on the haciendas productivity after
President Lázaro Cárdenas agrarian reform.
- Gift and Purchase, 1997.
- Inventory available.
- 97-2
-
- Young, William
- Brazos County Land Grant, 1844; 1 folder (1 item)
- Certificate on vellum. The land grant, awarded to William Young, is
for one labor of land in Brazos County, on Peach Creek. The document was signed by
Republic of Texas President, Sam Houston, and the Commissioner of the General Land Office,
Thomas William Ward, on November 21, 1844, in Austin, Texas.
- Gift, 1989.
- GO4
-
- Youngblood, Joseph W. (Joseph William), b. 1887
- Papers, ca. 1895-1971, bulk 1900-1955; 4 folders (52 items)
- Joseph W. Youngblood was a representative for Tarrant County in the
Texas House of Representatives, 1935-1936, worked in building construction and supported
local unions.
- Correspondence, legal documents, financial documents, and
photographs. Joseph Youngbloods papers are primarily personal and family documents
and photographs. Included are insurance policies of Youngbloods first wife, Nina
Alice Youngblood, and several photographs showing members of the Youngblood and Wehunt
families.
- Gift, 1985.
- GA157
-
- Younkin, C. George, 1910-1997
- Papers, ca. 1932-1996; 31 boxes (32 linear ft.)
- George Younkin was records officer with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Washington, D.C., 1935-1951, and regional archivist with the National
Archives and Records Administration in Fort Worth, Texas, 1951-1975. From 1970-1975, he
taught archives courses at Texas Christian University. He was author of several monographs
concerning American Indians, especially the Indians of Oklahoma. He was also active in Boy
Scouts of America, Tarrant County Senior Citizens Alliance, and many local and national
historical and archival organizations.
- Correspondence, minutes, directories, handbooks, manuals,
photographic materials, maps, art print reproductions, posters, and research, lecture, and
meeting files. The George Younkin papers relate to his careers with the U.S. government
and TCU, his research on American Indians, family papers and genealogy interests, and
professional and personal activities, both before and after his retirement from the
National Archives in 1975.
- Gift, 1996.
- Inventory available.
- 96-57
-
- Younkin, C. George, 1910-1997
- Papers, 1848-1993, bulk 1932-1993; 8 boxes (8 linear ft.)
- George Younkin was a records officer with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Washington, D.C., 1935-1951, and regional archivist with the National
Archives and Records Administration in Fort Worth, Texas, 1951-1975. From 1970-1975, he
taught archives courses at Texas Christian University. He was author of several monographs
concerning American Indians, especially the Indians of Oklahoma. He was also active in Boy
Scouts of America, Senior Citizens Alliance of Tarrant County, and many local and national
historical and archival organizations.
- Correspondence; minutes; diary; histories of the Younkin, Ward, and
Weeks families; photographs; slides; cassette tape recordings; newspaper clippings; maps;
and printed materials. These are the professional, family, and personal papers of George
Younkin with the emphasis on family materials. Included are letters and documents of early
family members (Henrietta Ward, J. Ray Ward, Sam Weeks, and Charles F. Younkin), notably a
letter written during the Mexican War period, a letter and two daguerreotypes or tintypes
from the Civil War period, and letters and documents created during World War I. George
Younkin served in World War II. There are letters to his wife, documents, and memorabilia
during the period of his military service. Much of the collection concerns Younkins
activities outside his professional work and after retirement, such as materials
concerning the American Indian, Boy Scouts of America, National Association of Retired
Federal Employees, National Genealogical Society, Senior Political Action Committee,
Senior Citizens Alliance of Tarrant County, and Society of Southwest Archivists.
- Gift, 1997.
- Inventory available.
- 97-47
Manuscripts Index: A B C D
E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
Top of Page Guide to
the Collections Guide Index
Zavala, Adina de, 1861-1955. See De Zavala, Adina, 1861-1955
- Zavala, Lorenzo de, 1788-1836
- Estate Records, 1838-1844; 1 folder (3 items)
- Lorenzo de Zavala was a liberal Mexican national who was a signer of
the Texas Declaration of Independence and ad interim vice president of the Republic of
Texas, March 17-October 17, 1836.
- Legal documents. These documents pertain to the probate of Lorenzo de Zavalas
estate in present-day Harris County, Texas. Included is the bond for the administrator,
Henry M. Locke, an inventory and appraisal of property, and a description and appraisal of
a parcel of land originally granted in 1831 to Victor Blanco.
- Gift, 1974.
- GA47
-
- Zuber, William Physick, 1820-1913
- Letters to Mary A. Anderson and Susan Murrelle, 1891-1912; 10 folders
(63 items)
- William P. Zuber served under Capt. James Gillaspie in the Sixth
Company, Second Regiment of Texas Volunteers at the battle of San Jacinto. A charter
member of the Texas State Historical Association, he published articles and books about
his and other prominent Texans participation in the Texas Revolution and later
events of Texas history.
- Correspondence, newspaper clippings, and a photograph. These are letters from Zuber to
Capt. James Gillaspies daughters, which describe Zubers early life in Texas
from 1830. Related in detail are the events of the Texas Revolution, March 1-June 1, 1836,
during the period that Zuber served under Captain Gillaspie, particularly at the battle of
San Jacinto. Included is biographical information about James Gillaspie, Sam
Houstons activities, the capture of Santa Anna, the attack of the Steamboat
Yellowstone, the Mier Expedition, and many other events and people involved in the
Texas Revolution. Also included are newspaper clippings about the battle of San Jacinto
and its last survivors and a photograph of the last reunion of the survivors.
- The collection is also known as: William Physick Zuber Collection.
- Gift, 1974.
- Finding aid available.
- GA19, OS370
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A-B << Historical
manuscripts C-D << Historical
Manuscripts E-G << Historical
Manuscripts H-K
<< Historical Manuscripts L-M
<<Historical Manuscripts N-R
<< Historical Manuscripts S
Historical Manuscripts Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z
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