Georgia -- Carrollton -- History
Found in 44 Collections and/or Records:
Hargrave Family papers
This collection consists of original letters and photographs, as well as copies of both, from the Hargrave family of Carroll County, Georgia.
Kate Harman papers
Papers of Kate Harman, known as “Mama Kate.” Harman was the food service manager for West Georgia College’s snack bar for eight years.
Susan Hayward collection
A collection of materials related to the life and career of Susan Hayward, an Academy Award-winning actress of the mid-twentieth century. Her career spanned several decades, from the 1940s to the 1970s.
Myron House oral history collection
This collection contains 187 cassette tapes, 31 compact discs, 9 VHS tapes, and six paper transcripts. The recordings are oral history interviews, speeches, and musical instruction and performances.
Anne G. Ingram papers
Papers of Anne G. Ingram, daughter of first West Georgia College president, Irvine S. Ingram, and his wife Martha Munro.
Frances Barrow Jackson collection
Photographs and other materials pertaining to the Barr, Barrow, Jackson, Lovvorn, and Morris families from Bowdon.
kNow Justice, kNow Peace photographs
Photographs of the kNow Justice, kNow Peace march on the University of West Georgia campus which occurred on December 2, 2014.
Lit-Mu Club records
Pamphlets and other materials from a literary arts club in Carrollton, Georgia.
Benjamin Mandeville Long papers
Photographs, negatives, scrapbooks, and other materials of Benjamin Mandeville Long (1881-1973), the oldest child of two-time Carrollton mayor Henry and Lula Long. After serving in the U.S. Army, Long began a banking career in Cordova, Alabama in 1906. He returned to Carrollton in 1914 and worked in the Peoples Bank until 1917 when he opened Long Insurance Agency. Long remained in insurance from 1917 until the late 1960s when he retired.
Mandeville Mills collection
Collection includes corporate magazine Mandeville Yarns, medallions issued for the fiftieth anniversary in 1952, and “Recollections of Mandeville Mills” by Miss Mary Lovvorn.