Cache Valley
Found in 35 Collections and/or Records:
4-H Club photograph collection
780 photographic images, silver gelatin, black-and-white and color prints, 8"x10" and smaller; showing 4-H members, adult leaders, leadership training, cooking competitions, dress revue, livestock competitions, conferences, miscellaneous demonstrations, camps, national and regional congresses, presentations, awards, classes, tractor demonstrations, and the Western Regional Leaders' Forum for 4-H Clubs in Utah.
Adams Elementary Valentine's Tea Fieldwork Collection
Wade Andrews photograph collection
The Wade Andrews photograph collection mostly consists of aerial photographs of Northern Utah and Southeastern Idaho including the Bear and Weber Rivers, as well as Pineview, Mantua, and Willard Reservoirs. Also included are images of recreational activities in Pineview and Willard Reservoirs, Peach Days, hydro plane races, and a few agriculture photos.
Gaylen Ashcroft photograph collection
The Gaylen Ashcroft collection consists of 740 photographs and slides from Dr. Ashcroft's time with the Utah Climate Center. Includes department staff and faculty, USU scenic images, slides used in class lectures, experiments and equipment, and aerial views from Idaho and Utah.
Charles R. Batten papers
This collection consists of research files, correspondence, and written works from Charles Batten. Batten worked for several timber companies and did some freelance writing from his libertarian, free market perspective.
Bear River Heritage Barn Surveys
A. Alvin Bishop papers
This collection contains materials pertaining to the projects, committees, businesses, and seminars A. Alvin Bishop was involved in, both within Cache Valley and internationally. Of particular note are the extensive records related to the development of the culinary water systems of Logan and Nibley, Utah.
Royce S. Bringhurst Papers
This collection documents the life of Royce S. Bringhurst, a Bennion, Utah native who went on to become a strawberry pomologist at the University of California at Davis. It includes material from his mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, military service in WWII, pomology career, and retirement prior to his death in November of 2005.
D.E. Burley telegrams
D.E. Burley and William W. Woodside were agents for the Oregon Short Line Railroad. Burley of Salt Lake, Utah, and Woodside of Logan, Utah exchanged these three telegrams in which they discussed a group of women emigrants at Idaho Falls who claimed that they were supposed to have beeen sent to Logan.