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[Letter to Clara Stewart from her son, fighter ace James C. Stewart, June 3, 1944]
Letter to Clara Stewart from her son, fighter ace James C. Stewart, June 3, 1944. Contains personal news written while Stewart was stationed in England. Discusses financial matters, daily life, and his combat film and photographs. Three handwritten pages. Part of a disassembled scrapbook containing World War II and post-war materials, circa 1943-1956.
[Letter from Howard Strickling to Imogen Cunningham, August 21, 1935]
Letter from Howard Strickling of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation to Imogen Cunningham, August 21, 1935. Explains Archibald's book was considered for adaptation but ultimately declined due to its similarity to another film to which MGM owns the rights. One typed page. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni,…
[Memo agreement between Jim Archibald and Alexander Markey, November 6, 1935]
Memo agreement between Norman "Jim" Archibald and Alexander Markey of the Motion Picture Foundation of the U.S.A., November 6, 1935. Enumerates the terms for Archibald granting the foundation film rights to his book. One typed page. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni, Inc., New York.
[Letter from unidentified person to Norman "Jim" Archibald, August 21, 1935]
Letter from [illegible name] of the Motion Picture Foundation of the U.S.A. to Norman "Jim" Archibald, August 21, 1935. Notes S. E. McKeown has sent the foundation Archibald's book, expresses interest in discussing film adaptation. One typed page. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni, Inc., New York.
[Letter from Buck to Norman "Jim" Archibald, circa 1935]
Letter from Buck [Harold Buckley] of Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. to Norman "Jim" Archibald, circa 1935. Forwards a "lousy" list of contacts (possibly 95th Squadron), advises Archibald to let Buckley be his agent in Hollywood for film options. One handwritten page.Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni, Inc.,…
[Letter from Harold E. Hartney to Major Meriam Cooper, January 4, 1935]
Letter from Harold E. Hartney to Major Meriam Cooper of RKO Studios, January 4, 1935. Recommends Archibald's book for film adaptation, notes he will be sending autographed copy, asks for meeting or appropriate contacts. One typed page. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni, Inc., New York.
[Letter from Harold E. Hartney to Meriam Cooper, January 4, 1935]
Letter from Harold Hartney to Meriam Cooper of RKO Studios, January 4, 1935. Possibly alternate version of previous letter; recommends Archibald's book for film adaptation, explains several notable contacts. Two typed pages. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni, Inc., New York.
[Letter from Buck to Norman "Jim" Archibald, October 26, 1935]
Letter from Buck [Harold Buckley] of Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. to Norman "Jim" Archibald, October 26, 1935. Explains reasoning for Warner Bros. and possibly other studios declining film adaptation of the book, suggests getting an agent in Hollywood. Two typed pages. Part of a series of documents relating to Archibald's book "Heaven High, Hell Deep," published in 1935 by Albert and Charles Boni,…
[V-mail letter to Clara Stewart from her son, fighter ace James C. Stewart, September 12, 1943]
V-mail letter to Clara Stewart from her son, fighter ace James C. Stewart, September 12, 1943. Contains personal news written while Stewart was stationed in England. Discusses a trip to London and events from daily life. One handwritten page. Part of a disassembled scrapbook containing World War II and post-war materials, circa 1943-1956.
The military career of Lee R. Embree from May, 1941 to January 1, 1942
Manuscript by Lee R. Embree, undated. Describes Embree's career as a U.S. Army Air Corps photographer during the period of May 1941 to January 1, 1942, including his experiences before, during, and after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941. 16 typed pages.