Showing Collections: 2671 - 2680 of 5329
Laurens and Butternuts Monthly Meetings (Hicksite) Records
Includes minutes of the men's meeting for business, 1828-1855.
Laurie-Robbins family papers
This collection consists of the papers of the Laurie and Robbins families. Included are the copy books of Abigail and Jane Laurie, in which are their own poetry and works by various authors. Also included are fragments of the marriage certificate of Thomas Laurie and the will of Jacob Laurie. Various unsigned letters addressed to Hannah L. Robbins and an undated arithmetic worksheet are included as well.
Wayne Lauser Collected Papers
Collection consists of materials relating to Lauser's walk from Cleveland to Washington D.C., the federal lawsuit against him, his sentencing, and his time in prison.
Lawyers Alliance for Nuclear Arms Control Collected Records
Collection includes printed correspondence, pamphlets, flyers, and subject/reference files.
Lawyers Committee on American Policy Towards Vietnam Collected Records
Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy Collected Records
Collection includes memoranda, correspondence (1981-1988), meeting minutes, financial records, litigation files, newspaper clippings, flyers, and subject/reference files about other antinuclear organizations.
Frieda Langer Lazarus Collected Papers
Collection consists of correspondence and printed matter related to Lazarus's involvement as Chair of the War Resisters League's Conscientious Objector Problems Committee, 1943-1946.
Le Ray Monthly Meeting (Pre-Separation and Hicksite) Records
Records of Le Ray Monthly Meeting (Hicksite), 1815-1867. Includes: Minutes, 1815-1867; Vital records 1815-1867.
Le Ray Quarterly Meeting (Orthodox) Records
Records of LeRay Quarterly Meeting (Orthodox), 1830-1871. Includes: Women's Minutes, 1830-1871.
Henry Tyson Lea correspondence received
The collection contains correspondence received by Henry Tyson Lea of Methuen and Lawrence, Mass., from his Kummer cousins, Edith, Mary C., and Lucy Kummer, who lived in West Medford, Mass. Most of the letters are from Lucy whose letters describe her early years as a teacher and the places she visits, including a walking trip with the Appalachian Club to Walden in a November 1887. A letter dated 1913 is directed to Henry's widow.