D. D. Dougherty Library, Edmisten and Eury, circa 1960
 

http://contentdm.library.appstate.edu:81/cgi-bin/showfile.exe

Citation

“D. D. Dougherty Library, Edmisten and Eury, circa 1960,” Appalachian State University Libraries Digital Collections, accessed December 24, 2024, https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/items/show/13707.


Comments

Allowed tags: <p>, <a>, <em>, <strong>, <ul>, <ol>, <li>

Title

D. D. Dougherty Library, Edmisten and Eury, circa 1960

Description

This image shows Maxie Edmisten, dean of Women, and Library Director William L. Eury looking at a collection of donated notebooks from A. J. Greene, former Appalachian Training School teacher, in D. D. Dougherty Library, built 1935, at Appalachian State Teachers College (1929-1967) in June 1962. Greene taught English at Appalachian State from 1915-1939. Edmisten served as dean from 1957 until her retirement in 1971. Eury worked at the library at Appalachian State since 1929, and served as library director from 1945 to 1970.

Subject

Administrators
Staff
Libraries
Academic libraries
Appalachian State University

Source

News Bureau Faculty and Staff Biographical File, 2004.265, Box 4, Edmisten, Maxie, C11.1.2.4.

Publisher

University Archives, Appalachian State University

Date

1962-06

Contributor

News Bureau

Format

JPEG
Photographs

Language

English

Type

Image

Temporal Coverage

1960s

Corporate Names

Appalachian State Teachers College (N.C.)

Personal Names

Edmisten, Maxie Greene, 1909-1992. Eury, William Leonard, 1904-1995

Place Names

D. D. Dougherty Library (1935)

Series

Series 4 -- Faculty and Staff. Series 6 -- Colleges, Departments, Offices, and Centers

File name

6409_2004_265_A.jpg

Sponsors

The Appalachian State University Historical Photographs Digitization Project is supported with federal Library Service and Technology Act (LSTA) funds made possible through a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources through the North Carolina ECHO, 'Exploring Cultural Heritage Online' Digitization Grant Program.