Folklorists -- Texas
Found in 895 Collections and/or Records:
Condolence letters (H-R), 1964
Condolence letters (S-Z), 1964
Condolences, 1964-1965
Contents from Dobie's wallet, 1914-1921
Cook, Alice, 1988
Hudson wrote several obituaries for people close to him over the years including Bertha McKee Dobie (J. Frank Dobie’s wife), Frank Wardlaw (Founder of the University of Texas Press and the Texas A&M University Press), and Alice Cook (Hudson’s college English teacher). These files also include notes Hudson used to write the obituaries.
Coppini Alamo Monument, correspondence, drafts, and clippings, 1935-1940
“Corpus Christi Caller-Times Sunday, featuring King Ranch”, July 12, 1953
Corpus Christi Public Schools Certificate of Merit, 1971
This series contains material that helps to illustrate Mr. and Ms. Mireles’ life-long teaching careers. Mr. Mireles’ career in particular can be traced through his teaching contracts, and his Texas Teacher Retirement System statements in this series.
Correspondence
Correspondence, 1970-1991
Correspondence, 1930-1975, undated
This series includes both correspondence belonging to E.E. Mireles and Jovita González Mireles, as well as correspondence between them. Of particular interest are the letters from Ms. Mireles to Mr. Mireles during the summer of 1956, while she was away in Mexico, which offer insight into their relationship.
Correspondence, 1949-1994
Correspondence is arranged in the following files: To Wilson Hudson, From Wilson Hudson as well as About Wilson Hudson. All are arranged in alphabetical order. His correspondence as a member of the Texas Folklore Society is found within Series III.
Correspondence, 1935-1936, undated
Series II contains personal correspondence, organized alphabetically. Some folders include photographs and published materials. Certain letters are only addressed to or from nicknames, including “Bibba” (Deborah Dobie) and “Guyo” (Guy Skiles). Of particular note is a series of letters sent between Dobie, and his wife Deborah Dobie in 1935-1936, while he was traveling the state collecting historical artifacts for the Texas Centennial Exposition’s Hall of State.