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Size | 58.5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 40000 items) |
Abstract | Mildred Gwin Andrews was executive secretary of the Southern Combed Yarn Spinners Association (SCYSA), 1936-1946; expert consultant on textiles to the U.S. Army Office of Quartermaster General and member of the War Production Board's Committee on Industrial Salvage during World War II; field representative for Dudley, Anderson, and Yutzy, a public relations firm, 1946-1952; and director of public relations, 1952-1955, and executive secretary, 1955-1968, of the American Textile Machinery Association (ATMA). While associated with the ATMA, Andrews managed the American Textile Machinery Exhibitions-International, 1952-1965. In the mid-1950s, Andrews directed publicity for the Tungsten Institute. Throughout her life, Andrews published books and articles chiefly, but not exclusively, about textiles. After 1970, Andrews ran a public relations firm, Andrewtex, in Charlotte, N.C. She was also a consultant for the first International Trade Mart in Honduras and a lecturer on textile machinery in Asian countries. Personal papers and writings of Mildred Gwin Andrews and records of the American Textile Machinery Association (ATMA) and its predecessor the National Textile Machinery Manufacturers Association. The ATMA records, chiefly dated 1952-1970, include annual reports, minutes of Board of Directors' meetings, financial records, correspondence, records of American Textile Machinery Exhibitions-International, promotional material of the ATMA and various textile companies, governmental and association reports, economic forecasts, and newspaper and magazine clippings. Also included are records of the Textile Exhibitors Association, the Southern Combed Yarn Spinners Association, and the Tungsten Institute. There are also files relating to Andrews's work with the War Production Board during World War II; to International Executive Service Corps (I.E.S.C.) work in Honduras; the U.S. Dept. of Commerce trade mission to the Netherlands; and tariffs and foreign trade. In addition, there are writings and research notes, chiefly about the textile industry; personal correspondence and subject files; and photographs of people and of textile machinery. Among the most important writings are a history of the textile industry, entitled The Men and the Mills (1987), and an earlier book, Profit Life of Textile Machinery (1957). |
Creator | Andrews, Mildred Gwin, 1903-1984. |
Curatorial Unit | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
Language | English |
Processed by: Michael Trotti, Gary Frost, December 1995
Encoded by: ByteManagers Inc., 2008
Updated by: Dawne Howard Lucas, January 2022
This collection was processed with support, in part, from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Division of Preservation and Access.
Back to TopThe following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
Mildred Gwin was born in Greenwood, Miss., on 31 January 1903, the daughter of Sally Barnes Humphreys and Samuel Lizzie Gwin. Samuel Gwin was a prominent lawyer and cotton planter in the Delta region of Mississippi. He sent his daughter to the National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C. After graduation in 1921, Mildred returned to her Mississippi to study law in her father's office.
On 4 September 1923, Mildred Gwin married Stephen Elliot Barnwell, a cotton broker of Gastonia, N.C. The couple had one child, Gwin Barnwell, who later married Robert I. Dalton, Jr. In November 1937, Mildred Gwin and Stephen Barnwell divorced. Eight years later, Mildred Gwin married Elmer F. Andrews, who died in 1964.
Mildred Gwin Andrews began her lifelong involvement in the textile industry in 1930 as a "girl Friday" for the Gaston County Yarn Spinners Association, which soon changed its name to the Southern Combed Yarn Spinners Association (SCYSA). At the same time, Mildred took a night job in the spinning room of a cotton mill in order to learn mill technique. She held the post of Executive Secretary of the SCYSA from 1936 until 1946. During World War II, she was a "dollar-a-year man" as Expert Consultant on Textiles to the U.S. Army Office of Quartermaster General. She also served on the War Production Board's Committee on Industrial Salvage. From 1946 to 1952, Andrews worked with Dudley, Anderson, and Yutzy, a public relations firm. She was a field representative for them, and served on the Textile Committee on Public Relations, helping to run the Textile Information Service.
In 1952, she joined the American Textile Machinery Association (ATMA) as its Director of Public Relations, becoming Executive Secretary of the organization in 1955. In 1968, Andrews retired from the ATMA, but continued to work part-time as a consultant and an assistant to the president of the Association.
While associated with the ATMA, Andrews managed the American Textile Machinery Exhibitions-International, 1952-1965. She also remained active in other fields and with other organizations. In the mid-1950s, for example, she directed publicity for the Tungsten Institute.
Throughout her life, Andrews published numerous books and articles chiefly but not exclusively about textiles. Her writings on the textile industry include Faces We See (1939), Cotton Magic (1944), Profit Life of Textile Machinery (1957), and the posthumously published The Men and the Mills: A History of the Southern Textile Industry (1987), as well as dozens of articles for newsPapers, industry journals, and for several editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Written in the 1950s, "The Textile Almanac," although never published, provided much material for later articles and for The Men and the Mills. For the Tungsten Institute, Andrews wrote Tungsten: The Story of an Indispensable Metal (1955).
In 1970, Andrews retired from the ATMA and eventually settled in Charlotte, N.C. She remained active as a writer, publishing a serialized history of the textile industry and The Men and the Mills. She also ran a public relations firm, Andrewtex. and was a consultant for the first International Trade Mart in Honduras and lecturer on textile machinery in Asian countries. In North Carolina, Andrews participated in civic organizations, church activities, museum fund raising, and various charity functions. She died in October 1984.
Sources: Southern Oral History Program Collection, Interview H-153 (Southern Historical Collection); Who's Who of American Women (1970-1971).
Back to TopThis collection includes personal papers of Mildred Gwin Andrews and writings on the textile industry and her position as American Textile Machinery Association (ATMA) Executive Secretary. These writings made her the de facto historian and archivist of the American textile machinery industry. Many of the organization's records, when purged from its active files during the 1970s, came to rest in her hands.
Back to TopNote that original file folders titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: alphabetical.
Records and correspondence of the American Textile Machinery Association, founded as the National Textile Machinery Manufacturers Association (NATMMA) in 1933, and renamed the ATMA in 1952. Most material dates from 1952 to 1970, when Andrews was involved in the organization, although material ranging from the 1930s through the 1980s is also included.
The bulk of this subseries is comprised of minutes and miscellaneous records of the annual meetings and the Board of Directors meetings of the ATMA. The contents of notebooks of the meeting minutes, 1948-1968, have been kept intact, with the miscellaneous material, chiefly press releases, following. Additional official records include directories, organizational manuals, bylaws, and audits.
Also housed in this subseries are the records of a special trade representative, G. E. Putnam, sent by ATMA to Japan and Korea in 1948-1949. Reports from this mission provide insight into postwar trade relations, wages, exchange rates, prices for textile machinery, rebuilding efforts, and the U.S. military occupation government of Japan. In a dispatch of February 1949, only a year before war broke out, Putnam described the tenuous state of the Republic of Korea and its army. For financial records connected to this mission, see the Samuel F. Rockwell files in Series 1.3.
Arrangement: chronological.
Chiefly the correspondence of E. Kent Swift, president of the ATMA from 1938 to 1945.
Folder 127 |
1935-1939. |
Folder 128 |
1937-1941. |
Folder 129 |
1941. |
Folder 130 |
1942-1943. |
Folder 131 |
1944-1945. |
Folder 132 |
1945-1946. |
Folder 133 |
1947. |
Folder 134 |
Report on Survey of Technical Improvements, 1910-1935. |
Arrangement: alphabetical.
Records of Samuel F. Rockwell, a director and the treasurer of the National Association of Textile Machinery Manufacturers (NATMM, renamed ATMA in 1952) from its creation in 1933 to his retirement from both positions in 1957. He was also the treasurer and eventually president of the Davis and Furber Machinery Company, one of the ATMA member companies.
The bulk of these materials are financial records and ledgers of the Association and of the Code Authority for the textile machinery industry as organized under the New Deal's National Recovery Administration, 1934-1935.
Other materials in these files include records, 1937-1957, of ATMA's Division II (Woolen and Worsted Preparatory and Yarn Machinery), of which Rockwell was the Director, and materials concerning meetings of the War Production Board, 1944-1945, and the Industrial Advisory Committee of the National Production Authority, 1950-1951.
Arrangement: chronological.
Records of the ATME in 1954, known as the ATME-I afterwards. In association with the ATMA, Andrews managed these exhibitions, some of the largest trade shows in the world. Materials include press releases, clippings, promotional materials, floor plans, space allocations and the records, correspondence, and reports of the exhibition committees.
Arrangement: alphabetical.
Broad and eclectic range of materials from the office files of the ATMA and from literature and other records Andrews collected throughout her career. The bulk is dated between 1952 and 1970, but a still sizable number of items are from before and after this period. These files range from press releases and promotional materials of the ATMA and various textile companies to governmental and association reports and economic forecasts. There are also newspaper and magazine clippings.
At least four separate collections of files were combined in this series. Andrews had her own files from which worked on The Men and Their Mills, and other files were shipped to her from the ATMA at different times. For instance, in a letter dated 17 May sometime after 1970, Virginia Casey of the ATMA wrote, "I am sending you, under separate cover, material I pulled out of the waste baskets after 5 p.m. last evening. Have not gone thru it, but I'm sure a lot of valuable information was being pitched! Our file drawers are empty so a lot of reference material has already gone."
Note that original file folders titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: by organization.
Note that original file folder titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: chronological.
The annual meeting minutes and Board of Directors meeting minutes are contained in two large volumes. This association was a precursor to the NATMM/ATMA.
Folder 1525 |
Minutes 1913-1924. |
Folder 1526 |
Minutes 1924-1935. |
Folder 1527 |
Miscellaneous. |
Arrangement: alphabetical.
The bulk of this subseries consists of annual reports from the Association, 1938-1944, where Andrews worked in the 1930s and early 1940s. Also included are a membership list from 1976 of the American Yarn Spinners Association, which eventually subsumed the SCYSA.
Arrangement: alphabetical.
This subseries chiefly contains the programs and speeches from the spinner-breeder conferences, 1944-1954. The conferences were sponsored by the Delta Council, a Mississippi-based cotton organization. Andrews and the ATMA were occasionally involved with these conferences.
Folder 1539 |
Biographies of speakers. |
Folder 1540 |
Miscellaneous. |
Folder 1541 |
Press releases. |
Folder 1542 |
Programs, 1945-1950. |
Folder 1543 |
Programs, 1951-1956. |
Folder 1544 |
Report, 1944. |
Folder 1545-1546
Folder 1545Folder 1546 |
Speeches. |
Arrangement: chronological.
Included are materials collected by Andrews on exhibitions that she did not help to organize. The Southern Textile Expositions and the European-based International Exhibition of Textile Machinery (ITMA) dominate the collection.
Arrangement: alphabetical.
This subseries collects Andrews's work as the head of information and publicity departments for the Institute, 1954-1957. Her press releases, editorials, and articles make up most of the subseries, along with a book that she wrote on the tungsten industry.
Folder 1593 |
Articles. |
Folder 1594 |
Editorial clippings. |
Folder 1595 |
Feature story for Charlotte News, 1954. |
Folder 1596 |
Correspondence. |
Folder 1597 |
Public relations program. |
Folder 1598 |
Statements and addresses. |
Folder 1599 |
Mining World Yearbook entry, 1957. |
Folder 1600 |
National Geographic Bulletin. |
Folder 1601 |
Press releases by M. G. Andrews--Master file. |
Folder 1602 |
Press releases--miscellaneous. |
Folder 1603-1606
Folder 1603Folder 1604Folder 1605Folder 1606 |
Source material. |
Folder 1607 |
Tungsten: The Story of an Indispensable Metal by M. G. Andrews, 1955. |
Folder 1608 |
Miscellaneous. |
Arrangement: alphabetical by subject.
This subseries houses Andrews's work with the Quartermaster General's office during World War II and with her public relations firm, Andrewtex, in the 1970s. Most of the Andrewtex material involves an account with Krupp International, a German firm.
Arrangement: by mission.
Reports, pamphlets, correspondence, newsletters, clippings, charts, catalogues, and other related material from Mildred Andrews's foreign trade work with ATMA and the International Executive Service Corps. Before and after her retirement from ATMA, Andrews promoted textiles and foreign trade through various trade shows she either attended or organized. Andrews visited the Netherlands, Honduras, and many countries in Asia seeking markets for American-made goods.
Note that original file folder titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: alphabetical by topic.
Correspondence, trade pamphlets and brochures, reports, clippings, and other related items from Mildred Andrews's Netherlands trip of spring 1963. Under the auspices of the Department of Commerce, Andrews, five other business executives, and two Department of Commerce officials attended the Trade and Industrial Equipment Mission to the Netherlands, 20 April-18 May 1963. Andrews was the first woman to join one of the 111 similar trade missions, begun by the Department of Commerce to promote sales of U.S. products. The mission observed trade fairs, visited factories, and met with their counterparts from the Netherlands. All of the mission members interviewed different Dutch businessmen and women as possible buyers of U.S. goods or exporters. This subseries contains the interviews conducted by Mildred Andrews at various Dutch textile companies. Also included are "trip reports" to family members, travel expenses and vouchers, and numerous trade pamphlets and brochures. After returning to the U.S., the trade mission group conducted a series of "field trips" to different cities to discuss their findings in Holland. These field trips were held in New York City, Providence, R.I., and San Francisco.
Arrangement: alphabetical by topic.
Letters, clippings, contracts, pamphlets, brochures, reports, and other related items from Mildred Andrews's work with the International Executive Service Corps (I.E.S.C.) in Honduras. Beginning in January 1970, Andrews signed up to assist with the I.E.S.C.'s project #2387. This project's mission was to set up a commercial exposition in Honduras. The I.E.S.C. functioned as a sort of Peace Corps for retired executives. Andrews, drawing on her experience from organizing trade fairs for the ATMA, went to Honduras in 1970 and 1971 and helped establish the first wholesale trade market in Honduras. The Exposicion Comercial Hondurena (ECH) occupied more than 1,300 meters of space in the Honduaras Maya Hotel located in Tegucigalpa. Exhibitors included textile firms, pharmaceutical companies, and local artisans. In addition to the businesses, the Exposicion Comercial Hondurena also included an orchid garden, an art gallery, and a display of Mayan archeological discoveries. This subseries contains all of the paperwork, including the contract with the hotel, architects' drawings, staffing, and committee paperwork created in establishing this wholesale venue. In April 1971, Mildred Andrews wrote to the members of the exposition commission, "I am confident that ECH is actually the most unique exposicion that has ever been put together by any group in any country" (folder 1667). Note that many of the documents in this subseries are in Spanish, but most have English.
Arrangement: chronological.
Correspondence, pamphlets, printed reports, catalogues, and other material from the various textile trade shows attended by Mildred G. Andrews. Until her retirement in 1969, Andrews went to these exhibitions as the Executive Secretary of the American Textile Machinery Association. The bulk of the material in this subseries, however, comes from trade shows that Andrews attended as "an industry expert." She represented the textile industry for the U.S. Department of Commerce at three catalog shows of textile and apparel machinery. These shows were held in the fall of 1973 in Seoul, South Korea; Taipei, Taiwan; and Hong Kong.
Folder 1686 |
Japan mission, 1946. |
Folder 1687 |
"A Study of Trade between Latin America and Europe," 1953. |
Folder 1688 |
Korean mission, 1953. |
Folder 1689-1690
Folder 1689Folder 1690 |
Europe mission, 1955. |
Folder 1691 |
Asia mission Trade mission report, 1972. |
Folder 1692 |
Correspondence. June-November 1973. |
Folder 1693 |
Correspondence. December 1973-March 1974 and undated. |
Folder 1694 |
Dept. of Commerce Catalogue Exhibition, Fall 1973. |
Folder 1695 |
Exhibitors' list, 1973. |
Folder 1696 |
Expense vouchers and invoices, 1973. |
Folder 1697 |
Final report, 12 December 1973. |
Folder 1698 |
Hong Kong, 1973. |
Folder 1699 |
Itineraries, Fall 1973. |
Folder 1700 |
Miscellaneous. |
Folder 1701-1703
Folder 1701Folder 1702Folder 1703 |
South Korea, 1973. |
Folder 1704 |
Taiwan, 1973. |
Arrangement: chronological, with a separate clippings file.
Reports, pamphlets, correspondence, newsletters, clippings, charts, and other material about the textile industry and United States foreign trade. In the 1950s, the textile industry began to feel the effects of cheaper foreign imports on the domestic market. A letter dated 28 April 1955 from W. F. Lowell, president of the ATMA, to Gov. Harold E. Stassen in Foreign Operations Administration noted the dismal state of the textile industry, "I do want to convey to you again the fact that the American Textile Machinery Association is going through a very difficult period which is due to great extent to the unprofitable operations of the textile industry itself. In other words, our customers have not been making any money and therefore could not see their way clear to purchase normal replacement requirements."
Pamphlets with titles such as "Soviet Deterrents to Increased Foreign Trade" and "A Gatt in Your Ribs" emphasized the foreign threats to the U.S. textile business. In a confidential report by the Office of the Special Representative for Trade Negotiations Trade Information Committee, 24 April 1968, the ATMA cited eight examples of machines that were built in foreign countries and purchased by textile firms at cheaper prices than those built in the United States. The report stated that it was losing the domestic market and could risk forfeiting the foreign market unless U.S. banks and export credit companies created loan agreements more favorable to developing companies such as Brazil.
After her retirement, Mildred G. Andrews continued to work in the textile industry as a member of the International Executive Service Corps. In the spring of 1971, Andrews went to Thailand as part of a mission to "promote the development of new and expanded uses of U.S. cotton in Thailand through a coordinated program of market research, sales promotions, and general publicity designed to increase per capita consumption of cotton in Thailand" (folder 1712).
Folder 1705 |
1945-1947; 1949; 1953-1954. |
Folder 1706 |
1955-1956. |
Folder 1707 |
1958-1961. |
Folder 1708 |
1962. |
Folder 1709 |
1963. |
Folder 1710 |
1966-1967. |
Folder 1711 |
1968. |
Folder 1712 |
1969-1974 and undated. |
Folder 1713 |
Clippings. |
Arrangement: by project.
The bulk of this series is comprised of writings in various genres on the textile industry: books, reports, press releases, speeches, articles, and pamphlets. Writing was a central part of Andrews's adult life, whether scribing press releases or a history and description of the North Carolina Governor's Mansion.
Note that some photographs from files of this series have been moved to Series 7.
Note that original file folder titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: by type of material.
This subseries contains three drafts of the Textile Almanac. None are dated, but a comparison reveals their order. One is identified as "earlier," another "later," and the third was in folders titled "Original History of the Textile Industry."
Begun as a project funded by the Textile Information Service, the Almanac was envisioned as a reference work to serve textile executives and supplement curricula in textile schools. In fact, one professor at North Carolina State University assigned a manuscript of the Almanac in his courses. Although Andrews received a number of letters from companies and individuals wanting to purchase the book, the manuscript was never published. In 1952, the Textile Information Service ended its support for the project. Nevertheless, this project apparently solidified Andrews's position as the unofficial historian of the industry, and the material she collected served as the foundation for decades of historical writing.
Arrangement: by type of material.
Fully half of this subseries consists of source material for The Men and the Mills. Andrews apparently drew this material chiefly from the ATMA subject files (Series 2).
Originally envisioned as the published version of her "American Textiles--a Historic Narrative" series of articles in Textile News, this work was progressively revised and edited into a more focused volume on the textile industry in the South. Although Andrews had been working with UNC Press for several years on the project, the volume was still not published by the time of her death. Andrews's daughter, Gwin Barnwell Dalton, and son-in-law, Robert Dalton, edited the manuscript, which Mercer Press published in 1987.
Arrangement: alphabetical by subject.
The short writings included in this subseries show the breadth of Andrews's interests during her long writing career. Her first article, on Benjamin Brown Gossett, appeared in Cotton in 1932, her last, fully fifty years later.
Three series of articles are particularly prominent in this subseries. "The Situation'--As Seen Across the Executive's Desk" was written for Cotton Magazine between 1936 and 1941. In a 1979 interview for the Southern Oral History Program, Andrews recalled that she wrote the articles anonymously and as if she were a male executive (e.g., she alluded to "my wife" who committed the offence of wearing silk clothing instead of cotton). Her next series of articles was "Exploring the Textile Community" for Textile World between 1950 and 1954, and in the mid- to late-1970s, she wrote "American Textiles: A Historic Narrative" for the Textile News.
This subseries also contains a number of pieces Andrews wrote especially for the ATMA, including press releases, articles both in her name and ghostwritten for others, speeches, and several reports, the most important of which was Profit Life of Textile Machinery (1957).
Arrangement: chronological and by topic.
Note that original file folder titles have, for the most part, been retained.
Arrangement: chronological with separate folder for invitations.
Letters written by and to Mildred Gwin Andrews and invitations to social gatherings primarily in the Washington, D.C., area. Although some letters deal with business activities, most are personal in nature. Thank-you notes, gift acknowledgements, and letters concerning the writing of Andrews's book on the history of the textile industry make up the bulk of this subseries. The invitations are primarily for American Textile Machinery Association functions.
Folder 1951 |
1939-1940; 1950-1965. |
Folder 1952 |
1966-1968. |
Folder 1953 |
1969-1973. |
Folder 1954 |
1974-1976. |
Folder 1955 |
1977-1978. |
Folder 1956 |
1979-1984. |
Folder 1957 |
Invitations. |
Arrangement: by subject.
Subject files on topics such as the Mint Museum in Charlotte, N.C., the Southern Governors' Conference, and the North Carolina Society of Washington. Materials on museums and art include some relating to Andrews's presentation of a collection of woodcuts by Mississippi artist Lalla Walker Lewis to the Cottonlandia Museum in Greenwood, Miss. Other subject files contain collected material on Myers Park Methodist Church, biographical and genealogical material on the Andrews and Gwin families, and political ephemera from Senators James Eastland and B. Everett Jordan.
Folder 1958 |
Andrews, Elmer F. |
Folder 1959 |
Articles and speeches. |
Folder 1960 |
Barr, J. Walter. |
Folder 1961 |
Biographical information. |
Folder 1962 |
Clippings. |
Folder 1963 |
Docking family. |
Folder 1964 |
Eastland, James O. |
Folder 1965 |
Johnson, William Frederick. |
Folder 1966 |
Jordan, B. Everett. |
Folder 1967 |
Lewis, Lalla Walker. |
Folder 1968 |
Maps of Fairfax, Va. |
Folder 1969 |
Mint Museum. |
Folder 1970 |
Museums and decorative arts. |
Folder 1971 |
Myers Park Methodist Church. |
Folder 1972 |
National business publications. |
Folder 1973 |
North Carolina Society of Washington. |
Folder 1974 |
Parties. |
Folder 1975 |
Retirement. |
Folder 1976 |
Southern Governors' Conference, 1959. |
Pictures of Mildred Gwin Andrews, American Textile Machinery Association officials, ATMA annual meetings and exhibitions, and an ITMA photo album. Also included are many pictures of textile plants and machinery and other industrial facilities.
Image Folder PF-4436/1 |
Mildred Gwin Andrews and other individuals. 1955-1973. |
Image Folder PF-4436/2 |
Mildred Gwin Andrews and other individuals. Undated. |
Image Folder PF-4436/3 |
Groups. 1914-1960. |
Image Folder PF-4436/4 |
Groups. 1961-1962. |
Image Folder PF-4436/5 |
Groups. ATMA 30th Annual Meeting, 28 February 1963. |
Image Folder PF-4436/6 |
Groups. 28 March 1963-25 June 1963. |
Image Folder PF-4436/7-8
PF-4436/7PF-4436/8 |
Groups. ATMA 31st Annual Meeting, 26 February 1964. |
Image Folder PF-4436/9 |
Groups. ATMA 32nd Annual Meeting, 3 March 1965. |
Image Folder PF-4436/10 |
Groups. May 1965-September 1965. |
Image Folder PF-4436/11-12
PF-4436/11PF-4436/12 |
Groups. ATME-I, 26 September 1965-2 October 1965. |
Image Folder PF-4436/13 |
Groups. ATMA 33rd Annual Meeting, 1966. |
Image Folder PF-4436/14 |
Groups. ATMA 34th Annual Meeting, 28 February 1967. |
Image Folder PF-4436/15-16
PF-4436/15PF-4436/16 |
Groups. ATMA 35th Annual Meeting, 27 February 1968. |
Image Folder PF-4436/17 |
Groups. 1969-1984. |
Image Folder PF-4436/18-21
PF-4436/18PF-4436/19PF-4436/20PF-4436/21 |
Groups. Undated. |
Image Folder PF-4436/22 |
Scenes. 1925-1954. |
Image Folder PF-4436/23 |
Scenes. 1960. |
Image Folder PF-4436/24 |
Scenes. ATME-I, 26 September 1965-2 October 1965. |
Image Folder PF-4436/25 |
Scenes. ATME-I, 15-24 October 1969. |
Image Folder PF-4436/26-28
PF-4436/26PF-4436/27PF-4436/28 |
Scenes. Undated. |
Image Folder PF-4436/29 |
Unidentified individuals. |
Image Folder PF-4436/30-37
PF-4436/30PF-4436/31PF-4436/32PF-4436/33PF-4436/34PF-4436/35PF-4436/36PF-4436/37 |
Unidentified groups. |
Image Folder PF-4436/38-40
PF-4436/38PF-4436/39PF-4436/40 |
Unidentified scenes. |
Image Folder PF-4436/41 |
Pictures used in writings of M. G. Andrews. |
Image Folder PF-4436/42-44
PF-4436/42PF-4436/43PF-4436/44 |
ITMA Cematex photographs. |
Extra Oversize Image Folder XOP-PF-4436/1 |
Oversize photographs. |
Oversize Volume SV-4436/1-2
SV-4436/1SV-4436/2 |
Oversize volumes |