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Leonard M. Jessup interview, August 6, 2018: transcript

Date

2018-08-06

Description

“I decided to just keep going, and I devoted my career to higher ed. I wanted to continue putting back into this system that I felt I got a lot out of. Again, repaying a debt.” What began as a passion for playing school sports would later lead Dr. Len Jessup on a path to lifelong service in the area of higher education. From his California childhood he would soon find himself across different U.S. states performing various higher education duties from professor to university president. In this interview, Jessup talks about his grandparents’ decision to emigrate from Italy to the U.S. and how grateful he feels towards his family as a result. He recalls playing baseball in college. In his eyes, being part of several sports teams helped him develop into the person he is now. He describes doing research during at the University of Arizona and speaks to what it was like moving from one university position to the next. Ultimately, his colleagues would recommend that he move to Las Vegas to

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Photograph of William Norton Schuyler with his daughter Ruth and his father Charles Schuyler, 1904

Date

1904

Description

William Norton Schuyler with daughter Ruth Estella (Schuyler) Cahlan and his father Charles Mortimer Schuyler. William is about 30 years old, Ruth is about 3 years old, and Charles is about 55 years old.

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Photograph of a plaza, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

Several people walk down a brick road as they pass buildings, statues, and automobiles in the street.

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Photograph of a house, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

A front view of the exterior of a house.

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Photograph of a kitchen, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

This appears to be storage closet for several pots, pans and dishes.

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Photograph of an unidentified woman, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

An unidentified woman poses in the front yard of a house.

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Photograph of people, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

Two young unidentified individuals sit together inside of a house.

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Photograph of two people, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

The two young individuals look at each other and smile.

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Photograph of people in the woods, early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

Two individuals pose in front of a cabin in the woods. Behind the cabin is an automobile.

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Transcript of interview with Harriet Trudell by Caryll Batt Dziedziak, May 3, 2006

Date

2006-05-03

Description

Born on August 22, 1935, Harriet spent her childhood years in the segregated southern cities of St. Petersburg, Florida and Mobile, Alabama. Daughter to a blue collar plumber, who was also a union organizer and ‘rabid Democrat,’ Harriet recalls her father saying, “Remember children, you know what meat tastes like because there’s a man named Franklin Roosevelt.” Unsurprisingly, she grew up thinking Roosevelt was God. With her mother’s sudden death at age thirty-one from a cerebral hemorrhage, ten year old Harriet spent two years at a boarding school before rejoining her younger brother at her maternal grandparents in St. Petersburg. Florida. During this time, her father also based out of the grandparents’ home while following big construction work opportunities at various cities. In 1948, sixteen-year-old Harriet accompanied her father, an Alabama Delegate, to the Democratic National Convention. Hearing Hubert Humphrey’s Civil Rights speech change her life. “I came home from that conve

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