- US US-store Archives/RG-CH-4
- Box
Fait partie de RG-CH: Chaplain's Office 1960-2009
Chaplain's Office
Fait partie de RG-CH: Chaplain's Office 1960-2009
Chaplain's Office
Fait partie de RG-CH: Chaplain's Office 1960-2009
Chaplain's Office
Sermons, Prayers, Religious Studies Department
Fait partie de RG-CH: Chaplain's Office 1960-2009
Chaplain's Office
Fait partie de Grinnell Town History 1840- 1850-1950
Fait partie de Grinnell Town History 1840- 1850-1950
Fait partie de RG-COM: Computer Center Records 1977-2014
Intercultural Affairs Photographs
Fait partie de RG-O: College Organizations 1958-
Correspondence October 1938 - June 1939
Fait partie de 1972 Activism Reunion Materials 1969-2012 1969-1973
Correspondence between Jean Pottenger and William A. Schneider Jr. from October 1938 to June 1939. No letters from July or August 1939.
Other correspondence:
November 1938:
December 1938:
March 1939:
January 1939:
February 1939:
April 1939:
May 1939:
June 1939:
September 1939:
Correspondence October 1939 - May 1940
Fait partie de 1972 Activism Reunion Materials 1969-2012 1969-1973
Correspondence between Jean Pottenger and William A. Schneider Jr. from October 1939 to May 1940.
Other correspondence:
October 1939:
November 1939:
December 1939:
February 1940:
Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Events
Fait partie de Office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
Fait partie de RG-AL: Alumni Office Records
Fait partie de RG-AL: Alumni Office Records
Fait partie de Biographical Files 1800-
Grinnell, Josiah Bushnell (J.B.)
Fait partie de Biographical Files 1800-
Grinnell, Iowa was founded in March 1854 by Josiah Bushnell Grinnell (1821-1891) who chose a site which surveys indicated would be the junction of two railroads. Grinnell was a minister, trustee and benefactor of Iowa College (later renamed Grinnell College), helped organize the Republican party in Iowa, was a Representative to the Iowa legislature and later to the U.S. House (1863), was active in agricultural development and railroad building. He and his wife, Julia Chapin, were both descended from old New England families; their daughter, Mary Grinnell Mears, may have assembled some of these papers.
Genealogical charts in this collection trace part of the Grinnell family from Pierre Grenelle, born about 1480 in France. A descendant, Matthew, born 1602, became a Protestant and moved to Newport, R.I., in 1630, beginning the American line of the family. Matthew’s son married a granddaughter of John and Priscilla Alden. Other charts trace various branches of the Chapin family from about 1576 to Mary Grinnell’s birth about 1857.