Cosmopolitan Club record book.

ArchivalResource

Cosmopolitan Club record book.

The Cosmopolitan Club record book includes: member lists, treasurer reports, meeting minutes, group photos, and roll calls for meetings. The materials are written and pasted in a bound book containing 167 pages covering the years 1921-1942.

0.29 cu. ft. 1 box.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 6959261

University of Kentucky Libraries

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Cosmopolitan Club (Lexington, Ky.)

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YMCA of the USA

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A child of evangelical Protestantism, the YMCA at first considered itself a specialized agency for bringing young men to Christ. Although the early Y's mission was unabashedly religious in nature, the organization focused on method rather than doctrine or philosophy. Dominated by business men rather than professional religious leaders, the movement tended to emphasize facilities, expansion, practical usefulness, and specific influence. Early work included not only the distribution of tracts, Bib...

University of Kentucky.

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The University of Kentucky in Lexington, KY is a land grant institution founded in 1865. The University evolved through three stages before becoming the University of Kentucky in 1916: the Agriculture and Mechanical College of Kentucky University, 1865-78, a private, denominational institution in Lexington created by an act of the legislature on February 22, 1865; the Agriculture and Mechanical College of Kentucky, 1878-1908; and State University, Lexington, 1908-1916. A statute in 1916 changed ...

Cosmopolitan Club (University of Kentucky),

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The Cosmopolitan Club was organized through the YMCA to help bring foreign students into a closer relation with American Students, customs, and ideals. Likewise for the American student to understand the foreign student. The club grew rapidly and was believed to be of great aid to the foreign students in developing their ability as leaders and students. According to 1926-1927 "K Book" the club grew to a membership of about eighteen students and faculty, nine of which were foreign born. Meetings ...