Friel and Mathews Family Papers, 1887-1999

Overview of the Collection

Title
Friel and Mathews Family Papers
Dates
1887-1999 (inclusive)
Quantity
24.5 linear feet of shelf space, (43 boxes)
Collection Number
Cage 877 (collection)
Summary
Papers of the Mathews and Friel families of Pullman, WA. Several generations of the family are represented, including John and Serena Mathews, continuing through to the marriage of their daughter Catherine to Jack Friel and two of their children, John Mathews Friel and Charlotte Friel. The collection includes correspondence, photographs, printed material, and memorabilia.
Repository
Washington State University Libraries' Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC)
Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections
Terrell Library Suite 12
Pullman, WA
99164-5610
Telephone: 509-335-6691
mascref@wsu.edu
Access Restrictions

This collection is open and available for research use.

Languages
English, with the exception of some items in Subseries 2.4. Memorabilia, postcards, and receipts from Europe are in the following languages: Dutch, French, German, Italian, Czech, and Danish.

Biographical NoteReturn to Top

The principal individuals represented in this collection are Serena F. Mathews, John W. Mathews, Homer H. Mathews, Catherine M. Friel, John B. "Jack" Friel, Charlotte Friel, and John Mathews Friel.

Serena Florence Mathews (May 19, 1871-April 28, 1952) was born in Darlington, Wisconsin (Lafayette County) to Catherine "Katie" Ann and William Blight Wallis. After graduating from Darlington High School in 1890, Serena made her way to Pullman, WA a year later where she taught in the first Lincoln School on West Main Street and continued her studies at the newly-opened Washington Agricultural College and School of Science (later WSC, WSU). The Wallis family eventually joined Serena in Pullman and made their home on the corner of Spaulding and Maple Streets, which later became the Methodist Church parsonage. Following her marriage to attorney John W. Mathews, Serena remained an active participant in Pullman civic affairs and club work and established a reputation for using her affiliations to advocate for the progress of women and other matters. During World War I, Serena served as the Whitman County chapter president of the American Red Cross and helped organize the "Community War Workers," a group of over 100 women that raised funds and distributed supplies throughout the local community. The Pullman Fortnightly Club, of which she was a longtime member (and where her mother was a charter member), was instrumental in securing Serena's nomination to serve as the 17th president of the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs, a position she held from 1927-1929. Her work through the Federation of Women's Clubs helped to pass the County Library Bill in the 1930s, improving access to literature and information in rural communities across the state. She also advocated for child welfare reform, as well as reform for women inmates and developmentally disabled individuals. In addition to her work with the Women's Clubs, Serena was a member of the P.E.O. Sisterhood (Chapter S), Order of the Eastern Star, and the Women's Society of Christian Service of Simpson Methodist Church.

John Wilbur Mathews (April 27, 1864-May 1, 1917) was born in Huntertown, Indiana (Allen County) as the seventh child of Samuel and Elvira Mathews. His grade school days were spent in a wooden frame schoolhouse on his father's farm, and he eventually pursued classical training at the Methodist Episcopal College in Fort Wayne, Indiana. His professional aspirations brought him to the Eastman National Business College in Poughkeepsie, New York, followed by the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where he obtained his law degree in 1889. Following graduation, he formed a law partnership with the Honorable D.D. Moody at Auburn, Indiana, but after a year, the firm was dissolved so that John "might fulfill a youthful desire to go west." He arrived in Pullman in May 1891 and opened a law office, establishing a reputation representing Palouse region farmers. As a staunch supporter of "dry" campaigns at the local and state level, he prosecuted violators of the state's liquor laws during his term as Whitman County Prosecuting Attorney (1896-1898). Some years later, Ferry County Commissioners took notice of his diligence in this area and hired him as a special prosecutor to "clean up the lawless conditions in that county" (Pullman Herald, May 4, 1917). He married Serena Wallis in Pullman on November 29, 1894, and they had three children: Homer (b. 1896), Catherine (b. 1901), and Charlotte (b. 1904). In 1910, John and Serena purchased a homestead in Buhl, Idaho and developed it from sagebrush to irrigated hay grain crop production. Prior to his final illness, John was elected Mayor of Pullman "on a platform pledging the improvement of the moral conditions of the city and a continuation of its previous progressive program" (Pullman Herald, May 4, 1917).

Homer Hamilton Mathews (August 14, 1896-April 23, 1968) was the eldest child and only son of John and Serena Mathews. He graduated from Pullman High School in 1914 where he was a member of the football team (Whitman County champions in 1913-1914). He went on to attend WSC (1915-1918) and became a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) fraternity. He was a member of the men's glee club, as well as a trombone player in the school band. Like his mother, he became an educator for a time and taught in Yakima in 1920. He eventually moved to Sacramento, California with his wife Esther.

John Bryan "Jack" Friel (August 26, 1898-December 12, 1995) was born in Waterville, WA to John M. and Maude (Woolverton) Friel. Jack moved to Pullman in 1916 and began his studies in history, economics, and political science at WSC and joined the Kappa Sigma fraternity. After the U.S. entered World War I, he enlisted in the U.S. Army (Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky). After a brief stint in France, he returned to Pullman and lettered in baseball and basketball, earning all-conference honors in basketball in 1922. After his graduation in 1923, he began the three-year teaching assignment necessary to acquire a teaching certificate in the state of Washington at the time. It also marked the start of his basketball coaching career in the high school and college ranks, at Colville High School. He moved on to a three-year tenure at North Central High School in Spokane and coached the team to a state championship in 1928. Following his time in Spokane, he accepted a position as head basketball coach at WSC (later WSU), a position he held from 1928-1958. He also pursued a Master of Arts in Education at New York University, specifically in physical education methodology. He won 495 games as head basketball coach at WSC, which ranked him eighth in coaching wins in NCAA history at the time of his retirement in 1958. His most successful team was the 1940-1941 team which won the Pacific Coast Conference before losing to the University of Wisconsin in the NCAA championship game. Friel also served as the baseball coach at WSC from 1943-1945. After his retirement from WSC, he became the first commissioner of the Big Sky Conference, a position he held from 1963-1971. He also became the Northwest region's observer of officiating, and is credited with the implementation of the one-and-one foul shot. His contributions to the sport over the decades have been recognized with a number of honors, including the dedication of WSU Beasley Coliseum's Jack Friel Court in 1977. He was an inaugural inductee into WSU's Athletic Hall of Fame (1978), and was also named to the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame.

Catherine Mathews Friel (November 18, 1901-July 27, 2003) was born in Colfax, Washington, the second of three children, to John and Serena Mathews. Like her mother, Catherine was active in the civic affairs of the local community. In 1919, her senior year at Pullman High School, she transformed the high school's Girls League into Pullman's Y.W.C.A. and served as its first president. She was also active in literary groups and other clubs in Pullman, including the Fortnightly Club (of which she was a third generation member) and the P.E.O. Sisterhood. She attended Washington State College where she studied English and joined the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. While working in the college library for 25 cents an hour in her freshman year, Catherine met Jack Friel, three years her senior. "Freshman girls felt sophisticated going with older men who had been to Europe," she recalled in a spring 2002 article in Washington State Magazine (Pat Caraher, "Catherine Mathews Friel is thankful for life in a small college town"). She stayed in touch with Jack after they graduated in 1923 and embarked on a teaching assignment at Dayton High School, where she taught English. She would eventually complete a Master's degree in English and subsequently taught at Pullman High School. She was a vocal advocate for historic preservation on the WSU campus, and went to great lengths to help save Stevens Hall in the 1970s. Stevens Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. But her efforts to preserve the legacies of WSU did not stop at the campus' first women's dormitory. Following the death of her son John and daughter Charlotte in the 1970s, she and Jack worked to establish the John Mathews Friel Memorial Artist Lecture Series through the WSU Museum of Art, as well as the Charlotte Friel Memorial Lecture in the Edward R. Murrow School of Communication. In 1999, Catherine was awarded the WSU Foundation Outstanding Service Award for her contributions to the university.

Jack and Catherine married on August 28, 1926. They had four children: Charlotte (b. 1929), Wallis (b. 1931), John (b. 1938), and Janette (b. 1940). With the exception of Janette, who obtained a psychology degree from Stanford and earned a doctorate in Veterinary Medicine, all of their children attended and graduated from WSU. Although (like Janette) he is not a principal subject of this collection, it should be noted that Wallis, a former Whitman County Superior Court Judge, studied political science and graduated in 1953.

Charlotte Friel (December 29, 1929-December 31, 1971) grew up an active member of the Camp Fire Girls organization. She graduated from Pullman High School with the class of 1947 and received her B.A. in Speech from WSC in 1951, where she was editor of the WSU student newspaper The Daily Evergreen and a member of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Her aspirations in the field of broadcasting took her to New York City, where she applied for and was offered an administrative job at Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS). She advanced to the position of Manager of Research and Administration Corporate Affairs, a position she held from 1954 until her death in 1971. She obtained her M.A. in Communications from Columbia University in 1960, as well as her Ph.D. in Communications from New York University in 1968. Following her death from Hodgkin's Disease, the Charlotte Friel Memorial Lecture was established by Jack and Catherine in 1973 to bring in recognized professionals in the mass communications field to the WSU campus. Her papers and notes used to write her doctoral dissertation, "The Influence of Television in the Political Career of Richard M. Nixon, 1946-1962," were subsequently transferred from the New York University Libraries to what would become the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California.

John Mathews Friel (April 20, 1938-June 5, 1971) received his B.A. in Fine Arts from WSU in 1962. After working briefly as a graphic designer in the WSU Department of Publications and an art editor for the satirical magazine ASKANCE, he received a scholarship to study at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, and later studied at the Los Angeles Art School. He served in the U.S. Army Reserve and was discharged on September 30, 1963. His hard-edge paintings became a hot commodity for individual buyers and collectors in the late 1960s and hung in business and private collections in the northwest, California, Chicago, and New York. His works "Interlock," "Thunderball," and "Flash" all hung in the executive reception areas of Columbia Records and the CBS Television Network in New York City. While living in Tokyo in 1966-1965, he had a one-man exhibit at the Tsubaki Kindai Gallery in Tokyo (1966). Upon his return to North America, he participated in a two-man collaboration titled "The IT Show," which was featured in the Albert White Galleries in Toronto, Canada, and the Rolf Nelson Gallery in Los Angeles. Despite his success in the fine arts world, John became "depressed and disillusioned with his artistic creations [and] he destroyed dozens of his paintings before his death." After his suicide in 1971, Catherine and Jack worked to honor John's memory as an artist and WSU graduate and in 1973 established the John Mathews Friel Memorial Artist Lecture Series through the WSU Museum of Art, where three of his paintings reside in the university's permanent collection. In 1980, Catherine donated some of John's papers to the Archives of American Art.

Content DescriptionReturn to Top

The Friel and Mathews Family Papers contain the papers of John and Serena Mathews family dating back to 1887, continuing through to the marriage of their daughter Catherine to Jack Friel and the lives of two of their children, John Mathews Friel and Charlotte Friel.

The papers of John and Serena Mathews consist primarily of records relating to Serena's involvement with the Federated Women's Clubs and the Mathews homestead in Buhl, Idaho. These papers also contain photographs of the family, including their three children Homer, Catherine, and Charlotte, certificates verifying John's authority to practice law in Washington state, and correspondence and ephemera from Serena's grand tour of Europe in the early 1930s. Serena was an active participant in civic affairs and her papers provide a glimpse into her political leanings and affiliations.

Jack Friel's papers consist of materials related to his career as a basketball coach at Washington State College. They include correspondence, photographs, ephemera, and memorabilia. Ephemera related to his brief semi-professional athletic career, high school coaching, and role as Commissioner of the Big Sky Conference are also included.

Catherine Friel's papers consist of materials related to her association with Washington State College as a student and alumna, including correspondence, ephemera from Kappa Alpha Theta, a speech delivered at WSU in 1991, and photographs, including photographs of Catherine in the Women's Auxiliary of the ROTC. Also included are correspondence, clippings, and photographs from the Fortnightly Club.

The collection also contains materials about Charlotte and John Mathews Friel, children of Jack and Catherine who passed away in the 1970s. Materials related to Charlotte Friel include a copy of her dissertation, photographs, diaries, clippings, speeches delivered by Friel, materials from Charlotte's extracurricular activities at WSC, and correspondence and publicity for the Charlotte Friel Memorial Fund. Materials related to John Friel include clippings on his art work and correspondence for the John Friel Memorial Lecture Series.

Use of the CollectionReturn to Top

Restrictions on Use

Copyright restrictions apply.

Preferred Citation

[Item Description] Friel and Mathews Family Papers, 1887-1999

Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.

Administrative InformationReturn to Top

Arrangement

The collection is arranged in nine series according to family or individual, with the contents of each series being arranged in alphabetical order. Several of the series are further divided into subseries.

Series 1: Mathews Family, 1889-1952. Contains correspondence, photographs, and legal documents related to the Mathews family properties in Washington and Idaho, including a homestead near Buhl, Idaho (Twin Falls County) and the family residence in Pullman (1703 Ruby Street). There are also photographs of the Wallis family properties located in Pullman on Spaulding and Maple Streets, as well as photos of early twentieth century events and scenes around the Washington State College and Pullman High School campuses.

Series 2: Serena F. Mathews, 1890-1990. This series is divided into seven subseries, each arranged alphabetically. It consists primarily of Federated Women's Clubs and local club materials, personal correspondence, and materials from a trip to Europe.

Subseries 2.1: Federated Women's Clubs, 1901-1948. Correspondence, publications, photographs, and ephemera related to the Federated Women's Clubs, including meeting minutes, convention programs, delegate pins and ribbons, and other material. This series also contains scrapbooks, yearbooks, publications, and convention programs for the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs, specifically conventions at Aberdeen (1928), Longview (1936), Pullman (1924), Seattle (1930), and Yakima (1929). Many of the folders contain newspaper clippings of articles about former presidents and members of the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs, as well as miscellaneous policy issues advocated by women's clubs at the state and local level.

Subseries 2.2: Correspondence, 1910-1990. Correspondence with family, friends, and prominent members of the community on a variety of subjects, including incoming letters of condolence following the death of John Mathews.

Subseries 2.3: Diaries, 1939-1951. Twelve volumes detailing day-to-day activities and interactions with family and friends.

Subseries 2.4: European tour, 1930-1931. Travel documents, memorabilia, photographs, and postcards from Serena's trip to Europe beginning July 1930 and concluding July 1931. Many photographs are unidentified, but her traveling companions were Mrs. Elsa Chalfant and her two children, Margarete (age 16) and Arthur (age 12). There is a five-volume diary, over 900 pages, that Serena regularly updated throughout her travels, documenting her experience as an American tourist abroad. A 15-page essay, "Tid Bits from a Trip to Europe" is a condensed version of the diary with several pages detailing the National Socialist (Nazi) rallies they observed in Germany.

Subseries 2.5: Club activities, 1903-1951. Includes ephemera, notes, photographs, and miscellaneous programs of Pullman area clubs, including the Order of the Eastern Star, P.E.O., Pullman Women's Council, Pullman Fortnightly Club, the Monday Club, and the Pullman Historical Club.

Subseries 2.6: Published materials, 1919-1973. Contains miscellaneous publications by local and prominent authors.

Subseries 2.7: Miscellaneous, 1890-1952. Notes and ephemera, some of which was collected by Catherine Friel. Also contains Mathews' 1890 diploma from Darlington High School in Wisconsin, as well as a memorial scrapbook following Mathews' death in May 1952.

Series 3: John W. Mathews, 1887-1920. Contains miscellaneous law memorabilia, including a law school notebook with handwritten notes from coursework at the University of Michigan, law license and notary public certificates for the State of Washington. Also contains the Whitman County Prosecutor's Annual Report to the Governor for the year 1897, as well as some correspondence and ephemera related to the Monday Club.

Series 4: Homer H. Mathews, 1906-1964. Contains a Washington State College scrapbook (1915-1918) and Buhl, Idaho homestead scrapbook. Also contains local memorabilia from Pullman High School and grammar school.

Series 5: Friel Family, 1927-2000. Contains correspondence, documents, publications and photographs related to members of the Friel family (Jack, Catherine, Charlotte, Wallis, Janette, Edward, Agnes). Included is correspondence and ephemera from Jack and Catherine's wedding and wedding anniversaries. There are World War II ration books, along with a large correspondence file between the Friels and William Osborne, a WSC student housed by the Friels who was drafted and deployed to the South Pacific during World War II. His letters offer insight into conditions in the Pacific and South Asia theater. There are also newspaper clippings and articles on Waterville, WA (Jack's hometown), the Friels' lake house at Priest Lake, ID, and a map of Columbia Basin farm units in Othello, WA owned by Jack and Catherine. This series is the only part of the collection that includes information (newspaper clippings) on the career of Wallis W. Friel, a former Whitman County Superior Court judge. Additionally, there is correspondence between the Friels and WSU pertaining to memorial lecture contracts in honor of Charlotte and John.

Series 6: John B. "Jack" Friel, 1899-1991. This series is divided into three subseries, each arranged alphabetically. It consists primarily of newspaper clippings, correspondence, photographs, ephemera, and memorabilia related to Jack's career as a basketball coach at Washington State College and as Big Sky Conference Commissioner.

Subseries 6.1: Washington State University Athletics, 1921-1991. Consists of newspaper clippings, memorabilia, and photographs of WSU baseball, basketball, and football. There are five basketball scrapbooks with miscellaneous articles and programs, including one compiled for the dedication of Jack Friel Court in 1977. The 1940-1941 Washington State College basketball team--which lost to Wisconsin in the 1941 NCAA championship game--is featured prominently in this subseries. Photographs include former coaches, players, and teams, as well as Hall of Fame events.

Subseries 6.2: Correspondence, 1942-1992. Consists of personal correspondence, as well as correspondence related to Jack's nomination to the NCAA Hall of Fame, National Basketball Association Hall of Fame, WSU Athletics Hall of Fame, and the dedication of Friel Court. There are also letters on Jack's appointment as first Commissioner of the Big Sky Athletic Conference.

Subseries 6.3: Miscellaneous, 1918-1991. Contains World War I material (dog tags, regiment photograph, correspondence) and WSU realia, including materials related to the Kappa Sigma fraternity. There are newspaper clippings and photographs of the 1928 Washington state high school basketball tournament, which Jack won as head coach of Spokane's North Central High School. Material in the subseries from additional high schools include Colville High School, Wenatchee High School, and the Codger Bowl (Colfax High School vs. St. John's High School). There are also personal photographs from birthdays and wedding anniversaries, and the WSU Class of 1923's Golden Grad Weekend (1973).

Series 7: Catherine M. Friel, 1901-1999. This series is divided into seven subseries, each arranged alphabetically. It consists primarily of papers related to Catherine's education and work in the local community, as well as correspondence, photographs, and memorabilia from club activities such as the YWCA Girl Reserves, the Fortnightly Club, Kappa Alpha Theta, and the P.E.O. Sisterhood.

Subseries 7.1: Education and childhood, 1901-1991. Contains course notes from English classes at WSC, as well as a scrapbook and dance cards and programs from her student years. Also includes materials about Pullman High School.

Subseries 7.2: Teaching records, 1924-1982. Contains Catherine Friel's teaching records from Dayton High School, and several Dayton High year books.

Subseries 7.3: Subject Files, 1915-1999. Consists of photographs, correspondence, notes, and documents related to Catherine's personal and professional activities in the local community. Included are Spokane Sorosis programs, papers on the Washington State University Time Capsule Committee (in celebration of WSU's centennial), dog show awards and photographs of the Friels' prized cairn terriers, and other topics. Most notable is the Eva LaFollette Kunz oral history transcript. LaFollette was the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William "Bill" LaFollette, a Representative in Congress for Washington's 3rd and 4th districts (1911-1915 and 1915-1919, respectively).

Subseries 7.4: Kappa Alpha Theta, 1913-1993. This series contains photographs, newspaper clippings, membership and alumnae lists, notes, publications, and correspondence related to the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Most of the material covers the Alpha Sigma chapter at Washington State University, including the chapter's founding in 1913. Alpha Sigma became the first Theta chapter to be established at a state college (land-grant school), breaking with the organization's tradition of establishing chapters at classical institutions.

Subseries 7.5: P.E.O. Sisterhood, 1920-1990. Correspondence, membership programs, and convention programs for the Philanthropic Educational Organization Sisterhood. Materials are predominantly from the Pullman chapter (Chapter S), but there are programs from the Spokane chapter as well (Chapter E).

Subseries 7.6: Fortnightly Club, 1929-1993. Photographs, correspondence, and yearbooks for the Pullman Fortnightly Club. There are photographs of member meetings, in addition to a 50th anniversary celebration in 1943.

Subseries 7.7: Correspondence, 1922-1991. Correspondence with family and friends.

Series 8: Charlotte Friel, 1943-1990. Consists of notes and publications related to Charlotte's childhood and involvement in Camp Fire Girls, as well as K-12 education in Pullman. The series is primarily correspondence, photographs, and newspaper clippings about Charlotte's broadcasting career at Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) in New York, and contains a copy of her Ph.D. dissertation titled "The Influence of Television in the Political Career of Richard M. Nixon, 1946-1962," in addition to photographs and the transcript of John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon's first joint radio-television broadcast. There is correspondence between Catherine and Jack Friel and WSU regarding the establishment of the Charlotte Friel Memorial Communications Seminar, and letters from Japanese friends of her brother John, following his death.

Series 9: John Mathews Friel, 1954-1993. This series contains correspondence, photographs, and publications on John's life and career as an artist. There is some personal correspondence with his sister Charlotte, as well as correspondence between Catherine Friel and WSU to establish the John Mathews Friel Memorial Lecture Series through the WSU Museum of Art.

Acquisition Information

Catherine M. Friel and John B. "Jack" Friel donated this collection to the Washington State University Libraries in three installments, beginning in 1991 (MS.1991.65, MS.1993.45, MS.2000.29).

Processing Note

MASC staff and temporary employees performed preliminary processing on these materials beginning with their initial acquisition in 1991. Final processing was completed by Allison Bremmeyer in August 2017 under the supervision of librarians Steven Bingo and Cheryl Gunselman.

Detailed Description of the CollectionReturn to Top

Series 1: Mathews Family, 1889-1952Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
1 1-2
Buhl, ID Homestead correspondence (letters addressed to John and Serena Mathews)
1911-1950
1 3
Buhl, ID homestead financial and legal documents (Property rights and easements, special warranty deeds, etc.)
1901-1949
1 4
Buhl, ID homestead photographs (Series of photos taken by Serena F. Mathews when the Mathews family spent the summer of 1910 developing a homestead from sagebrush to irrigation for hay and grain crops)
1907, 1910
1 5
Erich Klossner correspondence (letter addressed to Mr. Carl Milton Brewster and his wife Mrs. Alfhild Nordby Brewster. Includes a copy of Klossner's May 1, 1952 remarks, "Memorial to Serena Mathews")
1952
1 6
Mathews family records (property and other records of the Mathews family in Pullman, WA)
1907-1947
1 7-8
Mathews family and WSC photographs (includes photos at the family home in Pullman [1703 Ruby Street], vacation to Montana, Silver Lake or Lake D'Puddle, miscellaneous WSC campus and sporting events, Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity (SAE), etc.
1900-1928
1 9
Pullman High School photographs (PHS agriculture class, football team, graduating class of 1914)
1913-1914
1 10
Pullman Herald, Golden Jubilee issue (letter sent by Edythe Roberts in 1982 with a copy of the Pullman Herald's 1938 Golden Jubilee issue)
1938
1 11
Wallis family records and documents (miscellaneous documents and certificates from Washington, Idaho, and Wisconsin)
1892-1915
1 12
Wallis family photographs (includes photos of the Wallis family home on the corner of Spaulding and Maple Street(s) in Pullman, and adjacent properties)
1898-1909
1 13
Millie Wallis correspondence
1889

Series 2: Serena F. Mathews, 1890-1990Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 2.1: Federated Women's Clubs, 1901-1948
Box Folder
2 1
Aberdeen convention (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1928
2 2
American Conference on Birth Control and National Recovery
1934
2 3
Annual meetings for the State Federation of Colored Women's Organizations and Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs
1928-1941
2 4
Assorted convention publications (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1906, 1927-1950
2 5
Benefits of County Libraries
Undated
2 6-8
Bulletin (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1924-1936
2 9
California Federation of Women's Club Annual Convention
1933
2 10
The Club Woman (official publication of the General Federation of Women's Clubs)
1933-1934
3 1
Correspondence
1932-1933
3 2
Correspondence
1893-1949
3 3
Correspondence and minutes
1926-1938
3 4
Epsilon Sigma Omicron notes and correspondence
1929-1935
3 5
Everett convention (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1949
3 6
Federal Industrial Institution for Women
1928-1933
3 7
Federation forest correspondence
1927-1928
3 8
Federation forest land grant and board minutes
1928-1930
3 9
Federation forest reflection and dedication
1947-1949
3 10
General Federation of Women's Clubs clippings
circa 1934
3 11
General Federation Women's Clubs clippings
circa 1912-1928
3 12
General Federation Women's Clubs clippings
circa 1928-1943
3 13
General Federation of Women's Clubs Council Meeting booklets
1933-1934
3 14
General Federation of Women's Clubs meetings notes
1933 and undated
37 3
General Federation of Women's Clubs Council Meeting delegate pins and ribbons
1933-1934
3 15
General Federation of Women's Clubs Council Meeting (Richmond, Virginia)
1933
4 1
General Federation of Women's Clubs Council Meeting (San Antonio, Texas)
1928
4 2
History of the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs
circa 1944
4 3
Longview convention (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1936
4 4
Matsby correspondence
1946
4 5
Meeting correspondence and minutes
1927-1928
4 6
Minutes and notes
1924-1949
4 7
Pullman convention (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1924
4 8
Pullman Women's Club yearbooks
1914-1925
4 9
Rose B. Larson obituary
1945
4 10
Seattle convention (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1930
4 11
Seattle convention (General Federation of Women's Clubs)
1932
4 12
Souvenir Biennial: General Federation of Women's Clubs
1932 June 9-18
37 4
The Spokane Woman (3 issues)
1927-1929
4 13
Thro the Years (A collection of verse, prose, and letters gathered from the writings of former presidents of the Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1944 February
4 14
Tribute to Ella Higginson for her contribution to the Federation of Women's Clubs
1941
5 1-2
The Washington Club Woman (official publication Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs)
1938-1948
5 3
Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs presidents (Mary Lincoln Brown, Mabel Campbell, Elsie Cowin, Marie Kulzer, Livona Lotzgesell, Juanita Ludwigs, Serena Mathews, Nellie Miller, Madalene Pratt, Helen Swensson, Maxine Thomas, Martha Thornton)
1903-1945
5 4
Washington State Federation of Women's Club clippings
1928
5 5
Washington State Federation of Women's Club clippings
circa 1927-1931
37 5
Washington State Federation of Women's Club delegate pins and ribbons
1927-1939
5 6
Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs meeting programs
1928-1949
5 7
Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs scrapbook
1925-1935
6 1
Women's Clubs ephemera
1925-1944
6 2
Women's Industrial Home and Clinic and County Library Bill
1920-1929
6 3
Yakima convention
1929
6 4-6
Yearbooks (Washington State Federation of Women's Clubs; 14 items)
1901-1934
Subseries 2.2: Correspondence, 1910-1990
Box Folder
7 1
Cards from grandchildren and Washington Federation of Women's Club presidents
1945-1947
7 2
Correspondence and "Tid Bits from a Trip to Europe"
1942-1990
7 3
Incoming correspondence (Arthur S. Beardsley, E.O. Holland, Lulu Holmes, Clarence D. Martin, M.H. Marvin, William "Bill" P. Weisel, etc.)
1918-1952
7 4
Letters of condolence (death of John Mathews)
1917
7 5
Outgoing correspondence
1910-1941
7 6
Outgoing correspondence to children from Mathomere (Kitsap County)
1938, 1944-1947
7 7
Personal correspondence
1927-1929
Subseries 2.3: Diaries, 1939-1951
Box Folder
7 8-10
Serena F. Mathews diaries (12 volumes)
1939-1951
Subseries 2.4: European Tour, 1930-1931
Box Folder
7 11
Memorabilia: Austria
Undated
7 12
Memorabilia: Belgium
Undated
8 1
Memorabilia: Czechoslovakia (Czech Republic)
Undated
8 2
Memorabilia: Denmark
Undated
8 3
Memorabilia: France
1931
8 4-5
Memorabilia: Germany
1930-31
8 6
Memorabilia: Great Britain
1931
8 7
Memorabilia: Hungary
Undated
8 8
Memorabilia: Italy
1931
8 9
Memorabilia: Switzerland
Undated
9 1
Passport
1930-1931
36 1-10
Postcards from Europe (Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Italy, Switzerland, United States)
1930-1931
9 2
Receipts from Europe
1930-1931
9 3
Serena F. Mathews' European Diary, volume 1 (pages 1-200)
1930 July 27-September 20
9 4
Serena F. Mathews' European Diary, volume 2 (pages 201-400)
1930 September 20-December 12
9 5
Serena F. Mathews' European Diary, volume 3 (pages 401-600)
1930 December 12-1931 March 12
10 1
Serena F. Mathews' European Diary, volume 4 (pages 601-800)
1931 March 12-May 11
10 2
Serena F. Mathews' European Diary, volume 5 (pages 801-947)
1931 May 12-June 17
10 3
Tid Bits from a Trip to Europe (Mathews' essay)
Undated
10 4
United States Lines (ship travel company)
1930
Subseries 2.5: Club Activities, 1903-1951
Box Folder
36 11
Community War Workers file (WWI)
1917-1918
37 6
Order of the Eastern Star certificate of recognition
1951 December 26
10 5
Order of the Eastern Star ephemera
1923-1959
10 6
P.E.O. handbooks
1940-1942
10 7
P.E.O. history
Undated
10 8
Programs and notes (Pullman Women's Council, Monday Club, Pullman Historical Club, Pullman High School advising notes)
1903-1929
10 9
Pullman Fortnightly Club photographs
circa 1915-1937
10 10
Photographs (mostly undated and unidentified)
circa 1930-1941
Subseries 2.6: Published Materials, 1919-1973
Box Folder
11 1
Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot paper, "The Experimentalists"
1939
11 2
Serena Mathews article in Bunchgrass Historian ("Determined Bridegroom Hikes Sixteen Miles Through Flood")
1973
11 3
The Secret to Keeping Friends by Emily Post (contains photographs and notes from Mother's Day, 1940)
1938, 1940
11 4
The Sex Side of Life by Mary Ware Dennett
1919
Subseries 2.7: Miscellaneous, 1890-1952
Box Folder
11 5
Correspondence, ephemera, and issues of the Spokane Woman newspaper featuring Serena Mathews
1927-1940
37 7
Darlington High School diploma (Darlington, Wisconsin)
1890
11 6
Mathews literary notes and review
Undated
11 7
Mathews memorial and award
1947-1952
11 8
Photographs and ephemera collected by Catherine Friel (primarily from Europe trip)
1930-1931
37 8
Serena F. Mathews Memorial book
1930-1952
11 9
Virgina City, Nevada book review and postcards
1938-1941
11 10
War ephemera (Red Cross, Cause and Cure of War conference)
1919-1933
11 11
Washington State College Greek Life
1927-1939 and undated

Series 3: John W. Mathews, 1887-1920Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
12 1
Incoming correspondence
1897, 1913
12 2
Law school notebook
1887
12 3
Monday Club ephemera and correspondence
1903, 1913
37 9
State of Washington Attorney and Counselor of Law license
1898
37 10
State of Washington notary public certificates
1912, 1916, 1920
12 4
Washington State Supreme Court Appellant's Brief (Harry L. Olive Company v. S.V. Meek)
circa 1914
12 5
Whitman County Prosecutor's Annual Report to the Governor (report written by John W. Mathews for the 1897 calendar year. Includes written response from Governor J.R. Rogers noting the January 1898 lynching of Chadwick Marshall at Colfax)
1898

Series 4: Homer H. Mathews, 1906-1964Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
38 1
Buhl Homestead scrapbook
1910
12 6
Golden Anniversary Homecoming booklet and ephemera
1964
12 7
Grammar school graduation certificate and award (Common Schools of the State of Washington)
1906-1910
Map Case 2
Pullman High School diploma (Class of 1914)
1914
38 2
Washington State College scrapbook
1915-1918

Series 5: Friel Family, 1927-2000Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
38 3
60th wedding anniversary guest book
1986
12 8
1973 Golden Grad Reunion (50 year reunion of the WSC Class of 1923)
1973
12 9
Article and poem by Erich Klossner
1952, 1956
12 10
Brain Structures at work in Organism and Environment Interactions by Edward Friel
1977-1979
12 11
Charlotte and John Friel lectureship contract
1989
12 12
Fo-Paws and Communicator articles on Jack and Catherine Friel
1944, 1990
12 13
Friel family correspondence and notes
1972, 1990
12 14
Friel family documents and publications
1958-1990
12 15
"The Insatiable Quest" and other poems by Erich Klossner
1971-1986
12 16
Jack and Catherine Friel correspondence
1995-2000
12 17
Jack and Catherine Friel correspondence
1966-1992
12 18
Jack and Catherine Friel correspondence with John Kosich
1992
13 1
Janette Friel report
1976-1977
13 2-3
Lessons in Living scrapbook
1941
Map Case 1
Map of Columbia Basin farm units (units owned by Jack and Catherine in Othello, WA)
circa 1971
13 4
"My Co-Ed" sheet music (Words by Agnes Friel, Music by LaVerna E. Kimbrough)
circa 1927
13 5
Priest Lake house
1969-1989
13 6
Photographs
circa 1930-1947
13 7
Pullman city projects
circa 1960-1977
13 8
Ration books (World War II)
circa 1941-1945
38 4
Spokesman Review Magazine article featuring Friel home on Priest Lake
May 24, 1970
13 9
Straws for the Lyric Flame by Erich Klossner
1952
13 10
Three Forks Museum
1986-1990
13 11
Wallis Friel (Judge Wallis W. Friel, Whitman County Superior Court)
1959-1989
13 12
Wallis Friel Snake River Six Band
1985-1990
13 13
Washington State University correspondence
1995-1990
13 14
Washington State University Museum of Art
1990-1991
38 7
Waterville and Friel family articles
1986-1991
14 1
Wedding correspondence and ephemera
1926
14 2
World War II correspondence: William Osborne and Harold Mizony
1943-1945
14 3
With Stardust on His Glasses by Erich Klossner
1956
35 6
Ration books and tokens (World War II)
1942-1944
Map Case 3
John Kennedy Presidential campaign poster
1960
Map Case 1
New York Times newspaper issues about Apollo 11 moon landing (2 items)
1969 July

Series 6: John B. "Jack" Friel, 1899-1991Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 6.1: Washington State University Athletics, 1921-1991
Box Folder
39 1
1941 Washington State College basketball team articles (50th anniversary)
1991
39 2
Baseball centennial plaque
1991
39 3
Baseball centennial ephemera
1991
36 12
Baseball signed by 1979 team
1979
39 4
Basketball clippings scrapbook
1931-1940
14 4
Basketball scrapbook
1940-1953
14 5
Basketball scrapbook
1941-1947
14 6
Basketball scrapbook (dedication of Jack Friel Court at WSU's Coliseum. Includes letters from Marv Harshman, Keith Lincoln, Sam Jankovich, Bob Smawley, Stan Bates, and others)
1977-1979
43 8
Scrapbook (primarily basketball, with some other sports and topics)
1940s
15 1-4
Clippings
1949-1990
16 1-3
Clippings
1949-1990
16 4
Clippings on retirement and 1941 team
1958-1971
Map Case 1
Jack Friel posters and articles
circa 1986
40 6
Pullman Herald: "The Performing Arts Coliseum and Washington State University"
1973 May 24
40 7
Silver Anniversary Reunion (1941 Basketball Team)
1966
16 6
W.B. "Red" Reese clippings
1958-1980
41 1
Washington State College athletics scrapbook
circa 1933-1941
16 7
Washington State College basketball programs
1941-1944
17 1
Washington State College photographs
1920-1923
17 2
Washington State University athletics photographs (former coaches, players, and teams; Hall of Fame ceremonies and banquets; Buck Bailey, Stan Bates, J. Fred "Doc" Bohler, Lieutenant Archie Buckley, Isaac "Ike" Deeter, Hubie Dunn, John Friel, Glenn Galligan, Doug Gibb, Marv Harshman, Paul Lindemann, Jack Mooberry, George Raveling, Golden Romney, Kelvin Sampson, Bob Smawley, Jim Sutherland, John Wooden, and others)
1921-1991
17 3
Washington State University Athletics programs and mailings
1947-1990
Subseries 6.2: Correspondence, 1942-1992
Box Folder
17 4
Basketball correspondence (John F. Bohler, Tippy Dye, Wiles Hallock, Marv Harshman, Jon Heimbigner, A.F. Raiter Jr., George Raveling, Joseph R. Vancisin, and others)
1945-1992
17 5
Big Sky Athletic Conference correspondence and 1970-1971 conference pressbook
1967-1990
17 6
Big Sky Athletic Conference correspondence on appointment as Commissioner
1963
17 7
Friel Court correspondence (dedication ceremony of Friel Court on December 3, 1977)
1977-1978
17 8
Erich Klossner correspondence
1978
17 9
Letters and clippings from WSC graduates and former players
1953-1992
18 1
National Basketball Hall of Fame correspondence (William "Bill" Mokray, Bob Smawley, Lee Williams)
1973-1979
18 2
National Collegiate Athletic Association Hall of Fame correspondence and material
1976-1990
18 3-4
Personal correspondence (outgoing and incoming letters to and from Jack and Catherine from friends, former players and teammates, acquaintances: Alfred B. Butler, Isaac "Ike" Deeter, Don J. Eagle, Ernest "Ernie" J. Filiberti, Thomas S. Foley, Shirley Fouts, Jack Gardner, Major General John A. Klein, John D. Kosich, Raymond F. Johnson, Paul Lindemann, J.D. Lewis, Jim Lyle, John D. McCallum, Carl E. McCullough, W.H. McPhee, Bob Miller, Harvey L. Murdock, Edward R. Murrow, Tom O'Neill, Craig Smith, Phil Wainscott, and others)
1942-1991
18 5
Retirement correspondence
1958
18 6
Washington State University correspondence (John Christopher, Sara Coddington, Rod Commons, Laurie Dahl, Lois B. DeFleur, John Elwood, C. Clement French, Dick Fry, Weldon B. Gibson, Sonia M. Hussa, Sam Jankovich, Janet Casello Johnson, Raymond F. Johnson, Willemina J. Kardong, Connie Kravas, Keith Lincoln, Robert "Bob" and Margaret McEachern, Bill Moos, Brian Murray, Glen Oman, Kelvin Sampson, Bob Smawley, Samuel H. Smith, Glenn Terrell, Lee Williams, Richard "Dick" A. Young, and others)
1950-1991
18 7
Washington State University Hall of Fame correspondence
1979-1990
Subseries 6.3: Miscellaneous, 1918-1991
Box Folder
41 2
90th birthday guest book
1988 August 26
18 8
Basketball ephemera
1928-1958
18 9
Basketball rules analyses
1984-1985
18 10
Big Sky Athletics (photographs, newspaper clippings, and correspondence)
1963-1973
19 1
Wilbur Bohm diary
1964-1965
19 2
Certificates
1943-1991
19 3
Codger Bowl Reunion (Armistice Day County Football Championship, 1938: Colfax High School vs. St. John's High School)
1988
19 4
Colville High School photographs
1924-1984
19 5
Fraternity certificates and photograph
1920, 1938, 1943
19 6
Kappa Sigma correspondence (external and internal improvements and renovations to the Kappa Sigma house)
1960-1978
19 7
New York University M.A. Education notes
1937-1939
19 8
Memorial clippings and letters
1995
19 9
Pac-10 Conference Basketball Observer's Guide
1983
19 10
Personal photographs (50th and 60th wedding anniversary; Jack's 90th birthday; childhood photographs in Waterville, Washington)
1899-1986
19 11
Skookum (Colville High School yearbook)
1924, 1925
16 5
State College of Washington graduation diploma
1923
20 1
The Tamarack (North Central High School yearbook)
1926, 1928
20 2
Washington state high school basketball tournament (North Central High School state tournament champions)
1928
20 3
Washington State University photographs (Golden Grad Weekend, Class of 1923; Herman Deutsch Reading Room; John Mathews Friel Memorial Lecture Series, etc.)
1944-1978
41 4
Washington State University realia
1968-1991
20 4
Wenatchee High School athletics
1920-1974
20 5
World War I correspondence
1918
20 5
Clippings about Jack Friel's semi-professional baseball career
1925
20 6
World War I dog tags
circa 1918-1919
Map Case 1
World War I regiment photograph (Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Kentucky)
1919 February 7

Series 7: Catherine M. Friel, 1901-1999Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Subseries 7.1: Education and Childhood, 1901-1991
Box Folder
20 7
Catherine's first years
1901-1903
20 8-9
Course notes: British Literature
circa 1920
20 10
Course notes (Spenser, Shakespeare, Intro to Philosophy, The Silent Voice, British Poets, Pullman High School)
1919-1920
20 11
Course notes: Classic and Medieval Literature
circa 1920
20 12
Course notes: Definitions of literature course notes
circa 1920
20 13-14
Course notes: English classes
circa 1920
21 1-8
Course notes: English classes
circa 1920
21 9
English notebook
1910-1915
21 10
The Hi Times (Pullman High School newspaper)
1959-1960
21 11
Pullman High School Centennial, 1892-1992
1992
22 1
Pullman High School, Class of 1963 (20 year reunion)
1983
22 2
Pullman High School history (newspaper articles and school memorabilia; includes 1916 PHS yearbook Alkiwawa)
1916-1991
22 3-4
Teaching papers
circa 1920-1926
22 5
Washington State College scrapbook
1919-1923
22 6
Washington State College dance cards and programs
1921-1922
Subseries 7.2: Teaching records, 1924-1982
Box Folder
22 7
Dayton High School
1924-1982
22 8-9
Nesika Wawa (Dayton High School yearbook (3 volumes: 1924, 1925, 1926)
1924-1926
Subseries 7.3: Subject files, 1915-1999
Box Folder
23 1
Biographical file
Undated
23 2
Certificates (Certificate of Admission to the (Pullman) High School; Phi Kappa Phi; U.S. Air Force recognition of Catherine Friel as "honorary life member of the Air Defense Team")
1915, 1922, 1959
23 3
Dog Show Awards photographs
1950-1953
23 4
Eva LaFollette Kunz oral history
1981
23 5
Fine art collecting
1979
23 7
The Lincoln Log (an English class publication)
1942-1943
23 8
National YWCA Girl Reserves meetings
1922-1928
23 9
"Paths to Power: Women in Professions" (Speech given at Washington State Convention of P.E.O. in Pullman by WSU Vice Provost of Student Affairs, Maureen Anderson)
1990
23 10
Phoebean Study Club (founded by Catherine Friel in 1947)
1947-1977
23 11
Presentation of Campus Day trophy by President Taft (photograph)
1920
23 12
Pullman Trim Tops
1971
23 13
Retired Teachers correspondence (National Retired Teachers Association)
1967-1974
23 14
Spokane Sorosis programs
1926-1931
23 15
Washington State University correspondence (Mac and June Crow, Walt Dryfoos, Connie Kravas, Keith Lincoln, Paul R. Hagner, John C. Pierce, Samuel H. Smith, Alexis S. Tan)
1995-1999
23 16
Washington State University Time Capsule Committee
1989-1991
23 17
YWCA Girl Reserves
1927-1929
24 1
YWCA Girl Reserves middy (Girl Reserves sailor collar blouse)
circa 1926
Subseries 7.4: Kappa Alpha Theta, 1913-1993
Box Folder
24 2
Alpha Sigma chapter 35th Anniversary
1948
24 3
Alpha Sigma chapter 50th Anniversary
1963
24 4
Alpha Sigma chapter 75th Anniversary
1988
24 5
Alpha Sigma chapter and Washington State University clippings
1950-1986
24 6
Alpha Sigma chapter and Washington State University friends
1920-1988
24 7
Alpha Sigma chapter clippings
1954-1968
24 8
Alpha Sigma chapter papers (membership and alumnae lists; booklets)
1972-1993
25 1-3
Conventions
1959-1998
25 4-5
Conventions
1969-1978
25 6
Correspondence
1953-1978
25 7
Correspondence and notes
1951-1986
26 1
Discrimination, equality, and other discussion ideas
1966-1968
26 2
District XV President correspondence
1967-1971
26 3
District XV President correspondence
1971-1991
26 4
District XV President correspondence with National Chairman
1964-1976
26 5
Greek life and university articles
1967-1970
26 6
Installation of the Alpha Sigma Chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta
1913
26 7
Kappa Alpha Theta Foundation
1967-1975
26 8
Manuals and other publications
1970-1974
27 1
National correspondence
1970-1980
27 2
New Member Program
1970-1993
27 3
Philanthropies
1969-1970
27 4
Photographs
1964-1993
27 5
Photographs and ephemera
1921-1950
27 6
University and fraternity trends
1964-1968
Subseries 7.5: P.E.O. Sisterhood, 1920-1990
Box Folder
27 7-8
Correspondence
1920-1990
28 1
Invitations and membership cards
1927-1952
28 2
Programs (Chapter E and Chapter S)
1926-1952
28 3-5
Programs and letters
1972-1993
28 6
P.E.O. Chapter "S"
1989-1993
28 7
State convention programs
1934, 1981
Subseries 7.6: Fortnightly Club, 1929-1993
Box Folder
23 6
Fortnightly Club photographs (50th anniversary of the Fortnightly Club)
1943
29 1-2
Fortnightly Club photographs and correspondence
circa 1929-1992
29 3-4
Fortnightly Club yearbooks
1941-1942, 1978-1993
Subseries 7.7: Correspondence, 1922-1991
Box Folder
29 5-6
Important letters and documents; miscellaneous correspondence; notecards with illustrations by Richard Hashagen of scenes and buildings at WSU, Colfax, and Whitman County
1922-1991
36 13
Postcards (blank) with photographs and illustrations of buildings and scenes at WSU, Pullman, and the Palouse region
Undated
30 1
Photograph preservation research (correspondence and clippings)
1987-1989

Series 8: Charlotte Friel, 1943-1990Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
30 2
Articles about Charlotte Friel's broadcasting career
1962-1983
30 3
Autograph books and announcements (Pullman High School, Class of 1947 graduation announcements; autograph book from Serena Mathews with note written inside)
1936-1947
30 4
Camp Fire Girls event programs (Mother-Daughter Banquet and "Daughters of Democracy" Annual Party)
1940, 1943
30 5-6
Camp Fire Girls notes and assignments
Undated
30 7-8
Camp Fire Girls publications
circa 1939-1940
43 1
Camp Fire Girls project book: "The Rank of a Firemaker"
Undated
43 2
Camp Fire Girls project book: "Torch Bearer Craftsman in Literature"
Undated
30 9
CBS office photos (Tad Myers, James Delay, Charlotte Friel, and Helen Brown)
October 8, 1965
31 1-2
Charlotte Friel Memorial Communications Seminar correspondence and documents
1973-1989
31 3
Charlotte Friel Memorial Communications lecturers
1984-1989
31 4
Clippings
1962, 1970
31 5
Correspondence (transfer of the Charlotte Friel papers from New York University Libraries to the Richard Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, California upon its completion)
1972-1973
31 6-7
Diaries and travel journals; address book
1943-1947, 1952, 1964
31 8
Edward R. Murrow Symposium (papers and clippings)
1978-1990
32 1
"History of the Northwest" extension course coursework (taught by Dr. Herman Deutsch)
1947
32 2
Incoming correspondence from family
1970
32 3
Incoming correspondence from Japanese friends of John Mathews Friel (sent to Charlotte before and after John's death on June 5, 1970)
1970-1972
32 4-6
"The Influence of Television in the Political Career of Richard M. Nixon, 1946-1962" (Charlotte Friel Ph.D dissertation)
1968
32 7
The Influence of Television in the Political Career of Richard M. Nixon (Ph.D research design)
1966
33 1
Media identification cards and membership cards (CBS/Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, American Women in Radio and Television, etc.)
1956-1965
33 2
Jokes and illustrations
1943
33 3
Newspaper articles
1950-1971
43 3
New York University diplomas (Master of Arts; Doctor of Philosophy)
1960, 1968
33 4
Outgoing correspondence with family
1936-1968
33 5
Pullman High School Class of 1947 twenty year reunion
1967
33 6
Theta Sigma Phi
1962-1980
33 7
Transcript and photographs of John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon first joint radio television broadcast
1960 September 26
33 8-9
Washington State College Board of Control records (NSA, Constitution and Bylaws, Correspondence [BWG], Student Government, Retreat, Educational Policies, Activities, Committees, Agenda, TUB, CUB Promotion, Miscellaneous, Activity Center Series, Evergreen, Budgets)
1950
33 10
Kay J. Wight (correspondence and clippings)
1982-1986

Series 9: John Mathews Friel, 1954-1993Return to Top

Container(s) Description Dates
Box Folder
34 1
Archives of American Art correspondence (John Mathews Friel papers)
1980
34 2
Articles on youth camp
1950
43 4
Childhood drawings (former basketball players)
Undated
34 3
Correspondence on art loan (letter written to Jack and Catherine Friel from the Law offices of Irwin, Friel and Myklebust, P.S., in Pullman's Old National Bank Building)
1974 April 23
34 4
Correspondence with Charlotte Friel
1954-1964
34 5-6
Fine Arts Artist (life and career of John M. Friel as an artist; includes publications with John's art)
1959-1993
34 7
Friends of the WSU Museum of Art
1979-1980
34 8
John Mathews Friel Memorial Fund
1974-1978
34 9-10
John M. Friel Memorial exhibit photographs (photographs taken by L.M. Curtis, depicting WSU's honorary dance group Orchesis interpreting John Friel's artwork produced between 1964-1971. Choreographed by dance professor W. "Tony" Weaver)
1973
35 1
John Mathews Friel Memorial Lecture Series (correspondence, programs, etc.)
1978-1993
43 7
Magazine publications featuring John Mathews Friel artwork (Home and Garden, Office Design, LIFE)
1966-1967
35 2
Photographs of John M. Friel art (Hard-edge paintings commissioned by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill of Chicago in the lobby of the Manitowoc Savings Bank in Wisconsin; Jewelry (Finnish) Shop in Ghiradelli Square, San Francisco, CA; other unidentified locations)
circa 1968
35 3-4
Washington State University and John M. Friel Memorial exhibit color slides
1973
35 5
WNBC-TV "Kaleidoscope 4" interview (NBC network affiliate in New York interview with John M. Friel about his hard-edge contemporary paintings)
1964

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top