Search Results
- IDNO:
- 049789
- Title:
- First Football Team WVU, Morgantown, W. Va.
- Date:
- 1891-1892
- Description:
- "First Football Team, WVU; lost to W & J at Morgantown 1891-92, the first and only intercollegiate game in 1891-92. S. steps of "Prep." Bldg. Top row L. to R.; 1 Wm. C. Meyer, Mgr., 2 A. Brown Smith, 3 Wm. G. Swaney, 4 Gory Hogg, 5 Alpheus Edw. Boyd, 6 Sam'l R. Jenkins. Second row, 1 Geo. Henry A Kunst, 2 Andrew Price, 3 J.W. Hughes, 4 R.F. Bivens, 5 John Thomas Holbert, B.S.C.E. '92. On the ground, 1 N.B. Blake, 2 Geo. M. Ford, A.B. 1892"
- IDNO:
- 049790
- Title:
- Baseball Game, Morgantown, W. Va.
- Date:
- undated
- IDNO:
- 049791
- Title:
- Library Entrance from West of Street, Morgantown, W. Va.
- Date:
- 1914/05
- Description:
- Stewart Hall, once the administration building and WVU Library, shown from across University Avenue.
- IDNO:
- 049792
- Title:
- Stewart Hall, West Virginia University
- Date:
- undated
- Description:
- Side view of Stewart Hall, which was once the administration building at WVU
- IDNO:
- 049793
- Title:
- Stewart Hall, West Virginia University
- Date:
- undated
- Description:
- Front view of Stewart Hall, WVU, which was once the administration building
- IDNO:
- 049794
- Title:
- Stewart Hall, West Virginia University
- Date:
- undated
- Description:
- View of Stewart Hall and University Avenue in Morgantown, W. Va.
- IDNO:
- 049795
- Title:
- Library (Administration Building) View of Back-left Side, West Virginia University
- Date:
- 1903
- Description:
- Side view of Stewart Hall when it was the WVU Library and Administration building
- IDNO:
- 049796
- Title:
- Administration Building When It Was Still the Library, West Virginia University
- Date:
- 1903
- Description:
- Front view of Stewart Hall as the "Administration Building (Probably when still library)"
- IDNO:
- 049797
- Title:
- Interior of the Library when in the Administration Building, West Virginia University
- Date:
- undated
- Description:
- View of interior of Stewart Hall when it was the library
- IDNO:
- 049798
- Title:
- Interior of Library when in Administration Building, West Virginia University
- Date:
- undated
- Description:
- View of interior of Stewart Hall when it was the library
- IDNO:
- 049799
- Title:
- Family Portrait of Lee Family at Home of D.C. Lee, Emerson Road
- Date:
- ca. 1930s
- Description:
- Group Portrait of Maryat Lee's family. Left to right: Maryat's father, Dewitt Collins Lee, her Robert E. "Buzz" Lee, her Mother Grace Dyer Lee, Maryat, and her oldest brother, John Lee.Maryat Lee (born Mary Attaway Lee; May 26, 1923 – September 18, 1989) was an American playwright and theatre director who made important contributions to post-World War II avant-garde theatre. She pioneered street theatre in Harlem, and later founded EcoTheater in West Virginia, a community based theater project.Early in her career, Lee wrote and produced plays in New York City, including the street play “DOPE!” While in New York she also formed the Soul and Latin Theater (SALT), and wrote plays centered around the lives of the actors in the group.In 1970 Lee moved to West Virginia and formed the community theater group EcoTheater in 1975. Beginning with local teenagers from the Governor’s Summer Youth Program, the rural theater group grew, and produced plays based on oral histories collected from the local community. Each performance of an EcoTheater play involved audience participation and discussion. With the assistance of the Humanities Foundation of West Virginia, guest scholars became a part of EcoTheater.
- IDNO:
- 049800
- Title:
- Group portrait of Maryat Lee, her father, Dewitt Collins Lee, and friends
- Date:
- ca. summer 1937
- Description:
- Young Maryat Lee, seated far right, with her father, seated in the center of the bottom row, and the Lamberts.Maryat Lee (born Mary Attaway Lee; May 26, 1923 – September 18, 1989) was an American playwright and theatre director who made important contributions to post-World War II avant-garde theatre. She pioneered street theatre in Harlem, and later founded EcoTheater in West Virginia, a community based theater project.Early in her career, Lee wrote and produced plays in New York City, including the street play “DOPE!” While in New York she also formed the Soul and Latin Theater (SALT), and wrote plays centered around the lives of the actors in the group.In 1970 Lee moved to West Virginia and formed the community theater group EcoTheater in 1975. Beginning with local teenagers from the Governor’s Summer Youth Program, the rural theater group grew, and produced plays based on oral histories collected from the local community. Each performance of an EcoTheater play involved audience participation and discussion. With the assistance of the Humanities Foundation of West Virginia, guest scholars became a part of EcoTheater.