RH. Regional History Collections
Found in 529 Collections and/or Records:
Company K, Third Missouri State Cavalry Manuscript
Typed manuscript (3p) relating battles and skirmishes of Company K, compiled for The Banner newspaper at Marble Hill, [Mo]. Lists wounded, killed and uninjured.
Confederate Civil War Scrapbooks
Two scrapbooks and one printed address memorializing the Confederate States of America, and containing primarily newspaper clippings, currency, poetry, written tributes and memorials, and photographic images. Address is a tribute to General Robert E. Lee by Honorable Harry B. Hawes of Missouri.
Confederate Currency
Ten dollar note from the Confederate States of America.
"Course of the River Mississippi from Balise to Fort Chartres" Map
Copy of a rudimentary physical map drawn up during an expidition to the Illinois in late 1765 by Lieutenant Rofs of the 54th Regiment.
Courthouse Park: Cape Girardeau, MO Scrapbook
Articles relating to Cape Girardeau’s Courthouse Park, including debates over ownership, protection, and use.
Creative Guild Scrapbook
Poems and short stories published by the Creative Guild of Cape Girardeau, tryout signup sheets, fall 1933 Creative Guild yearbook, and news articles about the Guild.
Cross Family Genealogy
Genealogical research of the Cross and Edwards families of Dunklin County, compiled by Wendell Mills.
Cross the Mississippi at Cape Girardeau Map
Pamphlet advertising the usefulness of the Cape Girardeau Bridge across the Mississippi River. Includes a mileage chart to the city of Cape Girardeau from various cities across the United States. The pamphlet also has maps of the cities of St. Louis, Cape Girardeau, and Chicago.
Cumberland River, Nashville District, Navigation Charts
Navigation charts for the Cumberland River, Nashville District, from Mouth to Burnside, [Ky], produced by the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. Contains 74 charts.
"Curbing the Mississippi: A Gigantic Task" Article
Newspaper article written by Lieutenant Colonel J.R. Slattery on the floodings of the Mississippi River, comments made on the events by past United States Presidents, the utilization of levees, and alternative methods of deferring flood waters.