7
Contains 17 Results:
Kenyon, Helen - Response from Public to Merger and Legal Cases, 1948 - 1950
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Kenyon, Helen - United Church of America , 1948 - 1949
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Kenyon, Helen - Uniting General Synod of the Congregational Christian Church and the Evangelical and Reformed Church , 1957
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Merrill, Charles C. - Anti-Merger arguments , 1948 - 1951
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Pious, I.M. (pseudonym)
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Richardson, Robert K., 1948 - 1950
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.
Swan, Alfred, 1963
Series III contains extensive professional and personal correspondence of Helen Keyon, Malcolm K. Burton, Howard Conn, Charles Merrill, Stanley North, Albert Palmer, Marion Bradshaw, and responses from lay people both for and against the proposed merger.