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  <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601">
    <eadid countrycode="us" encodinganalog="identifier" mainagencycode="waps" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv37963" identifier="80444/xv37963">Cage
		250</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">Guide to the William Jasper
			 Spillman Papers 
			 <date encodinganalog="date" type="inclusive" normal="1891/1940">1891-1940</date></titleproper>
        <titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">Spillman (William J.)
			 Papers</titleproper>
        <author encodinganalog="creator">Finding aid prepared by Terry
			 Abraham</author>
        <sponsor encodinganalog="contributor">Funding for encoding this finding
			 aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the
			 Humanities.</sponsor>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Washington State University Libraries 
                Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections
        </publisher>
        <date calendar="gregorian" encodinganalog="date" normal="2012">© 2012</date>
        <address>
          <addressline>Pullman, WA 99164-5610 USA</addressline>
          <addressline>(509) 335-6691</addressline>
          <addressline>http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/masc/</addressline>
          <addressline>mascref@wsu.edu</addressline>
        </address>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc>
    <profiledesc>
      <creation encodinganalog="description">Finding aid encoded by Mark
		  O'English 
		  <date normal="2003" encodinganalog="date">2003</date></creation>
      <langusage>Finding aid written in
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage>
    </profiledesc>
    <revisiondesc>
      <change>
        <date>1974</date>
        <item>The papers were originally processed prior to 1960 and
			 re-processed by Terry Abraham in August and September, 1974. </item>
      </change>
    </revisiondesc>
  </eadheader>
  <archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21">
    <did>
      <repository>
        <corpname encodinganalog="852$a">Washington State University Libraries, Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>Pullman, WA 99164-5610 USA</addressline>
          <addressline>(509) 335-6691</addressline>
          <addressline>http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/masc/</addressline>
          <addressline>mascref@wsu.edu</addressline>
        </address>
      </repository>
      <unitid encodinganalog="099" countrycode="us" repositorycode="waps">Cage
		  250</unitid>
      <origination>
        <persname encodinganalog="100" source="lcnaf" role="creator" rules="aacr2">Spillman, William Jasper</persname>
      </origination>
      <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="collection">William Jasper
		  Spillman Papers</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1891/1940">1891-1940</unitdate>
      <physdesc>
        <extent encodinganalog="300$a">6 containers.</extent>
        <extent encodinganalog="300$a">3 linear feet of shelf space.</extent>
        <extent encodinganalog="300$a">1125 items.</extent>
      </physdesc>
      <abstract encodinganalog="520$a"> 3 ft. Summary Correspondence,
		  clippings, research notes, drafts, reports, photographs and other papers of a
		  Washington State University professor and United States Department of
		  Agriculture official. Included are records, notes and reports of the 1927-1928
		  Survey of Indian Affairs. Also biographical materials collected by his son,
		  Ramsay Spillman, including obituaries, correspondence of family members and
		  colleagues, particularly James Henry Rice, and other papers.</abstract>
      <langmaterial>Collection materials are in
		  <language encodinganalog="546" langcode="eng">English</language></langmaterial>
    </did>
    <bioghist encodinganalog="5450_">
      <p>William Jasper Spillman was born October 23, 1863 in Lawrence County,
		  Missouri, the eleventh child of Nathan Cosby Spilman (b. 1823) and Emily
		  Paralee Pruit (b. 1830). His childhood was spent on a Missouri farm among a
		  large family burdened by the accidental death of his father in 1871. </p>
      <p>In 1881 young Willie Spilman (he changed the spelling while in
		  college) enrolled at the University of Missouri. He subsequently received his
		  B.S. in 1886 and, following three years as teacher at Missouri State Normal
		  School, Cape Giradeau, where he married Miss Mattie Ramsay (1865-1935) in 1889,
		  received his M.S. in 1890 in absentia. At this time Spillman was teaching
		  botany and physics at Vincennes University where he was fortunate in making the
		  acquaintance of Dr. Enoch A. Bryan who later, as President of Washington
		  Agricultural College, invited Spillman to join the faculty in Pullman. </p>
      <p>In 1889 the Spillmans moved to Oregon where he was appointed teacher
		  of science at the Oregon State Normal School at Monmouth. One of the Spillman
		  sisters and her husband were living in near-by McMinnville. Another older
		  sister was living at The Dalles with her family. It was in Monmouth that Ramsay
		  Spillman was born September 21, 1891. The Spillmans remained in Monmouth until
		  1894 the year that E.A. Bryan became the third president of the newly opened
		  Washington Agricultural College (later Washington State University). </p>
      <p>Bryan invited his former colleague to Pullman to teach agriculture.
		  His preparation for this new assignment consisted of his farm childhood, his
		  scientific training and several weeks of observation at the University of
		  Wisconsin. </p>
      <p>It was at Pullman that Spillman made a momentous scientific discovery
		  which, if he had not been preceeded by an obscure Austrian monk forty-five
		  years earlier, would have made his name known to the world. Involved in
		  experiments to hybridize wheat adapted to the growing conditions of the Palouse
		  country Spillman independently rediscovered Mendel's Law of Heredity. He has
		  been credited with a major role in the acceptance of Mendel's Law by scientists
		  and agriculturalists. </p>
      <p>During his brief tenure at Washington State College Spillman began to
		  concentrate on the economics and methodology of practical agriculture for the
		  farmer. He became known as the man with the knowledge to assist the farmer, not
		  just a laboratory theorist. In 1902 he accepted a position with the U.S.
		  Department of Agriculture following the reception of his paper on his
		  wheat-breeding experiments presented at the meeting of the Association of
		  American Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations in Washington, D.C. in
		  November, 1901. Here he, and a select crew which followed him from Pullman (as
		  an earlier group had followed him from Monmouth), laid the groundwork for the
		  scientific management of farms. Although hired as an agrostologist (or expert
		  on grasses) Spillman's overwhelming interest in farm management coupled with
		  the nearly free hand given to him by the Department produced several bulletins,
		  speeches and other communications directed to the farmer's needs. In 1905 the
		  Office of Farm Management was organized with Spillman as the head, a position
		  he retained until 1918 when a disagreement with the Secretary of Agriculture
		  elicited his resignation. Subsequently he obtained a position as editor of the
		  influential Farm Journal. This provided a forum for his many and diverse
		  approaches to agriculture. He retained this position until the farm slump and a
		  subsequent loss of advertising revenue in 1921 forced the Journal to cut back
		  its staff. </p>
      <p>Almost immediately Spillman was asked to rejoin the Department of
		  Agriculture and was again given a free hand. Among his many other activities
		  Spillman was asked to participate in the efforts of the 1927-1928 Survey of
		  Indian Affairs. Spillman's role required visiting reservations across the
		  country and reporting on their economic use and potential, particularly in
		  relation to agriculture. The final report of the Survey was published as The
		  Problem of Indian Administration (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1928). He
		  also served as part-time professor of commercial geography at the Foreign
		  Service School of Georgetown University from 1922 until 1931. Spillman remained
		  with the U.S.D.A. until his death July 11, 1931 after an unsuccessful
		  operation. </p>
      <p>As teacher and an educator, Spillman drew devoted crowds of students
		  to his classes. As an agriculturalist he was in the front rank of those
		  applying scientific methodology to the problems of agriculture. He rediscovered
		  Mendel's Law while engaged in wheat hybridization experiments. He formulated
		  theories for the application of commercial fertilizer on farms. He founded,
		  practically single-handedly, the study of agricultural economics or farm
		  management. To the farmers he was not the government's expert, but a practical
		  man who knew what he was talking about and, as well, knew when to listen. They
		  said: "Don't send me no experts; send Spillman." </p>
    </bioghist>
    <arrangement encodinganalog="351">
      <p>The circumstances of Ramsay Spillman's biographical efforts were such
		  that he depended to a great extent on his father's extant papers for source
		  material. In addition he collected other materials in an effort to provide a
		  more detailed as well as broader picture of his father's life and activities.
		  This resulted in a lack of distinction between the papers of William Jasper
		  Spillman and the interpolations and additions of his son. While there is
		  evidence that many of the folder headings were originally used by Professor
		  Spillman some have apparently disappeared. An attempt has been made in the
		  reprocessing to restore, as closely as possible, what may have been the
		  original sequence of the papers. They are therefore divided into two major
		  categories: The papers of Professor Spillman and the papers of Ramsay Spillman
		  about his father. Additionally the first of these categories have been
		  sub-divided into correspondence and miscellaneous papers, records relating to
		  the Survey of Indian Affairs and what was obviously a research file containing
		  notes, clippings, articles, addresses, reprints, lecture notes and other papers
		  on a multitude of subjects which Professor Spillman had inquired into or
		  retained some record. There is even a file labeled "Nonsense" which is the
		  typical creation of a man who is often called upon to enliven a speech or
		  address with a little joke apropos the occasion. Some of the research interests
		  indicated by this file never reached fruition while others exist here only in
		  their final form. It is the working file of a curious man. Ramsay Spillman's
		  efforts to memorialize his father's memory added many letters, clippings,
		  obituaries, memorials, and other papers on subjects touching his father's life.
		  Included are several letters by his father to his brother John while at the
		  University of Missouri during the early 1890s which were acquired from the
		  family in the pursuit of this biography. </p>
    </arrangement>
    <accessrestrict encodinganalog="506">
      <p>This collection is open for research use.</p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <prefercite encodinganalog="524">
      <p>[Item Description]. Cage
		250, William Jasper
		  Spillman Papers. Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries, Pullman, WA.</p>
    </prefercite>
    <acqinfo encodinganalog="541">
      <p>The papers of William Jasper Spillman were donated to Washington State
		  University Library by his son, Ramsay Spillman, in June, 1940. </p>
    </acqinfo>
    <relatedmaterial encodinganalog="5441_">
      <p>After his father's death Ramsay Spillman determined to write a
		  biographical account of the life and work of William Jasper Spillman. He
		  interviewed friends and relatives and corresponded with many of Spillman's
		  co-workers and colleagues. This biography was completed in 1933 and revised in
		  1939. In June of 1940 Ramsay Spillman deposited a typescript (carbon) copy of
		  his biography (Archives 370.92 Sp45S) and several boxes of his father's notes,
		  correspondence and papers and other source material he collected in the
		  Washington State University Library. Other Spillman letters are in the Cornell
		  University Library among the papers of the New York State College of
		  Agriculture (NUCMC MS 62-2295) and M.C. Burritt (NUCMC MS 64-841). </p>
    </relatedmaterial>
    <controlaccess>
      <p>This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online
		  catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or
		  places should search the catalog using these headings.</p>
      <controlaccess>
        <persname encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" role="creator">Spillman, William Jasper, 1863-1931 --Archives</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Spillman, Ramsay, b. 1891</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" role="subject" encodinganalog="600">Rice, James Henry, 1868-1935</persname>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <corpname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" role="subject" encodinganalog="610">Washington State University. College of
			 Agriculture</corpname>
        <corpname source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" role="subject" encodinganalog="610"> United States. Office of Farm Management. </corpname>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650" rules="scm">Indians of
			 North America--Economic conditions</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" rules="scm" encodinganalog="650">Agriculture --
			 Economic aspects--Research</subject>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Agriculture</subject>
        <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Native Americans</subject>
        <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Science</subject>
        <subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Washington (State)</subject>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <title encodinganalog="630" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2">
          Survey of Indian Affairs, 1927-1928
        </title>
      </controlaccess>
    </controlaccess>
    <dsc type="combined">
      <p>The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in
		  the collection.</p>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Series 1:
				Correspondence</unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 1</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Letterbook. 494 p.</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1899-1901</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 2</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Correspondence</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1901-1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">47
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 3</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Capper Award
				  correspondence</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1930-1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">16
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 4</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">N. C. Spilman pension
				  correspondence</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1904-1909</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">27
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Series 2: Records</unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 5</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Class book, W.S.U.</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1900-1901</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">1
				  volume.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 6</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Diary of M. R.
				  Spillman</unittitle>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1927</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">1
				  volume.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 7</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Portrait of W.J.S.</unittitle>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a" label="glass slide">1</extent>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a" label="photoprint">1</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Series 3: Survey of Indian
				Affairs</unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">1 / 8-10</container>
            <container type="box-folder">2 / 11-15</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Correspondence, clippings,
				  memoranda, reports, photographs, maps, drawings and other papers written and
				  collected by WJS as a member of the Survey of Indian Affairs. Included are
				  copies of WJS' report on agricultural and economic conditions on each
				  reservation visited.</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f">1927-1929</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">169
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Series 4: Research File. Notes,
				clippings, addresses, essays, drafts, articles, reprints, lecture notes and
				other papers on various subjects of research interest.</unittitle>
          <physdesc>
            <extent encodinganalog="300$a">650
				items.</extent>
          </physdesc>
        </did>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 16</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Agricultural History</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 17</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Calendars</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 18</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Civilization</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 19</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Columbia Lectures</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f">1930-1931</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 20</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Country boy data</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 21</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Crop yields</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 22</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Evolution</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 23</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Farm Journal
				  clippings</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f">1918-1924</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 24</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Farm relief</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 25</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Fertilizers</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 26</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Food production and
				  supply</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 27</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Food - Nutrition</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">3 / 28</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Fuel</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 29</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Georgetown University</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 30</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Gravitation and
				  Temperature</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 31</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Language</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 32</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Length of day</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 33</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Meteorology</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 34</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Minnesota address</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 35</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Miscellaneous</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 36</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Mt. Hood</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 37</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Nonsense</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">4 / 38</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Newspaper clippings</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 39</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Patents</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 40</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problem series</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 41</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problems - Calculus,
				  algebra</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 42</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problems - Games</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 43</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problems - Gases</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 44</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problems - Physics</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 45</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Problems - Weights and
				  measures</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 46</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Probability formula</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 47</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Ration computer</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 48</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Rationalism</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 49</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Recipes</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">5 / 50</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Teaching</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Series 5: Ramsay Spillman's
				Biographical Research Notes</unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 51</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Bibliography of WJS
				  (fragments).</unittitle>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">2
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 52</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">University of Missouri.
				  Correspondence, grade reports, clippings, concerning WJS at the University of
				  Missouri, 1891-1892. Drafts and biographical notes, </unittitle>
            <unitdate certainty="circa" encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Also catalog of Peirce City
				  Baptist College</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1888-1889</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">20
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 53</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">WJS and the Office of Farm
				  Management Correspondence, notes and other papers, </unittitle>
            <unitdate certainty="circa" encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">100
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 54</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Music Notes and transcriptions of
				  "There was a man lived in the West.</unittitle>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">8
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 55</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Kent, William. Draft of a chapter
				  on Dean William Kent and Chancellor Day omitted from the final version.
				  typescript and photocopy.</unittitle>
            <unitdate certainty="circa" encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">5
				  leaves.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 56</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Piper, Charles V. Notes and draft
				  of a chapter on Charles V Piper</unittitle>
            <unitdate certainty="circa" encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">5
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 57</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Rice, James Henry. Correspondence
				  with Ramsay Spillman</unittitle>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1931-1932</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">14
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 58</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Newspaper obituaries of
				  WJS</unittitle>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">38
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 59</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Resolutions. A resolution by the
				  Southwest Washington Farmer's Club concerning WJS' resignation from
				  WSU</unittitle>
            <unitdate encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Resolutions, memorials and
				  obituaries of WJS</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1931-1933</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">12
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 60</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Personal tributes.
				  Correspondence, clippings, addresses and other papers about WJS</unittitle>
            <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce">1931-1940</unitdate>
            <physdesc>
              <extent encodinganalog="300$a">10
				  items.</extent>
            </physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="file">
          <did>
            <container type="box-folder">6 / 61</container>
            <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">Container list, 3 p.
				  typescript.</unittitle>
            <unitdate certainty="circa" encodinganalog="245$f" calendar="gregorian">1960</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
</ead>

