Showing Records: 1 - 30 of 293
Brochure and illustrated handbook, 1904
German postcard maps, 1930 - 1933
Three propaganda postcards produced to communicate perceived threats faced by Germany in the years preceding World War II. Postcards are entitled "Wer braucht Sicherheit im Osten?" ["Who Needs Security in the East?]; "Deutschlands Abrukung und die RĂ¼stung siner Nachbarn" ["Germany's Disarmament and the Armament of its Neighbors"]; "Die Luftbedrohung Deutschlands" ["The Air Threat to Germany"].
German Propaganda Leaflets to Soviet Soldiers
I. Louisiana Purchase Exposition: Promotional Materials
This series consists of materials promoting the Louisiana Purchase.
II. Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence
This series consists of correspondence sent and received by Thomas W. Cridler.
III. Thomas Wilbur Cridler International Correspondence
This series consists of international correspondence sent and received by Thomas W. Cridler, arranged by country.
IV. Speeches
This series includes copies of speeches given to the International Art Association in Rome, a group of Republicans in West Virginia, the American Chamber of Commerce in Paris, and the LaFayette DuPont Masonic Lodge in Washington, DC regarding his experiences in Russia. Cridler describes at length his meeting with Czar Nicholas II and states "his hardest work was done in Russia; my proudest success achieved there."
Photographs, Miscellaneous, undated
Photographs of occupied Warsaw taken by Eugeniusz Haneman, 1944 - 1945
Thomas W. Cridler Business Cards, [1901-1904]
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1898-1900
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1901 February
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1901 March-December
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 January
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 February-May
Includes a notarized statement from A.C. Baker, a United States naval officer and Assistant Chief of Transportation Exhibits at the world's fair, regarding the continuing feud between Cridler and Colonel William McKay. Baker believes McKay is "going to write a letter to President Francis telling what his opinion was of Cridler and how unfit he was to perform his duties with the Louisiana Purchase Exposition." He is also convinced McKay "instituted the suit to put Cridler in a hole."
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 June
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 July 1-8
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 July 9-30
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 August 1-15
Thomas W. Cridler General Correspondence, 1902 August 16-28
Includes a retained copy of a letter Cridler wrote to Walter B. Stevens, Secretary of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. Cridler explains his "rule" for correspondence whereby he "treats only one subject in each letter." He further adds that his correspondence is "arranged under countries." He implores Stevens to bear this in mind when writing to him, and to refrain from "lumping several subjects together" in single letters.