The Latino Project, headed by attorney Luis P. Diaz, was a non-profit legal assistance and public advocacy organization that provided representation to Spanish-speaking groups and interests in Greater Philadelphia area. Until its demise in 1984, The…
The Latino Project, headed by attorney Luis P. Diaz, was a non-profit legal assistance and public advocacy organization that provided representation to Spanish-speaking groups and interests in Greater Philadelphia area. Until its demise in 1984, The…
The Latino Project, headed by attorney Luis P. Diaz, was a non-profit legal assistance and public advocacy organization that provided representation to Spanish-speaking groups and interests in Greater Philadelphia area. Until its demise in 1984, The…
Cincinnati naturalist, Thomas Gibson Lea lived in the Pittsburgh area until his marriage in 1822, when he moved with his family to Cincinnati. In this diary, Lea writes of this journey along the Ohio aboard the Antoinette.
Blank pamphlet in plain wrappers, with share at centerfold; printed forms pasted in; pencil inscription on final page.
Library Company copy owned by shareholder Henry Hill; given by George Vaux to the Philadelphia Athenaeum in April 1991; given by…
The American Sunday-School Union generally did not include dates in the imprints on the books they published and kept titles in print for long spans of time. This cataloger’s aid was developed by Holly Phelps from information in the Union’s…
The exhibition Ardent Spirits: The origins of the American temperance movement was held from Apr. 19, to Nov. 24, 1999, at the Library Company of Philadelphia. The curator was Jessy Randall.