Skip to main content

Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

Alice Brown Photograph Collection (PH-00079)

Abstract

The Alice Brown Photograph Collection (approximately 1920-1950) consists of black-and-white and color postcards and photographic prints, with some corresponding negatives and slides. Frasher's Fotos, a Pomona, California business, printed the majority of the postcards that illustrate locations in and around Rhyolite, Nevada and Death Valley, California.

Finding Aid PDF

Date

1920 to 1950

Extent

0.13 Cubic Feet (2 hanging files, 1 shared box of negatives, 1 shared binder of slides)
0.13 Linear Feet

Related People/Corporations

Scope and Contents Note

The Alice Brown Photograph Collection (approximately 1920-1950) consists of black-and-white and color postcards and photographic prints, with some corresponding negatives and slides. Frasher's Fotos, a Pomona, California business, printed the majority of the postcards that illustrate locations in and around Rhyolite, Nevada and Death Valley, California.

Access Note

Collection is open for research.

Publication Rights

Materials in this collection may be protected by copyrights and other rights. See Reproductions and Use on the UNLV Special Collections and Archives website for more information about reproductions and permissions to publish.

Arrangement

Materials remain in original order by type.

Biographical / Historical Note

Alice Louise Cowles Brown was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1919. After graduating with a degree in English from Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvania, she enrolled at the Carnegie Library School in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, specializing in children's literature. In 1943, after working a year as a librarian in St. Louis, Missouri, she enlisted in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAACs) during World War II, volunteering for overseas duty in 1944. After the war, Brown returned to Ohio, but soon moved to Tacoma, Washington where she worked in the public library. She married Jordon Brown in 1950 and in 1956 they moved to Henderson, Nevada. In 1961, Alice Brown returned to work at the University of Nevada, Southern Regional Division library. Initially hired as reference librarian, she moved to documents, working to bring in as many county, state, and federal documents as possible to expand the library's small collection. After her husband's death in 1976, Brown became a docent at the Spring Mountain Ranch State Park, and from 1992 to 1996 portrayed Helen J. Stewart in the park's "Living History" program. Alice Cowles Brown died in Henderson, Nevada in 2017.

Source:

Brown, Alice Cowles. "Memoir." Nevada Women's Archives, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada. September, 1996.

Related Collections

The following resources may provide additional information related to the materials in this collection:

Alice Brown oral history interview, 2005 October 19. OH-00259. [Cite format consulted: Audio

recording or Transcript.] Oral History Research Center, Special Collections and Archives, University

Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada.

Preferred Citation

Alice Brown Photograph Collection, approximately 1920-1950. PH-00079. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada.

Acquisition Note

Materials were donated by Alice Cowles Brown; accession number 2020-036.

Processing Note

In 2020, as part of an archival backlog elimination project, Melise Leech wrote the finding aid and entered the data into ArchivesSpace.

Resource Type

Collection

Collection Type

EAD ID

US::NVLN::PH00079

Finding Aid Description Rules

Describing Archives: A Content Standard
English