Showing Collections: 101 - 110 of 184
Jewel Jackson interview
This collection contains an oral history interview with Jewel Jackson conducted at Glenwood Recreation Center by Marie Bourassa on 2010 October 27 regarding Jackson's life in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Japanese toy saucers and cup
This collection contains two toy saucers and one toy teacup, with a bear and rabbit design, made in Japan, circa 1950 to 1960.
Fannie C. Jones interview
This collection contains an oral history interview with Fannie C. Jones conducted at Glenwood Recreation Center by Marie Bourassa on 2010 October 27 regarding Jones' life in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Kansas City Cap Manufacturing Company and J.O. Jones Company hats
James Keen photographic prints
This collection contains two photographs taken by James Keen, one of the Joel W. Solomon Federal Building and one of the Market Street Bridge, circa 1935-1950.
Charlene Kilpatrick interview
This accession contains an oral history interview with Charlene Kilpatrick conducted at Glenwood Recreation Center by Sanford WIner on 2010 October 27 regarding moving to Chattanooga in 1951 from South Pittsburg, Kilpatrick's life as an African-American woman in neighborhoods of Alton Park, Bushtown, and Glenwood, community and church voluntarism, political trends, and other topics.
Willy King papers
This collection contains cartoons, photographs, and articles created by Willy King regarding political, scholastic, athletic, and environmental developments in Chattanooga, Tennessee and in the United States from 1942 to 1993.
Kitchenware
This collection contains a kettle, butter molds and spigots, circa 1820 to 1940.
Kodak Motormatic camera and case
This collection contains a black and silver Kodak camera with a brown leather casefrom circa 1960 to 1969.
Ku Klux Klan photographs
This collection contains thirty-seven photographs depicting rallies, gatherings, and members of the Ku Klux Klan, a white spremacist hate group, during the 1970s and 1980s. Several photographs were taken by Chattanooga Times photographers and depict Ku Klux Klan activity in Chattanooga and the surrounding Tennessee Valley, but other locations include Connecticut, Kentucky, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Alabama, and California.