National Archives microfilm publications ; microcopy no. 247
Notes
Library owns: Roll 9, Item No. 1, Rough Journals 1774-1789 -- Roll 13, Item No. 1 Rough Journals 1774-1789 -- Roll 60, Item No. 46, Proposals on locating the seat of government and printing the journals -- Roll 83, Item No. 69, Pennsylvania State Papers 1775-1791 -- Roll 178, Item Nos. 159 and 160, Letters from Generals Putnam, Mercer, Lewis, Thompson, Ward, Weedon, Hand, Conway, Sullivan, and Howe 1775-1785 -- Roll 183, Item No. 166, Letters and Papers Relating to Canadian Affairs, Sullivan's Expedition, and the Northern Indians 1775-1779.
Listed in "Microfilm resources for research," 1986 as: M247.
Indexes compiled by John P. Butler.
"The records reproduced in the microfilm publication are from Records of the Continental and Confederation Congresses and the Constitutional Convention record group 360 in the National Archives."
Reproduced from original documents issued under the title Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789.
Photograph- Women's Republican Club Dinner, Oct. 22, 1952. At left, Governor Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, only Republican governor south of Mason and Dixon, nominated D. D. Eisenhower for President at Nation Republican Convention, Chicago. At center, Bertha Cochran Landis, and at right, Mrs. H. C. Kreisle, president of the Women's Republican Club.
Photograph- Women's Republican Club Dinner, Oct. 22, 1952. At left, Governor Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, only Republican governor south of Mason and Dixon, nominated D. D. Eisenhower for President at Nation Republican Convention, Chicago. At center, Bertha Cochran Landis, and at right, Mrs. H. C. Kreisle, president of the Women's Republican Club.
Description
Women's Republican Club Dinner, Oct. 22, 1952. At left, Governor Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, only Republican governor south of Mason and Dixon, nominated D. D. Eisenhower for President at Nation Republican Convention, Chicago. At center, Bertha Cochran Landis, and at right, Mrs. H. C. Kreisle, president of the Women's Republican Club.
C. Jared Ingersoll, Governor John S. Fine, Judge Nochem S. Winnet, Mayor Fred T. Grant of Sunbury, and Mayor Kendig C. Bare of Lancaster pose for picture at Governor's Capitol luncheon on October 22, 1951 where 35 Pennsylvania political, business and civic leaders obtained first-hand knowledge of city-county amendment to modernize structure of Philadelphia's governemnt and which had to be voted on throughout the state on election day, November 6, 1951.
Provenance
Gift of David Towle. See MG-747 Papers of Mayor Kendig Bare.
Mayor Kendig C. Bare, right, of Lancaster, PA, points to the Vienna Burg Theater as he stands on the balcony of Vienna's town hall overlooking the city's famed Ringstrasse. Bare attended the "11th International Congress of Mayors" in Vienna. Man at left is unidentified. Associated Press release attached to back of photograph.
Provenance
Gift of David Towle. See MG-747 Papers of Mayor Kendig Bare.