The "Hardman Pamphlets" span the years 1880-1980, with the bulk of the material falling into the period 1920 to 1960. The pamphlets cover a broad spectrum of subjects, the greatest emphasis being on twentieth-century British, labor-oriented literature, ranging from political theories, primarily socialism, to practical worker education movements. An item-level inventory is available by clicking the image at the top of the finding aid, or at this link: https://archives.trinity.edu/uploads/r/trinity-university-archives-and-special-collections/0/8/f/08f26a0722b7447fd3cbd9e03b9cc2bc9ba934f1fc2e53464b46c4b3c36d99cd/Hardman_Pamphlet_Inventory.pdf .
Sem títuloHighlands High School football banquet , San Antonio, TX, 1966.
Pictured: President Jimmy Carter, Walter Huntley Jr., Geri Thompson (mayor's staff) and Roy Mays (local Atlanta attorney). White House, 1977.
Sem títuloPictured: Walter Huntley, Left of Walter Huntley is Lenny Springs, and far right is former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young at the unveiling new affordable housing development.
Walter Huntley pictured with Colin Powell, the 65th United States Secretary of State.
Sem títuloWalter Huntley and Zell Miller, Atlanta, GA.
Sem títuloWalter Huntley and Valerie Jackson (Maynard Jackson's wife).
Walter Huntley.
Pictured:
Congressman William Gray of Pennsylvania
Cecelia Corbin-Hunter
Walter Huntley
Cabinet members of Mayor Maynard Jackson.
Walter Huntley pictured in the Door of No Return at the House of Slaves Museum in Dakar, Senegal.
Pictured: Walter Huntley and unidentified person.
Walter Huntley in Sendai, Japan with a YKK manufacturing company executive.
Sem títuloWalter Huntley and former VP of Sports Illustrated in Barcelona, Spain.
Pictured: Walter Huntley, Spike Lee (filmmaker), Mayor Maynard Jackson.
After attending an international conference on Mexico held in New York in 1967, a group of Texas institutions came together to form a Texas Consortium as a special committee of SCOLAS (Southwestern Conference on Latin American Studies). Their aim was to record Mexican archival records on microfilm. The group's primary goal was not to compete with other microfilm projects but rather to complement and support them. Microfilming Mexican archival records served the dual purpose of preserving deteriorating and irreplaceable documents and making them more readily available to scholars in the United States.
By 1971, Trinity had become one of the sixteen institutions that joined the Texas Consortium for Microfilming Mexican Archival Material. Trinity took on the responsibility of microfilming records from Nuevo Leon and Coahuila.
Trinity collaborated with the Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM) and Tecnológico de Monterrey on their ongoing microfilming project in Nuevo Leon. Between 1970 and 1973, Trinity students played a key role in this project. They assisted in organizing documents for filming, compiled a list of microfilm materials sent to the university, and conducted research on historical information related to the region. Trinity's involvement significantly contributed to ITESM's ability to capture records spanning from 1599 through 1972.
Several other universities also participated in microfilming projects across Mexico. These institutions included the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Texas at El Paso, and St. Mary's University. These projects encompassed records and documents from the National Archives in Mexico City, as well as from the states of Coahuila, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Chihuahua, and Durango.
Sem títuloThis collection consists of records from the Human Communication and Theatre department at Trinity University, formally known as the Speech and Drama department. The majority of this collection contains information on season productions.
This collection consists of hard copy bulletins published by the university for distribution.
Mayor Maynard Jackson's Office, Atlanta, GA, 1981.
Pictured L-R
Walter Huntley, Jr.
Elnora Huntley
Maynard Jackson
Walter Huntley, Sr.