Hardin-Simmons University Library - 11 Matching Results

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[Letter from Oscar A. Ullrich to T. N. Carswell - March 20, 1942]
A letter written to Mr. T. N. Carswell, Chairman 24th Senatorial District Drys, from Oscar A. Ullrich, Dean of Faculty, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas, dated March 20, 1942. Ullrich advises Carswell of the letter from Carswell to President John W. Bergin having been referred to him and that there are no separate courses offered on the effects of alcohol.
[Letter from Truett Latimer to David K. Switzer, February 24, 1959]
Letter from Truett Latimer to David K. Switzer commending him for the introduction of House Bill 291.
[Letter from Dick Vaughan to Truett Latimer, March 22, 1961]
Letter from Dick Vaughan to Truett Latimer; He suggests possible venues for their upcoming meeting.
[Letter from Dick Vaughan to Truett Latimer, November 9, 1960]
Letter from Dick Vaughan to Truett Latimer discussing a progress report on the study of the Texas Game & Fish Commission. He also encloses an article from the Houston Chronicle by Bob Brister.
[Conveyance of Land from Sayles to Campbell and Bland]
Legal document outlining a piece of land that Mary E. Sayles intends to convey over to W. T. Campbell and Howard Bland.
General Highway Map Williamson County Texas
Highway map of Williamson County, Texas, showing rivers, lakes, creeks, streams, cities, towns, outlying buildings (including schools, churches, and post offices), roads, highways (giving mileage between points), bridges, railroads, cemeteries, oil fields, utility lines, and petroleum pipelines. Map includes seven inset maps - Schwertner, Bartlett, Granger, Jonah, Coupland, Hutto, and Thrall - a key to counties and key to sheets diagrams, and an extensive legend indicating geographical and human-made features. Scale [ca. 1:126,720] (2 miles to the inch).
The Cretaceous Area North of the Colorado River
Geologic map of a portion of South Texas, showing Cretaceous rocks divided into two sequences - lower Cretaceous series and upper Cretaceous series. Shows also Tertiary and Paleozoic rocks. The map also includes county lines, cities and towns, roads, railroads, bodies of water, and areas of elevation. Relief shown by contours and spot heights.
Geological Survey of Texas
Geological map of mountain peaks in Lampasas and Williamson Counties, showing the different lays of rock (e.g. limestone, clay, chalk). Scale [ca. 1:3,600] (300 feet to the inch).
Williamson County, Texas
Highway map of Williamson County, Texas, showing rivers, lakes, creeks, streams, cities, towns, outlying buildings (including schools, churches, and post offices), roads, highways (giving mileage between points), bridges, railroads, cemeteries, oil fields, utility lines, and petroleum pipelines. Map includes six inset maps - Florence, Liberty Hill, Jarrell, Weir, Leander, and Cedar Park - and a key to sheets diagram in the lower-right corner. Scale [ca. 1:126,720] (2 miles to the inch).
Williamson County
Blue line print of survey map of Williamson County, Texas, showing rivers, creeks, original land grants or surveys, cities, towns, and roads. Handwritten notes have been made on the published map in red ink to identify Old Military Road from a 1896 Bell County map, a road from Austin, Texas, to Nashville, Tennessee, and a road from Hamilton, Texas, to Austin, Texas. Scale [ca. 1:246,154] (6000 varas to 13/16 of an inch).
Map of Williamson County
Blueline format of survey map of Williamson County, Texas, showing blocks of land, rivers, creeks, and land grants. No scale information is given.
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