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Oliver Jack Kaneft letters, 1940-1943
Contains letters from Oliver Kaneft to his girlfriend, Teddy Love, who later became his wife. Many of the letters were written while Kaneft was a flight instructor for WWII fighter pilots at the Alabama Institute of Aeronautics in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Kappa Alpha Fraternity convention minutes, 1894
Minutes of the fourth annual convention of Kappa Alpha order, held at Auburn, Alabama, 8 June 1894. Francis Johnson Keene papers, 1843-1855
Ledger sheets of accounts recording the sale of lumber, flour, corn, etc. The collection also contains poems written by and arithmetic exercises done by Frances Johnson Keene. Amos Kendall letter, 1831 April 4
Letter dated 4 April 1834, to Captain Joseph L. Kuhn, late paymaster, Marine Corps, regarding accounts. E. J. Kennedy papers, late 1800s-early 1900
Unsorted correspondence, legal documents, clippings, photographs, etc. Edward J. Kennedy papers, 1875-1900
Personal and business correspondence, cancelled checks, misc. John Spinks Kennedy papers, 1858-1892
Confederate soldier (7th Alabama Infantry) from Lauderdale County, lawyer and cotton factory owner in Tuscaloosa. The Kettledrum records, 1888-1965
The organizational records of this Tuscaloosa literary club for women in Alabama, including minutes and scrapbooks, with photographs of and articles on early members, their husbands, their residences, and club meeting; and papers presented to the membership. Francis Scott Key letter, 1834 February 4
Written to Governor John Gayle, thanking him for a nice visit to Tuscaloosa. Also discusses congressional debate on the Bank of the U.S. Keyes Family papers, 1846-1944
Correspondence, diaries, biographical notes, scrapbooks, photographs, memorabilia and other papers. Concerns the emigration of the family of John Washington Keyes and his wife Julia Hentz Keyes to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, after the Civil War, and their subsequent travel all over the world. Of special interest is the diary Mr. Keyes kept during his trip from Montgomery to Rio de Janeiro and accounts by Julia Keyes called Our Life in Brazil concerning the establishment of "Dixie Island" there. The correspondence involves several other members of the family and falls into four categories: Alabama letters (1846-1865); Brazillian letters (1867-1935); American letters (1872-1944); and European letters (1900-1941). Finding aid available. Julia Praytor Killingsworth Vienna: Viena on the Tombigbee River, Pickens County, Alabama, 1934
Two versions of an article about this Alabama town, part of a series she wrote about Pickens County. Published in 1964 [WHERE?] William Edward Kimbrough From Hell to Breakfast: A Novel, 1940
Thesis, University of Alabama, 1940 Frank Ragan King letters, 1854; 1859
Letters from Burwell Boykin Lewis and Richard C. Jones Pat King letter, 1862 March 21
Written from Marine Hospital, Vicksburg, Mississippi to his brother. Requests money for tobacco and other necessities. One page is written on back of printed song “Run , Yank, or Die, composed by T.W. Crowson of the Alabama Hickories.” Mary Wallace Kirk papers, 1877-1898, 1978
Obituaries of Mary Wallace Kirk, author, artist, and trustee of Agnes Scott College; typescript of her story “The Law and the Land”; miscellaneous business and legal documents of James T. Kirk, attorney. Robert N. Kirk letter, 1848 June 23
Written from Pickens County, Alabama, to uncle Matthew Biggert Kirk, Lancaster Court House, South Carolina. Tells of setting up his medical practice and family news. Location of original unknown. Kirkman & Jackson letter, 1818 September 8
To James Penn, transmitting account against Mr. David Miller, “a merchant established at the falls of the Black Warrior” [Tuscaloosa], regarding recovery of debt. Rosser Kirkman and Company receipt, 1837 June 2
A receipt from Kirkman, Rosser and Company, for the shipment of several items by steamboat from New Orleans to Tuscumbia, Alabama for Joseph Johnson and Company of Madisonville, Tennessee, 2 June 1837. Foster Mark Kirksey papers, 1795-1953
Planter, commission merchant, Confederate commissary agent and sheriff of Greene County, Alabama. Personal & business correspondence, papers relating to the Confederate Commissary Department, tax records, sheriff's papers (1845-1848) and business and plantation records of Kirksey and members of his family, including his wife, Margaretta Lucretia (Liston) Kirksey, his brother Robert Brown Kirksey, sons Harold A. and Robert Elisha, his father-in-law Jonathan Allen Liston (state legislator of South Bend and Southport, Indiana), and Thomas M. Duke of Texas. Includes Civil War letters from S.J. Nunnelee, a prisoner of war held at Camp Chase, Ohio, to Jonathan A. Liston; letter from Stephen F. Austin to Thomas M. Duke; and business papers relating to the firms Kirksey & Carpenter (1866-1871) and Dew & Kirksey (1872-1889), commission merchants of Mobile. Knabe & Scott records, 1887-1888
Bound volumes, 14 1/2" X 8 7/8" and 13 3/4"X 8 1/4". Daybook covering August 1, 1887 through August 1, 1888, and index. Knights of Pythias records, 1905-1912
Records of African-American lodges around the state of Alabama and their officers. Seal Impression, ca. 1915
Impression of seal used in Sylacauga during the 1910s and 1920s. Phillip Kyle Nathan Bedford Forrest, 1963
Paper read before the Alabama Historical Association, April 26, 1963, and submitted to the Alabama Review; focuses on the Sulphur Trestle Fortification engagement.
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