ua220b06f35_Abstract |
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Mrs. Lillibridge April 21, 1990 Washington State University interviewed by Lara Weig 0-6 6-15 15-29 29-40 40-49 49-60 60-78 78-91 91-106 106-117 117-124 124-142 142-159 159-179 179-208 208-246 246-255 255-274 274-300 300-314 314-325 325-338 338-364 364-377 introduction childhood- Grand Forks, North Dakota education- St. Mary's and University of North career- nursing and occupational therapy the move out West in 1926 Olympia in 1930 the building and maintaining of telephone lines description of land on Cooper Point Rd. importance of education in family Uncle's visit to China furniture knitting since 1920's first summer in Olympia and land they bought community service and husband's background description of Olympia home and talk of daughters time spent with husband mechanically inclined and likes crafts disciplining children Clint- her son boarding school and social life reading as child- a part of living talks of grandchildren housekeepers in Grand Forks home childhood memory- mice story 377-392 392-403 420-428 428-434 434-446 446-470 470-482 482-505 505-521 521-536 536-543 543-552 552-563 563-end 2 her father- caring for others in need summers in Minnesota and talk of helping community Yelm, Rainier, Olympia and Anne born organizations she belonged to Cream of Wheat- father helped start education- physics class and languages Olympia and its changes her children- volunteer work and education grandchildren Clint- doing good for others Episcopal Church, getting old Dorothy- present housekeeper boarders in downstairs apartment conclusion
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Lillibridge, Mary Gowran Oral History Interview, 1990 |
Interviewer | Weig, Lara |
Date | 1990-05-08 |
Description | 46 minute oral history with Mary Gowran Lillibridge, conducted for a Women in the West (HST 398) course at Washington State University. She discusses her family's influences in her education through college to becoming an occupational therapist while her husband was a doctor. She discusses her family of three children, how they were disciplined, their education, and community organizations. She helped with the development of many social clubs in Olympia and of telephone lines to outlying areas. |
Subject | Housewives; Public service |
Coverage | North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Thurston County--Olympia; North and Central America--United States--Washington (State)--Thurston County--Yelm; North and Central America--United States--North Dakota--Grand Forks County--Grand Forks |
Type | Sound |
Genre | Interviews |
Publisher | Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries: https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Rights Notes | In copyright. Item is in copyright until 95 years after 2011 publication date. |
Identifier | ua220b06f35 |
Source | Is found in Archives 220, Women in the West Oral Histories https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc/finders/ua220.htm at Washington State University Libraries' Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections (MASC) https://libraries.wsu.edu/masc |
Holding Institution | Manuscripts, Archives, and Special Collections, Washington State University Libraries |
Contributors | Digitization and description funded through a National Endowment for the Humanities We the People grant for Washington Womens History to the Washington Womens History Consortium, a part of the Washington State Historical Society. |
Language | English |
Digitization | Original audio cassettes were converted to wav files using Audacity and a USBPre interface. Mp3 files were then created from the wav files for online access. Film clips were created as mpeg-4 files using Adobe Premiere Elements 9 to add selected images to the wav audio files, and then converted to flv files for online display. Print documents were scanned to 300dpi pdf format using a Xerox Workcentre 5030 copier/scanner. |
Description
Title | ua220b06f35_Abstract |
Full Text | Mrs. Lillibridge April 21, 1990 Washington State University interviewed by Lara Weig 0-6 6-15 15-29 29-40 40-49 49-60 60-78 78-91 91-106 106-117 117-124 124-142 142-159 159-179 179-208 208-246 246-255 255-274 274-300 300-314 314-325 325-338 338-364 364-377 introduction childhood- Grand Forks, North Dakota education- St. Mary's and University of North career- nursing and occupational therapy the move out West in 1926 Olympia in 1930 the building and maintaining of telephone lines description of land on Cooper Point Rd. importance of education in family Uncle's visit to China furniture knitting since 1920's first summer in Olympia and land they bought community service and husband's background description of Olympia home and talk of daughters time spent with husband mechanically inclined and likes crafts disciplining children Clint- her son boarding school and social life reading as child- a part of living talks of grandchildren housekeepers in Grand Forks home childhood memory- mice story 377-392 392-403 420-428 428-434 434-446 446-470 470-482 482-505 505-521 521-536 536-543 543-552 552-563 563-end 2 her father- caring for others in need summers in Minnesota and talk of helping community Yelm, Rainier, Olympia and Anne born organizations she belonged to Cream of Wheat- father helped start education- physics class and languages Olympia and its changes her children- volunteer work and education grandchildren Clint- doing good for others Episcopal Church, getting old Dorothy- present housekeeper boarders in downstairs apartment conclusion |
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