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University of Memphis Digital Commons University of Memphis

Home > Special Collections > Manuscript Collections > Simonton, Charles P., family papers > Documents

Documents

 
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  • Woodman of the World program, Covington, Tennessee, 1929

    Woodman of the World program, Covington, Tennessee, 1929

    Program for the "Woodman of the World free Open Entertainment" held at Paine's Opera House, Covington, Tennessee, on August 15, 1929.

  • Remington Typewriter Company advertisment

    Remington Typewriter Company advertisment

    Advertisement for the Remington Typewriter Company of 162 Madison Avenue, Memphis, Tennessee, offering to provide a temporary stenographer to businesses when their permanent staff went on vacation. The advertisement has illustrations of a woman using a Remington typewriter and a woman fishing.

  • St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, catalog, circa 1906

    St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, catalog, circa 1906

    A 29-page catalog for St. Cecilia Academy for Young Ladies in Nashville, Tennessee, from around 1906. St. Cecilia Academy is a Roman Catholic high school for girls in Nashville, Tennessee, founded in 1860 by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation. During its early years, St. Cecilia Academy was a boarding school on a hill in North Nashville known as Mount Vernon Gardens. Music and art were important areas of emphasis from the outset and early courses of study included painting, sculpture, pottery, piano and harp along with core courses in math, science, history, English and religion. In 1957, St. Cecilia Academy moved to Harding Pike and no longer accepted boarders.

  • St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, catalog, circa 1907

    St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, catalog, circa 1907

    A 32-page catalog for St. Cecilia Academy for Young Ladies in Nashville, Tennessee, from around 1907. St. Cecilia Academy is a Roman Catholic high school for girls in Nashville, Tennessee, founded in 1860 by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation. During its early years, St. Cecilia Academy was a boarding school on a hill in North Nashville known as Mount Vernon Gardens. Music and art were important areas of emphasis from the outset and early courses of study included painting, sculpture, pottery, piano and harp along with core courses in math, science, history, English and religion. In 1957, St. Cecilia Academy moved to Harding Pike and no longer accepted boarders.

  • St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, program, circa 1906

    St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, program, circa 1906

    Program for a "Southern Evening" recital by the students of St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, Tennessee, from circa 1906. St. Cecilia Academy is a Roman Catholic high school for girls in Nashville, Tennessee, founded in 1860 by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation. During its early years, St. Cecilia Academy was a boarding school on a hill in North Nashville known as Mount Vernon Gardens. Music and art were important areas of emphasis from the outset and early courses of study included painting, sculpture, pottery, piano and harp along with core courses in math, science, history, English and religion. In 1957, St. Cecilia Academy moved to Harding Pike and no longer accepted boarders.

  • St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, recital program, 1906

    St. Cecilia Academy, Nashville, recital program, 1906

    Program for a recital of expression and voice at St. Cecilia Academy in Nashville, Tennessee, by Maude Smith and Elicia Weinecke on June 5, 1906. St. Cecilia Academy is a Roman Catholic high school for girls in Nashville, Tennessee, founded in 1860 by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation. During its early years, St. Cecilia Academy was a boarding school on a hill in North Nashville known as Mount Vernon Gardens. Music and art were important areas of emphasis from the outset and early courses of study included painting, sculpture, pottery, piano and harp along with core courses in math, science, history, English and religion. In 1957, St. Cecilia Academy moved to Harding Pike and no longer accepted boarders.

 
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