Huey P. Long published materials, 1932-1936.

ArchivalResource

Huey P. Long published materials, 1932-1936.

Broadsides, articles, clippings, and published volumes chiefly in defamation of Long's political career, including a copy of the July 28, 1933, issue of The Hammond Vindicator. The collection includes three letters to Edward L. Tinker and his wife referring to Huey Long, Rose McConnell Long, and Dr. Carl Austin Weiss.

28 items.

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Long, Rose McConnell, 1892-1970

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6gc2vdf (person)

Rose McConnell Long (April 8, 1892 – May 27, 1970) was a United States Senator and the wife of Huey Long. She was the third woman to ever serve as a U.S. Senator, and the first from Louisiana. She was a member of the Democratic Party. Born in Greensburg, Indiana, her family moved to Shreveport, Louisiana in 1901, where Rose attended the public schools and later became a local schoolteacher. She met Huey Long after she won a cake baking contest that he had organized to promote a product he was...

Long, Huey Pierce, 1893-1935

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w64f1q12 (person)

Huey Long Pierce, Louisiana governor and United States senator, was born 30 August 1893, near Winnfield, Winn Parish, Louisiana, and died 10 September 1935. He studied law and practiced in Winnfield after 1915; served as Louisiana public service commissioner (1921-1926); was elected governor of Louisiana (1928); was elected to the United States Senate (1930); and organized the Share-Our-Wealth Society (1934) for which he had national support. On 8 September 1935 he was shot by Dr. Carl A. Weiss ...

Weiss, Carl Austin, 1905-1935.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6w680pz (person)

Tinker, Edward Larocque, 1881-1968

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66t0kkm (person)

Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904) was a writer, translator, and teacher who wrote about New Orleans, the United States and is most well known for introducing the culture and literature of Japan to the West. Hearn spent ten years in New Orleans collecting songs for ethnomusicologist Henry Edward Krehbiel. Edward Laroque Tinker was a writer and a philanthropist who was interested in Hearn and wrote Lafcadio Hearn's American days (1924). From the guide to the Papers concerning Lafcadio Hearn, ...