Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

Search Results

Display    Results Per Page
Displaying results 3661 - 3670 of 3845

Interview with John Frederick Campbell, July 23, 2004

Date
2004-07-23
Description
Narrator affiliation: Operations Mining Superintendent, Reynolds Electrical and Engineering Company (REECo)

Text

Interview with Fred Ray Huckabee, January 21, 2005

Date
2005-01-21
Description
Narrator affiliation: Supervisory General Engineer, Chief Test Construction Branch, U.S. Department of Energy

Text

Interview with A. Costandina (Dina) Titus, September 28, 2004

Date
2004-09-28
Description
Narrator affiliation: Political Scientist; Scholar of Nuclear Testing in Nevada

Text

Laura Gentry interview, February 26, 1977: transcript

Date
1977-02-26
Description

On February 26, 1977, collector Harold May interviewed Laura Gentry (born May 1897 in St. Thomas, Nevada) at her cabin in Gold Butte, Nevada. In this interview, Laura Gentry discusses living in St. Thomas and Overton, Nevada. She discusses the development of the Overton and Gold Butte areas of Nevada as well as the people involved in mining in these areas.

Text

Transcript of interview with Mary Kreuzer by Patricia Kohlman, December 15, 1975

Date
1975-12-15
Description

On December 15, 1975, Patricia Kohlman interviewed Mary Kreuzer (born 1923 in Las Vegas, Nevada) in her home in Las Vegas. The two discuss Kreuzer’s childhood, as well as the different addresses that she’s lived at in Las Vegas. The interview concludes with a discussion on entertainment and small businesses before the population boom in Southern Nevada.

Text

Transcript of a narrative by Lucile Bunker, March 10, 1977

Date
1977-03-10
Description
An oral history statement conducted by herself. Lucile Whitehead Bunker (b. 1907 in Overton, Nevada), at the request of Doreen Day, provides an oral history statement about her experiences growing up and living in Southern Nevada. Bunker recalls her first experiences in Las Vegas and Overton and talks about her family, specifically about her mother, an ice cream maker, and father, the first assessor of Clark County. She then speaks about her various positions, including being a secretary at a school and law firm, a schoolteacher, and a deputy county clerk. She also describes her experiences as the wife of former Senator Berkeley Bunker, particularly living in Washington, D.C. where she met several presidents and attended several events with other lawmakers’ wives. Bunker additionally talks about her missionary work in her church and the various locations to which she travelled. She concludes the statement by talking about her interests in china painting, the early above-ground atomic testing, and the building of Hoover Dam.

Text