Hoover, Herbert, 1874-1964
Dates
- Existence: 1874-08-10 - 1964-10-20
Biographical / Historical
Herbert Hoover (1874-1964) was an American politician, mining engineer, author, and government official. He served as president of the United States from 1929 to 1933.
Found in 34 Collections and/or Records:
Gordon Auchincloss papers
Hanson Weightman Baldwin papers
Edwin Montefiore Borchard papers
Arthur Judson Brown Papers
Charles Reynolds Brown Papers
W. Cameron Caswell and John Marshall Holcombe, Jr. collection
The collection consists of correspondence and legal documents bearing the signatures of United States presidents, vice-presidents, cabinet members, and other historical figures. Portraits and photographs of the presidents complete the collection.
Jack Randall Crawford papers
Correspondence, diaries, an autobiography, writings, research notes, and teaching materials of Jack Randall Crawford. Also included are a small amount of papers belonging to Dorothy Gabain, Crawford's second wife. The largest part of the papers is made up of plays, fiction and literary criticism, both published and unpublished, written by Crawford. Also included are lecture notes and texts and students papers reflecting his teaching career at Yale University (1909-1946).
Irving Fisher papers
Loomis Havemeyer papers
Charles Dewey Hilles papers
Richard Hooker papers
Correspondence with political figures, particularly documenting Hooker's role as adviser and friend to several presidents.
Edward Mandell House papers
Albert Galloway Keller papers
Kellogg-Dickie papers
The Kellogg-Dickie Papers focus largely on Vernon and Charlotte Kellogg and their daughter, Jean Kellogg Dickie. The papers emphasize Charlotte and Vernon Kellogg's involvement in relief work for Poland and Belgium during and after World War I and Charlotte Kellogg's writings. Most of the Jean Kellogg Dickie material concerns her career as an artist and her involvement in the community.
William Kent family papers
Arthur Bliss Lane papers
Russell Cornell Leffingwell papers
Letter : to Spencer Whedon, New Haven, Connecticut, 1939 Mar 27
TLS, with envelope, addressed to Whedon at Branford College, Yale University, about Hoover's translation of De re metallica, by Georg Agricola.
Removed from: Georgius Agricola De re metallica, translated by Herbert Clark Hoover and Lou Henry Hoover (London: The Mining Magazine, 1912).