Some or all content stored offsite.
Container | Contents | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Speeches, Writings, and Related Material, 1887-1947 (continued) | |||||||||||||
“The Biggest New Naval Offensive of the War” | |||||||||||||
“The Plain American Sailor Who Saved a Ship and His Shipmates” | |||||||||||||
“Washington Belles Feared They Would Catch Measles from Prince Undine” | |||||||||||||
“If Germans Had Cut Every Cable, We Could Still Have Talked to Europe” | |||||||||||||
“Some Kings I Have Met” | |||||||||||||
“Balfour, the Philosopher” | |||||||||||||
“Which Helps Most? Your Critics or Your Friends?” | |||||||||||||
“What Is To Be the Fighting Craft of the Future?” | |||||||||||||
“Marshal Joffre More Than A Fighter” | |||||||||||||
“Who Can Censor the Censor” | |||||||||||||
“Building a Thousand Ships” | |||||||||||||
“Big Tasks That the Navy Accomplished” | |||||||||||||
“The Mobilization of Inventive Talent” | |||||||||||||
“Study Means Better Life,” The Young Man and Study, 1921 | |||||||||||||
Syndicated articles for Twenty-First Century Press | |||||||||||||
Correspondence, 1921 | |||||||||||||
Foreword to Anchors Aweigh, circa 1921 | |||||||||||||
Syndicated articles, Woodrow Wilson, 1924 | |||||||||||||
Correspondence, 1924-1925 | |||||||||||||
BOX 730 | List of articles | ||||||||||||
“Wilson the Mystic” | |||||||||||||
“House and Wilson” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Grayson” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson on Garrison” | |||||||||||||
“Fall as Diagnostician” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Ford” | |||||||||||||
“The Harvey Myth” | |||||||||||||
“How Wilson Met Lloyd George” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Lansing” | |||||||||||||
(2 folders) | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Bryan” | |||||||||||||
BOX 731 | “Wilson and Bill McDonald” | ||||||||||||
“Wilson and Lodge” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Brandeis” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson as Military Strategist” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson as a Political Leader” | |||||||||||||
“Why Wilson Went to Paris” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and W. B. Wilson” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Education” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Teapot Dome” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Mexico” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and the Irish” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and the Germans” | |||||||||||||
BOX 732 | “Wilson and Italy” | ||||||||||||
“Wilson and Neutrality” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Privilege” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Remarriage” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Newspaper Men” | |||||||||||||
Fragments | |||||||||||||
Proofs | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Bryan,” Saturday Evening Post, 1925, Sept 5. | |||||||||||||
Correspondence | |||||||||||||
“At Last the Inside Reasons Given of William Jennings Bryan's Resignation From the Wilson Cabinet,” Liberty, 1925, Correspondence | |||||||||||||
(2 folders) | |||||||||||||
[Naval Disarmament] circa 1925 | |||||||||||||
Articles for the Republic Syndicate | |||||||||||||
Behind the Scenes With William Jennings Bryan, 1925-1926 | |||||||||||||
Correspondence | |||||||||||||
(2 folders) | |||||||||||||
“Goodbye, Mr. Bryan-God Bless You, Mr. President” | |||||||||||||
“When Wilson and Bryan First Disagreed” | |||||||||||||
“Bryan Ranks With Jefferson in Amending Constitution” | |||||||||||||
“Bryan-Man of Peace-as a Soldier” | |||||||||||||
“Preaching Bryan's Funeral' in 1904" | |||||||||||||
“The Famous Bryan-Champ Clark Feud” | |||||||||||||
“When the Commoner Was the Hon. Secretary of State” | |||||||||||||
“Did Bryan Throw Away the Presidency in 1906?” | |||||||||||||
BOX 733 | “Who Was the Original Bryan Man?” | ||||||||||||
“Bryan and His Grape Juice Breakfasts” | |||||||||||||
“Was Bryan, as He Believed, Elected in 1896?” | |||||||||||||
“Wilson and Bryan Contrasted” | |||||||||||||
“When Bryan Got Mad” | |||||||||||||
“When Bryan Called the ’Figgers'” | |||||||||||||
“Bryan at Yale” | |||||||||||||
“The Great ’Silver Duel' Between Bryan and Hill” | |||||||||||||
“Bryan's Fight for ’One Term for President” | |||||||||||||
“When Bryan Was Actually a Dictator” | |||||||||||||
Fragments | |||||||||||||
Articles on Woodrow Wilson and the Cabinet | |||||||||||||
Correspondence, 1925-1926 | |||||||||||||
“Progress in North Carolina,” 1926, Sept. | |||||||||||||
“The Naval Battle of Paris,” circa 1926 | |||||||||||||
[Admiral Sims] circa 1927 | |||||||||||||
Syndicated column | |||||||||||||
Proofs | |||||||||||||
1929-1932 | |||||||||||||
(7 folders) | |||||||||||||
BOX 734 | Undated | ||||||||||||
Correspondence, 1924-1932 | |||||||||||||
(8 folders) | |||||||||||||
BOX 735 | 1930, July 12, “The Problem of Haiti,” Saturday Evening Post | ||||||||||||
(3 folders) | |||||||||||||
1933, Sept., “The New Deal Traces Its Ancestry Back to Jefferson,' Today | |||||||||||||
circa 1933, “Fifty Years of It” | |||||||||||||
1934, Sept. 8, “Navy Honors General Pershing on His Birthday,” Army and Navy Journal | |||||||||||||
1934, Sept., Review of The Idea of National Interest | |||||||||||||
circa 1935, Mar, [Haywood County] The Mountaineer | |||||||||||||
1935, Apr., “To Foster Patriotism and Secure Liberty,” The Note Book | |||||||||||||
1936, Feb., “Col. L. L. Polk as I Knew Him,” Progressive Farmer | |||||||||||||
1936, June, [Significance of July 4] | |||||||||||||
1936, July, “Chicken Itza and Uxmal,” American Foreign Service Journal | |||||||||||||
1936, circa Aug. “The Constitution Was Made for Man Not Man for the Constitution,” World Affairs Interpreter | |||||||||||||
circa 1936, Foreword to The Crusading Commoner | |||||||||||||
1937, Mar., “The Most Solemn Thrill of the World War: 4 July 1917” | |||||||||||||
1937, Foreword to The Republic of Czechoslovakia (includes correspondence with Vlastimil Kymal) | |||||||||||||
circa 1938, July, [The Southern Economy] | |||||||||||||
1938, Aug., “The American Navy in the World War,” Army and Navy Journal | |||||||||||||
circa 1939, [U.S. Entry Into World War I] | |||||||||||||
circa 1940, Nov., “Eyes North, Eyes South,” Hoy | |||||||||||||
circa 1940, “Benjamin Ryan Tillman” | |||||||||||||
1941, June, Article for the Edmund Burke American Memorial Committee, “Edmund Burke Still Lives in North Carolina,” and correspondence, 1939-1941 | |||||||||||||
1941, July 4, [Pan Americanism] Democracia | |||||||||||||
1941, July, “This Is Our Hemisphere,” Mexican-American Review | |||||||||||||
1941, July-Aug., “The South and World Affairs” | |||||||||||||
circa 1941, “Who Was This Chapman and When Did He Crow?” | |||||||||||||
1942, Jan., “Our Bill of Rights,” Opinion | |||||||||||||
circa 1942, Dec., [Woodrow Wilson] | |||||||||||||
circa 1942, “Enemy Number One” | |||||||||||||
circa 1944, “Can a Southerner Be a Liberal?” | |||||||||||||
1945, Jan., "Who was Chapman and When Did He Crow?" | |||||||||||||
1945, May 20, Article for Associated Press [1918 Peace Plan] | |||||||||||||
1946, “North Carolina's Part in the Wilson Administration” | |||||||||||||
undated, “The Boy Is Father to the Man” | |||||||||||||
undated, “Bryan an Apostle of Peace” | |||||||||||||
BOX 736 | undated, “Bryan and the Mexican Revolution” | ||||||||||||
Next Page » |