Archives West Finding Aid
Table of Contents
Norman D. and Doris Nevills papers, 1890s-1952
Overview of the Collection
- Creator
- Nevills, Norman D., 1908-1949
- Title
- Norman D. and Doris Nevills papers
- Dates
- 1890s-1952 (inclusive)18901952
- Quantity
- 21 linear feet
- Collection Number
- MS 0552
- Summary
- The Norman D. and Doris Nevills papers (1890s-1952) constitute one of the finest and most comprehensive collections of original research materials on the history of travel on the Colorado and Green Rivers and their tributaries. Included are correspondence, diaries, logs, subject files, news clippings, and business records. Norman Nevills (1909-1949), supported by his wife Doris, was one of the pioneers of commercial river running.
- Repository
-
University of Utah Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library
University of Utah
295 South 1500 East
Salt Lake City, UT
84112-0860
Telephone: 8015818863
special@library.utah.edu - Access Restrictions
-
Twenty-four hour advanced notice encouraged. Materials must be used on-site. Access to parts of this collection may be restricted under provisions of state or federal law.
- Languages
- English
Historical NoteReturn to Top
Norman Davies Nevills was born in Chico, California, on April 8, 1909. He was the only child of William Eugene Nevills and Mae Davies Nevills. Norman's paternal grandfather, also named William but known as "Captain Billy" Nevills, had been a successful miner and promoter during the California gold rush of the 1850s who lost everything in the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. William E. Nevills was a prospector in Alaska before coming to Mexican Hat, Utah, in the 1920s. William was drawn by one of the periodic oil booms that were common in southeast Utah. After two years of college at the College of the Pacific, Norman joined his parents at Mexican Hat in 1928 to assist with the oil development work. The expected oil fields never materialized, however, (although Norman worked off and on at drilling for oil until his death), and the Nevills family was forced to turn to other means of making a living. They built a tourist lodge above the San Juan River, which flowed through town, and Norman began guiding parties of visitors by car through Monument Valley and other nearby attractions. In between times, he supplemented the family income by doing whatever odd jobs he could find. In 1932, Norman was asked by a miner to haul a load of supplies to a placer mine a few miles downriver, which he did successfully. From this beginning, Norman Nevills launched his river career.
In the summer of 1933, Norman participated in an archeological survey of the area around the San Juan river; part of the survey involved the use of folding canvas boats on the San Juan. On October 18 of that same year, Norman was married to Doris Drown, a native of Portland, Oregon. For their honeymoon trip, Norman decided to take Doris down the San Juan. He built a boat based on a design given to him by his father, who had hauled supplies and passengers on Alaskan rivers during the Klondike gold rush. Family legend has it that Norman built the boat with boards from a horse trough and an old outhouse, and used oil well suction rods with steel blades for oars. The trip, to Copper Canyon in February 1934, was a success. Two years later, knowledge of Nevills' experience on the river had spread sufficiently for a party from California to contact him and hire him to guide them down the river. This he did in March of 1936, and for every year after that until his death in 1949, Nevills led groups down the San Juan River on excursions throughout the summer months. These trips became his bread and butter, and often the receipts and deposits from the San Juan trips financed his other trips on the Green, the Snake and Salmon, and through the Grand Canyon.
Nevills' first major expedition and the beginnings of his subsequent fame as the number-one Whitewater man in America was in 1938. In the summer of that year he led three boats and a crew of two other boatmen and six passengers (including two women) from Green River, Utah, through Cataract Canyon and the Grand Canyon. Although internal dissensions threatened to end the expedition at Lees Ferry, the beginning of the Grand Canyon, Nevills and Elzada Clover, the co-organizer of the trip, were able to keep the party together and complete the trip. Nevills and Dr. Clover had planned to write a book about their experiences on the river, but this never materialized, and each went on to other things. Nevills' second major trip was in 1940. This time he ran almost the entire length of the Green River, from Green River, Wyoming, through the Grand Canyon. The crew included his wife Doris and another woman, and from Green River, Utah on, Barry Goldwater, later to become a powerful Western politician.
In 1941 and 1942, Nevills conducted private charter trips through the Grand Canyon, giving him a lasting place in Colorado River history as the first person to go through the Grand Canyon more than twice. On the later trip, Otis Marston was one of the passengers. Marston and Nevills were at first close friends, but later personality conflicts drove them apart and Marston became one of Nevills' most vocal detractors; this was to have great bearing on Nevills' reputation after his death. By the time the 1942 trip was over, the U.S. was involved in World War II, and Nevills nascent river outfitting business was considerably curtailed. Although he did conduct a few parties down the San Juan during the war years, most of his time was spent working for the U.S. Geological Survey, whom he joined as resident engineer at Mexican Hat in 1943. In 1945, with the war almost over, Nevills took a party that included Otis Marston and Ed Hudson (who had also been on the 1942 Grand Canyon trip), Marston's daughters and wife, and others, down Cataract Canyon of the Colorado. This marked the resumption of a pattern that Nevills held throughout the rest of his life: spring and early summer trips on the San Juan, and then a major expedition on another river later in the summer. In 1946, it was the Snake and Main Fork of the Salmon Rivers in Idaho; in 1947, 1948, and 1949, the Grand Canyon. In 1950 Nevills planned to try a river in Canada or perhaps Asia, but death intervened.
Throughout his career guiding parties on the rivers of the West, Nevills was supported by his wife Doris. Indeed, many who knew them say that Doris was a very real reason for his success. Doris organized all the menus, shuttles, and other logistical details that are absolutely essential for a successful commercial river trip. In addition, she smoothed over disputes and ruffled feelings among passengers and boatmen that were caused by Norman's often abrasive personality. Doris was by all accounts completely devoted to Norman, and endured with good spirit the verbal abuse that she reportedly received from Norman's mother Mae Nevills. Doris' support of Norman's chosen career extended to pawning her jewelry during the early lean years, before Norman became famous, and caring for their two daughters, Joan, born in 1936, and Sandra, born in 1941. The one thing that Doris reportedly did not share was Norman's passion for flying, even though the Piper J3 that Norman bought in 1946 was a great convenience, given their isolated home. It was in Norman's plane that they met their deaths together, when the plane crashed on takeoff at Mexican Hat, on the morning of September 19, 1949.
In today's high-tech and big-business world of commercial river running, where thousands of paying passengers are taken down river annually, and thousands of dollars spent on equipment and permits by outfitters, Nevills Expeditions, with its wooden boats and slim margin of profit, seems quaint, like something out of a forgotten era. Indeed, after his death, Nevills' reputation suffered at the hands of later rivermen, who said he was too cautious, too much of a showman, and so on. Undeniably, Nevills was a showman, and was concerned with his own reputation. Equally undeniably, however, is the fact that to Norman Nevills must be given the credit for a number of firsts (so important to boatmen!) on the Colorado. He was the first to run the Colorado through the Grand Canyon more than twice, the first to run a strictly commercial river trip through the Grand Canyon, the first to take women on commercial river trips, and the first to take women through the Grand Canyon, which was unheard of at the time. Nevills was the first to admit that he was a cautious boatman, but he also was proud of the fact that he never flipped a boat on all the rivers he ran, a safety record hardly matched today. His boat design, the Cataract boat, remained one of the standard river craft until well after the end of World War II; those who continued to use his style of boat did so long after others had converted to inflatable rubber boats. Nevills' principle of "face your danger" (i.e. the boatman faces the obstacle and rows away from it) is still the way rapids are run today, and although others had used the technique before him, he popularized the idea.
Norman Nevills was a pioneer, indeed one of the pioneers of commercial river running, and there are still companies operating today that can trace their roots directly back to Nevills Expeditions. Virtually everyone on the river today is there because Norman and Doris Nevills were willing to "face their danger."
Content DescriptionReturn to Top
The Norman D. and Doris Nevills papers (1890s-1952) constitute one of the finest and most comprehensive collections of original research materials on the history of travel on the Colorado and Green Rivers and their tributaries. All materials have been left in their original and are divided into five sections: I. Personal Materials; II. Correspondence; III. River Trips; IV. Clippings; V. Miscellaneous Finances.
Section I, Personal Materials, consists of two boxes. Box 1 contains biographical materials about Norman, his father and grandfather; biographical notes by Joan Staveley and Thorn and Lygia Mayes, close personal friends of Norman and Doris; material gathered for a possible biography in the 1950s; miscellaneous materials from Mae Nevills, Norman's mother; and miscellaneous personal items. Also included in this box are clippings about Norman and Doris' death in September 1949, tributes to them, and correspondence about the memorial plague which was placed in their honor above Marble Canyon in 1952. Finally, there is correspondence about the donation of Norman's boats and equipment to various museums after his death, and correspondence and supporting documentation for a proposal made in 1957 to name the reservoir rising behind Glen Canyon Dam after Nevills. Box 2 contains miscellaneous records from the Mexican Hat Lodge, which was operated by Mae Nevills.
The heart of the entire collection is found in Section II. Unlike most manuscript collections, the incoming correspondence in the Nevills papers is accompanied by his outgoing correspondence, since Nevills made carbon copies of virtually all his letters. This is an unprecedented treasure trove for the researcher, for it allows entry into Norman's everyday thoughts and actions in a way that is normally not possible. There are approximately 5000 letters in the collection. This section is divided into four categories: Family, Personal, Government, and Business. Family correspondence is contained in only one box. Personal correspondence is the bulk of the collection, and is contained in boxes 3-22. It includes inquiries about and letters reserving places on river trips, since the basis of his river outfitting business was personal contacts, and it would have been virtually impossible to separate river trip correspondence from the purely personal correspondence. Government correspondence contains letters with the U.S. Geological Survey, his employer from 1943 until his death, the National Park Service, and various other federal and Utah state agencies. Business correspondence is arranged into subject categories and includes correspondence about automobiles, airplanes, insurance, oil, and so on. It should be noted that this category does not include any materials about river trips.
Section, III, River Trips, also contains a wealth of materials. Included are Norman's diaries, both originals and typed transcriptions; Doris's diary of the 1940 Green and Colorado River trip, including the later published account; diaries, journals, and scrapbooks kept by passengers on Nevills Expeditions who later sent him copies; miscellaneous materials about boats, supplies, equipment, brochures for Nevills Expeditions, and so on; and maps. Diaries sent by passengers, especially those about the San Juan trips, are of particular interest, as Nevills rarely kept a journal on those trips. Finally, the maps in box 34 are those used by Norman on his river trips, and contain many handwritten notations.
Section IV, Clippings contains both newspaper clippings covering the years 1933-1949, and magazines which have articles by and about Nevills, or in some cases advertisements for Nevills Expeditions. Boxes 35 and 36 contain newspaper clippings arranged by year. Box 37 contains issues of Desert magazine, the editor and publisher of which, Randall Henderson, was a close friend of the Nevills. In 1945 Henderson took a San Juan trip with Nevills Expeditions, followed in 1947 by a Grand Canyon trip. Henderson wrote feature articles about both of these trips; the Grand Canyon trip was serialized over several issues. Issues dated after 1949 contain memorials and reminiscences about Norman and Doris. Box 38 contains miscellaneous magazines, in each of which is an article about or a mention of Nevills Expeditions. These are arranged alphabetically by title.
Section V, Miscellaneous Finances, contains those financial records that did not fit into any of the previous categories. This includes canceled checks, check registers, bank statements, receipts and Mae Nevills' trading post account book.
Use of the CollectionReturn to Top
Restrictions on Use
The library does not claim to control copyright for all materials in the collection. An individual depicted in a reproduction has privacy rights as outlined in Title 45 CFR, part 46 (Protection of Human Subjects). For further information, please review the J. Willard Marriott Library's Use Agreement and Reproduction Request forms.
Preferred Citation
Collection Name, Collection Number, Box Number, Folder Number. Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, The University of Utah.
Administrative InformationReturn to Top
Arrangement
Organized in five series: I. Personal; II. Correspondence; III. River Trips; IV. Clippings; and V. Miscellaneous Finances.
Acquisition Information
Gift of daughters Joan Nevills-Staveley and Sandra Nevills Reiff in 1988.
Separated Materials
Photographs and audio-visual materials were placed in the Multimedia Division of Special Collections (P0341 and A0245).
Processing Note
Processed by Roy Webb in 1991.
Related Materials
Forms part of the River Running Archives (S.J. Quinney Outdoor Recreation Archives).
Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top
I: Personal MaterialsReturn to Top
Filed in this series are personal materials from Norman Nevills, his wife Doris, and other members of his family. The first box contains biographical materials and miscellaneous personal items. Box 2 contains materials about the Mexican Hat Lodge, operated by William E. and Mae Nevills.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Biographical Materials, Miscellaneous Personal Items
This subseries contains background material about Norman's family, as well as miscellaneous personal items from Norman and his parents. Some materials were gathered by Norman for articles and publicity during his life, others were gathered for a proposed biography after his death by his daughter Joan Nevills-Staveley. Also included are clippings about the death of Norman and Doris, tributes written after their deaths, materials about a memorial plaque that was dedicated in 1952, and correspondence and supporting documents for a 1957 proposal to name the reservoir behind Glen Canyon Dam after Nevills.
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Box | Folder | ||
1 | 1 | Nevills Family History |
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1 | 2 | Davies Family History |
|
1 | 3 | Mae Nevills Account Book |
1935-1937 |
1 | 4 | Norman Nevills Autobiography |
|
1 | 5 | Selective Service |
1943-1944 |
1 | 6 | Birth Certificate Search |
1944 |
1 | 7 | War Ration Books and Coupons |
|
1 | 8-10 | Biographical Notes by Joan Staveley |
|
1 | 11 | Biographical Notes from Thorn and Lygia Mayes |
|
1 | 12 | Miscellaneous Biographical Notes |
|
1 | 13 | Miscellaneous Personal Items |
|
1 | 14 | Correspondence About Possible Biography |
1955-1958; 1978 |
1 | 15 | Death of Norman and Doris Nevills |
1949 September 19 |
1 | 16 | Tributes |
|
1 | 17 | Memorial Plaque |
|
1 | 18 | Donation of Boats, Equipment |
|
1 | 19 | Lake Nevills Proposal--Correspondence |
1957-1959 |
1 | 20 | Lake Nevills Proposal--Drafts, Supporting Documents |
|
Mexican Hat Lodge
This subseries contains materials about the Mexican Hat Lodge, which was owned and operated by Nevills' parents, William E. Nevills (until his death in August 1941) and Mae D. Nevills.
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Box | Folder | ||
2 | 1 | Brochure |
1937 |
2 | 2 | Stationery |
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2 | 3 | "Canyon Wonderland" |
1941 |
2 | 4 | "Canyon Wonderland" Original Artwork |
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2 | 5 | Brochures--Drafts, Changes, Miscellaneous Pages |
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2 | 6 | Miscellaneous Maps |
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2 | 7 | History |
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2 | 8 | Fire |
1964 |
2 | 9 | Miscellaneous |
II: CorrespondenceReturn to Top
This section contains three types of correspondence. Box 3 contains correspondence with family members of both Norman and Doris Nevills. Boxes 4-24 contain miscellaneous personal correspondence, which includes correspondence about river trips, since the basis of Norman's river business was personal contacts. In those few cases where correspondence about Norman and Doris was received after their deaths, it has been included in the folder as well. Boxes 23-24 contain correspondence with various agencies of the U.S. and Utah State governments. Boxes 25-26 contain miscellaneous business correspondence, excluding inquiries about river trips or letters booking passage on a river trip. If there were three or more letters, the correspondent was given a separate folder. If there were less than three letters, they are filed chronologically in the folders labeled "A Miscellaneous" and so on. Within the folders, all letters are arranged chronologically.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Family Correspondence |
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Box | Folder | ||
3 | 1-2 | Mae D. Nevills |
1937-1949 |
3 | 3-4 | Jane Daniels |
1937-1944 |
3 | 5 | Mrs. M.E. Thompson |
1941-1942 |
3 | 6 | Doris Nevills |
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3 | 7 | "Mother D" [Drown] |
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3 | 8 | Doris Nevills to Joan Nevills |
1940-1949 |
3 | 9-10 | Doris Nevills to Joan Nevills |
|
3 | 11 | Norman Nevills to Joan Nevills |
1940-1949 |
3 | 12 | Joan Nevills-Cards, Miscellaneous |
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3 | 13 | Sandra Nevills |
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Personal Correspondence, A |
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Box | Folder | ||
4 | 1 | Mary Ogden Abbott |
1948-1949 |
4 | 2 | Mary Adamic |
1948-1949 |
4 | 3 | Don Adams |
1940-1942 |
4 | 4 | John Quincy Adamson |
1931-1932 |
4 | 5 | Agnes Albert |
1941-1949 |
4 | 6 | Richard Aldrich |
1948 |
4 | 7-10 | Harry Aleson |
1939-1949 |
4 | 11 | H.D. Alexander |
1948 |
4 | 12 | Janet Alexander |
1946 |
4 | 13 | John Allis |
1937-1949 |
4 | 14 | Mary Amend |
1948 |
4 | 15 | Edward Anderson |
1940-1941 |
4 | 15A | Anderson, Elvira |
1947-1948 |
4 | 15B | Andrews, W.E. |
1947-1949 |
4 | 16 | Bud and Tro Anspach |
1947-1949 |
4 | 17 | Paul Anthony |
1946 |
4 | 18 | E.M. Armstrong |
1947 |
4 | 18A | Don Ashbaugh |
1947-1949 |
4 | 19 | "A" Miscellaneous |
1930-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, B |
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Box | Folder | ||
5 | 1 | Linda Babcock ("Lydy") |
1948 |
5 | 2 | Wilson Baden |
1945-1948 |
5 | 3 | Alfred Bailey |
1942-1948 |
5 | 4 | Ralph Bailey |
1941-1943 |
5 | 5 | Mildred Baker |
1939-1944 |
5 | 6 | Dennis Baldwin |
1938-1948 |
5 | 7 | Lionel Banks |
1941-1943 |
5 | 8 | Alice Bates |
1946-1949 |
5 | 9 | Charles Bausback |
1948-1949 |
5 | 10 | George Bauwens |
1941-1946 |
5 | 11 | Austin Beals |
1946-1949 |
5 | 12 | Bayne Beauchamp |
1935-1939 |
5 | 13 | Fred H. Beck |
1941 |
5 | 14 | Lorin Bell |
1938 |
5 | 15 | Sunny Benedix |
1948 |
5 | 16 | Paul Benedict |
1943-1945 |
5 | 17 | Jessie Benedix |
1946-1947 |
5 | 18 | P.W. Blackford |
1942 |
5 | 19 | Doris Blakeslee |
1944-1947 |
5 | 20 | John Blanchard |
1947 |
5 | 21 | Howard H. Bliss |
1939-1940 |
5 | 22 | Don Bondurant |
1945-1947 |
5 | 23 | Joseph Borden |
1939-1947 |
5 | 24 | Daniel Bovee |
1940 |
5 | 25 | Allan Box |
1941-1949 |
5 | 25A | Allan Boz |
1948-1949 |
5 | 26 | Jack Breed |
1939-1946 |
5 | 27 | Dale Broten |
1945-1946 |
5 | 28 | Roy Burgess |
1945-1948 |
5 | 29 | Edward Burnham |
1941-1943 |
5 | 30 | Murray Butler |
1946 |
5 | 31 | Jack Butt |
1940-1941 |
5 | 32 | Gilbert Byrne |
1936-1947 |
5 | 33-39 | "B" Miscellaneous |
1932-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, C |
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Box | Folder | ||
6 | 1 | Winthrop Cady |
1949 |
6 | 2 | Ian Campbell |
1938-1942 |
6 | 3 | Ramona Cannon |
1946-1949 |
6 | 4 | Sylvia Capps |
1946-1949 |
6 | 5 | Paul Carius |
1933-1940 |
6 | 6 | Raymond Carlson |
1941 |
6 | 7 | Benjamin Carpenter |
1944-1948 |
6 | 8 | Carson (?) |
1943 |
6 | 9 | Frank Carson |
1946-1948 |
6 | 10 | Garold Carlton |
1948-1949 |
6 | 11 | Vernon Cato |
1947-1948 |
6 | 12 | Art Chaffin |
1940-1945 |
6 | 13 | Andy Chamberlain |
1947-1948 |
6 | 14 | June Chamberlain |
1942-1947 |
6 | 15 | William B. Chandlee |
1947 |
6 | 16 | Everett Chapman |
1946-1949 |
6 | 17 | Harold Chase |
1947-1949 |
6 | 18 | Ellery Clark |
1939 |
6 | 19 | Neil M. Clark |
1945-1946 |
6 | 20 | Steve Clark |
1932-1946 |
6 | 21 | A.C. Clarke |
1948 |
6 | 22 | Robert G. Cleland |
1946-1949 |
6 | 23 | Elzada Clover |
1938-1945 |
6 | 24 | Israel Cohn |
1936-1941 |
6 | 25 | W.B. Coleman |
1942-1949 |
6 | 26 | Hull Cook |
1938-1945 |
6 | 27 | Frank Cooke |
1945-1949 |
6 | 28 | Vernon Cooley |
1940-1941 |
6 | 29 | Joe Cooper |
1948 |
6 | 30 | Omar Cooper |
1949 |
6 | 31 | Jack Corbin |
1946-1948 |
6 | 32 | J. Early Craig |
1941-1946 |
6 | 33 | William Cree |
1942-1946 |
6 | 34 | Frank Cummings |
1946-1947 |
6 | 35-36 | Hugh Cutler |
1939-1949 |
6 | 37-42 | "C" Miscellaneous |
1934-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, D |
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Box | Folder | ||
7 | 1 | Burt L. Davis |
1946-1947 |
7 | 2 | Albert K. Dawson |
1941 |
7 | 3 | B.W. Deason |
1939-1940 |
7 | 4 | Lillie L. Deimler |
1947 |
7 | 5 | R.C. Denney |
1938-1946 |
7 | 6 | Eldon Dennis |
1944-1945 |
7 | 7-10 | Joe Desloge |
1944-1949 |
7 | 11 | A.M. Dewey |
1947-1948 |
7 | 12 | Frank Dodge |
1939-1945 |
7 | 13 | Lee Doud |
1942-1946 |
7 | 14 | Perry Driggs |
1945-1948 |
7 | 15 | Elizabeth Dupont |
1939-1950 |
7 | 16 | Stuart Dunbar |
1937-1938 |
7 | 17-20 | "D" Miscellaneous |
1929-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, E-F |
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Box | Folder | ||
8 | 1 | Clyde Eddy |
1938-1945 |
8 | 2 | Ray Eggersted |
1946-1948 |
8 | 3 | Josiah R. Eisaman |
1949 |
8 | 4 | W.D. Eldredge |
1940-1945 |
8 | 5 | Charles Ellet |
1946 |
8 | 6 | H.W. Endner |
1933-1940 |
8 | 7-9 | "E" Miscellaneous |
1932-1949 |
8 | 10 | Francis P. Farquhar |
1942-1948 |
8 | 11 | Ethel Farrell |
1937-1948 |
8 | 12 | Charles H. Feltes |
1937-1946 |
8 | 13 | Wilbur B. Foshay |
1948 |
8 | 14 | Duane Frandsen |
1948-1949 |
8 | 15 | Harry G. Franse |
1938-1946 |
8 | 16 | John A. Frost |
1932-1947 |
8 | 17 | Kent Frost |
1935-1949 |
8 | 18 | Moulton Fulmer |
1942-1949 |
8 | 19-20 | "F" Miscellaneous |
1935-1949 |
Explorers Club
Following his descents of the Green and Colorado Rivers in 1938 and 1940, Nevills was nominated and accepted as a member of the Explorers Club. This box contains materials from his nomination and later membership.
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Box | Folder | ||
9 | 1 | Membership |
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9 | 2 | Correspondence |
1941-1945 |
9 | 3 | Business |
1941-1949 |
9 | 4-5 | Notices of Meetings |
1942-1949 |
9 | 6 | Miscellaneous Announcements |
|
9 | 7 | Letters of Condolence to Nevills' Family |
1949 |
Personal Correspondence, G |
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Box | Folder | ||
10 | 1 | Herb Gable |
1935-1948 |
10 | 2 | John Galley |
1940-1941 |
10 | 3 | Martin Gambee |
1937-1944 |
10 | 4 | Ernest M. Garbe |
1945 |
10 | 5 | Ray Garner |
1941 |
10 | 6 | Claire E. Garretson |
1937-1949 |
10 | 7 | Wilbur Gibson |
1937-1939 |
10 | 8 | Hollis T. Gleason |
1948 |
10 | 9 | Joe Goettsman |
1949 |
10 | 10 | Barry Goldwater |
1940 |
10 | 11 | Barry Goldwater |
1941-1949 |
10 | 12 | J.A. Gower |
1948 |
10 | 13 | Alexander "Zee" Grant |
1939-1946 |
10 | 14 | Herbert E. Gregory |
1937-1945 |
10 | 15 | Archie Griffith |
1947 |
10 | 16 | R.W. Groo |
1937-1941 |
10 | 17 | Ernest O. Gross |
1945-1946 |
10 | 18-22 | "G" Miscellaneous |
1932-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, Ha-Hi |
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Box | Folder | ||
11 | 1 | Fred Haas |
1942-1945 |
11 | 2 | Ansel Hall |
1933-1939 |
11 | 3 | Ansel Hall |
1940-1948 |
11 | 4 | Ansel Hall (Explorers Newsletters) |
1933-1936 |
11 | 5 | Wendell C. Haines |
1941-1947 |
11 | 6 | Laphene "Don" Harris |
1938-1949 |
11 | 7 | Carter Harrison |
1947-1948 |
11 | 8 | Katherine Harvey |
1941-1945 |
11 | 9 | Bus Hatch |
1940-1944 |
11 | 10 | Fred Hauenstein |
1945-1949 |
11 | 11 | Sam Hayward |
1945-1946 |
11 | 12 | Viola Hazard |
1946-1948 |
11 | 13 | Weldon Heald |
1941-1948 |
11 | 14 | Wesley P. Heath |
1938-1943 |
11 | 15 | Graham Heid |
1941 |
11 | 16 | Randall Henderson (Desert Magazine) |
1938-1947 |
11 | 17 | Randall Henderson (Desert Magazine) |
1948-1949 |
11 | 18 | Edna Heringer |
1942 |
11 | 19 | Neville Hertwick |
1946 |
11 | 20 | Wayne and Lucille Hiser |
1947-1948 |
Personal Correspondence, Ho-Miscellaneous H |
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Box | Folder | ||
12 | 1 | Paul Hoefler |
1948 |
12 | 2 | John Hoeppel |
1938-1942 |
12 | 3 | Tony Holbrook |
1943-1947 |
12 | 4 | J.G. Holland |
1948 |
12 | 5 | Burton Holmes |
1948 |
12 | 6 | Haldane ("Buzz") Holmstrom |
1938-1940 |
12 | 7 | Arthur Hoskins |
1945-1949 |
12 | 8 | Charles F. Hottes |
1937-1941 |
12 | 9 | Charlie Howard |
1934-1949 |
12 | 10 | Don Howard |
1945-1948 |
12 | 11 | Frank Howard |
1945-1949 |
12 | 12 | Roy Howell |
1945-1947 |
12 | 13 | Russell Hubbard |
1947 |
12 | 14 | Roman Hubbell |
1938-1944 |
12 | 15 | Iva Marie Huddleston |
1948 |
12 | 16 | Ed Hudson |
1941-1949 |
12 | 17 | E.P. Hunt |
1936-1945 |
12 | 18 | Ethel Hurd |
1942-1944 |
12 | 19 | Hayden Huston |
1940-1949 |
12 | 20 | Marian and Laurin Hyde |
1940-1942 |
12 | 21-25 | "H" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, I-K |
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Box | Folder | ||
13 | 1 | "I" Miscellaneous |
1944-1949 |
13 | 2 | Wyatt Jacobs |
1948 |
13 | 3 | Celia Johnson |
1948-1949 |
13 | 4 | Lamont Johnson |
1946-1949 |
13 | 5 | Ros Johnson |
1946-1947 |
13 | 6 | Ros Johnson |
1948 |
13 | 7 | Ros Johnson |
1949 |
13 | 8 | Florence Jones |
1938 |
13 | 9 | Marge Jones |
1946-1948 |
13 | 10 | Lois Jotter |
1938 |
13 | 11 | "J" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
13 | 12 | Felix Kallis |
1948 |
13 | 13 | Virginia Kass |
1942-1944 |
13 | 14 | Victor Kaufman |
1947-1948 |
13 | 15 | Howard Kearns |
1938-1944 |
13 | 16 | Helen Kendall |
1948-1949 |
13 | 17 | Florence Kenworthy |
1945-1947 |
13 | 18 | Ed Kerley |
1936-1938 |
13 | 19 | Dmitri Kessel |
1944 |
13 | 20 | Annie Kier |
1946-1949 |
13 | 21 | Paul Kilburn |
1949 |
13 | 22 | C.T. Kirby |
1949 |
13 | 23 | Ray Kiser |
1947-1949 |
13 | 24 | W.C. Kite |
1939-1940 |
13 | 25 | Phillip Klauber |
1948 |
13 | 26 | Ralph Knepper |
1944-1946 |
13 | 27 | H.M. Knickerbocker |
1945 |
13 | 28 | Wesely Knorpp |
1939-1940 |
13 | 29 | Helen Knupp |
1947 |
13 | 30 | Walter Koch et al |
1945-1948 |
13 | 31 | Emery Kolb |
1936-1948 |
13 | 32 | Seymour Kotcoff |
1947-1948 |
13 | 33 | John Krasny |
1948 |
13 | 34 | Max Krueger |
1948 |
13 | 35 | William Kuhlman |
1948-1949 |
13 | 36 | "K" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, L-Mc |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
14 | 1 | Lloyd Laflin |
1941-1946 |
14 | 2 | J.T. Lane |
1939 |
14 | 3 | Charles Larabee |
1939-1947 |
14 | 4 | C.I. Lauer |
1949 |
14 | 5 | Mary Lay |
1938-1940 |
14 | 6 | John R. Leach ("Pancho") |
1948-1949 |
14 | 7 | Hector Lee |
1947 |
14 | 8 | J. Bracken Lee |
1940-1949 |
14 | 9 | Father Leibler |
1943-1946 |
14 | 10 | Morgan Levelle |
1948 |
14 | 11 | Lloyd Linn |
1945-1946 |
14 | 12 |
Life Magazine |
1940-1945 |
14 | 13 | Fay B. Lloyd |
1944-1946 |
14 | 14 | G.M. Loeb |
1946 |
14 | 15 | Kenneth Love |
1930-1948 |
14 | 16 | Ilma Lucas |
1943 |
14 | 17 | Willard Luce |
1946 |
14 | 18 | "L" Miscellaneous |
1935-1939 |
14 | 19 | Hall McAllister |
1946 |
14 | 20 | A.E. MacArthur |
1940-1948 |
14 | 21 | Glenn McColley |
1945-1947 |
14 | 22 | Wayne McConkie |
1940-1945 |
14 | 23 | Harry McDevitt |
1943 |
14 | 24 | Ivins MacDonald |
1938 |
14 | 25 | Kyle McGrady |
1942-1945 |
14 | 26 | Edwin McKee |
1936-1949 |
14 | 27 | Marvin McLarty, Jr. |
1947 |
14 | 28 | Macmillan Co. |
1938-1946 |
14 | 29 | "Mc" Miscellaneous |
1934-1948 |
Personal Correspondence, M |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
15 | 1 | Molly Maley |
1946-1949 |
15 | 2 | Dave Mann |
1945-1949 |
15 | 3 | Mel Mann |
1942-1946 |
15 | 4 | Portia Mansfield |
1939-1944 |
15 | 5 | Frank Manson |
1945-1946 |
15 | 6 | Charles Markham |
1948 |
15 | 7 | Katherine Martin |
1949 |
15 | 8 | L.H. Martinson |
1946 |
15 | 9 | Beverly Marx |
1949 |
15 | 10 | Frank E. Masland |
1946-1948 |
15 | 11 | Frank E. Masland |
1949 |
15 | 12 | Masonic Lodge |
1933-1949 |
15 | 13 | Thorn Mayes |
1938-1945 |
15 | 14 | Thorn Mayes |
1946-1949 |
15 | 15 | Hugo Menke |
1942 |
15 | 16 | Clarence Meyer |
1948-1949 |
15 | 17 | Gleed Miller |
1948 |
15 | 18 | Harriet Miller |
1947-1948 |
15 | 19 | Victor Mills |
1948 |
15 | 20 | O.L. Miner |
1944-1945 |
15 | 21 | Hugh Miser |
1947 |
15 | 22 | T.W. Morash |
1947 |
15 | 23 | Ross and Elvira Montgomery |
1941-1947 |
15 | 24 | Lucius Moore |
1941-1942 |
15 | 25 | Lucius Moore |
1943-1948 |
15 | 26 | Thomas Morley |
1945-1946 |
15 | 27 | Archie and Dave Morris |
1946-1947 |
15 | 28 | A. Reynolds Morse |
1948-1949 |
15 | 29 | Malcolm Moss |
1948-1949 |
15 | 30 | Joseph Muench |
1948 |
15 | 31 | John B. Mull |
1949 |
15 | 32 | Ross Musselman |
1938-1947 |
15 | 33 | Truman Myers |
1947-1949 |
15 | 33-35 | "M" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
16 | Personal Correspondence, Otis "Dock" Marston
This box contains correspondence with Otis "Dock" Marston, who went through the Grand Canyon with Nevills in 1942. On later trips, Marston served as a boatman for Nevills, and later yet became known as the historian of the Colorado River. He was always an indefatigable and voluminous correspondent, and his letters contain a great deal of information on the rivers, the canyons, and other contemporary figures. These are detailed, personal letters between him and Nevills, and contain probably the best revelations as to Nevills and Marston's characters.
|
1942-1949 | |
Personal Correspondence, N-Q |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
17 | 1 | John Navas |
1939-1942 |
17 | 2 | Herbert Neal |
1948-1949 |
17 | 3 | Elmer Nelson |
1948-1949 |
17 | 4 | Jennie Nielson |
1947 |
17 | 5 | Carey Nixon |
1946-1949 |
17 | 6 | "N" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
17 | 7-11 | Frank O'Brien |
1940-1946 |
17 | 12 | Marie Ogden |
1942-1946 |
17 | 13 | Ed Olsen |
1941-1949 |
17 | 14 | Joseph Ott |
1942-1943 |
17 | 15 | William Owen |
1944-1945 |
17 | 16 | "O" Miscellaneous |
1934-1949 |
17 | 17 | B.H. Page |
1947-1948 |
17 | 18 | Jack Paine |
1948-1949 |
17 | 19 | T.S. Palmer |
1945-1946 |
17 | 20 | George Parker |
1948 |
17 | 21 | Forbes Parkhill |
1939-1940 |
17 | 22 | L.M. Perrin |
1946-1948 |
17 | 23 | Bruce Peters |
1949 |
17 | 24 | L.S. Peterman |
1948-1949 |
17 | 25 | Alice and Henry Petri |
1947-1948 |
17 | 26 | Ted and Dorothy Phillips |
1944-1948 |
17 | 27 | Ruth Pieroth |
1947 |
17 | 28 |
Popular Mechanics
|
1942-1944 |
17 | 29 | R.L. Power |
1947-1948 |
17 | 30-31 | "P" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
17 | 32 | F.E. Quinlan |
1948 |
17 | 33 | "Q" Miscellaneous |
1935; 1948-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, R |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
18 | 1 | Bob Ramstad |
1946-1948 |
18 | 2 | William Rand |
1948-1949 |
18 | 3 | Paul Rattle |
1946-1949 |
18 | 4 | Redd Family |
1940-1946 |
18 | 5 | Del Reed |
1938-1944 |
18 | 6 | Harry Reed |
1937-1947 |
18 | 7 | P.T. Reilly |
1946-1949 |
18 | 8 | Adrian Reynolds |
1940-1949 |
18 | 9 | Irvine Reynolds |
1946-1947 |
18 | 10 | John Riffey |
1948-1949 |
18 | 11 | James P. Rigg |
1940-1949 |
18 | 12 | Bestor Robinson |
1947-1949 |
18 | 13 | Ned Robinson |
1948 |
18 | 14 | Don Robison |
1947-1948 |
18 | 15 | Bright Roddy |
1944-1946 |
18 | 16 | Leo Romer |
1945-1946 |
18 | 17 | Anne Rosner |
1939-1040 |
18 | 18 | Frank Ross |
1945-1946 |
18 | 19 | Ted Ross |
1945 |
18 | 20 | Jack Rottier |
1945-1947 |
18 | 21 | Jack Rue |
1947-1949 |
18 | 22 | Hal Rumel |
1945-1946 |
18 | 23 | Al Runkle |
1939 |
18 | 24 | Al Runkle |
1940 January-March |
18 | 25 | Al Runkle |
1940 April-1941 |
18 | 26-27 | "R" Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, S |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
19 | 1 | W.B. Sampson |
1946-1947 |
19 | 2 | Jack Sanford |
1941-1947; 1950 |
19 | 3 |
Saturday Evening Post
|
1946 |
19 | 4 | Pauline Saylor |
1946-1947 |
19 | 5 | Jack A. Schmidt |
1948 |
19 | 6 | Alfred Schmitz |
1941-1942 |
19 | 7 | Emma Schray |
1947-1949 |
19 | 8 | William J. Schukraft |
1941-1946 |
19 | 9 | Charles T. Schweitzer |
1946 |
19 | 10 | August Segelhorst |
1946 |
19 | 11 | Paul Seel |
1947-1948 |
19 | 12 | M.F. Selleck |
1936-1940 |
19 | 13 | Harry Shaw |
1941 |
19 | 14 | Anthony Shearer |
1947-1948 |
19 | 15 | Shepard Book Co. |
1938 |
19 | 16 | A.L. and Henry Sherk |
1946-1949 |
19 | 17 | Dorothy Shipman |
1946 |
19 | 18 | Don Short |
1941-1948 |
19 | 19 | Herbert S. Shuey |
1942-1947 |
19 | 20 | Frank Silvey |
1936 |
19 | 21 | Harold N. Simpson |
1947-1948 |
19 | 22 | Mildred Small |
1949 |
19 | 23 | Alden B. Smith |
1947 |
19 | 24 | Don Smith |
1944-1947 |
19 | 25 | Joseph F. Smith |
1937-1947; 1949 |
19 | 26 | W.T. Smith |
1942-1944 |
19 | 27 | Corinne Smothers |
1948 |
19 | 28 | J.S. Southworth |
1939-1940 |
19 | 29 | Keith Spalding |
1945-1948 |
19 | 30 | A.H. Spencer |
1943-1949 |
19 | 31 | Edward F. Stacy |
1946 |
19 | 32 | J.I. Staley |
1948-1949 |
19 | 33 | Standard Travel Information Service |
1949 |
19 | 34 | John Stanton |
1946-1947 |
19 | 35 | Wallace Stegner |
1946-1948 |
19 | 36 | Hyrum W. Stevens |
1935; 1946-1947 |
19 | 37 | John Stilwell |
1946-1949 |
19 | 38 | Julius F. Stone |
1938-1944 |
19 | 39 | Perry Stowe |
1947-1948 |
19 | 40 | Frank Streator |
1945-1949 |
19 | 41 | Nancy Streator |
1946-1949; 1950 |
19 | 42 | Corinne Stubbs |
1943-1944 |
19 | 43 |
Sunset Magazine |
1941-1949 |
19 | 44 | Frank Suter |
1946 |
19 | 45 | J. Frederick Sutherland |
1948-1949 |
19 | 46 | Kenneth D. Swan |
1937; 1946 |
Personal Correspondence, Miscellaneous S-V |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
20 | 1-5 | "S" Miscellaneous |
1930-1949 |
20 | 6 | Rich Thomson |
1946-1947 |
20 | 7 | Elmer Timmons |
1940-1941 |
20 | 8 | V.L. Tindall |
1947-1948 |
20 | 9 | P.W. Tompkins |
1930; 1941-1949 |
20 | 10 | Claude Towne |
1946-1949 |
20 | 11 | Morris Townsend |
1939 |
20 | 12 |
Trailways Magazine |
1948 |
20 | 13 | Arthur and Gladys Trask |
1941-1945 |
20 | 14 |
Travel Magazine |
1942-1943 |
20 | 15 | Lucretia Traver |
1940-1947 |
20 | 16 | George Trebing |
1945-1947 |
20 | 17 | Spence Turner |
1948 |
20 | 18-19 | "T" Miscellaneous |
1929-1949 |
20 | 20 | Florence Uptegrove |
1947 |
20 | 21 | "U" Miscellaneous |
1938-1949 |
20 | 22 | Charles S. Van Eaton |
1936-1949 |
20 | 23 | V. Villette |
1947-1948 |
20 | 24 | W.M. Von Kuhn |
1945-1946 |
20 | 25 | "V" Miscellaneous |
1939-1949 |
Personal Correspondence, Wa-Wi |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
21 | 1 | H.R. Walker |
1947-1948 |
21 | 2 | Preston Walker |
1933-1942 |
21 | 3 | Preston Walker |
1943-1949 |
21 | 4 | Walter Walker |
1940-1942 |
21 | 5 | Walter Walker |
1943-1945 |
21 | 6 | Walter Walker |
1946-1947 |
21 | 7 | Robert Wall |
1941-1942 |
21 | 8 | L.A. Ward |
1937 |
21 | 9 | E.H. Warner |
1940 |
21 | 10 | Monte Warner |
1948 January-March |
21 | 11 | Monte Warner |
1948 April-September |
21 | 12 | Monte Warner |
1949 |
21 | 13 | Carl Weeks |
1949 |
21 | 14 | Jenny G. Weiling |
1944-1945 |
21 | 15 | Robert Welles |
1941-1942 |
21 | 16 | Cady and Mason Wells |
1947-1949 |
21 | 17 | Howard O. Welty |
1946-1949 |
21 | 18 | Jack Wentworth |
1942 |
21 | 19 | Minna Werner |
1949 |
21 | 20 | The Westerners |
1948-1949 |
21 | 21 | Maurine Whipple |
1943-1947 |
21 | 22 | H.H. Whitney |
1948 |
21 | 23 | Bill and Katherine Wilson |
|
21 | 24 | Bruce Wilson |
1942-1949 |
21 | 25 | Frederic H. Wilson |
1946 |
21 | 26 | F.Q. Wilson |
1941 |
21 | 27 | Neill Wilson |
1942-1944 |
21 | 28 | Neill Wilson |
1945-1949 |
21 | 29 | George Wing |
1943-1945 |
21 | 30 | Carl J. Winkler |
1948-1949 |
21 | 31 | Frank S. Wise |
1946 |
Personal Correspondence, Wo-Z; Miscellaneous Unidentified |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
22 | 1 | Margaret Wood |
1948-1949 |
22 | 2 | Roy Wood |
1941 |
22 | 3 | Bob Woodward |
1944-1946 |
22 | 4 | Sid and Peck Woodbury |
1946-1949 |
22 | 5 | R.J. Woods |
1944-1946 |
22 | 6 | Weldon Woodson |
1945 |
22 | 7 | W.J. Woolston |
1941-1942 |
22 | 8-11 | "W" Miscellaneous |
1932-1949 |
22 | 12 | "Y" Miscellaneous |
1945-1949 |
22 | 13 | "Z" Miscellaneous |
1931-1948 |
22 | 14 | Miscellaneous Unidentified |
|
Government Correspondence--National Park Service, Miscellaneous Agencies
In Box 23, folders 1-8 contain correspondence with the National Park Service (N.P.S.); folders 9-13 with other agencies of the federal government; folders 14-16 with Utah State agencies.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
23 | 1 | Grand Canyon National Park--Tillotson-Bryant |
1934-1948 |
23 | 2 | Grand Canyon National Park--Harold C. Bryant |
1947-1949 |
23 | 3 | Boulder Dam National Recreation Area |
1941 |
23 | 4 | Boulder Dam National Recreation Area--George Baggley |
1947-1949 |
23 | 5 | Boulder Dam National Recreation Area--Guy Edwards |
1941; 1948 |
23 | 6 | Leo McClatchy |
1937-1941 |
23 | 7 | Jesse Nussbaum |
1937-1949 |
23 | 8 | John Doerr |
1948 |
23 | 9 | N.P.S. Miscellaneous |
1938-1949 |
23 | 10 | Bureau of Reclamation |
1936-1949 |
23 | 11 | U.S. Grazing Service |
1935; 1942-1944 |
23 | 12 | U.S. Weather Bureau |
1943-1949 |
23 | 13 | Miscellaneous Federal Agencies |
1938-1946 |
23 | 14 | Utah Resettlement Administration |
1934-1937 |
23 | 15 | Utah Writer's Project |
1937-1941 |
23 | 16 | Miscellaneous Utah State Agencies |
1933-1949 |
Government Correspondence--U.S. Geological Survey
Box 24 contains correspondence, personnel action and payroll forms, and other materials from the U.S. Geological Survey. Nevills served as resident engineer for the U.S.G.S. at Mexican Hat from 1943 until his death in 1949.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
24 | 1-14 | Government Correspondence--U.S. Geological Survey |
1931-1949 |
24 | 15 | Efficiency Ratings |
1943-1949 |
24 | 16 | Personnel Actions |
1945-1949 |
24 | 17 | Miscellaneous Payroll Forms |
1945-1949 |
24 | 18 | Miscellaneous |
|
24 | 19 | Miscellaneous Stream Flow Data |
|
24 | 20 | Miscellaneous Publications |
|
Business Correspondence, Airplane-Loans
The business correspondence in boxes 25-26 is organized alphabetically by subject. In box 26, folders 29-52 contain letters that did not fit within any of the previously chosen subject categories; therefore, they were listed under miscellaneous business correspondence and arranged alphabetically according to the name of the company or the correspondent.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
25 | 1 | Airplane--Joe Bergin |
1944-1947 |
25 | 2 | Airplane--Civil Air Patrol |
1946 |
25 | 3 | Airplane--Eddie Drapela |
1944-1949 |
25 | 4 | Airplane--Miscellaneous Correspondence |
1944-1949 |
25 | 5 | Airplane--Logbooks, Flight Plans |
|
25 | 6 | Airplane--Miscellaneous |
|
25 | 7 | Autos--Auto Clubs |
1936-1949 |
25 | 8 | Autos--Central Chevrolet |
1936-1941 |
25 | 9 | Autos--Denny & Jones (Cortez Motor Sales) |
1936-1947 |
25 | 10 | Autos--Intermountain Willys |
1949 |
25 | 11 | Autos--Al Kruh |
1944 |
25 | 12 | Autos--Pioneer Auto Wrecking |
1946 |
25 | 13 | Autos--Streator Chevrolet |
1941; 1948 |
25 | 14 | Autos--Miscellaneous |
|
25 | 15 | Gasoline--Continental Oil Co. (CONOCO) |
1933-1947 |
25 | 16 | Generators--Kohler Co. |
1939-1946 |
25 | 17 | Generators--Midwest Service and Supply |
1944-1947 |
25 | 18 | Generators--Naval Supply Depot, Clearfield, Utah |
1946 |
25 | 19 | Generators--WItte Engine Works |
1939-1940 |
25 | 20 | Generators--Miscellaneous |
|
25 | 21 | Insurance--Autos, Miscellaneous |
|
25 | 22 | Insurance--Ralph King |
1946-1947 |
25 | 23 | Insurance--Miscellaneous |
1946-1948 |
25 | 24-32 | Legal--Senior and Senior |
1939-1949 |
25 | 33 | Loans--First National Bank of Moab |
1937-1949 |
25 | 34 | Loans--General Motors Acceptance Corp. (GMAC) |
1940-1942 |
25 | 35 | Loans--Rauh-Burke Investment Co. |
1937-1938 |
Business Correspondence, Mining-Miscellaneous |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
26 | 1 | Mining--Thomas F.V. Curran |
1941-1942 |
26 | 2 | Mining--Bayard Mendenhall |
1938 |
26 | 3 | Mining--Uranium |
|
26 | 4 | Mining--Miscellaneous |
|
26 | 5 | Oil--A.F. Allen |
1948 |
26 | 6 | Oil--D.S. Baker |
1945 |
26 | 7 | Oil--Perry Coon |
1939-1944 |
26 | 8 | Oil--Frank C. Hatch |
1949 |
26 | 9 | Oil--Arthur Lyon |
1935 |
26 | 10 | Oil--Equipment Lists |
|
26 | 11 | Oil--Leases, Assignments |
1936-1940 |
26 | 12 | Oil--Leases, Assignments |
1943 |
26 | 13 | Oil--Leases, Assignments |
1944-1948 |
26 | 14 | Oil--Leases, Miscellaneous |
|
26 | 15 | Oil--Maps, Descriptions |
|
26 | 16 | Oil--River Bridge Claim--Location Notices |
|
26 | 17 | Oil--Well Logs, Nevills #6 |
|
26 | 18-20 | Oil--Miscellaneous |
1930-1949 |
26 | 21 | Pumps--F.E. Myers and Brothers |
1944 |
26 | 22 | Pumps--Fairbanks-Morse Co. |
1936; 1944-1947 |
26 | 23 | Pumps--George B. Metcalf |
1946-1947 |
26 | 24 | Pumps--Robinson Machinery Co. |
1946 |
26 | 25 | Pumps--S & M Supply |
1943 |
26 | 26 | Pumps--Miscellaneous |
1943-1949 |
26 | 27 | Taxes--Dan Milenski |
1947-1948 |
26 | 28 | Taxes--Miscellaneous |
1935-1949 |
26 | 29 | Miscellaneous--Ray Carr |
1936-1947 |
26 | 30 | Miscellaneous--Covey's New America Motor Lodge |
1946-1949 |
26 | 31 | Miscellaneous--Denver Fire Clay Co. |
1941 |
26 | 32 | Miscellaneous--Durango Mercantile Co. |
1939-1943 |
26 | 33 | Miscellaneous--East Side Grocery |
1940 |
26 | 34 | Miscellaneous--Jack Kuhne, Jack Darrock |
1944-1949 |
26 | 35 | Miscellaneous--Karl Lyman |
1936-1940 |
26 | 36 | Miscellaneous--Lyman Truck Line |
1938-1943 |
26 | 37 | Miscellaneous--Montgomery Ward |
1938-1945 |
26 | 38 | Miscellaneous--Navajo Service |
1939 |
26 | 39 | Miscellaneous--Esther Parker |
1939 |
26 | 40 | Miscellaneous--Knox Patterson |
1942-1946 |
26 | 41 | Miscellaneous--H.J. Plumhoff |
1943-1944 |
26 | 42 | Miscellaneous--Leo Prinster |
1940-1942 |
26 | 43 | Miscellaneous--Sears, Roebuck |
1942-1949 |
26 | 44 | Miscellaneous--Walt Disney Productions |
1946-1947 |
26 | 45 | Miscellaneous--Western Printing |
1940-1949 |
26 | 46 | Miscellaneous--Whitmore Oxygen |
1946-1948 |
26 | 47 | Miscellaneous--Z.C.M.I. |
1939-1940; 1944 |
26 | 48-52 | Miscellaneous |
1933-1949 |
III: River TripsReturn to Top
This series contains all materials directly relating to Nevills Expeditions, Norman and Doris' river outfitting business. Included are Norman and Doris' journals from river trips, 1936-1948, (both originals and transcriptions); journals and diaries from passengers on his trips which were later sent to him, scrapbooks compiled both by the Nevills and by passengers, and miscellaneous materials about boats, equipment, supplies, passenger lists, brochures, and so on. NOT included in this series are letters from passengers or potential passengers inquiring about river trips, because of the volume of the correspondence. This is filed in boxes 3-22, personal correspondence, under the name of the passenger. All journals and other writings are filed chronologically.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Nevills' Journals, (Originals)
This box has been removed from the collection and is housed in the Manuscripts Reserve Collection. Transcripts of the journals can be found in box 28.
|
|||
Box | Volume | ||
27 | 1 | San Juan River |
1936 |
27 | 2 | Boat-building Log |
1938 |
27 | 3 | Green and Colorado Rivers, vol. 1 |
1938 |
27 | 4 | Green and Colorado Rivers, vol. 2 |
1938 |
27 | 5 | Green and Colorado Rivers, vol. 3 |
1938 |
27 | 6 | Green and Colorado Rivers, (Norman and Doris) |
1940 |
27 | 7 | Green and Colorado Rivers, vol. 1 (Doris) |
1940 |
27 | 8 | Green and Colorado Rivers, vol. 2 (Doris) |
1940 |
27 | 9 | Grand Canyon |
1941 |
27 | 10 | Grand Canyon |
1942 |
Folder | |||
27 | 1 | Cataract-Glen Canyons |
1945 |
Nevills' Journals, (Transcriptions)
Box 28 contains transcriptions of journals kept by Norman and Doris Nevills during river trips, 1936-1948. In some cases these were typed by Norman Nevills from his originals, not all of which have survived. The typed versions often differ somewhat from both the original, hand-written diaries and the straight transcriptions of his daily journals. Later, some of the journals were transcribed by hand by Joan Nevills-Staveley, Nevills' daughter. Also included in this box are articles, book reviews, and other writings by Norman Nevills, all of which relate to river running. If the journal is transcribed rather than typed, this will be noted in the folder description. Otherwise, all transcriptions are typed.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
28 | 1 | San Juan and Colorado Rivers |
1936 |
28 | 2 | Boat-building Log |
1938 |
28 | 3 | Green and Colorado Rivers |
1938 |
28 | 4 | Green and Colorado Rivers, (transcribed) |
1938 |
28 | 5 | Green River, Wyoming-Jensen, Utah |
1940 |
28 | 6 | Green River, Wyoming-Green River, Utah |
1940 |
28 | 7 | Lees Ferry-Boulder Dam |
1940 |
28 | 8 | Green and Colorado Rivers, (typed account) |
1940 |
28 | 9 | Green and Colorado Rivers
Doris Nevills' account of the trip, titled "Woman Conquerer of the Colorado," published in The Daily Sentinel, Grand Junction, Colorado, June 15-July 6, 1941
|
1940 |
28 | 10 | San Juan and Colorado Rivers |
1940 |
28 | 11 | San Juan and Colorado Rivers (P.W. Tompkins trip) |
1941 April-May |
28 | 12 | San Juan and Colorado Rivers |
1941 |
28 | 13 | Grand Canyon |
1941 |
28 | 14 | Grand Canyon |
1941 |
28 | 15 | Grand Canyon, (transcribed) |
1941 |
28 | 16 | Grand Canyon |
1942 |
28 | 17 | Grand Canyon, (transcribed) |
1942 |
28 | 18 | San Juan and Colorado Rivers |
1944 |
28 | 19 | Salmon and Snake Rivers |
1946 |
28 | 20 | Green and Colorado Rivers |
1947 |
28 | 21 | Grand Canyon |
1948 |
28 | 22 | Review of The Colorado by Frank Waters--Norman Nevills |
1947 October |
28 | 23 | "Face Your Danger," by Norman Nevills (2 drafts) |
|
28 | 24 | Typed account by Norman Nevills
No title or date.
|
|
Passenger's Journals, Songs
Box 29 contains copies of journals kept by passengers on Nevills' river trips. In some cases these are simply typed copies, others take the form of printed or even published accounts which were later sent to Nevills. Also included in this box are copies of songs which were composed by passengers on the trips. If the journalist gave the document a title, this is included in the folder description.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
29 | 1 | "Van Eaton Party Travelogue" |
1936 |
29 | 2 | Elzada Clover |
1938 |
29 | 3 | "A Journey Down the Green and Colorado Rivers," Barry Goldwater |
1940 |
29 | 4 |
An Odyssey of the Green and Colorado Rivers: The Intimate Journal of Three Boats and Nine People on Two Rivers, Barry Goldwater (privately published) |
1941 |
29 | 5 | "The River Rats Return," Alexander Grant |
1940 |
29 | 6 | Evelyn Box |
1941 |
29 | 7 | "Riding Grand Canyon Rapids," Weldon Heald |
1941 |
29 | 8 | "Cockleshell on the Colorado," Alexander Grant |
1941 |
29 | 9 | P.W. Tompkins |
1941 |
29 | 10 | "Brother, Take the Oars," Neill Wilson |
1942 |
29 | 11 | June Chamberlin |
1942 |
29 | 12 | "The Colorado is Still Wild," Weldon Heald |
1942 |
29 | 13 | "Tall Tales from the San Juan River," Paul Benedict |
1943 |
29 | 14 | Father H. B. Liebler |
1945 |
29 | 15 | "Floating Down the San Juan and Colorado," Randall Henderson |
1945 |
29 | 16 | Margaret Marston |
1945 |
29 | 17 | Alice Bates |
1946 |
29 | 18 | "That River Trip!" Lil Diemler |
1946 |
29 | 19 | "Salmon-Snake," Otis Marston |
1946 |
29 | 20 | "Wheeler Report" [Salmon-Snake Rivers] |
1946 |
29 | 21 | "Fast-Water Man," Neil Clark |
1946 |
29 | 22 | "Fast Water in the Desert," Weldon Heald |
1947 |
29 | 23 | "Desert River through Navajoland," Alfred Bailey |
1947 |
29 | 24 | Randall Henderson (?) |
1947 |
29 | 25 | Janice Fullmer |
1948 |
29 | 26 | "192 Miles of Thrills on the San Juan and Colorado Rivers," Moulton Fulmer |
1948 |
29 | 27 | Barbara Gifford |
1948 |
29 | 28 | Preston Walker
(published in 1948)
|
1942 |
29 | 29 | Helen Kendall |
1948 |
29 | 30 | Nancy Streator |
1948 |
29 | 31 | "Who's Who on the Rainbow Trail," Francis Farguhar |
1948 |
29 | 32 | Ed Hudson Up-River Attempt |
1948 |
29 | 33 | Alice Bates |
1949 |
29 | 34 | Margaret Wood |
1949 |
29 | 35 | "By the Rim of Time," Frank E. Masland |
1949 |
29 | 36 | Frank E. Masland |
1949 |
29 | 37 | "From Hat to Head of Marble in Six Days," Andrew Chamberlain |
|
29 | 38 | "Through the Grand Canyon Before Powell?" |
|
29 | 39 | Songs--"Two Little Flies," Tro Anspach |
1948 |
29 | 40 | Songs--Miscellaneous |
|
Boats-Supplies |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
30 | 1 | Boats--Independent Lumber Co. |
1946-1949 |
30 | 2 | Boats--Harbor Plywood Co. |
1937-1938 |
30 | 3 | Boats--Harbor Plywood Co. |
1939-1940 |
30 | 4 | Boats--Harbor Plywood Co. |
1941-1942 |
30 | 5 | Boats--Harbor Plywood Co. |
1946-1949 |
30 | 6 | Boats--Maris Plywood Co. |
1938 |
30 | 7 | Boats--O.H. Ellison Lumber Co. |
1936-1946 |
30 | 8 | Boats--Utah Lumber Co. |
1936-1940 |
30 | 9 | Boats--Miscellaneous Materials Lists |
|
30 | 10 | Boats--Miscellaneous Correspondence |
|
30 | 11 | Boats--Miscellaneous
This folder also contains fragments of drawings pertaining to boat construction.
|
|
30 | 12 | Competitors--Harry Aleson River Expeditions |
|
30 | 13 | Equipment--Boardman and Flower |
1938-1949 |
30 | 14 | Equipment--Dover Merchandising Co. |
1948 |
30 | 15 | Equipment--Evinrude Motors |
1939; 1944 |
30 | 16 | Equipment--Vorbeck Sporting Goods |
1938-1948 |
30 | 17 | Equipment--Miscellaneous Correspondence |
1938-1949 |
30 | 18 | Equipment--Shipping, Miscellaneous Advertising |
|
30 | 19 | Passengers--Passenger Lists |
1936-1949 |
30 | 20 | Passengers--Miscellaneous Passenger Lists |
|
30 | 21 | Shuttles--Grand Canyon-Boulder Dam Tours, Inc. |
1938-1949 |
30 | 22 | Supplies--Correspondence, Miscellaneous |
1936-1949 |
30 | 23 | Supplies--Menus |
1938; 1941-1949 |
30 | 24 | Supplies--Menus |
|
Brochures, Publicity, Miscellaneous |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
31 | 1 | San Juan River |
1936 |
31 | 2 | Green and Colorado Rivers |
1938 |
31 | 3 | Green and Colorado Rivers |
1940 |
31 | 4 | Grand Canyon |
1941 |
31 | 5 | San Juan River, Grand Canyon |
1942 |
31 | 6 | San Juan River |
1943 |
31 | 7 | San Juan River |
1945 |
31 | 8 | Snake and Salmon Rivers |
1946 |
31 | 9 | San Juan River |
1946-1947 |
31 | 10 | San Juan River, Grand Canyon |
1948 |
31 | 11 | San Juan River, Green and Colorado Rivers |
1949 |
31 | 12 | San Juan River |
1950 |
31 | 13 | Publicity--Programs by Others |
|
31 | 14 | Publicity--Postcards |
|
31 | 15 | Mileages |
|
31 | 16 | Miscellaneous Notes |
|
31 | 17 | Miscellaneous Trip Guidelines |
|
31 | 18 | River Rat Initiation Ceremony |
|
31 | 19 | Miscellaneous Comments and Quotes by Norman Nevills and others |
|
31 | 20 | Whitewater Association Proposal |
|
31 | 21 | Miscellaneous |
|
Scrapbooks and Maps
Box 32 contains scrapbooks compiled by Norman Nevills and his family. These three are for the most part simple compilations of clippings.
|
|||
Box | Volume | ||
32 | 1 | Scrapbook |
1933-1945 |
32 | 2 | Scrapbook |
1938-1941 |
32 | 3 | Scrapbook |
1938; 1946-1948 |
33 | Scrapbook
The scrapbook in Box 33 was prepared by passengers on Nevills trips in 1947-1949. It is a much more elaborate effort than his own, and includes photographs, hand-drawn artwork, and passenger lists within a cowhide cover.
|
1947-1949 | |
34 | Maps
The maps in Box 34 are those used by Nevills on his river trips. These are U.S. Geological Survey maps of the Green, Colorado, San Juan, Snake, and Salmon Rivers that have been cut into sections to fit into a wooden map holder devised by Nevills for use on the river. The holder is also included in this box. Also included is a homemade scroll map where the sections of maps of the Grand Canyon were pasted onto brown paper to make a continuous scroll. The scroll has many handwritten notes by Nevills.
|
IV: ClippingsReturn to Top
Norman Nevills was very publicity conscious. He and his wife and mother kept copies or at least clippings of virtually every newspaper or magazine article that mentioned his name. In addition, passengers and friends sent him copies or clippings from other newspapers from all across the country with articles about him or Nevills Expeditions. This section contains clippings as well as copies of magazines that contain articles about Nevills or Nevills Expeditions.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Box | Folder | ||
35 | 1 | Clippings |
1933-1935 |
35 | 2 | Clippings |
1936 |
35 | 3 | Clippings |
1938 April-May |
35 | 4 | Clippings |
1938 July |
35 | 5 | Clippings |
1938 August-November |
35 | 6 | Clippings |
1939 |
35 | 7 | Clippings |
1940 |
35 | 8 | Clippings |
1941 |
36 | Clippings |
1942-1949 | |
37 |
Desert Magazine
Box 37 contains copies of Desert magazine, in which articles about or advertisements for Nevills Expeditions frequently appeared from 1940 to 1949. In 1945 and 1947, Randall Henderson, the editor of Desert, took trips on the San Juan and the Grand Canyon respectively, and wrote feature articles about Norman and Nevills Expeditions which were serialized over several issues. Issues dated after Norman and Doris' death in 1949 contain tributes to them, or reminiscent articles about them.
|
1940-1950; 1952; 1958 | |
Miscellaneous Magazine Articles
The magazine and journal articles range from national magazines to local or trade publications. Each contains an article or mention of Norman Nevills or Nevills Expeditions. The publications are arranged alphabetically by title.
|
|||
Box | Folder | ||
38 | 1 |
Academy Newsletter
|
1947 December |
38 | 2 |
Argosy
|
1945 August |
38 | 3 |
Arizona Highways
|
1941 January; 1953 August |
38 | 4 |
California Monthly
|
1947 April |
38 | 5 |
Carnegie Magazine
|
1950 April |
38 | 6 |
Colorado Editor
|
1940 February |
38 | 7 |
The Deseret News Magazine
|
1949 April 10 |
38 | 8 |
Elks Magazine
|
1942 March; 1943 August |
38 | 9 |
Explorers Journal
|
1945-1946 |
38 | 10 |
Farm Journal
|
1946 May |
38 | 11 |
Field and Stream
|
1949 April |
38 | 12 |
The Field Glass
|
1947 August 4 |
38 | 13 |
The Hand Lens
|
1947 June |
38 | 14 |
Home Movies
|
1943 March |
38 | 15 |
The Kerley News
|
1936 April 27 |
38 | 16 |
The Last Frontier
|
1940 May-June |
38 | 17 |
Life
|
1944 October 23 |
38 | 18 |
National Geographic
|
1947 August |
38 | 19 |
National Parks Magazine
|
1949 July |
38 | 20 |
The Olympian
|
1942 November; 1943 January; 1943 July; 1943 August |
38 | 21 |
The Prairie Club
|
1949 September |
38 | 22 |
Reclamation Era
|
1938 September |
38 | 23 |
Region III Quarterly
|
1940 July; 1941 July |
38 | 24 |
Retired Men's News
|
1938 April; 1938 September-October |
38 | 25 |
The Rotarian
|
1948 August |
38 | 26 |
The Saturday Evening Post
|
1946 May 18 |
38 | 27 |
Scenic Southwest
|
1942 February; 1942 March; 1942 August; 1946 May |
38 | 28 |
The Shuttle
|
1948 September |
38 | 29 |
Sunset
|
1942 February; 1948 March |
38 | 30 |
Transit Topics
|
1949 July 12 |
38 | 31 |
Travel
|
1942 October; 1949 May |
38 | 32 |
Travel West
|
1941 August 16; 1941 November 01 |
38 | 33 |
The Veteran's News
|
1938 April |
V: Miscellaneous FinancesReturn to Top
Boxes 39 and 40 contain those miscellaneous financial records that could not be filed within any of the previous categories. This includes cancelled checks, checkbooks, bank statements, deposit slips, miscellaneous receipts, and a ledger book.
Container(s) | Description | Dates | |
---|---|---|---|
Cancelled Checks, Checkbooks, Miscellaneous Receipts |
|||
Box | Folder | ||
39 | 1 | Miscellaneous Receipts |
1938-1949 |
39 | 2 | Cancelled Checks |
1940 |
39 | 3 | Cancelled Checks, Bank Statements, et al |
1946 |
39 | 4 | Checkbooks, Deposit Slips |
1947 |
39 | 5 | Bank Statements, Checkbooks |
1948 |
39 | 6 | Bank Statements, Checkbooks |
1949 |
Box | |||
40 | Cancelled Checks; Mae D. Nevills Trading Post Account Book |
1946-1948 |
Names and SubjectsReturn to Top
Subject Terms
- Rafting (Sports)--West (U.S.)--History--Sources
Personal Names
- Marston, Otis R.
- Nevills, Doris
Geographical Names
- Colorado River (Colo.-Mexico)--Recreational use--History--Sources
- Glen Canyon (Utah and Ariz.)
- Grand Canyon (Ariz.)
- Green River (Wyo.-Utah)--Recreational use--Sources
- San Juan River (Colo.-Utah)--Recreational use--History--Sources
Form or Genre Terms
- Business records
- Correspondence
- Diaries