Students, college -- Berea College
Found in 112 Collections and/or Records:
Harold H. Johnston papers
The Harold H. Johnston papers document the young adult life experiences of a Berea College student from Brooklyn, New York, who studied business at Berea at the close of the nineteenth century.
Health and Human Performance Department
Records of the Health and Human Performance Department (previously Physical Education and Health) at Berea College.
Henry Allen Laine Collection
This is a collection of records and materials documenting the life and work of Berea College graduate and civil rights leader Henry Allen Laine. Materials include biographical sketches, copies of correspondence, a copy of "Foot Prints," Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame support letters and materials, and Laine's Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame plaque.
Japanese-American Students During WWII
A small collection of materials providing information regarding Japanese-American students who attended Berea College as a result of internment or relocation during World War II.
Jim Adams Papers
Jim Adams attended the Berea College affiliated Foundation School in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Joe Hurt Papers
Joe Hurt was born March 22, 1900, in Pike County, and attended Pikeville Academy, Berea College and the University of Kentucky where he received a BS in agriculture in 1928. He was an agriculture extension agent for 20 years, first in Boyd County and then McCracken County. In 1948 he moved to Mercer County where he operated a farm on Handy Pike.
John Bell Stephenson Papers, 1984-1994
John F. Gregg Papers
John F. Gregg, descendant of John Gregg Fee, founder of Berea College, was born in Bracken County, Ky, in 1850. He graduated from Berea College in 1875 alongside two classmates: John R. Rogers and A.A. Burleigh. He later became a Berea College trustee and was a member of the board of trustees which called William Goodell Frost to the presidency of the College. He passed away in Genoa Ohio in 1931.
Johnny Anderson Papers
Johnny Anderson attended the Academy School of Berea College between 1929 and 1931.