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1
Title: Lee Sherman Dreyfus Papers, 1937-2008

Creator: Dreyfus, Lee Sherman, 1926-2008
Quantity: 9.0 cubic feet, 1 reel of microfilm (35 mm), 71 photographs, 60 transparencies, 2 tape recordings, 6 films, 8 videorecordings, and 5 DVDs
Call Number: MCHC65-090; M85-510; M87-495; M95-165; M2008-114; M2009-029; Audio 1692A; AC 560; EA 015-EA 017; EA 019-EA 020; VBA 363-VBA 364
Abstract: Papers of Lee Sherman Dreyfus, communications professor, Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, and Governor of Wisconsin, documenting his various careers and activities specifically as they relate to teaching and the development of educational television in Wisconsin, political campaigning, and his gubernatorial service.
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2
Title: Benjamin Franklin Heuston Papers, 1849-1894

Creator: Heuston, Benjamin Franklin, 1823-1894
Quantity: 0.8 c.f. (2 archives boxes)
Call Number: La Crosse Mss J
Abstract: Papers of B.F. Heuston, a Trempealeau County, Wisconsin lumberman, land speculator, general store owner, and county official, including correspondence (1850-89), diaries (1862-78), account books (1849-60, 1864-79), reminiscences, and historical notes on Trempealeau County. Most of the correspondence concerns Heuston's Civil War service with Co. C, 22nd Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment. The Civil War letters and diaries describe the 22nd Regiment's surroundings in Tennessee, Georgia, South and North Carolina, and Virginia; the Atlanta Campaign and Sherman's march through Georgia; Heuston's wounding at Resaca and subsequent stays in army hospitals, especially at Camp Chase General Hospital (Columbus, Ohio); and racial and abolitionist concerns, including the arrest of the 22nd Regiment's officers for refusing to return slaves, Heuston's teaching experiences in a Negro school (1863), and controversies about arming Blacks, Northern education, and enlistment of Blacks. Trempealeau County materials include a typewritten history (1890), including biographical sketches of early settlers and landowners; and a typescript concerning an old French post near Trempealeau. Also includes pages for the “Fonetik Longhand Writer,” “The pronouncing system of B.F. Heuston,” and handwritten articles on temperance, prohibition, the Pan American railroad, and “The Negro problem” (1890).
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