Wheaton College (Ill.) -- 1940s
Found in 25 Collections and/or Records:
Donald W. Berry Oral History Interview
Elias Hatcher Papers
Elisabeth Elliot Papers
Eric and Lydia Maillefer Papers
George M. Winston Papers
Helen E. Evans Oral History Interviews
Helen R. Jongewaard Oral History Intervie
Helen Renich Papers.
Jack Frizen Papers
Jeannette Thiessen Oral History Interviews
John A. MacDonald Oral History Interviews
Joseph C. MacKnight Oral History Interview
Kathryn M. Feldi Oral History Interview
Marian Chapman Papers
Oral history interviews, photographs, and prayer letters relating to the ministry of Marian Gold Chapman, a missionary with Latin America Mission in Cartagena, Colombia (1957-1975); Bogota, New Jersey (1975-1977), and Coral Gables, Florida (1977-1979).
Mary M. Johnson Oral History Interview
Oral history interview with Mary Margaret Garfield Johnson in which she discusses her family background; education at Wheaton College with emphasis on the activities of the literary societies; and her impressions of fellow classmate Billy Graham.The time period covered by the interviews is 1920 to 1943.
Mary Margaret Garfield Johnson was interviewed by Robert Shuster on May 7, 1993 at the Billy Graham Center Archives at Wheaton College.
Mertis Byram Heimbach Oral History Interviews
Paul D. Votaw Oral History Interview
Paul E. Freed Oral History Interview
Phyllis E. Taylor Oral History Interview
Raymond Buker Jr. Oral History Interview
Raymond Elliott Oral History Interview
Robert and Winifred Hockman Papers
Collection documenting the medical missionary service of Robert and Winnifred Hockman with the United Presbyterian Church in Ethiopia, including correspondence written by Hockmans to Robert Hockman’s parents, photographs, a scrapbook about the life and death of Robert Hockman, and oral history interviews with Winifred Hockman. The collection contains extensive material on the Italo-Ethiopian War and the work of the International Red Cross.
Samuel D. Faircloth Papers
Prayer letters and an oral history interviews which document Samuel Douglas Faircloth’s childhood, conversion, education at Wheaton College and elsewhere, and his work as a United States Army chaplain in Italy immediately after World War II, as a church planter in Portugal, and a seminary professor at the Tyndale Theological Seminary in the Netherlands.