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Utah State University student folklore genre collection of etiological legends, 1960-2018
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Fife Folklore Archives
- Title
- Utah State University student folklore genre collection of etiological legends
- Dates
- 1960-2018 (inclusive)19602018
- Quantity
- 2 boxes (ca. 750 items), (3 linear feet)
- Collection Number
- UUS_FOLK COLL 8a_Group 7: Etiological Legends
- Summary
- Legends collected by undergraduate students in USU (1960s to present) and BYU (1960 to 1978) folklore classes. Collected primarily in Utah, the items focus principally on folklore of the Western U.S.
- Repository
-
Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives Division
Special Collections & Archives
Merrill-Cazier Library
Utah State University
Logan, UT
84322-3000
Telephone: 4357978248
Fax: 4357972880
scweb@usu.edu - Access Restrictions
-
Restrictions
Open to public research. To access the collection a patron must have the following information: collection number, series number, sub-series number, if applicable, box number and folder number (or image number).
- Languages
- English.
- Sponsor
- Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grant, 2007-2008
Historical NoteReturn to Top
The Fife Folklore Archives Student Folklore Genre Collection consists of folklore items collected by undergraduate students in Utah State University folklore classes from the late 1960s to the present and folklore items collected by undergraduate students in Brigham Young University folklore and anthropology classes during 1960-1978. Most items include informant data, context, text (the folklore item), texture (stylistic notation), and collector data. The items of folklore are in text form on 8 ½ x 11 sheets of line-free paper. Since, 1999 genre items also include release forms. The materials do not circulate. The collection is separated into nine groups:
- Group 1: customs (foodways)
- Group 2: belief
- Group 3: speech
- Group 4: tales and jokes
- Group 5: songs
- Group 6: games and pranks
- Group 7: legends: character (boxes 15-16), contemporary (boxes 20-27), etiological (boxes 17-19), human condition (boxes 13-14.2), supernatural non-religious (boxes 7-12), and supernatural religious (boxes 1-6)
- Group 8: material culture
- Group 9: e-lore: electronically transmitted folklore (Xerox, facsimile and e-mail)
In the late 1960s, folklore courses were first taught at USU by Professor Austin Fife. At this time, Fife (a French professor) had his students collect items of folklore on pre-printed index cards. The information on the cards has now been transferred to 8 ½ x 11 sheets of paper and the items have been added to the genre collection. At about the same time (1967) at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, Utah, Professor William A. Wilson began teaching folklore classes. Wilson had his students collect folklore using both genre collections and major project (focused) collections. The genre items were separated and filed by genre. Also included in the BYU genre collection were items from two other BYU professors who had their students collect folklore: John Sorenson and Thomas Cheney. The student collections from Sorenson and Cheney were given to Wilson and he added them to the genre collection along with his students' work. On these items, in the upper right hand corner above all other information, Wilson noted "SC" for Sorenson Collection and "CC" for Cheney Collection.
In 1978, William A. Wilson left Brigham Young University to direct the newly established Folklore Program and Folklore Archives at Utah State University. Wilson brought to USU the student genre collection that he had amassed at BYU, with a copy of the genre collection remaining at the BYU library. At the USU folklore archives (later named the Fife Folklore Archives for Austin and Alta Fife), William A. Wilson and Barbara [Garrett] [Walker] Lloyd used the already sorted BYU materials when creating the collection classification system. This classification system, with its roots in the Finnish archive tradition, is still used at the Fife Folklore Archives.
Wilson was at USU until 1985 when he returned to BYU to head the English Department. However, the BYU administration gave him a year's leave of absence to copy all the student materials in the Fife Folklore Archives at USU and bring them with him to BYU. Wilson notes: "Hannele [wife] and I practically lived in the USU archive. Max [Peterson, Director of the Merrill Library] brought a copy machine into the archive, and we copied day after day. First we copied the entire BYU genre collection. Then we copied all the items in the accumulated genre piles [of USU items]." Thus, in 1985 the BYU and USU folklore genre and focused collections were identical. During the following years, William A. Wilson and later Kristi Bell at BYU's Folklore Archives (now named the William A. Wilson Folklore Archives) and Barbara [Garrett] [Walker] Lloyd and later Randy Williams at the Fife Folklore Archives at USU worked to maintain the same classification system at both universities' folklore archives. However, the materials submitted by students from the two universities began, of course, to differ from each other, as students generally collect the kinds of materials their professors talk about in class.
In 1985 Professor Barre Toelken came to USU (from the University of Oregon) to direct the Folklore Program. He continued the folklore-collecting legacy that Austin Fife and William A. Wilson began. Over the years Professors Steve Siporin, Patricia Gardner, Jan Roush, Jeannie Thomas, Lisa Gabbert and Lynne McNeill and instructors Barbara [Garrett] [Walker] Lloyd, Randy Williams, and Michael Christensen (and others) have all had their students collect and deposit folklore items to the Fife Folklore Archives. And thus, the USU Student Genre Collection continues to grow. The format has changed somewhat over the years to reflect the trends in folkloristics. As stated above, many of the early submissions had little contextual data, and often limited, if any, informant data. William A. Wilson created a collecting format that included: informant data, contextual data, and text (item of folklore). Barre Toelken and Randy Williams added "texture" to the format of genre collections, allowing the collector to give "the feel" of the item to potential researchers. In in 1998, students were asked to include release forms with their genre items, following a trend in the folklore field that addresses not only the item (which in some cases, like a joke, may been seen as part of the public domain materials and therefore not needing a release) but also the performance of the lore (and therefore necessary for a release from the performer informant).In 2002, the collection was moved from hundreds of three-ringed binders to archival folders and boxes, making the collection more physically stable and easier to manage and use. In 2003, the collection finding aids were encoded in HTML as a means of hosting them on-line for greater research accessibility. In 2012, the finding aids were hosted in EAD.
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The USU Student Folklore Genre Collection: Group 7: Etiological Legends consists of approximately 750 individual items of legends collected by undergraduate students. Most items include informant, context, text (the folklore item), texture (stylistic notation), and collector data.
- Celestial Phenomena and Meteorological Events
- Origin of Earth and Geographic Features
- Origin of Animals/Animal Characteristics
- Origin of People/Human Characteristics
- Origin of Plants
- Origin of Beliefs
- Origin of Customs
- Place Names
- Other Names
- Origin of Products, Items, Objects
Forms one of nine subgroups in the Utah State University student genre collection, housed in the Fife Folklore Archives. Guide to folklore collecting assignments.
For items submitted since December 2017, please see Student Folklore Fieldwork, housed in DigitalCommons.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
CopyrightIt is the responsibility of the user to obtain permission to publish from the owner of the copyright (the institution, the creator of the record, the author or his/her transferees, heirs, legates, or literary executors). The user agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Utah State University Libraries, its officers, employees, and agents from and against all claims made by any person asserting that he or she is an owner of copyright.
Patrons must sign and comply with the USU Special Collections and Archives Use Agreement and Reproduction Order form as well as any restrictions placed by the collector or informant(s).
Permission to publish material from the Utah State University student folklore genre collection of etiological legends must be obtained from the Curator of the Fife Folklore Archives and/or the Special Collections Department Head.
Preferred Citation
Utah State University student folklore genre collection of etiological legends, 1960-2018. (FOLK COLL 8a: Group 7, box, folder). Utah State University. Special Collections and Archives Department.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Arrangement: topical.
Acquisition Information
The items in the Student Folklore Genre Collection were collected by USU and BYU students in folklore and anthropology classes as part of course requirements and deposited in the Fife Folklore Archives by the instructor. Duplicates of BYU student items are housed at BYU's William A. Wilson Folklore Archives. The materials in Group 7: Legends (including character, contemporary, etiological, human condition, supernatural non-religious, and supernatural religious legends) cover the period from approximately 1960 to the present. The collection was created in 1978 by William A. Wilson and Barbara [Garrett] [Walker] Lloyd.
Processing Note
Originally processed by Barbara [Garrett] [Walker] Lloyd and William A. Wilson and updated over the years by Fife Folklore Archives staff. Most recently updated by Nicole Cornwall, 2012. Finding aid created by Randy Williams and Tricia Harrison, 2002; updated by Randy Williams, March 2012.
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
5: Etiological LegendsReturn to Top
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
5.1: Celestial Phenomena and Meteorological Events |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 1 | 5.1.1: Sun |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 1 | 5.1.1.1 : Tane, a warrior, catches the sun and forces him to go slower,
making the day 24 hours long
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 1 | 5.1.1.2 : Maui, Hawaiian demigod, catches the sun and forces him to
go more slowly, providing his parents more time to get their work done
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 1 | 5.1.1.3 : Indians send out a rabbit that shoots down the sun to talk to him
and make him stay out longer
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 1 | 5.1.1.4 : Amateras-Ohmirami, the sun, hides behind a rock until
the other gods trick her into coming out
.2 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 1 | 5.1.1.5 : A hero shoots down nine suns leaving only one to circle the earth
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 2 | 5.1.2: Moon |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 2 | 5.1.2.1 : A young chieftain's bride dies but he sees her in the evening
in the pale moon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 2 | 5.1.2.2 : The moon was jealous of the sun, so as a punishment,
it was made smaller and less bright
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 2 | 5.1.2.3 : Moon is chased by her old suitor, the Sun
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 2 | 5.1.2.4 : How the Moon keeps warm
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3: Stars |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.1 : Indian wives leave husbands because of onions and climb rope
into the sky and become the constellation of "Taurus."
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.2 : Eight Indian sons dance and ascend into the sky;
one decides to return but trips and is killed. The remaining seven form the "Big Dipper."
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.3 : Badger cuts out stars and coyote throws them into
the sky forming the "Milky Way."
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.4 : Pale Moon, because of her purity, is transformed into
the evening star as a light for others to follow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.5 : Seven children walk away from their drinking,
unkind mother and turn into the "Little Dipper."
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.6 : Father Sky will not let his daughter stay on earth with an Indian boy,
hurls them up into the sky where they can be seen as Star Maiden and her lover
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.7 : Seven sons of the creator want to be immortal, decide to turn into
stars because they are always there; they form the Big Dipper
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.8 : An Indian climbs too high up a mountain to come down again,
so his father turns him into the North Star, and because he sits on the edge of a cliff,
the North Star never moves
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.9 : Herdboy and Weaver Princess are stars that are punished to
circle on another until each July 7 when they meet
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.10 : A little girl is rewarded for kind deeds by her little dipper
changing into heavenly stars
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 3 | 5.1.3.11 : An old prospector lost flour, sugar and coffee which became the "Milky Way"
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 4 | 5.1.4: Wind |
Undated |
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 4 | 5.1.4.1 : Hawaiians believed that when the wind shifts from its normal pattern,
King Kamehameha is mad
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 4 | 5.1.4.2 : The Chinook wind got its name from a beautiful Indian maiden who
was lost; when the warrior felt a warm breeze, they said it was her breath
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.2: Origin of Earth and Geographic Features |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 5 | 5.2.1: Creation of Earth |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 5 | 5.2.1.1 : The Insect people leave their newly created world and
fly to the human world above them
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 5 | 5.2.1.2 : The star gods fought with the moon god, and the moon
god's blood drops become the Japanese Islands
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 5 | 5.2.1.3 : An Indian keeps sending out a coyote to survey the
world until he is sure that the creation is finished
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2: Mountains |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.1 : An Indian prince and his girlfriend who died become the mountains
Poxpocatepetl [Popocatepetl] and Ixtatcyeatl
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.2 : Vertical ridges on Hawaiian Mountains were formed by huge canoes
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.3 : Chief of water and chief of mountain fight over king's daughter
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.4 : Sand dunes created by Pacific wind blowing sand
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.5 : Mount Timpanogos
.53 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.6 : Earth does not become completely flat again after
returning from talking to the sky, this is why there are hills and mountains
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.7 : Dinosaurs fall asleep in Utah, are covered up with dirt and rocks and
come to form mountains
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.8: Teton Mountain Range was formed by an Indian as mounds in memory
of his parents and sister who were killed by a bear
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.9 : Algonquin Indians believe that the Ramapo Mountains were formed by
Manitou who dropped rocks from his apron
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.10 : Algonquins believe that the Palisades and the Hudson Highlands were
built by Manitou to keep in the wicked beings, but they escaped
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.11 : An Eskimo wife waits by the sea for her husband; she is covered with
snow and turns into Mount Susitna (The Sleeping Lady) near Cook Inlet, Alaska
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.12 : An Eskimo princess waits for her husband who never returns;
after her death, the Gods turn her into the "Sleeping Princess Mountain," a part of the Talkeetna
mountain range in Alaska
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.13 : Big Rock Candy Mountain came into existence after a good witch let
boil over a magical brew of candy which covered and coated the mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.14 : Devil's Slide was formed when Satan was kicked out of heaven and slid
down to hell
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.15 : Sleeping Giant Mountain on Kauai was formed by the death of a giant
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.16: Squaws murdered and the braves' grief was so great that Squaw Butte was formed
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.17 : Squaw Peak was formed when an Indian maiden died so she could be with her lover
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.18 : An Indian princess becomes the face of the mountain rather than marry someone she didn't love
.2 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.19 : Squaw kills herself over dead lover; this stains the cliffs red
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.20 : Sleeping Mother bear awaits cubs and forms dunes
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.21 : Thunder in the Hudson Highlands is cause by Henry Hudson playing
tenpins
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.22 : Origin of a mountain near El Norro, Puerto Rico
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.23 : Why a volcano in Hawaii stopped puffing out smoke
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 6 | 5.2.2.24 : How Mt. Timpanogos and the cave beneath it came to be
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3: Rocks |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.1 : A Paiute brave jumps from a rock because of love for a Ute girl;
the rock took the form of a broken heart
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.2 : A lady picked seaweed too long and turned into a rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.3 : When Christ was crucified, little men cried tears that turned into crosses
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.4 : Two luck rocks grow into big rocks when a young boy cuts his hair
with them
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.5 : A man and a woman, who committed adultery, were turned into stone and
pushed off the path, but the image reappears every year
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.6 : Tear drops which turn to stone; origin of the Apache Tears
.6 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.7 : Woman waiting on the shore for her husband, who is really her brother,
turns into the Forever Stone in the Gulf of Ca Mau, Vietnam
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.8 : A brave Indian saves a princess from a bear with the help of a
magic stone which grows into a large rock, Devil's Tower
.6 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.9 : An eyehole in the ridge of Weber Canyon is where the devil tied a
string to make a yo-yo out of the world
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.10 : Rocky Peak on top of Lone Ridge was piled up by citizens of Laketown
in order to hide the bodies of killed Indians
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.11 : Nun punished for falling in love and turned into stone "The Kneeling Nun"
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.12 : Origin of Paul Bunyan and other rock formations
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.13 : G-Hill Princess refuses to leave Gunnison and died on her hill;
a boulder honors her memory
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.14 : Rock formations of an Indian mother and her child enter cave
.5 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 7 | 5.2.3.15 : Natural bridge formed by two warring brothers
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4: Oceans, Rivers, Lakes |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.1 : A good Indian using holy water destroys his enemy when the holy water
turns into a lake
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.2 : A princess cries a lake over the loss of her lover and drowns in it
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.3 : Tequendama, the God, split a mountain to save his people from a great
flood; the split formed the great waterfall
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.4 : Bear Lake was formed by tears from the Great Bear
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.5 : An Indian maiden sacrificed herself to the God's and her face
can be seen behind Multnomah Falls
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.6 : An Indian Princess was killed and nature honored her by placing
a bridal veil over a cliff
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 8 | 5.2.4.7 : A tragic lover killed herself, which turned part of a lake red
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 9 | 5.2.5: Canyons |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 9 | 5.2.5.1 : A medicine man turns into a big serpent and causes the formation of
Iguazu canyon in order to prevent an Indian princess and her lover from running away
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 9 | 5.2.5.2 : Thistle Canyon was formed by a giant who fell and died
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 9 | 5.2.5.3: Sardine Canyon was named after someone found a sardine tin along the stream that flows next to it.
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 10 | 5.2.6: Countries, Cities, Islands |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 10 | 5.2.6.1 : When a goddess is plowing part of Sweden, a chunk of earth
(the city of Copenhagen) is broken off
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 10 | 5.2.6.2 : Maui casts his net into the ocean and pulls up islands like Polynesia,
Tahiti, New Zealand, and the Hawaiian chain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 10 | 5.2.6.3 : Yellowstone earned its name after a large Indian tribe took a
bathroom break together
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 10 | 5.2.6.4 : How the islands of Japan came to be
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 10 | 5.2.6.5 : Foundation of Korea
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.3: Origin of Animals or Animal Characteristics |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 11 | 5.3.1: Fish and Sea Animals |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 11 | 5.3.1.1 : A mother and daughter jump into the sea; the mother becomes a
turtle and the daughter a shark
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 11 | 5.3.1.2 : Kingfisher wear a War-Bonnet because the Napa made him angry
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 11 | 5.3.1.3 : When frogs croak they're really saying, "I'm in trouble!"
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2: Land Animals |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.1 : The donkey is a protected, sacred animal among the Indians because
Christ rode on a donkey once
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.2 : A horn snake eats people and then disappears
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.3 : The coyote kills two deer which ate fruit from the coyote's tree
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.4 : The coyote steals food from an Indian, but is thrown into the fire
and burns his paws. Because of that, he howls and licks his feet
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.5 : The monkey is afraid of the revenge of the wild cat,
that is why he lives in trees
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.6 : A dog gets angry about a cat because the cat loses the magic amber of
their master; that is why they are not friends
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.7 : Unicorns were wiped out because Noah did not load a pair of them on his ark
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.8 : Opossum burnt off the hair from his tail trying to turn it black
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.9 : Wicked people killed a helpful giant spider and were cursed with black evil spiders
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.10 : The King of Cats has god-like powers and is immortal
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.11 : Pandas received their coloring by rubbing soot on each other during mourning
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.12 : How Coyotes became bad luck
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.13 : Why the Minx Cat has a squashed face
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.14 : Tabby cats have a "M" on their face as a reward from Mary for
keeping baby Jesus warm
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.15 : Unicorns were wiped out because they did not listen to Noah and get on the ark
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.16 : Why coyote's don't eat corn
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 12 | 5.3.2.17 : Why Corgis are the way they are
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3: Birds |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.1 : The birds were painting themselves, but the crow slept too long,
so when he got there, there was only black paint remaining
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.2 : The ring around the a loon's neck is the beads that were tossed
into the water by a dying Indian
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.3 : Crow cheated in a contest and now says, "Caw, Caw" as punishment
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.4 : Robin fanned the fire to keep baby Jesus warm and burnt his chest
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.5 : How butterflies received their color
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.6 : The Great Spirit taught bird to sing to make the world less lonely
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.7 : Why Pelican have a large beak
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 13 | 5.3.3.8 : Parrots are green as a punishment for eating all a farmer's mangos
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.4: Origin of People or Human Characteristics |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 14 | 5.4.1: Creation of Races or Nations |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.1 : Creation of the Miztec kingdom after a great flood
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.2 : A king and queen gave birth to one hundred eggs which
developed into people who populated the earth
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.3 : The Paiute Indians originate from a tribe of giants who almost
became extinct as punishment for treating a crippled child badly
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.4 : The Digger, Washoe, and Paiute were created by the wolf, coyote,
jack rabbit, sage hen, lizard, and yellow hammer. The humans received the hand of the lizard
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.5 : God created blacks by over baking, whites by under baking,
and Indians by baking man just right
.5 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.6 : At first, all men were black, so God made a white bath so the
people could become white; some people were late, so only the palms of their hands and soles of
their feet are white
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.7 : Navajos believed that there were originally twelve tribes;
one tribe got lost, but returned as the Mormon people
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.8 : The Navajos believe that they came across the great water in a bamboo tube
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.9 : Abraham was fed by Gabriel the angel to save his life because a
king had decreed all male children be slain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.10 : Aryan nation started by a man with unrealistic projections
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.11 : Coyote accidentally scatters the Maker's sticks which becomes
the people of the world
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 14 | 5.4.1.12 : Matoshka creates people from mud after flood
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 15 | 5.4.2: Creation of Man and Woman |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 15 | 5.4.2.1 : The first man and woman left the presence of the Great White Spirit
without permission and had to live away from him forever
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 15 | 5.4.2.2 : Satan tried to complete one of God's men but failed;
the result was woman
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 15 | 5.4.2.3 : Men and women started as one circle, were broken and now search
for their missing half
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 15 | 5.4.2.4 : Bear eats garlic and grass for 30-40 days and turns into a
woman and starts the human race
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3: Human Characteristics and Traits |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.1 : The Tongan stopped being cannibalistic because they feared
the spirits of the dead would molest them
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.2 : A Russian woman started wearing a veil to hide a
kiss mark she received while her husband was away
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.3 : Men have bulging throats because when Adam ate the apple in the Garden
of Eden, he couldn’t swallow it, but rather it got caught in his throat
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.4 : "Outtie" belly buttons are the sign that the babies were not yet
ready to be sent out
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.5 : How birth marks are determined
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 16 | 5.4.3.6 : Why the deaf population is so small
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 17 | 5.4.4: Creation of Individuals |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 17 | 5.4.4.1 : Navajo legend about Changing Woman, the daughter of Earth and Sky,
who is taken care of by First Man and Woman
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.5: Origin of Plants |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 18 | 5.5.1: Flowers |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.1 : The hibiscus has a dark red spot because a fairy jabbed her
finger while sewing in the center
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.2 : Forget-me-not flowers grow where a hawk stopped an Indian from
drinking poisoned water
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.3 : Warrior pulls flower in half, gives one piece to a princess as a sign
that he will return; but he never does, and so the naupaka plant has only half a blossom
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.4 : God is moved by and transforms the girls’ blue bonnets into
flowers so that they will never be forgotten
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.5 : Indian paint brush stained by blood of murdered Indian woman
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.6 : Indian paint brush used when Indians painted themselves for war
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.7 : Narcissus fell in love with his own image and became a flower
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 18 | 5.5.1.8 : Origin of the Indian Paintbrush
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2: Trees |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.1 : A tree grows where a young girl killed herself out of grief for her
dead brother; the tree leaves fall because she cries for her brother, and the leaves are red because
of the spilt blood of the innocent boy
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.2 : Christ makes the dogwood tree grow smaller so that it can never again
be used to make crosses; he also causes the blossoms to have the form of the cross, with a crown
of thorns in the center
.8 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.3 : A stick thrown away by a man becomes a cottonwood tree
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.4 : Trees change color in the fall to make the world bright again
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.5 : Quaking Aspens quake because of the role they played in Jesus's death
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.6 : All trees and shrubs killed leaving a lone bristlecone tree
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.7 : Trees are in groves because they dance and sing together at night
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.8 : Pioneers carried Box Elder Trees across the plains
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.9 : Pine cones have a tiny handprint inside because a pine tree
sheltered baby Jesus
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.10 : Origin of Trees around the Logan temple
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.11 : In the fall one grove turns a red heart shape to honor tragic lovers
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.12 : Why Pine Trees have Needles
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 19 | 5.5.2.13 : The Widow Maker tree
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3: Edible Plants |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.1 : A princess’ lover was killed, so his head was buried, and a tree
grew where it was buried. Coconuts were the fruit of the tree to remind the princess of his face
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.2 : God sent a starving people a rainbow. One man walked across the
rainbow and brought back rice
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.3 : A plant grew where a king's son had been buried. The king named the
plant "Kava" after his son and made a beverage from the plant
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.4 : A kava plant grew where a sacrificed girl had been buried; chief
comes to use it at a ceremony after observing the plant's impact on a rat
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.5 : King of Hawaii stole pineapples and planted them by apple trees to make them grow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.6 : Sego Lily was a gift from the Great Spirit to starving Indians
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.7 : Indian princess apples were stained red by the blood of a slain princess
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 20 | 5.5.3.8 : Selu the Mother of Corn
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.6: Origin of Beliefs |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 21 | 5.6.1: Christ |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 21 | 5.6.1.1 : When Christ saw the wickedness of the people he cried a great
flood of tears which made the Grand Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 21 | 5.6.1.2 : Apaches believe the Christ appeared to them and that his foot prints are visible
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 22 | 5.6.2: Gods |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 22 | 5.6.2.1 : The coyote took the baby of the water which caused a great flood
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 22 | 5.6.2.2 : Fire crackles because Loki, the fire god, is beating his children
as punishment for the naughtiness
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 22 | 5.6.2.3 : A great white god appeared to the Chigran Indians and teaches
them how to live
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 22 | 5.6.2.4 : A great "White Butterfly" visited the Navajos, taught them how to live,
and gave signs of his return
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 22 | 5.6.2.5 : Gods turn little girl into eagle to punish her scornful grandmother
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3: Spirits |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.1 : The coyote took the baby of the water which caused a great flood
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.2 : In an Indian town, the people believe that the spirits of wicked
people haunt the town after sunset
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.3 : Aztec given sign of where to build a city
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.4 : Kakazbal, spirit of evil
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.5 : Sacrifice a pizza to Big Wag, swimming God
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 23 | 5.6.3.6 : The Celestial nymph's Hagoromo
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0: Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.1 : Those desiring strength and courage must climb a mountain where a
great chief was buried by his son who then became a great chief
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.2 : How a couple decides that if a dog pants on "Dog Tongue Day,"
it would be an indication of a short spring
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.3 : Fountain of Youth
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.4 : An Elf tells a little girl that four leaved clovers are lucky
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.5 : Why putting a cowboy hat on a bed brings bad luck
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.6 : Suicide rock (Salt Lake City)
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.7 : Indians believe beaver brings luck
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.8 : Story of Gilgamesh
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 24 | 5.6.0.9 : Santa Claus was a carpenter in a town
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.7: Origin of Customs |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 25 | 5.7.1: Dance |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 25 | 5.7.1.1 : The San Juan Indians do a deer dance to honor the son of a
virgin who turned into a deer
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 25 | 5.7.1.2 : In a dream, a buffalo tells an Indian how to do a Sundance to
cure the people of illness
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 25 | 5.7.1.3 : A tribe of Indians sends out a brave to find a way to celebrate
spring. The brave meets a bear that teaches him the Bear Dance
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 26 | 5.7.2: Songs |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 26 | 5.7.2.1 : The town drunk was accidentally thrown into a pit with the bodies of
those who died from the black plague; when he awoke, he sang the Augustine Song
.1 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 26 | 5.7.2.2 : Possible origins of the partridge in the song 12 Days of Christmas
.1 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 27 | 5.7.3: Speech |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 27 | 5.7.3.1 : The Spanish "Theta" sound originated from a king with a hair lip;
the people copied his way of speech out of respect
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 27 | 5.7.3.2 : Tikkit Tikki Tembo
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4: Origin of Holidays and Festivals |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.1 : On April 1, 1572, Belgian and Dutch men beat their opponents in a
religious war by means of tricking. This is why the day came to be April Fool's Day
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.2 : Onam, an Indian harvest festival, marks the annual return of a King
from the underworld
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.3 : E moGee - The dragon snake
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.4 : Symbolism of "Something old, Something new..." wedding custom
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.5 : Origin of Valentine's Day
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.6 : La Befana, the Christmas Witch (Italy)
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.7 : April Fools
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 28 | 5.7.4.8 : Halloween
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5: Origin of Holiday Customs |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.1 : Jack-o-Lanterns are put out to light the way for a man who can go
neither to heaven nor to hell
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.2 : Christmas trees were first used by people in the Northlands in
order to give them hope during winter time until the sun would return
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.3 : Originally, the Christmas tree was decorated with a rainbow by God's
angels. After an angel dropped and shattered the rainbow one year, they started to use the
shimmering pieces for decoration
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.4 : We hang tinsel on Christmas trees to celebrate the Christmas Spider
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.5 : The Easter Bunny comes bring eggs so children know Spring has arrived
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 29 | 5.7.5.5 : Why people put up red during Chinese New Year
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0: Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.1 : A Japanese son was throwing his mother off a mountain because she was
old. She broke tree branches on the way up so he would not get lost. Because of her kindness,
he did not throw her off
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.2 : Sego lily becomes Utah state flower after a man who promised to find
something beautiful in southern Utah produced the sego lily for his wife
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.3 : The custom to paint houses red in Sweden derives from the discovery
that red copper dust protects the wood
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.4 : The habit of the English to drive on the left side of the road comes
from a time when people found out that it is easier to defend oneself with the sword if walking
on the left
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.5 : How Samoan kings got their names
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.6 : How Irish peasants started eating roast chicken
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.7: Origin of flowers on lapels
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.8 : High School Spirit Rocks
.3 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.9 : Why Barber Poles are red and white
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.10 : Woods Cross Wildcats
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.11 : Woman cuts the end off of a ham because her mother did
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.12 : Why you have to stay behind the line at Camp Red Cliffe
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.13 : Why tourists wedge a stick underneath a rock at Snowbird
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
17 | 30 | 5.7.0.14 : Origin of a fish as a symbol of Christians
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.8: Place Names |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 1 | 5.8.1: Utah |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.A1: Argyle Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.A2: Atoka
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B1: Birdseye
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B2: Bridal Veil Falls
.8 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B3 : Boiler
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B4: Ballywats Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B5: Bear Lake
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B6 : Beer Flat
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B7 : Blacksmith Fork Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B8 : Blanding
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B9: Bogus Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B10 : Bottle Hollow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.B11 : Beaver Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C1 : Cache Valley
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C2 : Camp Red Cliff
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C3 : Crow Mountain
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C4 : Coonville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C5 : Cockcomb
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C6 : Chocolate Peak
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C7 : Camel Sock Corner
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C8 : Castle Valley
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C9 : Coalville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.C10 : Centerfield
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D1 : Deseret
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D2 : Dividend
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D3 : Draper
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D4 : Dip-N-Vat
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D5 : Dead Horse Point
.5 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D6 : Dead Man's Corner (College Ward)
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D7 : Dead Man's Hollow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D8 : Dead Man's Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D9 : Devil's Slide
.6 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D10 : Dead Man's Cave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D11 : Duchesne
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D12 : Devil's Soup Bowl
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D13 : Dangling Rope
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 1 | 5.8.1.D14 : Devil's Hand Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E1 : Elberta
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E2 : Emery
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E3 : Eureka
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E4 : Echo
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E5 : Erda
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E6 : Eagle's Roost Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.E7 : Ephraim Cemetary
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.F1 : Fairfield
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.F2 : Fountain Green
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.F3 : Fairview
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.F4 : Farr West (photos incl.)
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.F5 : Fruitland
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.G1 : Goshen
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.G2 : Grandpa's Hollow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.G3 : Gravity Hill (Salt Lake City)
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.G4 : Grader Road (Southern Utah)
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H1 : Helper
.4 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H2 : Hobble Creek Canyon
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H3 : Hurricane
.10 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H4 : Hall's Cave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H5 : Honeyville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.H6 : Happy Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.J1 : Joe's Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.J2 : Jail Rock
.2 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.K1 : Kanab
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.K2 : Koosharem
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.K3 : Kaysville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L1 : Layton
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L2 : Levan
.5 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L3 : Loa
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L4 : Liberty
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L5 : Lewiston
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L6 : Lightning Ridge
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 2 | 5.8.1.L7 : Lyman
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M1 : Magna
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M2 : Mammoth
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M3 : Marmalade District
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M4 : Midvale
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M5 : Monument
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M6 : Moore
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M7 : Mosida
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M8 : Midway
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M9 : Molly's Nibble/Nipple
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M10 : Mantua
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M11 : Minnie Maud
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M12 : Moab
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.M13 : Memorial Hill
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.N1 : Newton
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.N2 : Nine Mile
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.N3 : Nigger-Bill Canyon
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.N4 : Nephite Canal
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.O1 : Ophir
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.O2 : Orangeville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.O3 : Orderville
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P1 : Paragonah
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P2 : Parowan
.4 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P3 : Payson
.2 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P4 : Peoa
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P5 : Point of the Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P6 : Pond Town
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P7 : Provo
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P8 : Paradise
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P9 : Plain City
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P10 : Pleasant Grove
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P11 : Poison Creek
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P12 : Promise Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P13 : Providence
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.P14 : Pete McElprang Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.R1 : Riverton
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.R2 : Red Bridge
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.R3 : Roy
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.R4 : Richmond
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S1 : Salem
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S2 : Sandy
.4 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S3 : Santaquin
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S4 : Soldier Summit
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S5 : Spanish Fork
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S6 : Spring City
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S7 : Sugarhouse
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S8 : Sardine Canyon
.8 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S9 : Shoot’em a Ring Canyon
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S10 : Squaw Peak
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S11 : Swasey's Leap
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S12 : Spirit Lake
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S13 : Squaw Spring
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S14 : Sunset
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S15 : Squaw Cave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 3 | 5.8.1.S16 : Suicide Rock
Digital Items: 1
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T1 : Thead's Peak
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T2 : Thistle
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T3 : Tintic
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T4 : Tooele
.13 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T5 : Toquerville
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T6 : Toronto's Cave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T7 : Tub
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T8 : Trenton
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T9 : Tithing Hill
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.T10 : Tony's Grove
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.V1 : Vernal
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.V2 : Vernon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.W1 : Woods Cross
.10 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.W2 : Walker's Flat Missing
.1
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.W3 : Wellington
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.0 : Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.0.1 : Utah places named after the Swasey's
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.0.2 : Panguitch, Paragonah, Parowan
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.0.3 : How did towns of area get their names?
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 4 | 5.8.1.0.4 : Wayne County Mountains
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
5.8.2: Other States |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 5 | 5.8.2.1 : Alabama |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 5 | 5.8.2.1.H1 : Horse Pen Forty
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 6 | 5.8.2.2 : Alaska |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 6 | 5.8.2.2.A1 : Anchorage
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 6 | 5.8.2.2.K1 : Kachemac Bay
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3 : Arizona |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.E1 : Elephant's Feet
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.L1 : Lee's Ferry
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.M1 : Marble Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.P1 : Phoenix
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.P2 : Pipe Springs
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.S1 : Show Low
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.S2 : Snowflake
.6 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 7 | 5.8.2.3.T1 : Tuba City
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 8 | 5.8.2.4 : Arkansas |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 8 | 5.8.2.4.C1 : Christmas Tree
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5 : California |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.A1 : Azusa
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.E1 : Eagle Rock California
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.K1 : Keeler
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.L1 : Lover's Leap
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.M1 : Mount Diablo
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.O1 : Ono
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.P1 : Point Reyes National Seashore
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.R1 : Running Deer Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.S1 : Squaw Rock
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.S2 : Suicide Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 9 | 5.8.2.5.V1 : Van Nuy
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 10 | 5.8.2.6 : Colorado |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 10 | 5.8.2.6.C1 : Cimmaron
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 10 | 5.8.2.6.E1 : Elephant Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 10 | 5.8.2.6.S1 : Sleeping Ute Mountain (photos incl.)
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 10 | 5.8.2.6.T1 : Telluride
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 11 | 5.8.2.7 : Connecticut |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 11 | 5.8.2.7.M1 : Moodus
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 11 | 5.8.2.7.W1 : Wolfpit Road
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 12 | 5.8.2.8 : Delaware |
Undated |
18 | 13 | 5.8.2.9 : Florida |
Undated |
18 | 14 | 5.8.2.10 : Georgia |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 14 | 5.8.2.10.S1 : Savannah
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 15 | 5.8.2.11 : Hawaii |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 15 | 5.8.2.11.K1 : Kauai
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 15 | 5.8.2.11.K2 : Kailua
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12 : Idaho |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.B1 : Blackfoot
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.B2 : Bloomington
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.B3 : Bread Loaf Rock
.2 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.B4 : Bone
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.B5 : Black Bear Corner
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.C1 : Clifton
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.C2 : Caribou
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.C3 : Cub River
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.D1 : Devil's Hand
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.D2 : Dirty Head
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.D3 : Dingle
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.G1 : Gooding Missing
0
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.G2 : Georgetown
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.G3 : Gentile Valley
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.G4 : Giraffe Hill
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.H1 : Horseshoe Canyon
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.I1 : Idaho Falls
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.I2 : Indian Woman Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.J1 : Jack Ass Mine
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.L1 : Lost Cave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.L2 : Lago
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.L3 : Lanes Grave
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.L4 : Little Butte Cemetery
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.M1 : Malad
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.M2 : Menan
.3 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.M3 : Mink Creek
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.M4 : Mound Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.N1 : Nampa
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.O1 : Ovid
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.O2 : Oxford
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.O3 : Owyhee
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.P1 : Preston
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.P2 : Pocatello
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.P3 : Pinch Gut Lane
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.P4 : Peg Leg Slaugh
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.R1 : Rolling Thunder Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.S1 : Soda Springs
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.S2 : Suzie's Nipple
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.S3 : Strawberry Canyon
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.S4 : Squaw Leap
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.U1 : Ucon
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.V1 : Victory Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.W1 : Willow Flat
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.0 : Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.0.1 : Dead Horse Cave, Teakettle Cave, etc
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 16 | 5.8.2.12.0.2 : Idaho
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 17 | 5.8.2.13: Illinois |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 17 | 5.8.2.13.S1 : Salt Creek
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 17 | 5.8.2.13.S2 : Starved Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 18 | 5.8.2.14: Indiana |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 18 | 5.8.2.14.0 : Miscellaneous
.4 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 19 | 5.8.2.15: Iowa |
Undated |
18 | 20 | 5.8.2.16: Kansas |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 20 | 5.8.2.16.U1 : Udall
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 21 | 5.8.2.17: Kentucky |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 21 | 5.8.2.17.0 : Miscellaneous
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 22 | 5.8.2.18: Louisiana |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 22 | 5.8.2.18.B1 : Baton Rouge
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 23 | 5.8.2.19: Maine |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 23 | 5.8.2.19.S1 : Skowhegan
.2 (items)
|
Undated |
18 | 24 | 5.8.2.20: Maryland |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 24 | 5.8.2.20.C1 : Cabin John
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 24 | 5.8.2.20.S1 : Silver Spring
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 25 | 5.8.2.21: Massachusetts |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 25 | 5.8.2.21.0 : Miscellaneous
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 26 | 5.8.2.22: Michigan |
Undated |
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 26 | 5.8.2.22.1: Sleeping Bear Dunes |
Undated |
18 | 27 | 5.8.2.23: Minnesota |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 27 | 5.8.2.23.A1 : Apple Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 27 | 5.8.2.23.M1 : Minnesota
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 27 | 5.8.2.23.W1 : Winona
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 28 | 5.8.2.24: Mississippi |
Undated |
18 | 29 | 5.8.2.25: Missouri |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 29 | 5.8.2.25.C1 : Creve Coeur
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 29 | 5.8.2.25.P1 : Peculiar
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 30 | 5.8.2.26: Montana |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 30 | 5.8.2.26.B1 : Bearmouth
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 30 | 5.8.2.26.C1 : Chief Mountain
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 30 | 5.8.2.26.S1 : Song of the Singing Sirens
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 31 | 5.8.2.27: Nebraska |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 31 | 5.8.2.27.P1 : Plattsmouth
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 32 | 5.8.2.28: Nevada |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 32 | 5.8.2.28.D1 : Devil's Corral
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 32 | 5.8.2.28.E1 : Elko
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 32 | 5.8.2.28.T1 : Tonopah
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 33 | 5.8.2.29: New Hampshire |
Undated |
18 | 34 | 5.8.2.30: New Jersey |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 34 | 5.8.2.30.B1 : Basking Ridge
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 34 | 5.8.2.30.B2 : Bare Hill
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 34 | 5.8.2.30.N1 : New Providence
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31: New Mexico |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.A1 : Array
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.B1 : Bathtub row
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.L1 : Las Cruces
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.M1 : Messilla Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.M2 : Matlock Squeeze
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.S1 : Shiprock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.T1 : Tucumcari
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 35 | 5.8.2.31.W1 : Wichita Falls
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32: New York |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.F1 : Freeport
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.H1 : Horse Stable Rock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.H2 : Hoosick
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.M1 : Middletown
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.P1 : Pearl River
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.S1 : Spiten Dival [Devil]
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.S2 : Statton Island
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 36 | 5.8.2.32.S3 : Sodus
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 37 | 5.8.2.33: North Carolina |
Undated |
18 | 38 | 5.8.2.34: North Dakota |
Undated |
18 | 39 | 5.8.2.35: Ohio |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 39 | 5.8.2.35.B1 : Blind Horse Turn
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36: Oklahoma |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.A1 : Alfalfa
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.A2 : Altus
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.B1 : Broken Arrow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.B2 : Burbank
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.G1 : Glenpool
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.K1 : Keota
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 40 | 5.8.2.36.N1 : Needmore
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37: Oregon |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37.G1 : Grande Rounde Valley
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37.G2 : Goat Island
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37.O1 : Oswego
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37.S1 : Sleepy Hollow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 41 | 5.8.2.37.T1 : Thief Valley Missing
0
|
Undated |
18 | 42 | 5.8.2.38: Pennsylvania |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 42 | 5.8.2.38.I1 : Intercourse
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 42 | 5.8.2.38.P1 : Plumsock
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 42 | 5.8.2.38.P2 : Prosperity
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 43 | 5.8.2.39: Rhode Island |
Undated |
18 | 44 | 5.8.2.40: South Carolina |
Undated |
18 | 45 | 5.8.2.41: South Dakota |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 45 | 5.8.2.41.D1 : Dead Cow
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
18 | 46 | 5.8.2.42: Tennessee |
Undated |
18 | 47 | 5.8.2.43: Texas |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 47 | 5.8.2.43.D1 : Deaf Smith County
.1 (item)
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18 | 47 | 5.8.2.43.F1 : Friendswood
.1 (item)
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18 | 48 | 5.8.2.44: Vermont |
Undated |
18 | 49 | 5.8.2.45: Virginia |
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 49 | 5.8.2.45.B1 : The Bunnyman Bridge
.2 (item)
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18 | 49 | 5.8.2.45.F1 : Forks of Buffalo
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46: Washington |
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.L1 : Lebam
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.L2 : Little Rock
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.M1 : Mount Rainier
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.P1 : Puyallup
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.S1 : Sumner
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.S2 : Seattle
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.W1 : Walla Walla
.1 (item)
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18 | 50 | 5.8.2.46.Y1 : Yakima
.1 (item)
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18 | 51 | 5.8.2.47: West Virginia |
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 51 | 5.8.2.47.B1 : Big Ugly
.1 (item)
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18 | 51 | 5.8.2.47.S1 : Seneca
.1 (item)
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18 | 52 | 5.8.2.48: Wisconsin |
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 52 | 5.8.2.48.S1 : Sheboygan
.3 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49: Wyoming |
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.A1 : Afton
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.A2 : Auburn
.5 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.B1 : Bedford
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.B2 : Blind Bull Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C1 : Cokeville
.3 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C2 : Cabin Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C3 : Cedar Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C4 : Coffee Pot Flat
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C5 : Cody
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.C6 : Crowheart Butte
.2 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.D1 : Dead Man Creek
.5 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.D2 : Devil's Gate
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.E1 : Etna
.2 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.F1 : Freedom
.7 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.F2 : Fairview
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.G1 : Grand Tetons
.2 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.I1 : Isa Lake
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.J1 : Jackson Hole
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.K1 : Kemmerer
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.O1 : Osmond
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.P1 : Prater
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.P2 : Poker Hollow
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S1 : Smoot
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S2 : Star Valley
.10 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S3 : Sweetwater
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S4 : Skull Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S5 : Squaw Creek/Squaw Flat
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S6 : Stewart
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S7 : Strawberry Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S8 : Sublette County
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.S9 : Screaming Woman Rock
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.T1 : Ten Sleep
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.T2 : Thomas Lee Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.T3 : Tincup Creek
.3 (items)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.W1 : Willow Creek
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.W2 : Wailing Canyon
.1 (item)
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18 | 53 | 5.8.2.49.Y1 : Yellowstone
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0: Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.A1 : Amesville
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.B1 : Bakersfield
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.B2 : Beef Canyon
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.C1 : Cut Foot Sioux
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.C2 : Christine's Run
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.D1 : Diana's Pool
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.D2 : Dover Lake
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.E1 : Eufaula
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.E2 : Eagle Pass
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.E3 : Everett's Peak
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.E4 : El Cajon
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.E5 : Estes Park
.2 (items)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.F1 : Funk's Lake
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.H1 : Hell's Canyon
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.H2 : Hyenga, William (named after)
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.L1 : La mesa
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.L2 : Latitudes
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.L3 : Lost Hammer Canyon
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.L4 : Lucky Dog Silver Mine
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.M1 : Mary's Nipple
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.M2 : Monsey
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.M3 : Maria's Rock
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.N1 : Nigger Dan Hollow
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.P1 : Pomona
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.P2 : Pickett's Ridge
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.P3 : Pelican Pond
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.R1 : Rooster Rock
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.R2 : Robin
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S1 : Sands Springs
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S2 : Skiatook
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S3 : Sloatsburg
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S4 : Sawdust lane
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S5 : Salley's Peak Hole
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.S6 : Snobakye
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.T1 : T’aa Buchiidii
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.T2 : Thief Valley
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.T3 : Terrace Canyon
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.T4 : Targhee Forest and Ski Resort
.1 (item)
|
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.T5 : Tai taa
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.W1 : Workman Lake
.1 (item)
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18 | 54 | 5.8.2.0.Y1 : Yahuarcocha
.1 (item)
|
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Box | Folder | ||
18 | 55 | 5.8.3: Countries - Other than U.S.A |
|
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 55 | 5.8.3.A1 : Africa
.1 (item)
|
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.A2: Argentina
.1 (item)
|
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.C1: Canada
.2 (items)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.E1: England
.2 (items)
|
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.G1: Germany
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.I1: Italy
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.J1: Japan
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.M1: Mexico
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.N1: New Zealand
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.S1: Switzerland
.1 (item)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.T1: Tonga
.2 (items)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.W1: Craiy Llewelyn, a house in Breconshire, Wales
.2 (items)
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18 | 55 | 5.8.3.GU1: Guam
.1 (items)
|
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5.9: Other Names |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 1 | 5.9.1: Family Names |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 1 | 5.9.1.A1 : Applenaut
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.B1 : Barfus
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.B2 : Bilbao
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.C1 : Costello/Kastelic
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.C2 : Cunningham
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.D1 : Drabble
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.F1 : Fasselin
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.H1 : Hay
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.P1 : Price
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.P2 : Pugmire
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.P3 : Pinegar
.1 (item)
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19 | 1 | 5.9.1.S1 : Sondereggar
.1 (item)
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19 | 2 | 5.9.2: Street Names |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 2 | 5.9.2.1 : Treasure Drive (Boise, Idaho)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 2 | 5.9.2.2 : Streets in Hyrum, Utah
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 2 | 5.9.2.3 : Devil's Bridge (Zurich, Switzerland)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 3 | 5.9.3: Names of Institutions/Public Places |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 3 | 5.9.3.1: Peteetneet School (Payson, Utah)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 3 | 5.9.3.2: Bluebird Restaurant (Logan, Utah)
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
19 | 3 | 5.9.3.3: Chapel in Germany guilt by Prince as sign of remorse for
killing his brother
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
19 | 3 | 5.9.3.4: USU Anthropology Museum
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 3 | 5.9.3.5: the nine Mounds of Saga Prefecture (Kyushu, Japan)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4: Nicknames |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 4 | 5.9.4.1: Bora Bora
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.2: "School in the Swamp" (Spring Valley, New York)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.3: "KKK" (Kankakee River, Illinois)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.4: "River of No Return" (Salmon River)
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.5: Gringos
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.6: Bowlers
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.7: "Hotel California" is really Camarillo State Hospital
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.8: California Mule Deer
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 4 | 5.9.4.9: Pasta Tara
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0: Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 5 | 5.9.0.1 : Bologna rocks named after tradition of warming pieces of
bologna on them
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.2 : The Lovin' Tree got name from numerous pieces of women's garments
that are found hanging in tree
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.3 : Porches named "widow walks" because sailors’ wives used to stand on
them and wait for husbands who often never returned
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.4 : Vaseline
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.5 : Hush puppies
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.6 : A cowardly person is "chicken"
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 5 | 5.9.0.7 : The Yucca Tree
.1 (item)
|
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5.10: Origin of Products, Items, Objects |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 6 | 5.10.1: Signs and Symbols |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 6 | 5.10.1.1 : Flags |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 6 | 5.10.1.1.1 : Swedish Flag
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 6 | 5.10.1.1.2 : Danish Flag
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 6 | 5.10.1.2: Watch for Falling Rock" signs were put up when an Indian named
Falling Rock did not return to his tribe
.37 (items)
|
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19 | 6 | 5.10.1.3 : Proctor and Gamble symbol
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 6 | 5.10.1.4 : Knighthood of John Stark
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 6 | 5.10.1.5 : High water marks in Arco
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 7 | 5.10.2: Works of Architecture |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 7 | 5.10.2.1 : Extraordinary staircase of church in Santa Fe, New Mexico
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 7 | 5.10.2.2 : Three legends explaining why tower of Kitziegen [Kitzingen]
in German is crooked
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 7 | 5.10.2.3 : Crosses on Lamoille Rock
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 7 | 5.10.3: Decorations |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 7 | 5.10.3.1: Tommy Mather table
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 7 | 5.10.3.2: Schwibbogens Arch
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0: Miscellaneous |
|
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 8 | 5.10.0.1: Meat tenderizer
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
19 | 8 | 5.10.0.2: Origin of the Oquirrh bucket which is won by the in-state college
basketball champion
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.3: Doughnuts
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.4: Filk music
.2 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.5: Scooby-Doo
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.6: Old Bus of Creamy Hollow
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.7: Colors on a Map
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.8: Boy's and girl's shirts
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.9: Mother Goose
.6 (items)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.10: Twin Falls reservoir
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.11: Datsun automobile
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.12: Bagpipes were originally Irish, but the Scottish stole them.
.1 (item)
|
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19 | 8 | 5.10.0.13: Why the popularity of lace rose and declined during the Victorian Era
.1 (item)
|
Undated |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Folklore archives--Utah.
- Folklore--West (U.S.)
- Legends--United States.
- Supernatural--Folklore.
- Urban folklore--West (U.S.)
Corporate Names
- Utah State University. Folklore Program. (contributor)