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BOX 706-793not filmed Speeches, Writings, and Related Material, 1887-1947
Holograph and typewritten drafts, corrected proofs, notes research material, and correspondence relating to speeches, articles, books, and miscellaneous writings, including some by Adelaide Worth Bagley Daniels.
Arranged by type of material and chronologically within each file.
BOX 706 Speeches
1887, 1903-1912
(4 folders)
List, 1913-1915
1913
Mar.-July
(5 folders)
BOX 707 Aug.-Dec.
(3 folders)
1914
Jan.
(4 folders)
BOX 708 Jan.-Apr.
(7 folders)
BOX 709 May-Dec.
(8 folders)
BOX 710 1915
Jan.-June
(6 folders)
BOX 711 June-Dec.
(6 folders)
1916
Jan.-Mar.
(3 folders)
BOX 712 Apr.-Dec.
(9 folders)
BOX 713 List, 1917-1918
1917
(7 folders)
BOX 714 1918
Jan.-May
(7 folders)
BOX 715 June-Oct.
(6 folders)
BOX 716 Nov.-Dec.
(2 folders)
1919
Jan.-Aug.
(5 folders)
BOX 717 Sept.-Dec.
(2 folders)
1920
(4 folders)
BOX 718 1921-1932
(4 folders)
Lists, 1933-1941
1933-1935
(4 folders)
BOX 719 1936-1938
(7 folders)
BOX 720 1939-1942
(6 folders)
BOX 721 1943-1946
(5 folders)
Undated
(2 folders)
BOX 722 Undated
(6 folders)
BOX 723 Undated
(5 folders)
BOX 724 Undated
(3 folders)
Undated notes and fragments
(2 folders)
BOX 725 Undated notes and fragments
(3 folders)
Articles
circa 1908, Articles for campaign of 1908
circa 1908, [William Howard Taft and Beekman Winthrop]
1914, Mar. 7, “According to Plan,” Harper's Weekly
circa 1914, May, “Making the Navy an Economic Asset,” Scientific American
1914, Dec., “The First Christmas I Remember,” Baltimore Southern Methodist
circa 1914, Dec., “Blessed Are the Peace-Maker Presidents,” World Outlook
circa 1914, “Woodrow Wilson,” The Presidents of the United States
BOX 726 1916, Dec., “Making Our Navy Efficient”
1917, “Men Must Live Straight if They Would Shoot Straight”
circa 1917, “Daniels Pledges Safeguards for Morale of Enlisted Men”
1917, Dec., “The United States Navy,” Munsey's Magazine
circa 1918, “What the War Work of Women Will Mean to the Future”
circa 1918, “Women in the War”
1920, Feb., “Article for The Golden Star
circa 1920, [Admiral Sims] World's Work
1920, Nov.-1921, Mar., Articles for Saturday Evening Post, correspondence
1921, Mar. 19, “Why the United States Needs a Big Navy,” Saturday Evening Post
1921, Mar. 26, “Building the World's Most Powerful Warships,” Saturday Evening Post
(3 folders)
BOX 727 1921, Apr. 9, “Training Men for the Navy and the Nation,” Saturday Evening Post
(3 folders)
1921, Apr. 23, “The Navy That Flies,” Saturday Evening Post
1921, May 21, “Naval Reserve,” Saturday Evening Post
BOX 728 Articles for the National Newspaper Service
1921 , Our Navy in the War
Correspondence
Outlines of series and lists of subscribing papers
“Lifting the Smoke Screen”
"The Most Important Cabinet Meeting in the Wilson Administration”
“The Day War Was Declared”
“Leviathan Sunk! Germans Announced”
“President Wilson as a Strategist”
“The Story of Mr. S. W. Davidson”
“Confounding German Spies and Plotters”
“The United States Gunboat That Lived in Turkey All during the War”
“The Secret Rendezvous of the Fleet”
“N.O.T.S.— The Biggest Cargo Fleet in the World”
“President Found Relief in Humorous Stories”
“The War Plan That Was Lost”
“Why There Should Be an Atlantic and Pacific Fleet”
“How Appeasing the Shark God Insured Construction of Dry Dock at Pearl Harbor”
“The Biggest Transportation Job in History”
“How an American Admiral Saved Admiral Kolchak from a Russian Prison”
“The Flood of War Inventions”
“How an American Collier Opened the Fourth in Ponta Delgada”
BOX 729 “When the U-Boats Came to America”
“Civilian Personalities of the War in Our Own Country”
“The Night of 2 Apr. 1917"
“The Flags of Admirals of Three Nations Floated on the Sylph”
“Why the Atlantic Fleet Did Not Go as a Unit to European Waters”
“Naval Aviators Were First of the Armed Forces of the United States to Land in France”
“Long Distance Guns Stopped Shelling Paris”
“United States Came Near War in 1916"
“What Was the Chief Allied Naval Error of the War?”
“Rhymes and Queer Code Combinations Puzzled the Listening Germans”
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