Showing Collections: 21 - 30 of 148
First Friday Luncheon Club records
The First Friday Luncheon Club records, 1957-1968, contains records about the First Friday Luncheon Club collected by an unknown creator. It can be presumed that the creator was an officer and/or member of the Board of Governors of this organization. This club allowed Catholic men to network and connect with one another at the monthly meetings.
Flannery O'Connor correspondence collection
Govans history collection
The Govans history collection, 1919-1962, contains materials that document the history of the Govans neighborhood in Baltimore, Maryland. This is an artificially assembled collection, with material donated to or purchased by the Loyola Notre Dame Library. The collection includes materials relating to businesses, churches, and transportation in Govans.
Harry Earl Montgomery collection of Lincoln materials
The Harry Earl Montgomery collection of Lincoln materials, 1831-1913, contains material relating to the life and death of Abraham Lincoln, as well as materials documenting memorials to Lincoln. Harry Earl Montgomery (1873-1915) was a lawyer in Buffalo, New York. He was a collector known for his collections of ancient coins and materials on Abraham Lincoln.
Herbert R. O'Conor and Herbert R. O'Conor, Jr. correspondence collection
Herman I. Storck, S.J. papers
The Herman I. Storck, S.J. papers, 1933, contain a scrapbook created by Storck that documents his travels to Rome and the Holy Land.
Historical newspapers collection
Intaglio prints of outdoor scenes
The Intaglio prints of outdoor scenes collection consists of two prints created with etching, aquatint, and hand coloring. The first, titled "Vannes 'Au Petit Pot,'" depicts several buildings in Vannes, France in the evening as a person walks beside them carrying a basket. The second, titled "Le Ruitscoud(?) en Hiver," depicts a person in red standing near a river in pale winter light.
James Cardinal Gibbons memorabilia collection
James Monroe check
The James Monroe check, 1823, contains the signature of James Monroe, the fifth President of the United States, as written on a Bank of the United States note. The cancelled check is written to the order of J. Ingersoll for four hundred dollars.
