Showing Collections: 1391 - 1400 of 1758
Ruthanna Simms Collection
Ruthanna Mary Simms was a lifelong Friend who spent most of her life as an employee of Quaker organizations. This small collection consists of materials relating to civil rights and peace that she preserved in the last decade of her life.
S. Edgar Nicholson Papers
Samuel Edgar Nicholson (1862-1934), Earlham 1885, was a Friends minister, temperance advocate, member of the Indiana state legislature (1893-1917), editor of the American Friend (1913-1917), and for 30 years the secretary of the Anti-Saloon League. This folder consists of correspondence and an essay on the Five Years Meeting. Subjects include temperance work, Earlham College, the 1920 World Conference of Friends in London, and the elections of 1920 and 1928.
S. Smith Holloway Collection
S. Smith Holloway (1810-1890) was a Gurneyite Friend and physician who lived in Belmont County, Ohio, and Wabash and Henry Counties in Indiana. The collection consists of typescripts of diaries of trips in 1832 and 1840 from Belmont County through Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan.
Sabron Newton Collection
Sabron Reynolds Newton Historical Materials
Two typescript compilations: "Time Line Showing Some Quaker Connections with the Holiness and Missions Movements and with Japan and Japanese-Americans Before and After World War II" and "Time-Line for Some Southern California/Pacific Rim Quaker Connections and Roots," 2019
Saint Mary's Monthly Meeting
Salem Monthly Meeting
Samuel C. Mills Collection
The Samuel C. Mills Collection consists of five small notebooks, one of which bears Flora P. Mills’s name. Three are synopses of sermons and lectures, some dated. The other two contain addresses, financial records, and notes on religious meetings and conventions.
Samuel Comfort Papers
Letters sent and received by Samuel Comfort (1776-1862), a Hicksite Friend and recorded minister of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Several correspondents were leading Hicksite Friends in Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Ohio.
Samuel H. Morris Diary
Diary of Samuel J. Morris, Jacksonburg, Indiana, Dec. 1904-Sept. 1914. Morris made almost daily entries, many of which are unusually candid and colorful in his description of his life and the lives of his family and neighbors.