This letter dated October 10, 1924 is from Clemson cadet Harold Witt to his father, concerning a student walkout that had recently occurred on campus.
The Wofford B. Camp Papers consist of subject correspondence files, magazine articles, speech memorabilia, newspaper clippings, and photographs documenting Camp's career from his days as a student at Clemson Agriculture College through the operation of the W. B. Camp & Sons Inc. agribusiness in California.
"Women Themselves" was a series of 26 half hour radio programs produced and broadcast by WEPR, a national pubic radio station located in Greenville, South Carolina. The project was jointly sponsored by WEPR and Alan Schaffer of the Department of History at Clemson University.
The collection includes one architectural drawing of Woodburn done by Clemson Agricultural College, Clemson, SC, in April 1963. It is drawing number 63003. The drawing is of elevations, floor plans and a drawing of the estate.
World War II Experiences is a memoir by Benson C. McWhite, a member of the Clemson Class of 1944 and of the 805th Signal Service Company which can be used to research cadet life at Clemson College just prior and during World War II; military and signals training; and SIGSALY, an encoded radio telephone system used during the war.
The War Information Center was established at Clemson College in April 1942. It was one of roughly 140 colleges and universities across the United States designated by the Library Service Division of the U.S. Office of Education to receive a wide range of publications and information in order to keep communities informed about the war effort in an age before mass media. The collection contains materials that document the events of World War II and its immediate aftermath.