Box 32
Contains 44 Results:
JRS Jr. Correspondence, 1942-1949
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
JRS Jr. Correspondence Drafts, 1947
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
JRS Jr. Correspondence Drafts, 1949
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
Postcards, 1942, 1944-1945
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1940-1943
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1944
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1945
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1946
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
Postcards, 1946-1949
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1947
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.
WDS Correspondence, 1948-1950
Correspondence of note in this subseries include letters from Mabel Wolfe [Wheaton], Thomas Wolfe’s sister, who introduced Wilma Dykeman to James R. Stokely Jr. Other letters of note include congratulatory letters regarding the couple’s wedding and their first child, Dykeman Stokely, as well as letters documenting their early writing careers and James R. Stokely Jr.’s apple orchards.