photo album with soiled, cream colored leather cover with "Photo Album" on front and a sticker that reads "Holidays 1939-1949'; black paper pages; photographs and postcards, most adhered to page using black photo corners; travel to florida, new york; beach; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
photograph album with green, leather cover with gold writing that reads "Family Album 1949-1956" on the front cover and spine; black, paper pages; mostly black and white photographs, some in color; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
black bound photograph album with gold embellishment on cover; back cover has separated from remainder of album; plastic covered pages with color photographs; map of Epcot Center at Walt Disney World loose in album; brochure for Universal Studios loose in album; map of Sea World loose in album; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
green bound album with gold writing on front cover and spine that reads "Family Album 1910-1948"; black paper pages; photograph album containing photos of kids, kids with toys, kids on bicycles, families on vacation, kids in a classroom, automobiles; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
light green bound photograph album with black paper pages; "Photographs" printed in dark green on front cover and "Holidays 1954-1955" written on a sticker on front of spine; black and white photographs and postcards from travels around United States, Canada and Europe; four blank pages at end of album; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
blue satin cloth bound album with gold embellishments; "Holidays 1950-1953" handwritten on sticket on front of spine; bound with a single black string; black paper pages; one blank page at end of album; Belonged to Patricia Anne Cohen, formerly actor Patricia English
Yearbook; 1943 Rohwer Center High School Yearbook which belonged to Mitsuye Ito. Ito and her family were among the many Japanese Americans who were forcibly removed from their homes and business on the west coast and incarcerated in relocation camps during World War II. The yearbook was made by the staff and the foreword states that the faculty hopes the students have pleasant memories of school and to remember their theme, the Mississippi River, as a symbol of life and perpetual forward motion. They remind the students that they are important to the Nation. Yearbook is signed by numerous students and teachers. The high school was at the Rohwer Relocation Center which was located in Desha County, Arkansas. This camp was one of the two incarceration camps built in Arkansas to house Japanese Americans from the West Coast. The camp was active from September 18, 1942, to November 30, 1945. Yearbook is in fragile condition and no longer has its cover.
Album of photographs taken by Harry A. Spencer during his tour of service in the United States Army during World War I. The album has a black leather cover stamped with the word "Photographs" that has separated from the spine. A gelatin silver photograph of a piece of artillery is attached to the front below the title. The album is composed of fifty black paper pages on which silver gelatin photographs have been mounted with hand-written captions beneath. The pages are tied together near the spine with a black woven shoelace. The album details Spencer's life while he served in the military during the war, including his time at Camp Greene in North Carolina, and travels through Memphis, Tennessee, New York City, England, France, Belgium, Germany, and Colorado. See accession file for reference reproduction of Spencer's album created by the donor, Spencer's grand-daughter Kathi Wong.