Wright (1917-7/1921 & 1934-1939) 7/15/2015
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Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan. -
The Arkansas River Flood of June 3-5, 1921
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR ALBERT B. FALL, Secretary UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEORGE 0ns SMITH, Director Water-Supply Paper 4$7 THE ARKANSAS RIVER FLOOD OF JUNE 3-5, 1921 BY ROBERT FOLLANS^EE AND EDWARD E. JON^S WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1922 i> CONTENTS. .Page. Introduction________________ ___ 5 Acknowledgments ___ __________ 6 Summary of flood losses-__________ _ 6 Progress of flood crest through Arkansas Valley _____________ 8 Topography of Arkansas basin_______________ _________ 9 Cause of flood______________1___________ ______ 11 Principal areas of intense rainfall____ ___ _ 15 Effect of reservoirs on the flood__________________________ 16 Flood flows_______________________________________ 19 Method of determination________________ ______ _ 19 The flood between Canon City and Pueblo_________________ 23 The flood at Pueblo________________________________ 23 General features_____________________________ 23 Arrival of tributary flood crests _______________ 25 Maximum discharge__________________________ 26 Total discharge_____________________________ 27 The flood below Pueblo_____________________________ 30 General features _________ _______________ 30 Tributary streams_____________________________ 31 Fountain Creek____________________________ 31 St. Charles River___________________________ 33 Chico Creek_______________________________ 34 Previous floods i____________________________________ 35 Flood of Indian legend_____________________________ 35 Floods of authentic record__________________________ 36 Maximum discharges -
Death Certificate Index - Cass County (1917-June 1921)
Death Certificate Index - Cass County (1917-June 1921) Mother's Maiden Name Birth Date Birth Place Death Date County Number Box Name Albert, Mahale 30 June 1845 Ohio 02 May 1921 Cass Lautinzer 15-02042 D2071 Alger, Avis 22 Dec. 1846 Ohio 04 Nov. 1917 Cass 15-01293 D2070 Allbright, Doris 28 Sept. 1904 Iowa 24 Nov. 1918 Cass Lipp 15-01467 D2071 Anders, Mark 06 Dec. 1852 Iowa 01 Feb. 1920 Cass 15-01773 D2071 Andersen, Anna 05 Apr. 1880 Iowa 23 June 1920 Cass Jensen 15-01858 D2071 Andersen, Richard 16 Mar. 1853 Ohio 26 Apr. 1918 Cass Patten 15-01363 D2071 Anderson, Andrew O. 24 July 1852 Sweden 23 Aug. 1919 Cass Unknown 15-01665 D2071 Anderson, George Boyd 09 June 1918 Iowa 22 June 1918 Cass Christensen 15-01393 D2071 Anderson, Oscar 14 June 1872 Iowa 29 June 1917 Cass Erickson 15-01240 D2070 Anderson, Peter Sr. 01 Jan. 1835 Sweden 26 Jan. 1920 Cass Unknown 15-01753 D2071 Andrews, Mary Olive 22 May 1855 Ohio 25 May 1919 Cass Darnes 15-01624 D2071 Angell, James William 13 Apr. 1861 Iowa 27 Dec. 1918 Cass Ehle 15-01489 D2071 Archer, Eva 25 Oct. 1867 Missouri 19 Nov. 1919 Cass Lueder 15-01711 D2071 Archer, Geraldine Elizabeth 23 Sept. 1841 Michigan 01 Jan. 1921 Cass Cady 15-01973 D2071 Archer, Sam Bradford 28 Apr. 1865 Illinois 11 Aug. 1918 Cass Edwards 15-01417 D2071 Ashley, Lewis 30 Dec. 1854 Canada 26 Dec. 1919 Cass Unknown 15-01732 D2071 Ashwood, James Martin Woodrow 23 Sept. 1918 Iowa 09 Feb. -
Palestine. Disturbances in May, 1921. Reports of the Commission Of
^sssaBomma^ma^am ^ f PALESTINE. DISTURBANCES IN MAY, 1921. Reports of the Commission of Inquiry WITH Correspondence Relating Thereto. Fresented to Parliament by Com7nand of His Majesty, October, 1921. LONDON: PUBLISHED BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE. To be purchased through any Bookseller or directly from H.M. STATIONERY OFFICE at the following addresses: Imperial Housk, Kinosway, London, W.C. 2, and 23, Abingdon Street, London, S.W.I: 37, Peter Street, Manchester; 1, St, Andrew's Crescent, Cardiff; 2 <, Forth Street, Edinburgh ; or from BASON & SON, Ltd., 40 & 41, Lower Sackville Street, Dublin. 1921. Price One Shilling Net, [Cmd. 1540.] I N LIST OF PAPERSi PALESTINE. DISTURBANCES IN MAY, 1921. Reports of the Commission of Inquiry with Correspondence relating thereto. No. 1 TERMS OF REFERENCE. A. I APPOINT His Honour Sir Thomas Haycraft, Chief Justice of Palestine, Mr. H. C. Luke, Assistant Governor of Jerusalem, and Mr. Stubbs, of the Legal Department, to be a Commission to inquire into the recent disturbances in the town and neighbourhood of Jaffa, and to report thereon > And I appoint Sir Thomas Haycraft to be the Chairman, and Aref Pasha Dejani El Daoudi, Elias Eff. Mushabbeck and Dr. Eliash to be assessors to the Commission. The Commission shall have all the powers specified in Article 2 of the Commission of Inquiries Ordinance, 1921. HERBERT SAMUEL, High Commissioner for Palestine. 7th May, 1921. (B C-82) Wt. 17098-761 1500/90 11/21 H & S, Ltd. * B. I DIRECT the Commission of Inquiry, appointed by Order dated the 7th of May to inquire into and report upon the recent disturbances in the town and neighbourhood of Jaffa, to extend their inquiries and report further upon recent disturbances which have taken place in any part of the District of Jaffa or elsewhere in Palestine. -
Death Certificate Index - Greene (1920-June 1921, 1936-1939) 4/16/2015
Death Certificate Index - Greene (1920-June 1921, 1936-1939) 4/16/2015 Name Birth Date Birth Place Death Date County Mother's Maiden Name Number Box Abraham, Alice Belle 02 Aug. 1871 Iowa 02 Dec. 1937 Greene Smith H37-0108 D2830 Adamson, Chalkley E. 05 July 1880 Iowa 14 Oct. 1920 Greene Allman 37-01461 D2184 Adkins, Amanda Jane 18 Sept. 1853 Iowa 29 Jan. 1936 Greene G37-0015D2793 Adkins, Minnie Belle 08 Apr. 1876 Iowa 16 Mar. 1936 Greene Pruitt G37-0033 D2793 Adrian, Sarah Jane 27 Dec. 1869 Illinois 23 Oct. 1937 Greene Guyer H37-0099 D2830 Ainsworth, Harriet Mary 06 Aug. 1866 Iowa 14 Apr. 1937 Greene Stevens H37-0039 D2830 Albert, Nellie Mabele 31 Jan. 1879 Nebraska 05 Feb. 1938 Greene Pendleton J37-0021 D2864 Allan, Lucenda 18 June 1843 Ohio 04 Feb. 1920 Greene Wise 37-01366 D2184 Allen, Alexander 18 Aug. 1870 Ireland 30 Dec. 1937 Greene Anderson H37-0118 D2830 Allison, Harold A. 01 Dec. 1908 Washington 22 July 1939 Greene Lillard 37-0075 D2897 Ammerman, Samuel Bruce 20 May 1843 Illinois 25 July 1920 Greene Unknown 37-01433 D2184 Anchutz, Maria 25 Jan. 1864 Germany 13 Mar. 1938 Greene Unknown J37-0041 D2864 Anderson, Amarda J. 22 Dec. 1843 Illinois 12 Feb. 1920 Greene Waters 37-01368 D2184 Anderson, Carl Manford 1882 Sweden 08 Dec. 1920 Greene Johnson 37-01479 D2184 Anderson, Darrow Wesley 08 Oct. 1938 Iowa 10 Oct. 1938 Greene Thomsen J37-0134 D2864 Anderson, Eleanor Jane 03 Oct. 1853 Ohio 20 June 1938 Greene Horney J37-0069 D2864 Anderson, Howard Mairon 13 July 1890 Iowa 01 Jan. -
Annual Report of the Colonies, Kenya, 1921
FEB 2 6 1! COLONIAL REPORTS—ANNUAL. No. 1153. OLONY & PROTECTORATE OF KENYA. REPORT FOR 1921 1st APRIL TO 31st DECEMBER. (For Report for 1920-21 see No. 1122.) LONDON: ISTED <fc PUBLISHED BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE phased through any Bookseller or directly from H.M. STATIONERY OFFICE 1 the following addresses: Imperial House. KIngsway, London. W.Ca, and 28 Abingdon Street. London. S.W.i; 37 Peter Street. Manchester: s St. Andrew's Crescent. Cardiff; or 23 Forth Street. Edinburgh. 1923 Price 9d. net. 2 COLONIAL HEPOHTS—ANNUAL. INDEX. PREFACE t. -GKNKRAlv OBSERVATIONS A. Legislation ... v v B. Alienated Areas C. Native Areas ... .V. ... ... D. Northern Frontier District E. Population ... v - F. Immigration G. Public Health ',, . - 11.—GOVERNMENT FINANCE III. PROGRESS OF TRADE. AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRY A. Trade B. Agriculture and Stock-raising .. C. Mining D. Forests ... E. Banking F Position and Prospects of Commerce ... G. Climate ... ... , IV. COMMUNICATIONS A. Railways B. Roads G. Post and Telegraphs D. Shipping E. Public Works . V.—EDUCATION VI.—GAME KKNYA, 1921. No. 1158. REPORT ON THE COLONY AND PROTECTORATE OF KENYA FOR 1921.* (1st APRIL TO 31st DECEMBER). PREFACE. The territories comprised under the name of " Kenya Colony nd Protectorate," until recently known as the East Africa Pro- wtorate, consist of about 248,800 square miles, the eastern oundary of which was defined along the river Jtiha by an greemeiti with Italy in 1891, and on the north by an agree- lent with Abyssinia in 1908. On the west the Colony adjoins ie Uganda Protectorate, and on the south the mandated 'anganyika Territory. -
The International Hydrographic Bureau : 50 Years of Progress
THE INTERNATIONAL HYDROGRAPHIC BUREAU : 50 YEARS OF PROGRESS by Captain Victor A. M o i t o r e t , U.S. N avy (R et.) Directing Committee, I.H.B. I. — PROLOGUE The year is 1900, and a new century is about to begin. In 1900 : — In Norw ay a 51-year old naval officer, Samuel Harris M ü l l e r , was promoted to the rank of Captain, continuing in his duties as Chief of the Hydrographic Section of the Norwegian Survey Office. — In The Hague a 43-year old Dutch naval officer named Johan Marie P h a f f completed his first full year as Assistant to the Chief of the Hydro- graphic Service. — In Chinese waters Lieutenant Commander Albert Parker N i b l a c k of the U.S. Navy, 41-years old and already twice the winner of the U.S. Naval Institute’s annual prize essay contest, was seeing considerable excitement while serving during the Boxer campaign. In those same waters the cruiser USS Vicksburg was participating in the actions waged by the allied foreign powers against the Boxer uprising in northeast China, and serving aboard this ship was a 34-year old Lieutenant named Andrew Theodore L o n g . — On the Australian station, completing his first year in the rank of Commander, R.N., 37-year old John Franklin P a r r y was in command of H.M.S. D a rt doing important hydrographic surveys. This was his sixteenth year in H.M. Surveying Service, and he was now packing up to leave this command after five years aboard to return to England to become Chief Civil Assistant to the Hydrographer. -
The Foreign Service Journal, June
AMERICAN uJNbuLAiti JUL 12 . 1921 KOBE.JAPAN I CONSUL1 LLETIN piTDi ISHED MONTHLY WITH THE COOPERATION OF THE AMERICAN CONSULAR ASSOCIATION TO FURTHER AMERICAN INTERESTS IN FOREIGN LANDS THROUGH THF. CONSULAR SFRVICE No. 4 VOL. 3 JUNE 1921 AMERICAN COTTON AT LIVERPOOL Phntnarabh furnished by Consul Horace Lee Washington, showing American cotton on dock at Liverpool awaiting removal to storage warehouse. More than eleven million centals (100 lbs each)l oj' A™encan cott0n were imported at Liverpool during 1919, and the value thereof exceeded $530,000,00u. EDITOR & PUBLISHER, J. W. YOUNG, TIFFIN BUILDING, Long Island City, N. Y. Rogers Introduces New Bill Original Proposals of Massachusetts Representative for Reorganization of Foreign Service Extended to Include Pension System—Hearings This Summer Possibly. Immediately upon the meeting of Congress in special Counselors of Embassy would be recommissioned Foreign session, April 11th, Representative John Jacob Rogers of Service officers of Class I, and those acting as Counselors Massachusetts introduced a bill (H. R. 17) “for the of Legation would be recommissioned Foreign Service reorganization and improvement of the Foreign Service officers of Class II. Secretaries of Class I, not Counselors of the United States, and for other purposes.” The chief of Embassy or Legation, would be recommissioned For¬ features of the bill, which is a considerably enlarged eign Service officers of Class III, and so on. revision of the bill for the improvement of the Service On the consular side, Consuls General of Classes I and (H. R. 11058) which Mr. Rogers had before the last II would be recommissioned Foreign Service officers of session of Congress, are these: Class I. -
Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 Rev
OSU-Tulsa Library Ruth Sigler Avery collection Series 1: Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 Rev. December 2016 Research materials (arranged alphabetically by subject.) Box 1 “1921 Race Riot. What Was..What Is” Special issue of The Oklahoma Eagle . Feb 2003. Address and Resolutions to the Governor of Oklahoma and its Citizens “Address and Resolutions to the Governor of Oklahoma and its Citizens.” Written by the “Colored Citizens of Leavenworth.” Photocopied typescript, 3p. Photocopy of typed letter from the Governor’s office to T.W. Bell acknowledging receipt of the Address, etc. 2 Jul 1921, 1s. Allstrom, Marguerite Griffith Handwritten comments regarding an interview conducted by Ruth Avery, 6 Nov 1973. Consists of a two-paragraph portion of Avery’s further comments on other interviews. American Civil War Illustrated history cards by Panarizon Publishing Corp. depicting people, places, battles, and other events of the war. 73 cards. American Red Cross Angels of Mercy. The American Red Cross and the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot. Robert N. Hower. 1993. (See online catalog record) Report on the Tulsa Race Riot Disaster Relief. Photocopied typescript, 38p. Disaster Relief Committee. Tulsa County Chapter Report. Photocopied typescript, 31 Dec 1921, 37p. American Violence. A Documentary History Richard Hofstadter and Michael Wallace, eds. Avery’s typed and carbon copy typed page notes and transcriptions of excerpts. 7 pieces. “America’s Biggest Race War” Photocopy of a shaped prose poem, 1p. The Anatomy of Four Race Riots Lee E. Williams and Lee E. Williams II (Jackson, Mississippi: University & College Press, 1972). Photocopied excerpts from the book with Avery’s typed and handwritten notations, 4p. -
When Police Fail to Protect: Remembering the Tulsa Riot of 1921
When Police Fail to Protect: Remembering the Tulsa Riot of 1921 Maya Plimack Senior Division Historical Paper Paper Length: 2,493 words Plimack 1 On May 31, 1921 in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Dick Rowland, an African American man, was accused of assault by a young white woman. In the days that followed, a riot broke out and several city blocks of the African American neighborhood of Greenwood - known as “Black Wall Street” - were burned to the ground, leaving many dead and others homeless. A pre-existing environment of racial tension, conflict sparked by an alleged assault, and the failure of police to attempt a compromise led to the destruction of Tulsa’s African American community, which was slowly rebuilt over the next decade. The “Roaring Twenties,” as the era was called, was a time of great change that stressed the very fabric of America (Zeitz). The twenties marked the end of World War I, in which many black soldiers fought to prove themselves worthy of full citizenship rights. These soldiers returned home after several victories in Europe, only to find that their efforts were not acknowledged and segregation remained across the nation (“Black Men”). As the war began to wind down and a labor shortage arose in the North, an estimated six million black people moved northward toward urban centers between 1910 and 1940, in what became known as the first Great Migration (“The Great Migration”). This sparked a period of rapid urbanization, resulting in the spread of many ideas and the development of a rural-urban divide (Zeitz). A so-called “cultural civil war” began and Americans debated political issues such as women’s rights, Prohibition, and racism (Mintz). -
The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921: Determining
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by SHAREOK repository THE TULSA RACE RIOT OF 1921: DETERMINING ITS CAUSES AND FRAMING By CHRIS MESSER Bachelor of Science, Sociology Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 2003 Master of Science, Sociology Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 2005 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY July, 2008 THE TULSA RACE RIOT OF 1921: DETERMINING ITS CAUSES AND FRAMING Dissertation Approved: Dr. Patricia Bell Dissertation Adviser Dr. Gary Webb Dr. Beth Caniglia Dr. Jason Kirksey Dr. A. Gordon Emslie Dean of the Graduate College ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to express my deepest gratification to Dr. Patricia Bell for the countless number of hours she dedicated to assisting me, not only with my dissertation work, but a number of other endeavors as well. Your kindness, friendship, and humor will sincerely be missed. I would also like to thank my departmental committee members, Dr. Beth Caniglia and Dr. Gary Webb. Both of you are great teachers, researchers, and colleagues. Your participation in my dissertation meant so much to me. Thanks also to Dr. Jason Kirksey for stepping in on the project, despite the late request. So many students have had nothing but genuinely great things to say about you and your contribution to students and the university. I am also thankful for the several contributions Dr. Amilcar Shabazz made prior to his departure. There are others deserving of my gratitude as well. -
The Great Storm of May 1921: an Exemplar of a Dangerous Space
REVIEW ARTICLE The Great Storm of May 1921: An Exemplar of a Dangerous 10.1029/2019SW002195 Space Weather Event Special Section: Mike Hapgood1 Scientific Challenges of Space Weather Forecasting 1RAL Space, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Harwell Campus, Didcot, UK Including Extremes Key Points: Abstract We reconstruct the timeline of the extreme space weather event of May 1921, reviewing a • A review of scientific papers, wealth of reports from scientific literature, databases, newspaper reports, and reports by historians and newspapers, and other reports is astronomers. A series of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) bombarded Earth between 13 and 16 May, as shown used to build a timeline of the great geomagnetic storm of May 1921 by a series of sudden commencements observed across the global network of magnetometers. These • The first part of the storm created CMEs produced three major periods of geomagnetic activity. The first period followed the arrival of two conditions that enabled later activity CMEs on 13 May. These may have cleared much density from the inner heliosphere, enabling a subsequent to cause some of the most severe geoelectric fields on record CME to travel quickly to Earth and cause intense activity. Continuing moderate magnetic activity following • This timeline adds to the knowledge the first period may also have preconditioned the magnetosphere so it responded strongly to that later we can use to develop the scenarios CME. This arrived late on 14 May, driving a short period of very intense activity early on 15 May, including needed to plan mitigation of future fi severe space weather technological impacts indicative of strong geoelectric elds.