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Milton J. Elliott, IV Collection

1 Files
Abstract Or Scope

This collection consists of a videorecording made by digitizing an original 8 mm film, which is owned by Milton J. Elliott, III, who was a student at W&L during the 1956 Mock Convention. The video is in color and is silent. The footage of the 1956 Mock Convention runs about 8 minutes and is primarily of the parade. Sections of the video showing the convention floor and platform are brief and quite dark. There is also footage of a group of students picknicking at Goshen (about 3 minutes). The last 4 minutes of footage are shots of a wedding at The Homestead. It also consists of newspaper clippings pertainig to W&L Athletics, the 1956 Mock Convention, printed materails like the W&L Swing, and student papers from one of Dr. Leyburn's Sociology class.

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Milton J. Elliott, IV Collection 1 Files

Photo Views Company Postcards

9 Item
Abstract Or Scope

This collection contains postcards by the Photo Views Company in Oak Hill, Virginia. Included are postcards of Michie's Tavern near Charlottesville, Hot Springs, Falling Springs Branch between Hot Springs and Covington, Route 39 near Afton, and a view from Route 60, Route 60 Bridge near Covington, and Blue Ridge Terrace in Afton.

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Photo Views Company Postcards 9 Item

Postcards of the Homestead resort in Bath County, Virginia

7 Item
Abstract Or Scope

This collection consists of seven postcards of The Homestead Resort in Hot Springs, Virginia. The images include interior and exterior views of the resort and a view of the Cascades Golf Couse.

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Postcards of the Homestead resort in Bath County, Virginia 7 Item

Unidentified travel diary

1 Item
Abstract Or Scope

This manuscript copy of a diary dated May 26 through August 15, 1835 was kept by an unidentified traveller journeying by railroad, boat, and stagecoach from New York to the springs of Virginia (and the present-day West Virginia) and then on to Cincinnati, Ohio and Lexington, Kentucky before returning to New York. The traveller made stops in Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, and Fredericksburg. Most of the journal's accounts deal with the period when the writer was at White Sulphur Springs and the adjacent area. He records his impressions of inns and places visited, persons encountered, going to balls, calling on ladies and even a trip to Lexington, Virginia where he visits 'Mr. Clay,' presumably Henry Clay, who was at that time a Senator from Kentucky.

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Unidentified travel diary 1 Item

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