From the Tammi Gaudet Photograph Collection (PH-00360) -- Activities of the Southern Nevada American Society of Landscape Architects (SNASLA). Richard Marriotti of Marriotti Lanscape Architects. Southern Nevada American Society of Landscape Architects (SNASLA) Past President.
From the Beda and C. Norman Cornwall Photograph Collection (PH-00248) -- Beda Cornwall reception held at University Libraries Special Collections at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Standing from left to right: Blanche Zucker, Beda Cornwall, Seymour Newmark, Florence Mlynarczyk, Melina Cristostomo, and Shirley Allison.
From the Beda and C. Norman Cornwall Photograph Collection (PH-00248) -- Beda Cornwall reception held at University Libraries Special Collections at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Former members of the Citizens' Library Association seated from left to right: J. A. Tiberti, Nellie Bunch, Beda Cornwall, Laura Belle Kelch, Sherwin "Scoop" Garside, Clarabelle Decker , Harold Erickson, and Anna Dean Kepper.
'Plate 1. Source: Clark County Geographic Information Systems Central Repository. Comprehensive Planning, Advanced Planning Division. Feburary 20, 1997.' Scale [ca. 1:95, 040. 1 in.=approx. 1.5 miles]. Shows sewers, force mains, service area boundaries, watershed boundaries, and lift stations. Includes inset location map. Includes township and range grid. Clark County, Nevada, Comprehensive Planning, Advanced Planning Division.
Description provided with image: "L-R Mary Lou Williams, sister of the late Nanelia Doughty; Norton Williams; Susan Jarvis, Special Collections Librarian. The occasion is donation of papers of the late Nan Doughty to UNLV Special Collections. July 29, 1987." Another description provided on an accompanying sheet of paper: "[July 29, 1987, L-R: Mary Lou Williams; Norton Williams; Susan Jarvis]. Currently being processed, the Nan Doughty Collection, donated by her sister, Mary Lou Williams, contains a century's worth of correspondence from the Bradford-Shockley family. The Bradords and Shockleys were intimately involved in mining and land development in Nevada, New Mexico, California, and Oregon, and had been New England shipbuilders in the early 19th century. May Bradford Shockley was the United States' first female surveyor: her letters detail life in Tonopah, Nevada in the early 1900s. her husband, mining engineer William Shockley, traveled the world, and his correspondence describes, among other places, life in and around Candelaria, Nevada in the 1880s. The collection also includes hundreds of early Nevada photographers, mining documents, and maps."
The Ladies Society of Brotherhood of Firemen and Locomotive Engineers at the first Helldorado in Las Vegas, Nevada. From left to right, the women pictured are identified as: 1) Hazel Gibbons; 2) Lela Healy (Deamer); 3) Elizabeth Bailey (Lee); 4) Louella McEvoy; 5) Francis Ullom; 6) Rose Ullom; 7) Dorothy Porter; 8) Florence Gallagher (Simms); 9) Mrs. Walter Homan; 10) Frances Ruth Craner; 11) Maranda Craner; 12) Leona May; 13) Josephine Johnson; 14) Evelyn Rhoads (Wilson); 15) Gertrude Rhoads; and 16) Ethel Smith.