{"links":{"self":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog.json?page=125","prev":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog.json?page=124","next":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog.json?page=126","last":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog.json?page=5006"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":125,"next_page":126,"prev_page":124,"total_pages":5006,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":1240,"total_count":50059,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Item 7: Auditorium, Old","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","ref_ssm":["al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa"],"id":"postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","title_filing_ssi":"Item 7: Auditorium, Old","title_ssm":["Item 7: Auditorium, Old"],"title_tesim":["Item 7: Auditorium, Old"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Item 7: Auditorium, Old"],"text":["Item 7: Auditorium, Old","Postcard collection","8994","Published"],"component_level_isim":[1],"parent_ssi":"postcard-collection","parent_ids_ssim":["postcard-collection"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Postcard collection"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Postcard collection"],"parent_levels_ssm":["collection"],"unitid_ssm":["8994"],"collection_ssim":["Postcard collection"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"sort_isi":7,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo access restriction: All materials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published"],"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eItem 7: Auditorium, Old\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eItem 7: Auditorium, Old\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"total_digital_object_count_isim":[0],"_nest_path_":"/components#6","_nest_parent_":"postcard-collection","_root_":"postcard-collection","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:29:28.072Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"postcard-collection","title_ssm":["Postcard collection"],"title_tesim":["Postcard collection"],"ead_ssi":"postcard-collection","level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["76"],"text":["76","Postcard collection","Kansas State University history","Kansas agriculture and rural life","Military history","Documentation of student life and culture","0.25 Linear Feet, 1.00 Box","No access restriction: All materials are open for research.","Alphabetically by building at Kansas State University, followed by Fort Riley, Manhattan, and Kansas postcards.","Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Postcard collection, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.","Publication Date: 2014-01-28","This artificial collection includes postcards of subjects that include Kansas State University, Fort Riley, Manhattan, and Kansas. Some cards are addressed and others are blank.","The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.","The following postcards, marked U2015.13, were donated in loving memory of Janet Lee Rees by devoted husband Richard:   KSAC Postcards:   1. Anderson Hall: real photo card, postally used with student message about mid-term exams, stamp cancellation but no postmark, divided back; library does not have this view.   2. College Battalion: real photo card, postmarked 3/26/1909 with student message about final exams; library has a battalion card with a closer view but of military band, not postmarked.   3. Physical Science Hall: postmarked 9/6/1918; library has same view, not postmarked.   4. Physical Science Hall: real photo card, different view than #3, postmarked 3/14/1910; library does not have this view.   5. Horticultural Hall: color card postmarked 10/17/1910 with student message about studies; library does not have this view.   6. Horticultural Hall: real photo card, postmarked 6/30/1909 with student message about being busy until finish course; library does not have this view.   7. Agricultural Building: real photo card, postmarked 9/22/1914 with student message has classes in this building; library does not have this view.   8. Agricultural Hall: not postally used, divided back, published by Duckwall Bros. Manhattan, Kas; library does not have this view.   9. Women's Gymnasium (Holtz Hall): postmarked 6/8/year missing, undivided back with brief message on front; library has same card with pinholes in each corner, not postally used.   10. Kedzie (Domestic Science Hall): color view of 2-story building, postmarked 2/29/?8, student message discusses much larger building being built; library has same view but not color, different label, undivided back, not postally used, pinholes in each corner.   11. Domestic Science \u0026 Art Bldg: view of 3-story building, postmarked 2/27/1909, student message spends most of her time in this building; library does not have a 3-story view.   12. Domestic Science \u0026 Art Bldg: color view of 3-story building, postmarked 6/1/1913, message that person went through this building; library does not have this card.   13. Veterinary Science Building: color view of 3-story building, not postmarked, divided back, published by The Fleming Pharmacy, Manhattan, Kan; library does not have this view.   14. Nichols Gymnasium: color card, postmarked June but rest of date illegible; library does not have this view.   15. Van Zile Hall: color card, photo by Max Wolf Manhattan, Kansas; library has same card with different cloud formation and damaged back.   16. General View of Campus: color card, postmarked 12/16/?8, published by H.S. Willard \u0026 Co. Manhattan, Kans; library has this view, not color, different back.   17. Lover's Lane: color card, the image of lane is enhanced; library has similar view with different label and back.   18. Lover's Lane: divided back, postmark 6/7/1910, message discusses climbing Blue Mount Hill and writing card on shady \u0026 cool Lover's Lane; library has similar view with different label and back.   19. New Agronomy Building: color card, postmarked 11/26/no year; library does not have this card.   20. KSAC Football Team 1909: real photo card, divided back; library does not have this card.   21. Military Band: color card, divided back, published by H.S. Willard \u0026 Co. Manhattan, Kans; library does not have this card.   22. Memorial Chapel: green ink etching by Charlotte H. Morton, divided back; library does not have this card.   23. YMCA: real photo, divided back, the building became Saint Mary Hospital in 1936 and is where donor Richard D. Rees was born on 12/29/1938, mother's room was on main floor 1st window to the right of 11th Street entrance; this building is now the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house, the library does not have this card.   24. YMCA: postmarked 6/30/13, divided back; library does not have this card.   Manhattan Postcards:   1. Poyntz Avenue: color card, postmarked 9/11/1936, photo by Max Wolf, Manhattan, Kansas, view looking east from 4th Street.   2. Poyntz Avenue: not postally used, divided back, early 1900's view of unpaved Poyntz looking west from 1st Street.   3. Poyntz Avenue: postmarked 9/25/1912, early 1900's view of Poyntz with streetcar in center of street and horse \u0026 buggies along both curbs, student message about book costs and room \u0026 board.   4. Riley County Court House \u0026 Wareham Hotel: color card, postmarked 9/7/1938.   5. Riley County Court House: earlier view of the court house, postmarked 9/8/no year, student message that school just started.   6. Riley County Court House: vertical color card, divided back.   7. Hotel Gillett: color card, divided back.   8. Manhattan City High School: undivided back, postmarked 6/7/no year, brief message on front by girl attending some kind of instruction in the building.   9. Rebekah Home: real photo card, divided back, postmarked 9/24/?0, message by person starting work apparently at KSAC since gave address as KSAC, Manhattan.   10. I.O.O.F. Home Eureka Lake: color card, divided back, appears that a child started scribbling an address.   11. Dripping Springs: color card, divided back.   12. Union Pacific Depot: sepia tone card, postmarked 9/23/1910.   13. Episcopal Church: divided back card.   14. First Methodist Church: color card, postmarked 3/15/15,   15. Post Office: color card, postmarked 6/5/52.   16. Castle Kimble: color card, divided back.   17. Union Bus Depot: color card, divided back, distributed by Wolf Studio, Manhattan, Kansas.   18. Old Military Crossing on Blue River: color card, postmark 1/24/1910, message by student studying gas engines.   19. Drive in City Park: real photo card, postmarked 11/17/1910, unpaved street in park with many trees, bench, and obelisk monument.","Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. 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College Battalion: real photo card, postmarked 3/26/1909 with student message about final exams; library has a battalion card with a closer view but of military band, not postmarked.   3. Physical Science Hall: postmarked 9/6/1918; library has same view, not postmarked.   4. Physical Science Hall: real photo card, different view than #3, postmarked 3/14/1910; library does not have this view.   5. Horticultural Hall: color card postmarked 10/17/1910 with student message about studies; library does not have this view.   6. Horticultural Hall: real photo card, postmarked 6/30/1909 with student message about being busy until finish course; library does not have this view.   7. Agricultural Building: real photo card, postmarked 9/22/1914 with student message has classes in this building; library does not have this view.   8. Agricultural Hall: not postally used, divided back, published by Duckwall Bros. Manhattan, Kas; library does not have this view.   9. Women's Gymnasium (Holtz Hall): postmarked 6/8/year missing, undivided back with brief message on front; library has same card with pinholes in each corner, not postally used.   10. Kedzie (Domestic Science Hall): color view of 2-story building, postmarked 2/29/?8, student message discusses much larger building being built; library has same view but not color, different label, undivided back, not postally used, pinholes in each corner.   11. Domestic Science \u0026 Art Bldg: view of 3-story building, postmarked 2/27/1909, student message spends most of her time in this building; library does not have a 3-story view.   12. Domestic Science \u0026 Art Bldg: color view of 3-story building, postmarked 6/1/1913, message that person went through this building; library does not have this card.   13. Veterinary Science Building: color view of 3-story building, not postmarked, divided back, published by The Fleming Pharmacy, Manhattan, Kan; library does not have this view.   14. Nichols Gymnasium: color card, postmarked June but rest of date illegible; library does not have this view.   15. Van Zile Hall: color card, photo by Max Wolf Manhattan, Kansas; library has same card with different cloud formation and damaged back.   16. General View of Campus: color card, postmarked 12/16/?8, published by H.S. Willard \u0026 Co. Manhattan, Kans; library has this view, not color, different back.   17. Lover's Lane: color card, the image of lane is enhanced; library has similar view with different label and back.   18. Lover's Lane: divided back, postmark 6/7/1910, message discusses climbing Blue Mount Hill and writing card on shady \u0026 cool Lover's Lane; library has similar view with different label and back.   19. New Agronomy Building: color card, postmarked 11/26/no year; library does not have this card.   20. KSAC Football Team 1909: real photo card, divided back; library does not have this card.   21. Military Band: color card, divided back, published by H.S. Willard \u0026 Co. Manhattan, Kans; library does not have this card.   22. Memorial Chapel: green ink etching by Charlotte H. Morton, divided back; library does not have this card.   23. YMCA: real photo, divided back, the building became Saint Mary Hospital in 1936 and is where donor Richard D. Rees was born on 12/29/1938, mother's room was on main floor 1st window to the right of 11th Street entrance; this building is now the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house, the library does not have this card.   24. YMCA: postmarked 6/30/13, divided back; library does not have this card.   Manhattan Postcards:   1. Poyntz Avenue: color card, postmarked 9/11/1936, photo by Max Wolf, Manhattan, Kansas, view looking east from 4th Street.   2. Poyntz Avenue: not postally used, divided back, early 1900's view of unpaved Poyntz looking west from 1st Street.   3. Poyntz Avenue: postmarked 9/25/1912, early 1900's view of Poyntz with streetcar in center of street and horse \u0026 buggies along both curbs, student message about book costs and room \u0026 board.   4. Riley County Court House \u0026 Wareham Hotel: color card, postmarked 9/7/1938.   5. Riley County Court House: earlier view of the court house, postmarked 9/8/no year, student message that school just started.   6. Riley County Court House: vertical color card, divided back.   7. Hotel Gillett: color card, divided back.   8. Manhattan City High School: undivided back, postmarked 6/7/no year, brief message on front by girl attending some kind of instruction in the building.   9. Rebekah Home: real photo card, divided back, postmarked 9/24/?0, message by person starting work apparently at KSAC since gave address as KSAC, Manhattan.   10. I.O.O.F. Home Eureka Lake: color card, divided back, appears that a child started scribbling an address.   11. Dripping Springs: color card, divided back.   12. Union Pacific Depot: sepia tone card, postmarked 9/23/1910.   13. Episcopal Church: divided back card.   14. First Methodist Church: color card, postmarked 3/15/15,   15. Post Office: color card, postmarked 6/5/52.   16. Castle Kimble: color card, divided back.   17. Union Bus Depot: color card, divided back, distributed by Wolf Studio, Manhattan, Kansas.   18. Old Military Crossing on Blue River: color card, postmark 1/24/1910, message by student studying gas engines.   19. Drive in City Park: real photo card, postmarked 11/17/1910, unpaved street in park with many trees, bench, and obelisk monument."],"names_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections"],"corpname_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. 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Anderson Hall: real photo card, postally used with student message about mid-term exams, stamp cancellation but no postmark, divided back; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 2. College Battalion: real photo card, postmarked 3/26/1909 with student message about final exams; library has a battalion card with a closer view but of military band, not postmarked. \u003clb/\u003e 3. Physical Science Hall: postmarked 9/6/1918; library has same view, not postmarked. \u003clb/\u003e 4. Physical Science Hall: real photo card, different view than #3, postmarked 3/14/1910; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 5. Horticultural Hall: color card postmarked 10/17/1910 with student message about studies; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 6. Horticultural Hall: real photo card, postmarked 6/30/1909 with student message about being busy until finish course; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 7. Agricultural Building: real photo card, postmarked 9/22/1914 with student message has classes in this building; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 8. Agricultural Hall: not postally used, divided back, published by Duckwall Bros. Manhattan, Kas; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 9. Women's Gymnasium (Holtz Hall): postmarked 6/8/year missing, undivided back with brief message on front; library has same card with pinholes in each corner, not postally used. \u003clb/\u003e 10. Kedzie (Domestic Science Hall): color view of 2-story building, postmarked 2/29/?8, student message discusses much larger building being built; library has same view but not color, different label, undivided back, not postally used, pinholes in each corner. \u003clb/\u003e 11. Domestic Science \u0026amp; Art Bldg: view of 3-story building, postmarked 2/27/1909, student message spends most of her time in this building; library does not have a 3-story view. \u003clb/\u003e 12. Domestic Science \u0026amp; Art Bldg: color view of 3-story building, postmarked 6/1/1913, message that person went through this building; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 13. Veterinary Science Building: color view of 3-story building, not postmarked, divided back, published by The Fleming Pharmacy, Manhattan, Kan; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 14. Nichols Gymnasium: color card, postmarked June but rest of date illegible; library does not have this view. \u003clb/\u003e 15. Van Zile Hall: color card, photo by Max Wolf Manhattan, Kansas; library has same card with different cloud formation and damaged back. \u003clb/\u003e 16. General View of Campus: color card, postmarked 12/16/?8, published by H.S. Willard \u0026amp; Co. Manhattan, Kans; library has this view, not color, different back. \u003clb/\u003e 17. Lover's Lane: color card, the image of lane is enhanced; library has similar view with different label and back. \u003clb/\u003e 18. Lover's Lane: divided back, postmark 6/7/1910, message discusses climbing Blue Mount Hill and writing card on shady \u0026amp; cool Lover's Lane; library has similar view with different label and back. \u003clb/\u003e 19. New Agronomy Building: color card, postmarked 11/26/no year; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 20. KSAC Football Team 1909: real photo card, divided back; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 21. Military Band: color card, divided back, published by H.S. Willard \u0026amp; Co. Manhattan, Kans; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 22. Memorial Chapel: green ink etching by Charlotte H. Morton, divided back; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 23. YMCA: real photo, divided back, the building became Saint Mary Hospital in 1936 and is where donor Richard D. Rees was born on 12/29/1938, mother's room was on main floor 1st window to the right of 11th Street entrance; this building is now the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity house, the library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e 24. YMCA: postmarked 6/30/13, divided back; library does not have this card. \u003clb/\u003e Manhattan Postcards: \u003clb/\u003e 1. Poyntz Avenue: color card, postmarked 9/11/1936, photo by Max Wolf, Manhattan, Kansas, view looking east from 4th Street. \u003clb/\u003e 2. Poyntz Avenue: not postally used, divided back, early 1900's view of unpaved Poyntz looking west from 1st Street. \u003clb/\u003e 3. Poyntz Avenue: postmarked 9/25/1912, early 1900's view of Poyntz with streetcar in center of street and horse \u0026amp; buggies along both curbs, student message about book costs and room \u0026amp; board. \u003clb/\u003e 4. Riley County Court House \u0026amp; Wareham Hotel: color card, postmarked 9/7/1938. \u003clb/\u003e 5. Riley County Court House: earlier view of the court house, postmarked 9/8/no year, student message that school just started. \u003clb/\u003e 6. Riley County Court House: vertical color card, divided back. \u003clb/\u003e 7. Hotel Gillett: color card, divided back. \u003clb/\u003e 8. Manhattan City High School: undivided back, postmarked 6/7/no year, brief message on front by girl attending some kind of instruction in the building. \u003clb/\u003e 9. Rebekah Home: real photo card, divided back, postmarked 9/24/?0, message by person starting work apparently at KSAC since gave address as KSAC, Manhattan. \u003clb/\u003e 10. I.O.O.F. Home Eureka Lake: color card, divided back, appears that a child started scribbling an address. \u003clb/\u003e 11. Dripping Springs: color card, divided back. \u003clb/\u003e 12. Union Pacific Depot: sepia tone card, postmarked 9/23/1910. \u003clb/\u003e 13. Episcopal Church: divided back card. \u003clb/\u003e 14. First Methodist Church: color card, postmarked 3/15/15, \u003clb/\u003e 15. Post Office: color card, postmarked 6/5/52. \u003clb/\u003e 16. Castle Kimble: color card, divided back. \u003clb/\u003e 17. Union Bus Depot: color card, divided back, distributed by Wolf Studio, Manhattan, Kansas. \u003clb/\u003e 18. Old Military Crossing on Blue River: color card, postmark 1/24/1910, message by student studying gas engines. \u003clb/\u003e 19. Drive in City Park: real photo card, postmarked 11/17/1910, unpaved street in park with many trees, bench, and obelisk monument.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}},"normalized_title":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#normalized_title","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Item 7: Auditorium, Old","label":"Title"}},"parent_labels":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#parent_labels","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["Postcard collection"],"label":"In"}},"parent_ids":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#parent_ids","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["postcard-collection"],"label":"Ancestor IDs"}},"level":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#level","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Item","label":"Level"}},"collection_name":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#collection_name","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Postcard collection","label":"Collection"}},"eadid":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#eadid","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"postcard-collection","label":"EAD ID"}},"online_content?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#online_content?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":false,"label":"Online Content"}},"component?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#component?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":true,"label":"Component"}},"restricted_component?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#restricted_component?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":false,"label":"Restrictions"}}},"links":{"self":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/postcard-collection_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa"}},{"id":"helen-brockman-collection_al_2616922c8a3b784cf1b804be6caede1894160c27","type":"Series","attributes":{"title":"Patterns and Fashion Visuals","abstract_or_scope":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/helen-brockman-collection_al_2616922c8a3b784cf1b804be6caede1894160c27#abstract_or_scope","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"\u003cp\u003eThis series consists of one box containing patterns drafts and templates for proper measurements of clothes. 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(cum laude) (1964) and M.S. degree (1966) from the University of Missouri, and his Ph.D. degree (1969) from Iowa State University. He served on the Agronomy faculty in the Department of Agriculture at Western Illinois University, Macomb, from 1969 to 1974. Since 1974, he was at at Kansas State University, primarily doing undergraduate Crops teaching and retiring in 2008. He served as Assistant head for Teaching from 1982-1989 and Head of the Department of Agronomy from 1990 - 1998. He co-coordinated the Department of Agronomy Centennial celebration and co-authored the Agronomy Department History in 2006.   Before serving as Head, Dr. Posler's primary activities were teaching and advising, but he also had an active research program in forage management and utilization. At Western Illinois and Kansas State Universities, he taught courses in Crop Science, Plant Science, Forage Management and Utilization, Crop Diseases, World Crops, Crop Breeding, Crop Growth and Development, Internship in Agronomy, Plant and Seed Identification, Grain Grading, and Crops Team. He actively participated as member or chair of many departmental, college and university committees, including extended terms on the Faculty Senate at both WIU and KSU.   His research activities at Kansas State University included management and quality of cool-season grasses, legumes, summer annual and small grain forages, and planning forage systems for beef cattle. He also received USDA-DOE grants to evaluate sweet sorghum as a potential alcohol fuel feedstock. His research and teaching publications include 44 abstracts of papers presented at national meetings, 31 refereed journal articles, more than 30 other technical and popular publications, and 26 book reviews.   Dr. Posler has been advisor to many student groups, including Wheat State Agronomy Club, Plant Science Club, Alpha Zeta, Agriculture Council, and the Student Activities Subdivision of ASA. He coordinated two Comparative Agriculture study tours to Central and South America and two tours to Australia and New Zealand. He initiated a Collegiate Crops Team at WIU and coaches the KSU Collegiate Crops and NACTA Crops Teams. Fourteen of his Collegiate and NACTA Crops Teams were National Champions during 1999-2007.   Dr. Posler is a life member of the National Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA), chairing the NACTA Journal book review board, serving as Central Region Director, Vice President, and President in 1991. He was program chairman for the 29th NACTA Conference at KSU in 1983 and served on the NACTA Foundation Board. He was the first President of the Kansas Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (KACTA) and served as NACTA coordinator for Kansas.   Dr. Posler has been an active participant in the American Society of Agronomy (ASA) and Crop Science Society of America (CSSA). He served on numerous committees and was Chair, Division A-la, Student Activities Subdivision; Chair, Division C-3, Crop Ecology, Production, and Management; Associate Editor, Crop Science Journal, Board Representative, Member, ASA Budget and Finance committee; and Chair, Crop Science Research Award, Student Achievement Award, and Collegiate Crops Contest Committees. He was a co-organizer of the KFGC and was Member and Chair of the KFGC Awards Committee.   Dr. Posler holds membership in many honorary and professional societies, including Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Rho Sigma, Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma Delta, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Sigma Xi. In addition to NACTA, he is also a member of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, the American Forage and Grassland Council, the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology (Cornerstone Club), and the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council.   Dr. Posler has received numerous awards, including the Kansas State University College of Agriculture Outstanding Faculty of the Semester (1978,1981,1986,1999, and 2006), the NACTA Teacher Fellow and Outstanding Central Region Fellow awards (1978), the Gamma Sigma Delta Teaching Award of Merit (1982), the Kansas State University Outstanding Teaching Award (1983), the ASA Agronomic Resident Education Award (1986), the NACTA Ensminger-Interstate Distinguished Teaching Award (1987), the Gamma Sigma Delta Distinguished Faculty Award (1991), the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council Award of Excellence (1992), the KSU NACTA Teaching Award of Merit (1992), the NACTA Distinguished Educator Award (1997), the KSU College of Agriculture Alumni Distinguished Ag Faculty Award (l999), the KSU College of Agriculture Outstanding Advisor Award (2000), the Crop Science Society of America Teaching Award (2002), Gamma Sigma Delta Outstanding Advising Award of Merit (2003), Honorary Membership in the Kansas Crop Improvement Association (2004), and the Collegiate Crops Contest Coaches Committee Appreciation Award (2005).   He was elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy in 1988 and the Crop Science Society of America in 1991.","It received accession number U2012.39, and Dr. Posler donated the materials.","Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Gerry L. Posler papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.","Finding Aid Author: Salahuddin McKloskey  Processing Info: Student intern Salahuddin McKloskey processed the collection in October 2014 and university archivist Cliff Hight reviewed it in 2015.  Publication Date: 2015-05-18","The bulk of this collection documents the academic career of Gerry L. Posler from 1965 to 2008 with materials that include his resume, awards, research and presentation notes, course materials, correspondence, and printed materials. Additionally, there are articles he authored and photographs of graduate students and department experiments, as well as research manuscripts from the early twentieth century. The collection also includes materials related to the creation of a departmental history edited by Gerry Posler and Gary Paulson in celebration of the department of Agronomy’s centennial in 2006. Posler collected, assembled, edited, and author several of the chapters in the publication titled “A Centennial History of the Department Agronomy, Kansas State University”. Additionally there are about 721 files (761MB), of digital files provided by Posler. The digital files include course materials, publication drafts, presentations, retirement biographical information, resumes, and photographs. These files have been kept in their original order.","The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.","Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Posler, G. L.","Posler, G. L.","English","Latin"],"unitid_tesim":["U2012.39","103"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1904-2008"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Gerry L. Posler papers, 1904-2008"],"collection_title_tesim":["Gerry L. Posler papers, 1904-2008"],"collection_ssim":["Gerry L. Posler papers, 1904-2008"],"creator_ssm":["Posler, G. L."],"creator_ssim":["Posler, G. L."],"creator_persname_ssim":["Posler, G. L."],"creators_ssim":["Posler, G. L."],"access_terms_ssm":["The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Acqusition Source: Gerry L. Posler Acqusition Method: Donation. Acqusition Date: 20120829"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Kansas State University history"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Kansas State University history"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["3.00 Linear Feet, 2.00 Boxes"],"date_range_isim":[1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007,2008],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo access restriction: All materials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["No access restriction: All materials are open for research."],"appraisal_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAcquired because it documents the research and creative efforts of a faculty member and aligns with the Faculty Papers Collecting Policy.\u003c/p\u003e"],"appraisal_tesim":["Acquired because it documents the research and creative efforts of a faculty member and aligns with the Faculty Papers Collecting Policy."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is organized into ten series: 1) Biographical; 2) Awards, 1978-2007; 3) Course Material; 4) Study Abroad; 5) Presentation Material; 6) Research Material; 7) Publications, 1977-1998; 8) Correspondence, 1965-2008; 9) Printed Material; 10) Manuscripts; 11) Digital Records.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is organized into ten series: 1) Biographical; 2) Awards, 1978-2007; 3) Course Material; 4) Study Abroad; 5) Presentation Material; 6) Research Material; 7) Publications, 1977-1998; 8) Correspondence, 1965-2008; 9) Printed Material; 10) Manuscripts; 11) Digital Records."],"bioghist_tesim":["Gerry L. Posler was born 24 July, 1942 and raised on a farm near Cainsville, MO. He received his B.S. (cum laude) (1964) and M.S. degree (1966) from the University of Missouri, and his Ph.D. degree (1969) from Iowa State University. He served on the Agronomy faculty in the Department of Agriculture at Western Illinois University, Macomb, from 1969 to 1974. Since 1974, he was at at Kansas State University, primarily doing undergraduate Crops teaching and retiring in 2008. He served as Assistant head for Teaching from 1982-1989 and Head of the Department of Agronomy from 1990 - 1998. He co-coordinated the Department of Agronomy Centennial celebration and co-authored the Agronomy Department History in 2006.   Before serving as Head, Dr. Posler's primary activities were teaching and advising, but he also had an active research program in forage management and utilization. At Western Illinois and Kansas State Universities, he taught courses in Crop Science, Plant Science, Forage Management and Utilization, Crop Diseases, World Crops, Crop Breeding, Crop Growth and Development, Internship in Agronomy, Plant and Seed Identification, Grain Grading, and Crops Team. He actively participated as member or chair of many departmental, college and university committees, including extended terms on the Faculty Senate at both WIU and KSU.   His research activities at Kansas State University included management and quality of cool-season grasses, legumes, summer annual and small grain forages, and planning forage systems for beef cattle. He also received USDA-DOE grants to evaluate sweet sorghum as a potential alcohol fuel feedstock. His research and teaching publications include 44 abstracts of papers presented at national meetings, 31 refereed journal articles, more than 30 other technical and popular publications, and 26 book reviews.   Dr. Posler has been advisor to many student groups, including Wheat State Agronomy Club, Plant Science Club, Alpha Zeta, Agriculture Council, and the Student Activities Subdivision of ASA. He coordinated two Comparative Agriculture study tours to Central and South America and two tours to Australia and New Zealand. He initiated a Collegiate Crops Team at WIU and coaches the KSU Collegiate Crops and NACTA Crops Teams. Fourteen of his Collegiate and NACTA Crops Teams were National Champions during 1999-2007.   Dr. Posler is a life member of the National Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA), chairing the NACTA Journal book review board, serving as Central Region Director, Vice President, and President in 1991. He was program chairman for the 29th NACTA Conference at KSU in 1983 and served on the NACTA Foundation Board. He was the first President of the Kansas Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (KACTA) and served as NACTA coordinator for Kansas.   Dr. Posler has been an active participant in the American Society of Agronomy (ASA) and Crop Science Society of America (CSSA). He served on numerous committees and was Chair, Division A-la, Student Activities Subdivision; Chair, Division C-3, Crop Ecology, Production, and Management; Associate Editor, Crop Science Journal, Board Representative, Member, ASA Budget and Finance committee; and Chair, Crop Science Research Award, Student Achievement Award, and Collegiate Crops Contest Committees. He was a co-organizer of the KFGC and was Member and Chair of the KFGC Awards Committee.   Dr. Posler holds membership in many honorary and professional societies, including Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Rho Sigma, Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma Delta, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Sigma Xi. In addition to NACTA, he is also a member of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, the American Forage and Grassland Council, the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology (Cornerstone Club), and the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council.   Dr. Posler has received numerous awards, including the Kansas State University College of Agriculture Outstanding Faculty of the Semester (1978,1981,1986,1999, and 2006), the NACTA Teacher Fellow and Outstanding Central Region Fellow awards (1978), the Gamma Sigma Delta Teaching Award of Merit (1982), the Kansas State University Outstanding Teaching Award (1983), the ASA Agronomic Resident Education Award (1986), the NACTA Ensminger-Interstate Distinguished Teaching Award (1987), the Gamma Sigma Delta Distinguished Faculty Award (1991), the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council Award of Excellence (1992), the KSU NACTA Teaching Award of Merit (1992), the NACTA Distinguished Educator Award (1997), the KSU College of Agriculture Alumni Distinguished Ag Faculty Award (l999), the KSU College of Agriculture Outstanding Advisor Award (2000), the Crop Science Society of America Teaching Award (2002), Gamma Sigma Delta Outstanding Advising Award of Merit (2003), Honorary Membership in the Kansas Crop Improvement Association (2004), and the Collegiate Crops Contest Coaches Committee Appreciation Award (2005).   He was elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy in 1988 and the Crop Science Society of America in 1991."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eIt received accession number U2012.39, and Dr. Posler donated the materials.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_tesim":["It received accession number U2012.39, and Dr. Posler donated the materials."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Gerry L. Posler papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Gerry L. Posler papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eFinding Aid Author: Salahuddin McKloskey \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eProcessing Info: Student intern Salahuddin McKloskey processed the collection in October 2014 and university archivist Cliff Hight reviewed it in 2015. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePublication Date: 2015-05-18\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_tesim":["Finding Aid Author: Salahuddin McKloskey  Processing Info: Student intern Salahuddin McKloskey processed the collection in October 2014 and university archivist Cliff Hight reviewed it in 2015.  Publication Date: 2015-05-18"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe bulk of this collection documents the academic career of Gerry L. Posler from 1965 to 2008 with materials that include his resume, awards, research and presentation notes, course materials, correspondence, and printed materials. Additionally, there are articles he authored and photographs of graduate students and department experiments, as well as research manuscripts from the early twentieth century. The collection also includes materials related to the creation of a departmental history edited by Gerry Posler and Gary Paulson in celebration of the department of Agronomy\u0026#x2019;s centennial in 2006. Posler collected, assembled, edited, and author several of the chapters in the publication titled \u0026#x201C;A Centennial History of the Department Agronomy, Kansas State University\u0026#x201D;. Additionally there are about 721 files (761MB), of digital files provided by Posler. The digital files include course materials, publication drafts, presentations, retirement biographical information, resumes, and photographs. These files have been kept in their original order.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The bulk of this collection documents the academic career of Gerry L. Posler from 1965 to 2008 with materials that include his resume, awards, research and presentation notes, course materials, correspondence, and printed materials. Additionally, there are articles he authored and photographs of graduate students and department experiments, as well as research manuscripts from the early twentieth century. The collection also includes materials related to the creation of a departmental history edited by Gerry Posler and Gary Paulson in celebration of the department of Agronomy’s centennial in 2006. Posler collected, assembled, edited, and author several of the chapters in the publication titled “A Centennial History of the Department Agronomy, Kansas State University”. Additionally there are about 721 files (761MB), of digital files provided by Posler. The digital files include course materials, publication drafts, presentations, retirement biographical information, resumes, and photographs. 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He served on the Agronomy faculty in the Department of Agriculture at Western Illinois University, Macomb, from 1969 to 1974. Since 1974, he was at at Kansas State University, primarily doing undergraduate Crops teaching and retiring in 2008. He served as Assistant head for Teaching from 1982-1989 and Head of the Department of Agronomy from 1990 - 1998. He co-coordinated the Department of Agronomy Centennial celebration and co-authored the Agronomy Department History in 2006. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Before serving as Head, Dr. Posler's primary activities were teaching and advising, but he also had an active research program in forage management and utilization. At Western Illinois and Kansas State Universities, he taught courses in Crop Science, Plant Science, Forage Management and Utilization, Crop Diseases, World Crops, Crop Breeding, Crop Growth and Development, Internship in Agronomy, Plant and Seed Identification, Grain Grading, and Crops Team. He actively participated as member or chair of many departmental, college and university committees, including extended terms on the Faculty Senate at both WIU and KSU. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e His research activities at Kansas State University included management and quality of cool-season grasses, legumes, summer annual and small grain forages, and planning forage systems for beef cattle. He also received USDA-DOE grants to evaluate sweet sorghum as a potential alcohol fuel feedstock. His research and teaching publications include 44 abstracts of papers presented at national meetings, 31 refereed journal articles, more than 30 other technical and popular publications, and 26 book reviews. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dr. Posler has been advisor to many student groups, including Wheat State Agronomy Club, Plant Science Club, Alpha Zeta, Agriculture Council, and the Student Activities Subdivision of ASA. He coordinated two Comparative Agriculture study tours to Central and South America and two tours to Australia and New Zealand. He initiated a Collegiate Crops Team at WIU and coaches the KSU Collegiate Crops and NACTA Crops Teams. Fourteen of his Collegiate and NACTA Crops Teams were National Champions during 1999-2007. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dr. Posler is a life member of the National Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA), chairing the NACTA Journal book review board, serving as Central Region Director, Vice President, and President in 1991. He was program chairman for the 29th NACTA Conference at KSU in 1983 and served on the NACTA Foundation Board. He was the first President of the Kansas Association of Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (KACTA) and served as NACTA coordinator for Kansas. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dr. Posler has been an active participant in the American Society of Agronomy (ASA) and Crop Science Society of America (CSSA). He served on numerous committees and was Chair, Division A-la, Student Activities Subdivision; Chair, Division C-3, Crop Ecology, Production, and Management; Associate Editor, Crop Science Journal, Board Representative, Member, ASA Budget and Finance committee; and Chair, Crop Science Research Award, Student Achievement Award, and Collegiate Crops Contest Committees. He was a co-organizer of the KFGC and was Member and Chair of the KFGC Awards Committee. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dr. Posler holds membership in many honorary and professional societies, including Phi Eta Sigma, Sigma Rho Sigma, Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma Delta, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, and Sigma Xi. In addition to NACTA, he is also a member of American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, the American Forage and Grassland Council, the Council of Agricultural Science and Technology (Cornerstone Club), and the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dr. Posler has received numerous awards, including the Kansas State University College of Agriculture Outstanding Faculty of the Semester (1978,1981,1986,1999, and 2006), the NACTA Teacher Fellow and Outstanding Central Region Fellow awards (1978), the Gamma Sigma Delta Teaching Award of Merit (1982), the Kansas State University Outstanding Teaching Award (1983), the ASA Agronomic Resident Education Award (1986), the NACTA Ensminger-Interstate Distinguished Teaching Award (1987), the Gamma Sigma Delta Distinguished Faculty Award (1991), the Kansas Forage and Grassland Council Award of Excellence (1992), the KSU NACTA Teaching Award of Merit (1992), the NACTA Distinguished Educator Award (1997), the KSU College of Agriculture Alumni Distinguished Ag Faculty Award (l999), the KSU College of Agriculture Outstanding Advisor Award (2000), the Crop Science Society of America Teaching Award (2002), Gamma Sigma Delta Outstanding Advising Award of Merit (2003), Honorary Membership in the Kansas Crop Improvement Association (2004), and the Collegiate Crops Contest Coaches Committee Appreciation Award (2005). \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e He was elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy in 1988 and the Crop Science Society of America in 1991.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}},"normalized_title":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/gerry-l-posler-papers_al_44c3b0a0ba891df68aa056f9d3e3fcf23f64ad4e#normalized_title","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Series 2: Awards (1978-2007)","label":"Title"}},"parent_labels":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/gerry-l-posler-papers_al_44c3b0a0ba891df68aa056f9d3e3fcf23f64ad4e#parent_labels","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["Gerry L. 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Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres.   By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles’ five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters’ sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn.   In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch.   Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry’s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer.   In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler’s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women’s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her “egg money.”   Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land.   The younger Rogler followed in his father’s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen’s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004.   The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne’s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne’s and Elizabeth’s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/).   Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854).   Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003).","Published","Boxes 61-62-includes photographs of the Rogler family and friends and cattle, grasses, family homesteads, oil leaks, pasture damage, railroad, Sauble Ranch, Rogler Ranch, a wreck between a track and a truck and some unidentified photographs. There are also 3 photographs albums and a Sauble Family chart."],"component_level_isim":[1],"parent_ssi":"rogler-ranch-records-2","parent_ids_ssim":["rogler-ranch-records-2"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"parent_levels_ssm":["collection"],"unitid_ssm":["31387"],"collection_ssim":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"creator_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Series"],"level_ssim":["Series"],"sort_isi":7,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo access restriction: All matreials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"parent_access_terms_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.\u003c/p\u003e"],"famname_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Kansas agriculture and rural life","Farming and ranching"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Kansas agriculture and rural life","Farming and ranching"],"bioghist_tesim":["In 1853, Charles W. Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres.   By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles’ five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters’ sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn.   In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch.   Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry’s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer.   In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler’s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women’s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her “egg money.”   Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land.   The younger Rogler followed in his father’s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen’s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004.   The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne’s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne’s and Elizabeth’s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/).   Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854).   Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003)."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published"],"note_html_tesm":["\u003cnote type=\"generalNote\"\u003e \u003cp\u003eBoxes 61-62-includes photographs of the Rogler family and friends and cattle, grasses, family homesteads, oil leaks, pasture damage, railroad, Sauble Ranch, Rogler Ranch, a wreck between a track and a truck and some unidentified photographs. There are also 3 photographs albums and a Sauble Family chart.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"],"note_tesim":["Boxes 61-62-includes photographs of the Rogler family and friends and cattle, grasses, family homesteads, oil leaks, pasture damage, railroad, Sauble Ranch, Rogler Ranch, a wreck between a track and a truck and some unidentified photographs. There are also 3 photographs albums and a Sauble Family chart."],"barcode_ssim":["Box 1|A83412002030","Box 2|A83412001644","Box 3|A83412003141","Box 4|A83412003167","Box 5|A83412001597","Box 6|A83412003133","Box 7|A83412003159","Box 8|A83412002006","Box 9|A83412002145","Box 10|A83412001880","Box 11|A83412001660","Box 12|A83412001636","Box 13|A83412032962","Box 14|A83412001610","Box 15|A83412001602","Box 16|A83412001589","Box 17|A83411997614","Box 18|A83412003191","Box 19|A83412001678","Box 20|A83412009090","Box 21|A83412003971","Box 22|A83412001911","Box 23|A83412002161","Box 24|A83412002048","Box 25|A83412003858","Box 26|A83412003612","Box 27|A83412003175","Box 28|A83412003206","Box 29|A83412001903","Box 30|A83412003183","Box 31|A83411997622","Box 32|A83411997745","Box 33|A83411997753","Box 34|A83412001571","Box 35|A83412001898","Box 36|A83412002022","Box 37|A83412005567","Box 38|A83412014663","Box 39|A83412003874","Box 40|A83412003769","Box 41|A83411997656","Box 42|A83412005575","Box 43|A83412001686","Box 44|A83411997630","Box 45|A83412001628","Box 46|A83412005452","Box 47|A83411997664","Box 48|A83412003735","Box 49|A83411997795","Box 50|A83412001513","Box 51|A83411997680","Box 52|A83412001505","Box 53|A83411997737","Box 54|A83411997672","Box 55|A83411997800","Box 56|A83412002014","Box 57|A83412005559","Box 58|A83412003646","Box 59|A83411997779","Box 60|A83411997787","Box 61|A83412002153","Box 62|A83411997648"],"barcode_tesim":["A83412002030","A83412001644","A83412003141","A83412003167","A83412001597","A83412003133","A83412003159","A83412002006","A83412002145","A83412001880","A83412001660","A83412001636","A83412032962","A83412001610","A83412001602","A83412001589","A83411997614","A83412003191","A83412001678","A83412009090","A83412003971","A83412001911","A83412002161","A83412002048","A83412003858","A83412003612","A83412003175","A83412003206","A83412001903","A83412003183","A83411997622","A83411997745","A83411997753","A83412001571","A83412001898","A83412002022","A83412005567","A83412014663","A83412003874","A83412003769","A83411997656","A83412005575","A83412001686","A83411997630","A83412001628","A83412005452","A83411997664","A83412003735","A83411997795","A83412001513","A83411997680","A83412001505","A83411997737","A83411997672","A83411997800","A83412002014","A83412005559","A83412003646","A83411997779","A83411997787","A83412002153","A83411997648","A83411997761","A83412151910"],"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eSeries 5: Photograph Series\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eSeries 5: Photograph Series\u003c/unittitle\u003e, Circa 1882-1987, undated"],"total_digital_object_count_isim":[0],"_nest_path_":"/components#4","_nest_parent_":"rogler-ranch-records-2","_root_":"rogler-ranch-records-2","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:14:07.910Z","bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cnote\u003e \u003cp\u003eIn 1853, Charles W. Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres. \u003clb/\u003e By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles\u0026#x2019; five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters\u0026#x2019; sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn. \u003clb/\u003e In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch. \u003clb/\u003e Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry\u0026#x2019;s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer. \u003clb/\u003e In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler\u0026#x2019;s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women\u0026#x2019;s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her \u0026#x201C;egg money.\u0026#x201D; \u003clb/\u003e Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land. \u003clb/\u003e The younger Rogler followed in his father\u0026#x2019;s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen\u0026#x2019;s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004. \u003clb/\u003e The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne\u0026#x2019;s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne\u0026#x2019;s and Elizabeth\u0026#x2019;s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/). \u003clb/\u003e Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854). \u003clb/\u003e Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003).\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"],"collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"rogler-ranch-records-2","title_ssm":["Rogler Ranch records"],"title_tesim":["Rogler Ranch records"],"ead_ssi":"rogler-ranch-records-2","unitdate_ssm":["1874-1988"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1874-1988"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["P1993.12","250"],"text":["P1993.12","250","Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988","Kansas agriculture and rural life","Farming and ranching","106.50 Linear Feet, 65 Boxes Post-Fire Oversize Extent: Boxes 63-65 (16.5 x 20.5): 509S: 19/3/2 Box 62 (16.5 x 20.5): 509S: 19/5/3","No access restriction: All matreials are open for research.","Acquired because it documents cattle ranching and pasture management in Kansas, which enchances the department's Kansas life and culture--agricultural and rural life collection.","These records were kept in the original order and arranged in seven (7) series: (1) Family History Series (1931-1984, undated); (2) Family Correspondence Series (1874-1986, undated); (3) Ranch Records Series (1894-1988); (4) Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated); (5) Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated); (6) Scrapbook Series (1918-1978; and (7) Artifact Series (193, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated).","In 1853, Charles W. Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres.   By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles’ five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters’ sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn.   In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch.   Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry’s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer.   In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler’s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women’s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her “egg money.”   Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land.   The younger Rogler followed in his father’s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen’s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004.   The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne’s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne’s and Elizabeth’s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/).   Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854).   Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003).","It received accession number P1993.12. Rogler Ranch Records were delivered to the department following the death of Harvey Wayne Rogler in Summer 1993.","Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Rogler Ranch Records, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.","Finding Aid Author: Cynthia A. Harris  Processing Info: Cynthia A. Harris, Library Assistant III, Manuscripts/Collections Processor, processed the collection and Dave Allen, curator, reviewed it on February 1, 2017.  Publication Date: 2017-02-02","Related Materials: Alfalfa Lawn Farm  Dan Casement papers  Save the Tallgrass Prairie Collection Related Materials URL: http://www.lib.k-state.edu/finding-aids","This collection documents the activities of the Henry Rogler family and the Rogler Ranch Incorporation, also known as Pioneer Bluffs Ranch, from 1874 to 1993. It contains information on the family history, family correspondence, corporate records, photographs, and the Tallgrass Prairie.  The Family History series is comprised of one (1) box and includes information pertaining to the personal lives of family members separate from the work of the ranch. Included are obituaries, family stories, marriages, divorces, Henry Rogler as Kansas Legislator, and Wayne Rogler’s time as a Senator.  There is a wealth of information in the six and one-half (6.5) boxes of the Family Correspondence Series. This series has two sections. One is arranged alphabetically and the other is chronological by decades. The alphabetical section has information pertaining to life on the ranch, college life, married life, individuals living in other states, grandchildren, anniversary cards, birthday cards, and sympathy cards. The chronological section is made up of correspondence written to Helen Rogler, Henry and Maud Rogler, and Wayne Rogler from their friends and associates.  The Ranch Records Series (1925-1988) consists of fifty-three (53) boxes and is the largest part of the collection. It includes ranch records beginning in 1894, while Henry Rogler was living with his parents, Charles W. and Mary Mariah Satchell Rogler. Included are account ledgers and journals (1894-1900; 1920-1959), cattle book records (1960-1973), and yearly records (1925-1988). There is a gap in the account ledgers and journals between 1901 and 1919. The early yearly records between 1925 and 1948 are not complete. The records include some banking information on cattle bought and sold, the inventory of cattle, feed purchases, land leased from other ranchers and farmers, correspondence to ranchers, farmers, and companies, monthly bills, and taxes showing what was spent on operating the ranch and a list of employees.  The Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated) is made up of six (6) file folders in one-half (.5) of a box. Tallgrass Prairie vehicle bumper stickers and postcards were removed from this series and placed in the Artifact Series.  The Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated) consists of one and one-half (1.5) boxes. Included are members of the Rogler family and Kansas State University class photographs from 1898 to 1902, cattle, grass and oil leaks. There are also three (3) photograph books that include photographs of the Rogler family and the ranch.  The Scrapbook Series (1918-1978) consists of three (3) scrapbooks in two and one-half boxes (2.5). Scrapbook one (1) includes newspaper clippings about Wayne Rogler, the Bluestem Prairie and Henry and Maud Rogler. Scrapbook two (2) contains newspaper clippings about Kansas History and the Rogler family. Scrapbook three (3) contains newspaper clippings, cards and letters to Henry and Maud Rogler on their 50th, 60th, and 65th wedding anniversaries.  The Artifact Series (1934, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated) contains blank postcards that Henry and Maud Rogler and Wayne and Elizabeth Rogler collected on their travels. Also included in this series is a dried corsage that Maud Rogler wore on her 50th wedding anniversary on July 21, 1951. There are two (2) envelopes with clips of human hair belonging to Susan Ferris Sauble, mother of Maud Rogler, and Helen Rogler, daughter of Henry and Maud Rogler.  The Rogler Ranch Records have been assigned Accession Number P1993.12.","The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.","Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Rogler Ranch Records","Rogler Ranch Records","English","Latin"],"unitid_tesim":["P1993.12","250"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1874-1988"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"collection_title_tesim":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"collection_ssim":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"creator_ssm":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"creator_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"creator_famname_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"creators_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records"],"access_terms_ssm":["The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Acqusition Source: Wayne Rogler Acqusition Method: Donation. Acqusition Date: 19930701"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Kansas agriculture and rural life","Farming and ranching"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Kansas agriculture and rural life","Farming and ranching"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["106.50 Linear Feet, 65 Boxes Post-Fire Oversize Extent: Boxes 63-65 (16.5 x 20.5): 509S: 19/3/2 Box 62 (16.5 x 20.5): 509S: 19/5/3"],"date_range_isim":[1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo access restriction: All matreials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["No access restriction: All matreials are open for research."],"appraisal_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAcquired because it documents cattle ranching and pasture management in Kansas, which enchances the department's Kansas life and culture--agricultural and rural life collection.\u003c/p\u003e"],"appraisal_tesim":["Acquired because it documents cattle ranching and pasture management in Kansas, which enchances the department's Kansas life and culture--agricultural and rural life collection."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese records were kept in the original order and arranged in seven (7) series: (1) Family History Series (1931-1984, undated); (2) Family Correspondence Series (1874-1986, undated); (3) Ranch Records Series (1894-1988); (4) Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated); (5) Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated); (6) Scrapbook Series (1918-1978; and (7) Artifact Series (193, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated).\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_tesim":["These records were kept in the original order and arranged in seven (7) series: (1) Family History Series (1931-1984, undated); (2) Family Correspondence Series (1874-1986, undated); (3) Ranch Records Series (1894-1988); (4) Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated); (5) Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated); (6) Scrapbook Series (1918-1978; and (7) Artifact Series (193, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated)."],"bioghist_tesim":["In 1853, Charles W. Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres.   By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles’ five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters’ sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn.   In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch.   Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry’s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer.   In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler’s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women’s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her “egg money.”   Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land.   The younger Rogler followed in his father’s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen’s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004.   The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne’s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne’s and Elizabeth’s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/).   Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854).   Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003)."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eIt received accession number P1993.12. Rogler Ranch Records were delivered to the department following the death of Harvey Wayne Rogler in Summer 1993.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_tesim":["It received accession number P1993.12. Rogler Ranch Records were delivered to the department following the death of Harvey Wayne Rogler in Summer 1993."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Rogler Ranch Records, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Rogler Ranch Records, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries."],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eFinding Aid Author: Cynthia A. Harris \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eProcessing Info: Cynthia A. Harris, Library Assistant III, Manuscripts/Collections Processor, processed the collection and Dave Allen, curator, reviewed it on February 1, 2017. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePublication Date: 2017-02-02\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_tesim":["Finding Aid Author: Cynthia A. Harris  Processing Info: Cynthia A. Harris, Library Assistant III, Manuscripts/Collections Processor, processed the collection and Dave Allen, curator, reviewed it on February 1, 2017.  Publication Date: 2017-02-02"],"relatedmaterial_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eRelated Materials: Alfalfa Lawn Farm\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Dan Casement papers\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Save the Tallgrass Prairie Collection\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eRelated Materials URL: http://www.lib.k-state.edu/finding-aids\u003c/p\u003e"],"relatedmaterial_tesim":["Related Materials: Alfalfa Lawn Farm  Dan Casement papers  Save the Tallgrass Prairie Collection Related Materials URL: http://www.lib.k-state.edu/finding-aids"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection documents the activities of the Henry Rogler family and the Rogler Ranch Incorporation, also known as Pioneer Bluffs Ranch, from 1874 to 1993. It contains information on the family history, family correspondence, corporate records, photographs, and the Tallgrass Prairie.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Family History series is comprised of one (1) box and includes information pertaining to the personal lives of family members separate from the work of the ranch. Included are obituaries, family stories, marriages, divorces, Henry Rogler as Kansas Legislator, and Wayne Rogler\u0026#x2019;s time as a Senator.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e There is a wealth of information in the six and one-half (6.5) boxes of the Family Correspondence Series. This series has two sections. One is arranged alphabetically and the other is chronological by decades. The alphabetical section has information pertaining to life on the ranch, college life, married life, individuals living in other states, grandchildren, anniversary cards, birthday cards, and sympathy cards. The chronological section is made up of correspondence written to Helen Rogler, Henry and Maud Rogler, and Wayne Rogler from their friends and associates.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Ranch Records Series (1925-1988) consists of fifty-three (53) boxes and is the largest part of the collection. It includes ranch records beginning in 1894, while Henry Rogler was living with his parents, Charles W. and Mary Mariah Satchell Rogler. Included are account ledgers and journals (1894-1900; 1920-1959), cattle book records (1960-1973), and yearly records (1925-1988). There is a gap in the account ledgers and journals between 1901 and 1919. The early yearly records between 1925 and 1948 are not complete. The records include some banking information on cattle bought and sold, the inventory of cattle, feed purchases, land leased from other ranchers and farmers, correspondence to ranchers, farmers, and companies, monthly bills, and taxes showing what was spent on operating the ranch and a list of employees.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated) is made up of six (6) file folders in one-half (.5) of a box. Tallgrass Prairie vehicle bumper stickers and postcards were removed from this series and placed in the Artifact Series.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated) consists of one and one-half (1.5) boxes. Included are members of the Rogler family and Kansas State University class photographs from 1898 to 1902, cattle, grass and oil leaks. There are also three (3) photograph books that include photographs of the Rogler family and the ranch.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Scrapbook Series (1918-1978) consists of three (3) scrapbooks in two and one-half boxes (2.5). Scrapbook one (1) includes newspaper clippings about Wayne Rogler, the Bluestem Prairie and Henry and Maud Rogler. Scrapbook two (2) contains newspaper clippings about Kansas History and the Rogler family. Scrapbook three (3) contains newspaper clippings, cards and letters to Henry and Maud Rogler on their 50th, 60th, and 65th wedding anniversaries.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Artifact Series (1934, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated) contains blank postcards that Henry and Maud Rogler and Wayne and Elizabeth Rogler collected on their travels. Also included in this series is a dried corsage that Maud Rogler wore on her 50th wedding anniversary on July 21, 1951. There are two (2) envelopes with clips of human hair belonging to Susan Ferris Sauble, mother of Maud Rogler, and Helen Rogler, daughter of Henry and Maud Rogler.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Rogler Ranch Records have been assigned Accession Number P1993.12.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection documents the activities of the Henry Rogler family and the Rogler Ranch Incorporation, also known as Pioneer Bluffs Ranch, from 1874 to 1993. It contains information on the family history, family correspondence, corporate records, photographs, and the Tallgrass Prairie.  The Family History series is comprised of one (1) box and includes information pertaining to the personal lives of family members separate from the work of the ranch. Included are obituaries, family stories, marriages, divorces, Henry Rogler as Kansas Legislator, and Wayne Rogler’s time as a Senator.  There is a wealth of information in the six and one-half (6.5) boxes of the Family Correspondence Series. This series has two sections. One is arranged alphabetically and the other is chronological by decades. The alphabetical section has information pertaining to life on the ranch, college life, married life, individuals living in other states, grandchildren, anniversary cards, birthday cards, and sympathy cards. The chronological section is made up of correspondence written to Helen Rogler, Henry and Maud Rogler, and Wayne Rogler from their friends and associates.  The Ranch Records Series (1925-1988) consists of fifty-three (53) boxes and is the largest part of the collection. It includes ranch records beginning in 1894, while Henry Rogler was living with his parents, Charles W. and Mary Mariah Satchell Rogler. Included are account ledgers and journals (1894-1900; 1920-1959), cattle book records (1960-1973), and yearly records (1925-1988). There is a gap in the account ledgers and journals between 1901 and 1919. The early yearly records between 1925 and 1948 are not complete. The records include some banking information on cattle bought and sold, the inventory of cattle, feed purchases, land leased from other ranchers and farmers, correspondence to ranchers, farmers, and companies, monthly bills, and taxes showing what was spent on operating the ranch and a list of employees.  The Tallgrass Prairie Series (1957-1984, undated) is made up of six (6) file folders in one-half (.5) of a box. Tallgrass Prairie vehicle bumper stickers and postcards were removed from this series and placed in the Artifact Series.  The Photograph Series (1882-1987, undated) consists of one and one-half (1.5) boxes. Included are members of the Rogler family and Kansas State University class photographs from 1898 to 1902, cattle, grass and oil leaks. There are also three (3) photograph books that include photographs of the Rogler family and the ranch.  The Scrapbook Series (1918-1978) consists of three (3) scrapbooks in two and one-half boxes (2.5). Scrapbook one (1) includes newspaper clippings about Wayne Rogler, the Bluestem Prairie and Henry and Maud Rogler. Scrapbook two (2) contains newspaper clippings about Kansas History and the Rogler family. Scrapbook three (3) contains newspaper clippings, cards and letters to Henry and Maud Rogler on their 50th, 60th, and 65th wedding anniversaries.  The Artifact Series (1934, 1951, 1958-1959, 1981, undated) contains blank postcards that Henry and Maud Rogler and Wayne and Elizabeth Rogler collected on their travels. Also included in this series is a dried corsage that Maud Rogler wore on her 50th wedding anniversary on July 21, 1951. There are two (2) envelopes with clips of human hair belonging to Susan Ferris Sauble, mother of Maud Rogler, and Helen Rogler, daughter of Henry and Maud Rogler.  The Rogler Ranch Records have been assigned Accession Number P1993.12."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_tesim":["The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply."],"names_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Rogler Ranch Records","Rogler Ranch Records"],"corpname_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections"],"famname_ssim":["Rogler Ranch Records","Rogler Ranch Records"],"language_ssim":["English","Latin"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":9,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":999999,"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eRogler Ranch records\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"odd_typed_html_ssm":["{\"type\":\"publicationStatus\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePublished\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}","{\"type\":\"dacsCitation\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Rogler Ranch Records, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eRogler Ranch records\u003c/unittitle\u003e, 1874-1988"],"hashed_id_ssi":"9db5122920c99918","_root_":"rogler-ranch-records-2","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:14:07.910Z","bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cnote\u003e \u003cp\u003eIn 1853, Charles W. Rogler, age 17, left family in Asch, Austria, for the United States. At age 23, he settled his first 160 acres in Matfield Green, Chase County, Kansas. By 1883, Charles had increased his holdings to 720 acres and by the time of his death in 1888, he had acquired 1,800 acres. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e By 1900, under the management of long-time friend, Henry Brandley, the estate encompassed 4,020 acres when it was divided among Charles\u0026#x2019; five children. In 1902, Henry Rogler, an 1898 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, purchased one of his sisters\u0026#x2019; sections of the ranch that included the original 1872 homestead and old barn. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e In 1901, Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble, a 1901 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College. They designed and built a large home on the property in 1908. They named the ranch Pioneer Bluffs Ranch. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Between 1905 and 1925, Henry made the transition from farming to ranching. He was a farmer-stockman and pastureman. Pasturemen were local agents who brought together cattle owned by capitalists from outside the Flint Hills. Therefore, Henry was key to the development of the transient grazing industry that dominated twentieth century land use in the uplands of Chase Country. Transient grazing provided stable and conservative income for ranchers. The size of the Pioneer Bluffs ranch fluctuated dependent on the acreage rented or held as payment/security. As Henry managed more cattle for others, the more his own herd grew. By 1931, Henry\u0026#x2019;s son, Wayne, a 1926 graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, grazed 2,000 head of cattle during the summer. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e In the 1930s, the ranch became a leader in modernized production of feed crops, cooperating with Kansas State Agricultural College in pioneering alfalfa production, some sorghum and soybean crops. In addition to the livestock and crops aspect of the ranch, the Rogler\u0026#x2019;s also sold poultry and dairy products. Maud Rogler was a founder of women\u0026#x2019;s farm bureau work in Chase County and carried out model projects in poultry raising to exemplify self-sufficiency and diversification. She bragged that she put their four children through college with her \u0026#x201C;egg money.\u0026#x201D; \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Henry Rogler served the state by serving two years in the Kansas House of Representatives (1914-1916) and four years in the Senate (1928-1932). Henry served eight years as Vice President for the Chase County Farm Bureau and his involvement in agriculture was noted when he received the first Kansas Master Farmer Award in 1927. He operated the ranch until the late 1950s when he sold a large part of it to his son, Wayne. After Henry died in 1972, Wayne purchased the remainder of the farm and ranch land. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The younger Rogler followed in his father\u0026#x2019;s footsteps as a prominent farmer-stockman, serving four consecutive terms (1929-1946) in the Kansas House of Representatives and was appointed one term in the Kansas Senate. Wayne served as president of the Chase County Farm Bureau, the director of the National Farm Loan Association and as chairman of the state Chamber of Commerce. He was a member of various other organizations and a charter member of the National Cattlemen\u0026#x2019;s Association. Wayne owned and managed Pioneer Bluffs Ranch until his death on April 8, 1993. His wife, Elizabeth died on January 24, 2004. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Rogler Ranch or Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was one of the best known in the region. Under Wayne\u0026#x2019;s management the ranch grew to some 60,000 acres, including leased pastureland and managed 15,000 head of cattle a year. After Wayne\u0026#x2019;s and Elizabeth\u0026#x2019;s death no other family member was interested in the ranch and it was placed in trust. In 2006, Pioneer Bluffs Ranch was sold at auction for $6.92 million. A group of local Chase County members knew the value and importance of the ranch and were able to purchase 12-acres that included the house and outbuildings. Today, the Pioneer Bluffs Ranch is a historical tourist site (http://pioneerbluffs.org/). \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Charles W. Rogler (1836-1888) married Mary Mariah Satchell in 1869. They had five children: Albert (1870-1953), Katherine (1872-1915), Emma (1875-1961), Henry (1877-1972) and Mary Jane (1879-1854). \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Henry Rogler married Maud Sauble (1880-1972) on July 21, 1901. They had four children: Helen (1902-1999), Wayne (1905-1993), Irene (1908-2000) and George (1913-2003).\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}},"normalized_title":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/rogler-ranch-records-2_al_30424567b6f9de35fd880c3a12c649be6464badd#normalized_title","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Series 5: Photograph Series, Circa 1882-1987, undated","label":"Title"}},"parent_labels":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/rogler-ranch-records-2_al_30424567b6f9de35fd880c3a12c649be6464badd#parent_labels","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["Rogler Ranch records, 1874-1988"],"label":"In"}},"parent_ids":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/rogler-ranch-records-2_al_30424567b6f9de35fd880c3a12c649be6464badd#parent_ids","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["rogler-ranch-records-2"],"label":"Ancestor 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collection is organized in nine Series: 1) Biographical; 2) Correspondence; 3) Literary Works; 4) Subjects; 5) Photographs and Slides; 6) Media; 7) Scrapbooks; 8) Oversize; and 9) Printed Material.","Joel Climenhaga was a writer and playwright, as well as a professor of theater at Kansas State University. After being born in Zimbabwe in 1922, Climenhaga’s family moved frequently throughout his childhood. Climenhaga began his writing career in 1937 by writing short stories and poems, many about his childhood in Africa. From 1939 to 1941, he attended Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania, but he did not graduate. In 1942, Climenhaga moved to California to work at Upland Lemon Growers Association. He entered the U.S. Army in 1945 as a conscientious objector and was discharged in 1946. From 1948 to 1950, Climenhaga attended Chaffey College in Ontario, California, earning his A.A. in Theater Arts, Art, and English in 1949. Climenhaga then attended UCLA from 1950 to 1956, earning his B.A. in Theater Arts in 1953 and his M.A. in Theater Arts in 1958. While at UCLA, Climenhaga wrote the play “Marriage Wheel,” which won the Samuel Goldwyn Award, and in 1956, he published his play “Heathen Pioneer: a comedy in one act.” After completing his studies, Climenhaga was a visiting professor at Wilmington College and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. From 1963 to 1968, he was an Associate Professor of Speech, Drama, and English at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri, where he was also the chairman of the Department of Speech and Drama from 1964 to 1968. In 1968, Climenhaga became an Associate Professor of Theatre, as well as a member of the graduate faculty, at Kansas State University, a position he would hold until 1987. Climenhaga also served at K-State as the Director of Theatre from 1968 to 1987 and the coordinator of the New Play Program from 1972 to 1987. Climenhaga continued to publish his plays and writings while at K-State. This included the works “Hawk and Chameleon” in 1972, and the “One Man’s Frontier” column in the “Flinthills Journal” based in Wamego, Kansas from 1979 to 1980. Other works of his published throughout the 1970s include “Awakening,” “The Back Shelf Dispatch,” “Below Ground Level,” “Counsel for the Offense,” and “Greenage.” From 1981 to 1987, some of his newspaper columns were broadcast over K-State’s radio station, KSAC, in a bi-monthly program entitled “One Man’s Journey.” Climenhaga left K-State in 1987 to become a professor of Theatre Arts and English and the coordinator of the New Play Program at Tarkio College in Tarkio, Missouri. He worked at Tarkio until 1991. Throughout this time, he published multiple collections of poems, as well as the newspaper column “Dear Good People.” After briefly working for one year from 1991 to 1992 as professor of Theatre Arts and coordinator of the New Play Program at Teikyo Westmar University in LeMars, Iowa, Climenhaga retired in 1992 and moved to Bisbee, Arizona. In retirement, Climenhaga remained active in theater and writing, including serving on the Board of Directors of the Bisbee Repertory Theatre. Climenhaga died in 2000, and his work “Eighty Six Thousand Five Hundred and Fifty Three: a Sequence of Journey Poems” was published posthumously in 2001.","The Joel Climenhaga Papers were donated to Kansas State University by his widow, Zoe Climenhaga in 2001. It received accession number U2001.02.","Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Joel Climenhaga papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.","Finding Aid Author: Cynthia Harris  Processing Info: The collection was processed by Cynthia Harris, Manuscripts/Collections Processor and Tamara DeRossi, student assistant.  Publication Date: 2009-11-30","The Joel Climenhaga Papers (1912-2001) consist primarily of his literary works and correspondence to and from family and friends.  The Biographical Series consist of two boxes which include Climenhaga's baby book, family genealogy, obituary, and memorial service program, and 1987 Kansas State University retirement tributes.  The Correspondence Series is made up of fourteen boxes and arranged alphabetically. Climenhaga was a prolific and voluminous writer. He corresponded with Mina Cooper, Carlos Cortez, Charles Jones, George Moberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Kenneth Patchen to name a few. Within the Charles Jones correspondence there are letters by LBJ (Lyndon B. Johnson) and from people who opposed him agreeing with the NCAAP- these letters were signed by \"a white Christian\" or \"a white, white, American.\" There are twenty-four folders of correspondence between Climenhaga and Fred Shaw. The two men planned to turn their correspondence into a book titled The Mephisto Addenda. Before this could manifest, Fred Shaw passed away. The Climenhaga's were good friends with Kenneth and Miriam Patchen and there is extensive correspondence between the two families. The sub-series \"Correspondence to Poetry Magazines\" is listed alphabetically by magazine title and consists of one box.  The sub-series \"Correspondence Log\" is arranged chronologically and is stored in eighteen boxes. It is similar to a journal as Climenhaga made personal entries on specific dates and if those dates corresponded with writing or receiving a letter, the letter was included. Names of those who Climenhaga corresponded includes Marlon Brando, Milton Bernard, John and Emma Climenhaga, Mina Cooper, Norman Fedder, Henry Miller, Kenneth Patchen, George Savage, Fred Shaw, Wesley Van Tassel, Myrna Wolfe, and Kenneth Woodroofe. These letters were pulled from the alphabetical listing by Climenhaga. It is not known why Climenhaga separated these letters.  Literary Works is comprised of twenty-two boxes that contain Climenhaga's plays and poems, as well as fiction stories and essays. During his lifetime Climenhaga had at least seven columns in various newspapers and newsletters. Three of his columns One Man's Frontier, One Man's Journey, and Dear Good People often had the same material while the introduction was sometimes different or a sentence or two rearranged. One Man's Journey was also broadcasted on the KKSC Radio station at Kansas State University during the 1980s. Climenhaga was a notorious recycler of paper. He often used recycled paper which can be confusing to researchers. If researchers pay close attention, however, they just might find that \"recycled\" paper useful after all, as it could be a part of another story, poem, etc., whether written by Climenhaga or one of his many friends or colleagues. Climenhaga wrote his first poem at age six. By 1989, he had written approximately 2,500 poems of which 1,200 had been published in various magazines and journals. Volumes of his published poems include: The Age of Pollution; Belief in Chaos; Hawk and Chameleon; The Month of the Shadow on My Heart; Ninety-Nine Messages from Separate Places; None of this Really Matters a Great Deal Now; One Hundred and One Songs are Promised for Tomorrow; Preliminary Walk into the Sweat of Dying; Report on the Progress of the Bearded One's Homework; Spontaneity is a Deceiving God; and The Thirteenth Winter.  Subject Series is contained in seventeen boxes and is organized alphabetically. It includes names such as Charles Jackson Jones, Jr. who was married to artist Molly Ramolla, Kenneth Patchen, and Larry Smith. It also includes programs from plays produced, written, and directed by Climenhaga. Other programs include plays produced at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University; by the Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, CO; and at UCLA.  The Photograph and Slides Series consists of one box and includes photos of the 1976 Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, Colorado, production of Mark Twain. Photos taken at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University include the 1981 production of Kenneth Patchen's Don't Look Now, the 1989 production of Dust-Storm Wedding, and Climenhaga's own play the Marriage Wheel. The Slides consist of Kenneth Patchen's art poetry.  Comprised of seven boxes, the Media Series includes cassette tapes, reel to reel tapes, VHS videotapes, and computer disks. The computer disks contain some of Climenhaga's manuscripts that were incorporated in the Literary Works Series. The cassette tapes include interviews with Ben Nyberg and Jonathan Holden, 1985 letters from Charles Jones, and Climenhaga's 1980s One Man's Journey recorded at KKSU radio, Kansas State University. The reel to reel tapes includes several different readings from Patchen's Don't Look Now. The VHS tapes include the \"50th Anniversary of the 1939 Pottstown High School Graduates\" of interviews with Earl \"Yogi\" Storm, Dr. Joel Esner, and Raymond Elliott conducted by Bill Achatz. Climenhaga was unable to attend this anniversary gathering where he and others were inducted into the Alumni Honor Roll. Climenhaga created a video to be played at the anniversary program and it is included in this series. The tape Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996, is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband Kenneth Patchen. The most interesting tapes in this series, however, are the interviews with Joel Climenhaga. The one that stands out the most is the one created by the Manhattan, Kansas Art Councils, 1992, where John Biggs interviews Climenhaga.  There are some very interesting interviews with Joel Climenhaga, especially the one filmed by the Manhattan, Kansas Arts Council titled Joel: Creative Profile. Another VHS tape of interest is Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996. This is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband, Kenneth Patchen.  Scrapbooks are contained in one box. The most notable is the Marriage Wheel by Joel Climenhaga with his notes written on the sides of each page. Another item of interest is the 1983-1988 Travel Journal. Climenhaga kept notes of his summer travels, how many miles he traveled, where he traveled to, and when and where he stopped to eat.  The Oversize Series is made up of one box that includes art, art poetry, poetry, and program posters. Notable sketches in this series are the drawing of Joel Climenhaga by Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the greeting to the Climenhagas from Carlos and Marianna Cortez in 1972. Kenneth Patchen's art poetry shows up in Lee Artz's \"Passion for Peace,\" Peace Works, Mid-Peninsula Peace Center, Palo Alto, California and in Steven Ratiner's \"The Picture Poems of Kenneth Patchen,\" California Living, 1983. There are four Kenneth Patchen poems included: \"The Way Men Live Is a Life,\" 1944, \"A Poem For Christmas,\" 1961, \"What I'd Like To Know Is, 1967\" and \"A Mercy Filled and Defiant Xmas To All Still Worthy To Be Called Man,\" 1970. Program posters from the Kansas State University Purple Masque Theatre that are interesting include Mark Edward's Larger Than Life, 1978, Cindy Helfertstay's From Heaven to Hell, 1978, and Chloris Killian's 1981, The Dust-Storm Wedding. Other items of interest include Climenhaga's 1987 retirement certificate from Kansas State University and a letter from the then Provost, Owen J. Koeppe.  Stored in twenty boxes, the Printed Material includes Climenhaga's poetry magazines, published by him under his publishing company, Transient Press, and other research journals and books.","The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.","Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Climenhaga, Joel","Climenhaga, Joel","English","Latin"],"unitid_tesim":["U2001.02","62"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1912-2001"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Joel Climenhaga papers, 1912-2001"],"collection_title_tesim":["Joel Climenhaga papers, 1912-2001"],"collection_ssim":["Joel Climenhaga papers, 1912-2001"],"creator_ssm":["Climenhaga, Joel"],"creator_ssim":["Climenhaga, Joel"],"creator_persname_ssim":["Climenhaga, Joel"],"creators_ssim":["Climenhaga, Joel"],"access_terms_ssm":["The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Acqusition Source: Zoe Climenhaga Acqusition Method: Donation. Acqusition Date: 20010201"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["68.00 Linear Feet, 103.00 Boxes Post-Fire Oversize Extent: Boxes 76-78 (12.5 x 14.5): 509S: 19/12/2"],"date_range_isim":[1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1983,1984,1985,1986,1987,1988,1989,1990,1991,1992,1993,1994,1995,1996,1997,1998,1999,2000,2001],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo access restrictions: All materials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["No access restrictions: All materials are open for research."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is organized in nine Series: 1) Biographical; 2) Correspondence; 3) Literary Works; 4) Subjects; 5) Photographs and Slides; 6) Media; 7) Scrapbooks; 8) Oversize; and 9) Printed Material.\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is organized in nine Series: 1) Biographical; 2) Correspondence; 3) Literary Works; 4) Subjects; 5) Photographs and Slides; 6) Media; 7) Scrapbooks; 8) Oversize; and 9) Printed Material."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cnote\u003e \u003cp\u003eJoel Climenhaga was a writer and playwright, as well as a professor of theater at Kansas State University. After being born in Zimbabwe in 1922, Climenhaga\u0026#x2019;s family moved frequently throughout his childhood. Climenhaga began his writing career in 1937 by writing short stories and poems, many about his childhood in Africa. From 1939 to 1941, he attended Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania, but he did not graduate. In 1942, Climenhaga moved to California to work at Upland Lemon Growers Association. He entered the U.S. Army in 1945 as a conscientious objector and was discharged in 1946. From 1948 to 1950, Climenhaga attended Chaffey College in Ontario, California, earning his A.A. in Theater Arts, Art, and English in 1949. Climenhaga then attended UCLA from 1950 to 1956, earning his B.A. in Theater Arts in 1953 and his M.A. in Theater Arts in 1958. While at UCLA, Climenhaga wrote the play \u0026#x201C;Marriage Wheel,\u0026#x201D; which won the Samuel Goldwyn Award, and in 1956, he published his play \u0026#x201C;Heathen Pioneer: a comedy in one act.\u0026#x201D;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eAfter completing his studies, Climenhaga was a visiting professor at Wilmington College and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. From 1963 to 1968, he was an Associate Professor of Speech, Drama, and English at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri, where he was also the chairman of the Department of Speech and Drama from 1964 to 1968. In 1968, Climenhaga became an Associate Professor of Theatre, as well as a member of the graduate faculty, at Kansas State University, a position he would hold until 1987. Climenhaga also served at K-State as the Director of Theatre from 1968 to 1987 and the coordinator of the New Play Program from 1972 to 1987.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eClimenhaga continued to publish his plays and writings while at K-State. This included the works \u0026#x201C;Hawk and Chameleon\u0026#x201D; in 1972, and the \u0026#x201C;One Man\u0026#x2019;s Frontier\u0026#x201D; column in the \u0026#x201C;Flinthills Journal\u0026#x201D; based in Wamego, Kansas from 1979 to 1980. Other works of his published throughout the 1970s include \u0026#x201C;Awakening,\u0026#x201D; \u0026#x201C;The Back Shelf Dispatch,\u0026#x201D; \u0026#x201C;Below Ground Level,\u0026#x201D; \u0026#x201C;Counsel for the Offense,\u0026#x201D; and \u0026#x201C;Greenage.\u0026#x201D; From 1981 to 1987, some of his newspaper columns were broadcast over K-State\u0026#x2019;s radio station, KSAC, in a bi-monthly program entitled \u0026#x201C;One Man\u0026#x2019;s Journey.\u0026#x201D;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eClimenhaga left K-State in 1987 to become a professor of Theatre Arts and English and the coordinator of the New Play Program at Tarkio College in Tarkio, Missouri. He worked at Tarkio until 1991. Throughout this time, he published multiple collections of poems, as well as the newspaper column \u0026#x201C;Dear Good People.\u0026#x201D; After briefly working for one year from 1991 to 1992 as professor of Theatre Arts and coordinator of the New Play Program at Teikyo Westmar University in LeMars, Iowa, Climenhaga retired in 1992 and moved to Bisbee, Arizona. In retirement, Climenhaga remained active in theater and writing, including serving on the Board of Directors of the Bisbee Repertory Theatre. Climenhaga died in 2000, and his work \u0026#x201C;Eighty Six Thousand Five Hundred and Fifty Three: a Sequence of Journey Poems\u0026#x201D; was published posthumously in 2001.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"],"bioghist_tesim":["Joel Climenhaga was a writer and playwright, as well as a professor of theater at Kansas State University. After being born in Zimbabwe in 1922, Climenhaga’s family moved frequently throughout his childhood. Climenhaga began his writing career in 1937 by writing short stories and poems, many about his childhood in Africa. From 1939 to 1941, he attended Messiah College in Grantham, Pennsylvania, but he did not graduate. In 1942, Climenhaga moved to California to work at Upland Lemon Growers Association. He entered the U.S. Army in 1945 as a conscientious objector and was discharged in 1946. From 1948 to 1950, Climenhaga attended Chaffey College in Ontario, California, earning his A.A. in Theater Arts, Art, and English in 1949. Climenhaga then attended UCLA from 1950 to 1956, earning his B.A. in Theater Arts in 1953 and his M.A. in Theater Arts in 1958. While at UCLA, Climenhaga wrote the play “Marriage Wheel,” which won the Samuel Goldwyn Award, and in 1956, he published his play “Heathen Pioneer: a comedy in one act.” After completing his studies, Climenhaga was a visiting professor at Wilmington College and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. From 1963 to 1968, he was an Associate Professor of Speech, Drama, and English at Culver-Stockton College in Canton, Missouri, where he was also the chairman of the Department of Speech and Drama from 1964 to 1968. In 1968, Climenhaga became an Associate Professor of Theatre, as well as a member of the graduate faculty, at Kansas State University, a position he would hold until 1987. Climenhaga also served at K-State as the Director of Theatre from 1968 to 1987 and the coordinator of the New Play Program from 1972 to 1987. Climenhaga continued to publish his plays and writings while at K-State. This included the works “Hawk and Chameleon” in 1972, and the “One Man’s Frontier” column in the “Flinthills Journal” based in Wamego, Kansas from 1979 to 1980. Other works of his published throughout the 1970s include “Awakening,” “The Back Shelf Dispatch,” “Below Ground Level,” “Counsel for the Offense,” and “Greenage.” From 1981 to 1987, some of his newspaper columns were broadcast over K-State’s radio station, KSAC, in a bi-monthly program entitled “One Man’s Journey.” Climenhaga left K-State in 1987 to become a professor of Theatre Arts and English and the coordinator of the New Play Program at Tarkio College in Tarkio, Missouri. He worked at Tarkio until 1991. Throughout this time, he published multiple collections of poems, as well as the newspaper column “Dear Good People.” After briefly working for one year from 1991 to 1992 as professor of Theatre Arts and coordinator of the New Play Program at Teikyo Westmar University in LeMars, Iowa, Climenhaga retired in 1992 and moved to Bisbee, Arizona. In retirement, Climenhaga remained active in theater and writing, including serving on the Board of Directors of the Bisbee Repertory Theatre. Climenhaga died in 2000, and his work “Eighty Six Thousand Five Hundred and Fifty Three: a Sequence of Journey Poems” was published posthumously in 2001."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Joel Climenhaga Papers were donated to Kansas State University by his widow, Zoe Climenhaga in 2001. It received accession number U2001.02.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Joel Climenhaga Papers were donated to Kansas State University by his widow, Zoe Climenhaga in 2001. It received accession number U2001.02."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Joel Climenhaga papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Joel Climenhaga papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAlternative finding aid found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20210602162359/http://www.lib.k-state.edu/depts/sc_rev/findaids/ua2001-02.php\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Alternative finding aid found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20210602162359/http://www.lib.k-state.edu/depts/sc_rev/findaids/ua2001-02.php"],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eFinding Aid Author: Cynthia Harris \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eProcessing Info: The collection was processed by Cynthia Harris, Manuscripts/Collections Processor and Tamara DeRossi, student assistant. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePublication Date: 2009-11-30\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_tesim":["Finding Aid Author: Cynthia Harris  Processing Info: The collection was processed by Cynthia Harris, Manuscripts/Collections Processor and Tamara DeRossi, student assistant.  Publication Date: 2009-11-30"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Joel Climenhaga Papers (1912-2001) consist primarily of his literary works and correspondence to and from family and friends.  The Biographical Series consist of two boxes which include Climenhaga's baby book, family genealogy, obituary, and memorial service program, and 1987 Kansas State University retirement tributes.  The Correspondence Series is made up of fourteen boxes and arranged alphabetically. Climenhaga was a prolific and voluminous writer. He corresponded with Mina Cooper, Carlos Cortez, Charles Jones, George Moberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Kenneth Patchen to name a few. Within the Charles Jones correspondence there are letters by LBJ (Lyndon B. Johnson) and from people who opposed him agreeing with the NCAAP- these letters were signed by \"a white Christian\" or \"a white, white, American.\" There are twenty-four folders of correspondence between Climenhaga and Fred Shaw. The two men planned to turn their correspondence into a book titled The Mephisto Addenda. Before this could manifest, Fred Shaw passed away. The Climenhaga's were good friends with Kenneth and Miriam Patchen and there is extensive correspondence between the two families. The sub-series \"Correspondence to Poetry Magazines\" is listed alphabetically by magazine title and consists of one box.  The sub-series \"Correspondence Log\" is arranged chronologically and is stored in eighteen boxes. It is similar to a journal as Climenhaga made personal entries on specific dates and if those dates corresponded with writing or receiving a letter, the letter was included. Names of those who Climenhaga corresponded includes Marlon Brando, Milton Bernard, John and Emma Climenhaga, Mina Cooper, Norman Fedder, Henry Miller, Kenneth Patchen, George Savage, Fred Shaw, Wesley Van Tassel, Myrna Wolfe, and Kenneth Woodroofe. These letters were pulled from the alphabetical listing by Climenhaga. It is not known why Climenhaga separated these letters.  Literary Works is comprised of twenty-two boxes that contain Climenhaga's plays and poems, as well as fiction stories and essays. During his lifetime Climenhaga had at least seven columns in various newspapers and newsletters. Three of his columns One Man's Frontier, One Man's Journey, and Dear Good People often had the same material while the introduction was sometimes different or a sentence or two rearranged. One Man's Journey was also broadcasted on the KKSC Radio station at Kansas State University during the 1980s. Climenhaga was a notorious recycler of paper. He often used recycled paper which can be confusing to researchers. If researchers pay close attention, however, they just might find that \"recycled\" paper useful after all, as it could be a part of another story, poem, etc., whether written by Climenhaga or one of his many friends or colleagues. Climenhaga wrote his first poem at age six. By 1989, he had written approximately 2,500 poems of which 1,200 had been published in various magazines and journals. Volumes of his published poems include: The Age of Pollution; Belief in Chaos; Hawk and Chameleon; The Month of the Shadow on My Heart; Ninety-Nine Messages from Separate Places; None of this Really Matters a Great Deal Now; One Hundred and One Songs are Promised for Tomorrow; Preliminary Walk into the Sweat of Dying; Report on the Progress of the Bearded One's Homework; Spontaneity is a Deceiving God; and The Thirteenth Winter.  Subject Series is contained in seventeen boxes and is organized alphabetically. It includes names such as Charles Jackson Jones, Jr. who was married to artist Molly Ramolla, Kenneth Patchen, and Larry Smith. It also includes programs from plays produced, written, and directed by Climenhaga. Other programs include plays produced at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University; by the Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, CO; and at UCLA.  The Photograph and Slides Series consists of one box and includes photos of the 1976 Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, Colorado, production of Mark Twain. Photos taken at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University include the 1981 production of Kenneth Patchen's Don't Look Now, the 1989 production of Dust-Storm Wedding, and Climenhaga's own play the Marriage Wheel. The Slides consist of Kenneth Patchen's art poetry.  Comprised of seven boxes, the Media Series includes cassette tapes, reel to reel tapes, VHS videotapes, and computer disks. The computer disks contain some of Climenhaga's manuscripts that were incorporated in the Literary Works Series. The cassette tapes include interviews with Ben Nyberg and Jonathan Holden, 1985 letters from Charles Jones, and Climenhaga's 1980s One Man's Journey recorded at KKSU radio, Kansas State University. The reel to reel tapes includes several different readings from Patchen's Don't Look Now. The VHS tapes include the \"50th Anniversary of the 1939 Pottstown High School Graduates\" of interviews with Earl \"Yogi\" Storm, Dr. Joel Esner, and Raymond Elliott conducted by Bill Achatz. Climenhaga was unable to attend this anniversary gathering where he and others were inducted into the Alumni Honor Roll. Climenhaga created a video to be played at the anniversary program and it is included in this series. The tape Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996, is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband Kenneth Patchen. The most interesting tapes in this series, however, are the interviews with Joel Climenhaga. The one that stands out the most is the one created by the Manhattan, Kansas Art Councils, 1992, where John Biggs interviews Climenhaga.  There are some very interesting interviews with Joel Climenhaga, especially the one filmed by the Manhattan, Kansas Arts Council titled Joel: Creative Profile. Another VHS tape of interest is Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996. This is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband, Kenneth Patchen.  Scrapbooks are contained in one box. The most notable is the Marriage Wheel by Joel Climenhaga with his notes written on the sides of each page. Another item of interest is the 1983-1988 Travel Journal. Climenhaga kept notes of his summer travels, how many miles he traveled, where he traveled to, and when and where he stopped to eat.  The Oversize Series is made up of one box that includes art, art poetry, poetry, and program posters. Notable sketches in this series are the drawing of Joel Climenhaga by Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the greeting to the Climenhagas from Carlos and Marianna Cortez in 1972. Kenneth Patchen's art poetry shows up in Lee Artz's \"Passion for Peace,\" Peace Works, Mid-Peninsula Peace Center, Palo Alto, California and in Steven Ratiner's \"The Picture Poems of Kenneth Patchen,\" California Living, 1983. There are four Kenneth Patchen poems included: \"The Way Men Live Is a Life,\" 1944, \"A Poem For Christmas,\" 1961, \"What I'd Like To Know Is, 1967\" and \"A Mercy Filled and Defiant Xmas To All Still Worthy To Be Called Man,\" 1970. Program posters from the Kansas State University Purple Masque Theatre that are interesting include Mark Edward's Larger Than Life, 1978, Cindy Helfertstay's From Heaven to Hell, 1978, and Chloris Killian's 1981, The Dust-Storm Wedding. Other items of interest include Climenhaga's 1987 retirement certificate from Kansas State University and a letter from the then Provost, Owen J. Koeppe.  Stored in twenty boxes, the Printed Material includes Climenhaga's poetry magazines, published by him under his publishing company, Transient Press, and other research journals and books."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_tesim":["The researcher assumes full responsibility for observing all copyright, property, and libel laws as they apply."],"names_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Climenhaga, Joel","Climenhaga, Joel"],"corpname_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections"],"persname_ssim":["Climenhaga, Joel","Climenhaga, Joel"],"language_ssim":["English","Latin"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":10,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":999999,"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eJoel Climenhaga papers\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"odd_typed_html_ssm":["{\"type\":\"publicationStatus\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePublished\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}","{\"type\":\"dacsCitation\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Joel Climenhaga papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Kansas State University Libraries.\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eJoel Climenhaga papers\u003c/unittitle\u003e, 1912-2001"],"hashed_id_ssi":"f7cc7169514ef686","_root_":"joel-climenhaga-papers","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:14:43.657Z","scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Joel Climenhaga Papers (1912-2001) consist primarily of his literary works and correspondence to and from family and friends.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Biographical Series consist of two boxes which include Climenhaga's baby book, family genealogy, obituary, and memorial service program, and 1987 Kansas State University retirement tributes.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Correspondence Series is made up of fourteen boxes and arranged alphabetically. Climenhaga was a prolific and voluminous writer. He corresponded with Mina Cooper, Carlos Cortez, Charles Jones, George Moberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Kenneth Patchen to name a few. Within the Charles Jones correspondence there are letters by LBJ (Lyndon B. Johnson) and from people who opposed him agreeing with the NCAAP- these letters were signed by \"a white Christian\" or \"a white, white, American.\" There are twenty-four folders of correspondence between Climenhaga and Fred Shaw. The two men planned to turn their correspondence into a book titled The Mephisto Addenda. Before this could manifest, Fred Shaw passed away. The Climenhaga's were good friends with Kenneth and Miriam Patchen and there is extensive correspondence between the two families. The sub-series \"Correspondence to Poetry Magazines\" is listed alphabetically by magazine title and consists of one box.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The sub-series \"Correspondence Log\" is arranged chronologically and is stored in eighteen boxes. It is similar to a journal as Climenhaga made personal entries on specific dates and if those dates corresponded with writing or receiving a letter, the letter was included. Names of those who Climenhaga corresponded includes Marlon Brando, Milton Bernard, John and Emma Climenhaga, Mina Cooper, Norman Fedder, Henry Miller, Kenneth Patchen, George Savage, Fred Shaw, Wesley Van Tassel, Myrna Wolfe, and Kenneth Woodroofe. These letters were pulled from the alphabetical listing by Climenhaga. It is not known why Climenhaga separated these letters.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Literary Works is comprised of twenty-two boxes that contain Climenhaga's plays and poems, as well as fiction stories and essays. During his lifetime Climenhaga had at least seven columns in various newspapers and newsletters. Three of his columns One Man's Frontier, One Man's Journey, and Dear Good People often had the same material while the introduction was sometimes different or a sentence or two rearranged. One Man's Journey was also broadcasted on the KKSC Radio station at Kansas State University during the 1980s. Climenhaga was a notorious recycler of paper. He often used recycled paper which can be confusing to researchers. If researchers pay close attention, however, they just might find that \"recycled\" paper useful after all, as it could be a part of another story, poem, etc., whether written by Climenhaga or one of his many friends or colleagues. Climenhaga wrote his first poem at age six. By 1989, he had written approximately 2,500 poems of which 1,200 had been published in various magazines and journals. Volumes of his published poems include: The Age of Pollution; Belief in Chaos; Hawk and Chameleon; The Month of the Shadow on My Heart; Ninety-Nine Messages from Separate Places; None of this Really Matters a Great Deal Now; One Hundred and One Songs are Promised for Tomorrow; Preliminary Walk into the Sweat of Dying; Report on the Progress of the Bearded One's Homework; Spontaneity is a Deceiving God; and The Thirteenth Winter.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Subject Series is contained in seventeen boxes and is organized alphabetically. It includes names such as Charles Jackson Jones, Jr. who was married to artist Molly Ramolla, Kenneth Patchen, and Larry Smith. It also includes programs from plays produced, written, and directed by Climenhaga. Other programs include plays produced at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University; by the Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, CO; and at UCLA.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Photograph and Slides Series consists of one box and includes photos of the 1976 Pine Cone Players, Grand Lake, Colorado, production of Mark Twain. Photos taken at the Purple Masque Theatre, Kansas State University include the 1981 production of Kenneth Patchen's Don't Look Now, the 1989 production of Dust-Storm Wedding, and Climenhaga's own play the Marriage Wheel. The Slides consist of Kenneth Patchen's art poetry.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Comprised of seven boxes, the Media Series includes cassette tapes, reel to reel tapes, VHS videotapes, and computer disks. The computer disks contain some of Climenhaga's manuscripts that were incorporated in the Literary Works Series. The cassette tapes include interviews with Ben Nyberg and Jonathan Holden, 1985 letters from Charles Jones, and Climenhaga's 1980s One Man's Journey recorded at KKSU radio, Kansas State University. The reel to reel tapes includes several different readings from Patchen's Don't Look Now. The VHS tapes include the \"50th Anniversary of the 1939 Pottstown High School Graduates\" of interviews with Earl \"Yogi\" Storm, Dr. Joel Esner, and Raymond Elliott conducted by Bill Achatz. Climenhaga was unable to attend this anniversary gathering where he and others were inducted into the Alumni Honor Roll. Climenhaga created a video to be played at the anniversary program and it is included in this series. The tape Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996, is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband Kenneth Patchen. The most interesting tapes in this series, however, are the interviews with Joel Climenhaga. The one that stands out the most is the one created by the Manhattan, Kansas Art Councils, 1992, where John Biggs interviews Climenhaga.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e There are some very interesting interviews with Joel Climenhaga, especially the one filmed by the Manhattan, Kansas Arts Council titled Joel: Creative Profile. Another VHS tape of interest is Miriam Is Not Amused, a film by Kim Roberts, 1996. This is a profile of the life of Miriam Patchen with interesting information about her husband, Kenneth Patchen.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Scrapbooks are contained in one box. The most notable is the Marriage Wheel by Joel Climenhaga with his notes written on the sides of each page. Another item of interest is the 1983-1988 Travel Journal. Climenhaga kept notes of his summer travels, how many miles he traveled, where he traveled to, and when and where he stopped to eat.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The Oversize Series is made up of one box that includes art, art poetry, poetry, and program posters. Notable sketches in this series are the drawing of Joel Climenhaga by Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the greeting to the Climenhagas from Carlos and Marianna Cortez in 1972. Kenneth Patchen's art poetry shows up in Lee Artz's \"Passion for Peace,\" Peace Works, Mid-Peninsula Peace Center, Palo Alto, California and in Steven Ratiner's \"The Picture Poems of Kenneth Patchen,\" California Living, 1983. There are four Kenneth Patchen poems included: \"The Way Men Live Is a Life,\" 1944, \"A Poem For Christmas,\" 1961, \"What I'd Like To Know Is, 1967\" and \"A Mercy Filled and Defiant Xmas To All Still Worthy To Be Called Man,\" 1970. Program posters from the Kansas State University Purple Masque Theatre that are interesting include Mark Edward's Larger Than Life, 1978, Cindy Helfertstay's From Heaven to Hell, 1978, and Chloris Killian's 1981, The Dust-Storm Wedding. Other items of interest include Climenhaga's 1987 retirement certificate from Kansas State University and a letter from the then Provost, Owen J. Koeppe.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Stored in twenty boxes, the Printed Material includes Climenhaga's poetry magazines, published by him under his publishing company, Transient Press, and other research journals and books.\u003c/p\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}},"normalized_title":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#normalized_title","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Series 7: Media Series, 1932-1997","label":"Title"}},"parent_labels":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#parent_labels","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["Joel Climenhaga papers, 1912-2001"],"label":"In"}},"parent_ids":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#parent_ids","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["joel-climenhaga-papers"],"label":"Ancestor IDs"}},"level":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#level","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Series","label":"Level"}},"collection_name":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#collection_name","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Joel Climenhaga papers, 1912-2001","label":"Collection"}},"eadid":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#eadid","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"joel-climenhaga-papers","label":"EAD ID"}},"online_content?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#online_content?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":false,"label":"Online Content"}},"component?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#component?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":true,"label":"Component"}},"restricted_component?":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#restricted_component?","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":false,"label":"Restrictions"}}},"links":{"self":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/joel-climenhaga-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa"}},{"id":"franklin-a-coffman-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","type":"Series","attributes":{"title":"Series 7: Printed Materials, 1918-1972","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/franklin-a-coffman-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","ref_ssm":["al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa"],"id":"franklin-a-coffman-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa","title_filing_ssi":"Series 7: Printed Materials","title_ssm":["Series 7: Printed Materials"],"title_tesim":["Series 7: Printed Materials"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1918-1972"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1918-1972"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Series 7: Printed Materials, 1918-1972"],"text":["Series 7: Printed Materials, 1918-1972","Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978","364","Published","Twelve folders in Box 3. Materials of significance are works authored by Coffman including: an article Coffman published in the Kansas City Daily Drover, 1946; two of his journal articles from 1945-1947; a USDA circular, 1941; USDA Farmers Bulletins, and a 1941-1947 on Grow Disease-Resistant Oats. There is a 1914 map of Washington County, Colorado and a 1916 Otis Farms brochure. Of note to K-Staters, is the 1972 News Letter highlighting achievements of the Class of 1914."],"component_level_isim":[1],"parent_ssi":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","parent_ids_ssim":["franklin-a-coffman-papers"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978"],"parent_levels_ssm":["collection"],"unitid_ssm":["364"],"collection_ssim":["Franklin A. 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Of note to K-Staters, is the 1972 News Letter highlighting achievements of the Class of 1914.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"],"note_tesim":["Twelve folders in Box 3. Materials of significance are works authored by Coffman including: an article Coffman published in the Kansas City Daily Drover, 1946; two of his journal articles from 1945-1947; a USDA circular, 1941; USDA Farmers Bulletins, and a 1941-1947 on Grow Disease-Resistant Oats. There is a 1914 map of Washington County, Colorado and a 1916 Otis Farms brochure. Of note to K-Staters, is the 1972 News Letter highlighting achievements of the Class of 1914."],"barcode_ssim":["Box 1|A83412052190","Box 2|A83412052205","Box 3|A83412052158","Box 4|A83412052166","Box 5|A83412052093","Box 6|A83412052108","Box 7|A83412056681","Box 8|A83412078188","Box 9|A83412078170","Box 10|A83412078162","Box 11|A83412067161","Box 12|A83412067161","Box 13|A83412067161","Box 14|A83412152039","Box 15|A83412049406"],"barcode_tesim":["A83412052190","A83412052205","A83412052158","A83412052166","A83412052093","A83412052108","A83412056681","A83412078188","A83412078170","A83412078162","A83412067161","A83412067161","A83412067161","A83412152039","A83412049406"],"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eSeries 7: Printed Materials\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eSeries 7: Printed Materials\u003c/unittitle\u003e, 1918-1972"],"total_digital_object_count_isim":[0],"_nest_path_":"/components#6","_nest_parent_":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","_root_":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:14:49.439Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","title_ssm":["Franklin A. Coffman papers"],"title_tesim":["Franklin A. Coffman papers"],"ead_ssi":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","unitdate_ssm":["1884-1978"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1884-1978"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["P2011.10","36"],"text":["P2011.10","36","Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978","Kansas State University history","Kansas agriculture and rural life","13.50 Linear Feet, 15.00 Boxes Post-Fire Oversize Extent: Oversize Box 11,12,13 (16.5 x 20.5): 509: 20/29/4 Box 8 (16.5x20.5); 509: 20/29/5 Boxes 9, 10 (16.5x20.5); 509: 20/30/3","All materials are open for research.","No further accruals are expected.","The Franklin A. Coffman papers are arranged in 11 series: 1) Biographical, 2) Correspondence, 3) Genealogy, 4) Legal documents, 5) Literary works, 6) Awards and honors, 7) Printed materials, 8) Photographs, 9) Scrapbooks and photograph albums, 10) Oversize 11) Artifacts","Chronology\u0026#13;  1892 December 30, born in Jewell, Kansas\u0026#13;  1908 Passed grade school exams\u0026#13;  1914 June 18, graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College with a bachelor of science degree in agronomy\u0026#13;  1914-1916 Worked as station superintendent, Philippine Bureau of Agriculture\u0026#13;  1916-1917 Attended graduate school and worked as a student instructor in botany and plant physiology, Kansas State College\u0026#13;  1918-1924 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Akron, Colorado\u0026#13;  1919 June 18, married Alta Johnson\u0026#13;  1922 Received master of science in agronomy, plant breeding major, plant physiology minor, from Kansas State Agricultural College\u0026#13;  1923 April 23, daughter Alice Winifred Coffman born\u0026#13;  1924-1963 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service\u0026#13;  1926 April 25, Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science\u0026#13;  1949 October 26, elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy\u0026#13;  1950-1962 Served as secretary of the National Oat Conference\u0026#13;  1962 Received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture, December 31, retired\u0026#13;  1966 Received Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University\u0026#13;  1976 December 20, died in Prince George County, Maryland, buried in Columbia Gardens Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia\u0026#13;  1977 Oat History, Identification and Classification published\u0026#13;  K-State alumnus Franklin A. Coffman was a noted agronomist who specialized in oat experimentation and research. He was born in Jewell, Kansas in 1892 to Rachel and Ernest Coffman. Both parents attended Kansas State Agricultural College. Coffman entered the sub-freshman class at Kansas State Agricultural College in 1908. In 1911, he entered the freshman class. He majored in Agronomy and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture degree in 1914. Six of Coffman's siblings graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College.\u0026#13;  From 1914-1916, Coffman worked for the Philippine Bureau of Agriculture as the station superintendent in charge of corn. He returned to Kansas and began studies for a master's degree, but did not complete the program at that time. He moved to Akron, Colorado to work for the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1922, Coffman completed his Master of Science in Agriculture at Kansas State Agricultural College, as a plant breeding major, plant physiology minor.\u0026#13;  Upon graduation, Coffman continued to work for the United States Department of Agriculture where he remained employed until his retirement in 1962. The positions he held at the United States Department of Agriculture increased in importance and responsibility as Coffman built a reputation for his work in oat experimentation and research. In 1957, he became the principal agronomist in charge of winter oats and was responsible for 120 experiment stations in 44 states.\u0026#13;  Throughout his career, Coffman published approximately 200 articles and several books. He edited the book Oats and Oat Improvement and wrote five of the book's 15 chapters. Upon his retirement in 1962, Coffman received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1966, he received the Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University. After retirement, Coffman continued his involvement in oat research. The book Oat History, Identification and Classification, was published in 1977, a year after he died.\u0026#13;  Coffman married Alta Johnson in 1919 and had a daughter, Alice Winifred, in 1923. He had two grandsons. Coffman was an accomplished photographer and poet. Many of his poems were published in the Washington Post. Coffman was an avid sportsman and made many trips to western states and national parks. He was also a genealogist and did extensive research on both sides of his family.","The Morse Department of Special Collections acquired the Coffman papers through a gift from John T. Spike, grandson of Franklin A. Coffman. They were shipped to Kansas from the Texas home of his mother, Alice Coffman Spike. It received accession number P2011.10.","Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Franklin A. Coffman papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Hale Library, Kansas State University.","Finding Aid Author: Jane Schillie  Processing Info: Jane Schillie processed the collection under the direction of Anthony Crawford, Curator of Manuscripts, during the 2011-2012 academic year.  Publication Date: 2013-04-24","The Franklin A. Coffman papers contain letters, autobiographical materials, paternal and maternal family genealogies, legal documents, literary works, awards and honors, printed materials, photographs, scrapbooks and photograph albums, and artifacts.  Personal correspondence is mainly amongst family members though there is a letter from J. Edgar Hoover regarding a poem Coffman published. Business correspondence is sparse. Coffman received a bound volume of congratulatory letters upon his retirement. The letters provide the best account of Coffman's work with the United States Department of Agriculture within the collection. Many describe interactions with Coffman during field work and visits to experiment stations across the country. There is no official governmental correspondence in the collection documenting Coffman's work.  Coffman handwrote autobiographical accounts of his life during his later years. These accounts are mainly of his childhood, college days and work in the Philippines. The accounts covering the years Coffman spent in the Philippines are extensive. They provide many details and impressions about the native people. The accounts also cover his travels to other Asian countries while based in the Philippines.  Coffman spent years gathering genealogical information from relatives and researching his ancestors. He traced his father's Coffman ancestors back to 1737 and his mother's Bayle ancestors back to 1796. There are notes, different versions of family trees, and extensive narrative written by Coffman describing the lives of his ancestors.  Legal documents are sparse.  Coffman was a prolific poet. There are clippings of poetry published in the Washington Post. Some poems were published without his name. Others have his initials, F.A.C., including two series of poems compiled in notebooks. There are also unpublished poems.  There are certificates for scholarly and service awards and honors, and the registration certificate for the Marion Oat. There are not certificates for all the awards and honors listed on Coffman's resume.  There are just a few United States Department of Agriculture's bulletins and farmer's Bulletins that Coffman authored or co-authored. The vast majority of Coffman's published research is not part of the collection.  One of Coffman's hobbies was photography. There are hundreds of photographs documenting his personal and professional lives. Subjects are wide-ranging. Coffman signed some of his photographs, mainly what he referred to as the \"salon prints.\" There are photographs taken by others including professional portraits and candid photographs of Coffman at various ages. Many photographs are undated and unidentified.  There are seven scrapbooks containing photographs and memorabilia. 1) Photographs and memorabilia document a 10 day automobile trip to eastern cities and New England that Coffman took with his wife and daughter in 1936. Expenses totaled $110.96.  2) \"The Farm\" album contains photographs of family members, neighbors, friends, crops, farmhouse interiors and exteriors, Rocky Ford School, and Rocky Ford dam and mill. The album is dated 1913 and some photographs are identified. There are also approximately 56 photographs of Manhattan and Kansas State Agricultural College. The subjects are the campus, buildings, classmates, lake recreation, train depot, street car, and a railroad bridge. Some photos are identified and dated 1914.  3) This photo album with narrative is titled \"The Many Faces of F.A.C.\" and is written by \"A Couple of Norths and Shanghai Louis Kao.\" It was compiled in 1962 and contains photographs of Coffman in various locations.  4) The album has photographs of Coffman's family and ancestors (earliest date 1884), Sunday school class, the First Baptist Church in 1902, Kansas State Agricultural College, and Manhattan. There is extensive Kansas State Agricultural College memorabilia including a cadet corps certificate, 1908 fall term schedule, invitations, commencement programs, band programs, banquet programs, clippings and a baseball ticket. The album also has correspondence and drawings. The album has memorabilia from Coffman's transit back to the United States on the Shino Maru including menus and passenger list. There are photographs of the transit and memorabilia from a Hong Kong visit en route. There are photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Oklahoma A\u0026M and Akron, Colorado. 1916.  5) The Philippines album contains photographs of Coffman's trip across the western United States to board the S.S. Manchuria for transit to the Philippines. Coffman photographed the Golden Gate Park, the Panama Pacific International Exhibition grounds, onboard ship recreation, Honolulu, Tokyo, Nagasaki, the Philippines' countryside, Filipinos' daily activities, Philippine experiment stations, cultural activities, villages, Coffman's office and co-workers, YMCA sports, Viscayia (German naval ship), Hong Kong, Shanghai, Kobe, Yamaa, Yokahoma, the voyage back to the United States on the Shino Maru (not to be confused with the Shinyo Maru), Honolulu experiment station, Universal Film City, and the San Diego Exposition. 1914-1916.  6) The photographs and memorabilia in this album are compiled in honor of Coffman's brother, Will, who died in 1920. It contains drawings, report cards, class schedule and photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, University of Kansas, and Will's travels. Loose commencement programs from Kansas State Agricultural College, 1913-1915, are with the album.  7) The album contains photographs from Coffman's days in Akron and his travels to Amarillo, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Arlington, New York, Philadelphia and Mount Vernon from 1919-1922. There is memorabilia from Washington, D.C., New York including a Metropolitan Opera House program and a Hippodrome souvenir book, Coffman's wedding and showers, and a program from the American Society of Agronomy 1922 meeting. Morrill, Kansas, Twin Oaks, Estes Park, county fairs, and Manhattan are also subjects of photographs. Alta Johnson's School Girl Days: A Memory Book from Washington County High School, 1914, is boxed with the scrapbooks.  The most notable artifacts are four cameras, presumably used by Coffman: Univex Model A, 1933; No. 1-A Kodak Junior Model A, 1914; No. 2 Folding Autographic Brownie, circa 1915-1916; Kodak Six-16 camera and leather case, circa 1932-1936.","Copyright and other rights are held by the repository for anything not in the public domain.","Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Coffman, Franklin A.","Coffman, Franklin A.","English","Latin"],"unitid_tesim":["P2011.10","36"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1884-1978"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978"],"collection_title_tesim":["Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978"],"collection_ssim":["Franklin A. Coffman papers, 1884-1978"],"creator_ssm":["Coffman, Franklin A."],"creator_ssim":["Coffman, Franklin A."],"creator_persname_ssim":["Coffman, Franklin A."],"creators_ssim":["Coffman, Franklin A."],"access_terms_ssm":["Copyright and other rights are held by the repository for anything not in the public domain."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Acqusition Source: John T. Spike Acqusition Method: Donation. Acqusition Date: 20110820"],"access_subjects_ssim":["Kansas State University history","Kansas agriculture and rural life"],"access_subjects_ssm":["Kansas State University history","Kansas agriculture and rural life"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["13.50 Linear Feet, 15.00 Boxes Post-Fire Oversize Extent: Oversize Box 11,12,13 (16.5 x 20.5): 509: 20/29/4 Box 8 (16.5x20.5); 509: 20/29/5 Boxes 9, 10 (16.5x20.5); 509: 20/30/3"],"date_range_isim":[1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966,1967,1968,1969,1970,1971,1972,1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAll materials are open for research.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["All materials are open for research."],"accruals_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eNo further accruals are expected.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accruals_tesim":["No further accruals are expected."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Franklin A. Coffman papers are arranged in 11 series: 1) Biographical, 2) Correspondence, 3) Genealogy, 4) Legal documents, 5) Literary works, 6) Awards and honors, 7) Printed materials, 8) Photographs, 9) Scrapbooks and photograph albums, 10) Oversize 11) Artifacts\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_tesim":["The Franklin A. Coffman papers are arranged in 11 series: 1) Biographical, 2) Correspondence, 3) Genealogy, 4) Legal documents, 5) Literary works, 6) Awards and honors, 7) Printed materials, 8) Photographs, 9) Scrapbooks and photograph albums, 10) Oversize 11) Artifacts"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cnote\u003e \u003cp\u003eChronology\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1892 December 30, born in Jewell, Kansas\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1908 Passed grade school exams\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1914 June 18, graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College with a bachelor of science degree in agronomy\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1914-1916 Worked as station superintendent, Philippine Bureau of Agriculture\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1916-1917 Attended graduate school and worked as a student instructor in botany and plant physiology, Kansas State College\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1918-1924 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Akron, Colorado\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1919 June 18, married Alta Johnson\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1922 Received master of science in agronomy, plant breeding major, plant physiology minor, from Kansas State Agricultural College\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1923 April 23, daughter Alice Winifred Coffman born\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1924-1963 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1926 April 25, Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1949 October 26, elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1950-1962 Served as secretary of the National Oat Conference\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1962 Received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture, December 31, retired\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1966 Received Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1976 December 20, died in Prince George County, Maryland, buried in Columbia Gardens Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 1977 Oat History, Identification and Classification published\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e K-State alumnus Franklin A. Coffman was a noted agronomist who specialized in oat experimentation and research. He was born in Jewell, Kansas in 1892 to Rachel and Ernest Coffman. Both parents attended Kansas State Agricultural College. Coffman entered the sub-freshman class at Kansas State Agricultural College in 1908. In 1911, he entered the freshman class. He majored in Agronomy and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture degree in 1914. Six of Coffman's siblings graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College.\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e From 1914-1916, Coffman worked for the Philippine Bureau of Agriculture as the station superintendent in charge of corn. He returned to Kansas and began studies for a master's degree, but did not complete the program at that time. He moved to Akron, Colorado to work for the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1922, Coffman completed his Master of Science in Agriculture at Kansas State Agricultural College, as a plant breeding major, plant physiology minor.\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Upon graduation, Coffman continued to work for the United States Department of Agriculture where he remained employed until his retirement in 1962. The positions he held at the United States Department of Agriculture increased in importance and responsibility as Coffman built a reputation for his work in oat experimentation and research. In 1957, he became the principal agronomist in charge of winter oats and was responsible for 120 experiment stations in 44 states.\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Throughout his career, Coffman published approximately 200 articles and several books. He edited the book Oats and Oat Improvement and wrote five of the book's 15 chapters. Upon his retirement in 1962, Coffman received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1966, he received the Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University. After retirement, Coffman continued his involvement in oat research. The book Oat History, Identification and Classification, was published in 1977, a year after he died.\u0026amp;#13;\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Coffman married Alta Johnson in 1919 and had a daughter, Alice Winifred, in 1923. He had two grandsons. Coffman was an accomplished photographer and poet. Many of his poems were published in the Washington Post. Coffman was an avid sportsman and made many trips to western states and national parks. He was also a genealogist and did extensive research on both sides of his family.\u003c/p\u003e \u003c/note\u003e"],"bioghist_tesim":["Chronology\u0026#13;  1892 December 30, born in Jewell, Kansas\u0026#13;  1908 Passed grade school exams\u0026#13;  1914 June 18, graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College with a bachelor of science degree in agronomy\u0026#13;  1914-1916 Worked as station superintendent, Philippine Bureau of Agriculture\u0026#13;  1916-1917 Attended graduate school and worked as a student instructor in botany and plant physiology, Kansas State College\u0026#13;  1918-1924 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Akron, Colorado\u0026#13;  1919 June 18, married Alta Johnson\u0026#13;  1922 Received master of science in agronomy, plant breeding major, plant physiology minor, from Kansas State Agricultural College\u0026#13;  1923 April 23, daughter Alice Winifred Coffman born\u0026#13;  1924-1963 Worked for the United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service\u0026#13;  1926 April 25, Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science\u0026#13;  1949 October 26, elected Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy\u0026#13;  1950-1962 Served as secretary of the National Oat Conference\u0026#13;  1962 Received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture, December 31, retired\u0026#13;  1966 Received Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University\u0026#13;  1976 December 20, died in Prince George County, Maryland, buried in Columbia Gardens Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia\u0026#13;  1977 Oat History, Identification and Classification published\u0026#13;  K-State alumnus Franklin A. Coffman was a noted agronomist who specialized in oat experimentation and research. He was born in Jewell, Kansas in 1892 to Rachel and Ernest Coffman. Both parents attended Kansas State Agricultural College. Coffman entered the sub-freshman class at Kansas State Agricultural College in 1908. In 1911, he entered the freshman class. He majored in Agronomy and graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture degree in 1914. Six of Coffman's siblings graduated from Kansas State Agricultural College.\u0026#13;  From 1914-1916, Coffman worked for the Philippine Bureau of Agriculture as the station superintendent in charge of corn. He returned to Kansas and began studies for a master's degree, but did not complete the program at that time. He moved to Akron, Colorado to work for the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1922, Coffman completed his Master of Science in Agriculture at Kansas State Agricultural College, as a plant breeding major, plant physiology minor.\u0026#13;  Upon graduation, Coffman continued to work for the United States Department of Agriculture where he remained employed until his retirement in 1962. The positions he held at the United States Department of Agriculture increased in importance and responsibility as Coffman built a reputation for his work in oat experimentation and research. In 1957, he became the principal agronomist in charge of winter oats and was responsible for 120 experiment stations in 44 states.\u0026#13;  Throughout his career, Coffman published approximately 200 articles and several books. He edited the book Oats and Oat Improvement and wrote five of the book's 15 chapters. Upon his retirement in 1962, Coffman received the Superior Service Award from the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1966, he received the Distinguished Service in Agriculture Award from Kansas State University. After retirement, Coffman continued his involvement in oat research. The book Oat History, Identification and Classification, was published in 1977, a year after he died.\u0026#13;  Coffman married Alta Johnson in 1919 and had a daughter, Alice Winifred, in 1923. He had two grandsons. Coffman was an accomplished photographer and poet. Many of his poems were published in the Washington Post. Coffman was an avid sportsman and made many trips to western states and national parks. He was also a genealogist and did extensive research on both sides of his family."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Morse Department of Special Collections acquired the Coffman papers through a gift from John T. Spike, grandson of Franklin A. Coffman. They were shipped to Kansas from the Texas home of his mother, Alice Coffman Spike. It received accession number P2011.10.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_tesim":["The Morse Department of Special Collections acquired the Coffman papers through a gift from John T. Spike, grandson of Franklin A. Coffman. They were shipped to Kansas from the Texas home of his mother, Alice Coffman Spike. It received accession number P2011.10."],"odd_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePublished\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Franklin A. Coffman papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Hale Library, Kansas State University.\u003c/p\u003e"],"odd_tesim":["Published","Preferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Franklin A. Coffman papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Hale Library, Kansas State University."],"otherfindaid_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAlternative finding aid found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20210602162359/http://www.lib.k-state.edu/apps/findingaids/index.php?p=collections/controlcard\u0026amp;id=36\u0026amp;q=coffman\u003c/p\u003e"],"otherfindaid_tesim":["Alternative finding aid found here: https://web.archive.org/web/20210602162359/http://www.lib.k-state.edu/apps/findingaids/index.php?p=collections/controlcard\u0026id=36\u0026q=coffman"],"processinfo_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eFinding Aid Author: Jane Schillie \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eProcessing Info: Jane Schillie processed the collection under the direction of Anthony Crawford, Curator of Manuscripts, during the 2011-2012 academic year. \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePublication Date: 2013-04-24\u003c/p\u003e"],"processinfo_tesim":["Finding Aid Author: Jane Schillie  Processing Info: Jane Schillie processed the collection under the direction of Anthony Crawford, Curator of Manuscripts, during the 2011-2012 academic year.  Publication Date: 2013-04-24"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Franklin A. Coffman papers contain letters, autobiographical materials, paternal and maternal family genealogies, legal documents, literary works, awards and honors, printed materials, photographs, scrapbooks and photograph albums, and artifacts.  Personal correspondence is mainly amongst family members though there is a letter from J. Edgar Hoover regarding a poem Coffman published. Business correspondence is sparse. Coffman received a bound volume of congratulatory letters upon his retirement. The letters provide the best account of Coffman's work with the United States Department of Agriculture within the collection. Many describe interactions with Coffman during field work and visits to experiment stations across the country. There is no official governmental correspondence in the collection documenting Coffman's work.  Coffman handwrote autobiographical accounts of his life during his later years. These accounts are mainly of his childhood, college days and work in the Philippines. The accounts covering the years Coffman spent in the Philippines are extensive. They provide many details and impressions about the native people. The accounts also cover his travels to other Asian countries while based in the Philippines.  Coffman spent years gathering genealogical information from relatives and researching his ancestors. He traced his father's Coffman ancestors back to 1737 and his mother's Bayle ancestors back to 1796. There are notes, different versions of family trees, and extensive narrative written by Coffman describing the lives of his ancestors.  Legal documents are sparse.  Coffman was a prolific poet. There are clippings of poetry published in the Washington Post. Some poems were published without his name. Others have his initials, F.A.C., including two series of poems compiled in notebooks. There are also unpublished poems.  There are certificates for scholarly and service awards and honors, and the registration certificate for the Marion Oat. There are not certificates for all the awards and honors listed on Coffman's resume.  There are just a few United States Department of Agriculture's bulletins and farmer's Bulletins that Coffman authored or co-authored. The vast majority of Coffman's published research is not part of the collection.  One of Coffman's hobbies was photography. There are hundreds of photographs documenting his personal and professional lives. Subjects are wide-ranging. Coffman signed some of his photographs, mainly what he referred to as the \"salon prints.\" There are photographs taken by others including professional portraits and candid photographs of Coffman at various ages. Many photographs are undated and unidentified.  There are seven scrapbooks containing photographs and memorabilia. 1) Photographs and memorabilia document a 10 day automobile trip to eastern cities and New England that Coffman took with his wife and daughter in 1936. Expenses totaled $110.96.  2) \"The Farm\" album contains photographs of family members, neighbors, friends, crops, farmhouse interiors and exteriors, Rocky Ford School, and Rocky Ford dam and mill. The album is dated 1913 and some photographs are identified. There are also approximately 56 photographs of Manhattan and Kansas State Agricultural College. The subjects are the campus, buildings, classmates, lake recreation, train depot, street car, and a railroad bridge. Some photos are identified and dated 1914.  3) This photo album with narrative is titled \"The Many Faces of F.A.C.\" and is written by \"A Couple of Norths and Shanghai Louis Kao.\" It was compiled in 1962 and contains photographs of Coffman in various locations.  4) The album has photographs of Coffman's family and ancestors (earliest date 1884), Sunday school class, the First Baptist Church in 1902, Kansas State Agricultural College, and Manhattan. There is extensive Kansas State Agricultural College memorabilia including a cadet corps certificate, 1908 fall term schedule, invitations, commencement programs, band programs, banquet programs, clippings and a baseball ticket. The album also has correspondence and drawings. The album has memorabilia from Coffman's transit back to the United States on the Shino Maru including menus and passenger list. There are photographs of the transit and memorabilia from a Hong Kong visit en route. There are photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Oklahoma A\u0026M and Akron, Colorado. 1916.  5) The Philippines album contains photographs of Coffman's trip across the western United States to board the S.S. Manchuria for transit to the Philippines. Coffman photographed the Golden Gate Park, the Panama Pacific International Exhibition grounds, onboard ship recreation, Honolulu, Tokyo, Nagasaki, the Philippines' countryside, Filipinos' daily activities, Philippine experiment stations, cultural activities, villages, Coffman's office and co-workers, YMCA sports, Viscayia (German naval ship), Hong Kong, Shanghai, Kobe, Yamaa, Yokahoma, the voyage back to the United States on the Shino Maru (not to be confused with the Shinyo Maru), Honolulu experiment station, Universal Film City, and the San Diego Exposition. 1914-1916.  6) The photographs and memorabilia in this album are compiled in honor of Coffman's brother, Will, who died in 1920. It contains drawings, report cards, class schedule and photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, University of Kansas, and Will's travels. Loose commencement programs from Kansas State Agricultural College, 1913-1915, are with the album.  7) The album contains photographs from Coffman's days in Akron and his travels to Amarillo, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Arlington, New York, Philadelphia and Mount Vernon from 1919-1922. There is memorabilia from Washington, D.C., New York including a Metropolitan Opera House program and a Hippodrome souvenir book, Coffman's wedding and showers, and a program from the American Society of Agronomy 1922 meeting. Morrill, Kansas, Twin Oaks, Estes Park, county fairs, and Manhattan are also subjects of photographs. Alta Johnson's School Girl Days: A Memory Book from Washington County High School, 1914, is boxed with the scrapbooks.  The most notable artifacts are four cameras, presumably used by Coffman: Univex Model A, 1933; No. 1-A Kodak Junior Model A, 1914; No. 2 Folding Autographic Brownie, circa 1915-1916; Kodak Six-16 camera and leather case, circa 1932-1936."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCopyright and other rights are held by the repository for anything not in the public domain.\u003c/p\u003e"],"userestrict_tesim":["Copyright and other rights are held by the repository for anything not in the public domain."],"names_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections","Coffman, Franklin A.","Coffman, Franklin A."],"corpname_ssim":["Richard L. D. and Marjorie J. Morse Department of Archives and Special Collections"],"persname_ssim":["Coffman, Franklin A.","Coffman, Franklin A."],"language_ssim":["English","Latin"],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":11,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":999999,"title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eFranklin A. Coffman papers\u003c/unittitle\u003e"],"odd_typed_html_ssm":["{\"type\":\"publicationStatus\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePublished\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}","{\"type\":\"dacsCitation\",\"value\":\" \\u003cp\\u003ePreferred Citation: [Item title], [item date], Franklin A. Coffman papers, Box [number], Folder [number or title], Morse Department of Special Collections, Hale Library, Kansas State University.\\u003c/p\\u003e \"}"],"normalized_title_html_ssm":["\u003cunittitle encodinganalog=\"3.1.2\"\u003eFranklin A. Coffman papers\u003c/unittitle\u003e, 1884-1978"],"hashed_id_ssi":"fed7e718bb4c6394","_root_":"franklin-a-coffman-papers","timestamp":"2026-04-08T11:14:49.439Z","scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Franklin A. Coffman papers contain letters, autobiographical materials, paternal and maternal family genealogies, legal documents, literary works, awards and honors, printed materials, photographs, scrapbooks and photograph albums, and artifacts.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Personal correspondence is mainly amongst family members though there is a letter from J. Edgar Hoover regarding a poem Coffman published. Business correspondence is sparse. Coffman received a bound volume of congratulatory letters upon his retirement. The letters provide the best account of Coffman's work with the United States Department of Agriculture within the collection. Many describe interactions with Coffman during field work and visits to experiment stations across the country. There is no official governmental correspondence in the collection documenting Coffman's work.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Coffman handwrote autobiographical accounts of his life during his later years. These accounts are mainly of his childhood, college days and work in the Philippines. The accounts covering the years Coffman spent in the Philippines are extensive. They provide many details and impressions about the native people. The accounts also cover his travels to other Asian countries while based in the Philippines.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Coffman spent years gathering genealogical information from relatives and researching his ancestors. He traced his father's Coffman ancestors back to 1737 and his mother's Bayle ancestors back to 1796. There are notes, different versions of family trees, and extensive narrative written by Coffman describing the lives of his ancestors.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Legal documents are sparse.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e Coffman was a prolific poet. There are clippings of poetry published in the Washington Post. Some poems were published without his name. Others have his initials, F.A.C., including two series of poems compiled in notebooks. There are also unpublished poems.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e There are certificates for scholarly and service awards and honors, and the registration certificate for the Marion Oat. There are not certificates for all the awards and honors listed on Coffman's resume.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e There are just a few United States Department of Agriculture's bulletins and farmer's Bulletins that Coffman authored or co-authored. The vast majority of Coffman's published research is not part of the collection.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e One of Coffman's hobbies was photography. There are hundreds of photographs documenting his personal and professional lives. Subjects are wide-ranging. Coffman signed some of his photographs, mainly what he referred to as the \"salon prints.\" There are photographs taken by others including professional portraits and candid photographs of Coffman at various ages. Many photographs are undated and unidentified.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e There are seven scrapbooks containing photographs and memorabilia. 1) Photographs and memorabilia document a 10 day automobile trip to eastern cities and New England that Coffman took with his wife and daughter in 1936. Expenses totaled $110.96.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 2) \"The Farm\" album contains photographs of family members, neighbors, friends, crops, farmhouse interiors and exteriors, Rocky Ford School, and Rocky Ford dam and mill. The album is dated 1913 and some photographs are identified. There are also approximately 56 photographs of Manhattan and Kansas State Agricultural College. The subjects are the campus, buildings, classmates, lake recreation, train depot, street car, and a railroad bridge. Some photos are identified and dated 1914.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 3) This photo album with narrative is titled \"The Many Faces of F.A.C.\" and is written by \"A Couple of Norths and Shanghai Louis Kao.\" It was compiled in 1962 and contains photographs of Coffman in various locations.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 4) The album has photographs of Coffman's family and ancestors (earliest date 1884), Sunday school class, the First Baptist Church in 1902, Kansas State Agricultural College, and Manhattan. There is extensive Kansas State Agricultural College memorabilia including a cadet corps certificate, 1908 fall term schedule, invitations, commencement programs, band programs, banquet programs, clippings and a baseball ticket. The album also has correspondence and drawings. The album has memorabilia from Coffman's transit back to the United States on the Shino Maru including menus and passenger list. There are photographs of the transit and memorabilia from a Hong Kong visit en route. There are photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Oklahoma A\u0026amp;M and Akron, Colorado. 1916.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 5) The Philippines album contains photographs of Coffman's trip across the western United States to board the S.S. Manchuria for transit to the Philippines. Coffman photographed the Golden Gate Park, the Panama Pacific International Exhibition grounds, onboard ship recreation, Honolulu, Tokyo, Nagasaki, the Philippines' countryside, Filipinos' daily activities, Philippine experiment stations, cultural activities, villages, Coffman's office and co-workers, YMCA sports, Viscayia (German naval ship), Hong Kong, Shanghai, Kobe, Yamaa, Yokahoma, the voyage back to the United States on the Shino Maru (not to be confused with the Shinyo Maru), Honolulu experiment station, Universal Film City, and the San Diego Exposition. 1914-1916.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 6) The photographs and memorabilia in this album are compiled in honor of Coffman's brother, Will, who died in 1920. It contains drawings, report cards, class schedule and photographs of Kansas State Agricultural College, Manhattan, University of Kansas, and Will's travels. Loose commencement programs from Kansas State Agricultural College, 1913-1915, are with the album.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e 7) The album contains photographs from Coffman's days in Akron and his travels to Amarillo, Chicago, Washington, D.C., Arlington, New York, Philadelphia and Mount Vernon from 1919-1922. There is memorabilia from Washington, D.C., New York including a Metropolitan Opera House program and a Hippodrome souvenir book, Coffman's wedding and showers, and a program from the American Society of Agronomy 1922 meeting. Morrill, Kansas, Twin Oaks, Estes Park, county fairs, and Manhattan are also subjects of photographs. Alta Johnson's School Girl Days: A Memory Book from Washington County High School, 1914, is boxed with the scrapbooks.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e The most notable artifacts are four cameras, presumably used by Coffman: Univex Model A, 1933; No. 1-A Kodak Junior Model A, 1914; No. 2 Folding Autographic Brownie, circa 1915-1916; Kodak Six-16 camera and leather case, circa 1932-1936.\u003c/p\u003e"]}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}},"normalized_title":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/franklin-a-coffman-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#normalized_title","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":"Series 7: Printed Materials, 1918-1972","label":"Title"}},"parent_labels":{"id":"https://findingaids.lib.k-state.edu/catalog/franklin-a-coffman-papers_al_aa8fdde2af8888fb89454837238efba79326acfa#parent_labels","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":["Franklin A. 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While working in Pittsfield, White commuted to Troy, New York, to earn a Master of Engineering degree in Electric Power Engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1977. While working on his Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering at Tulane, he met his future wife, Georganne Wilcox and married on May 4, 1980.\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eIn 1985 White and family traveled north to Manhattan, Kansas, where he began teaching at Kansas State University. Over the years he taught Digital Controls, Finite Elements, and Dynamics among other subjects and developed a course in circuits specialty for Mechanical Engineers. He served as advisor for Women in Engineering, the Wildcat Wind Power Team and Final Frontier Aerospace Systems and Technology (FFAERO). 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