Eunice Sullivan Gray papers, 1863-2001.

ArchivalResource

Eunice Sullivan Gray papers, 1863-2001.

Personal correspondence ranges from childhood friends to prominent Democratic public figures as well as a series of letters between family members, 1892-1959. Records document her fifteen year teaching career at Highland Park Junior High School; the column Gray wrote for the Sanger Courier; her work in helping found the Sanger Library, the Sanger Senior Center, and the Sanger Crisis Center and Bargain Depot; her membership in the Democratic Party, Daughters of the American Revolution, Denton County Historical Commission, Wednesday Study Club (member of the Texas Federation of Women's Clubs), and the First Baptist Church, Sanger. Local and family history records include research for her book The story of Sanger, unpublished writings, genealogical information, and photographs of family and early Denton County. Papers of her late husband, Paxton H. Gray, an independent oil producer, are also in the collection.

17 cubic ft. (ca.)

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

College of Industrial Arts (Denton, Tex.)

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6bh3g3c (corporateBody)

Gray, Paxton H.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6gr4n78 (person)

Gray, Eunice Sullivan

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6mt1h3m (person)

Educator, journalist, and community leader in Sanger, Texas. Graduate of the College of Industrial Arts, 1931; M. Ed. from Southern Methodist University, 1959. From the description of Eunice Sullivan Gray papers, 1863-2001. (Texas Woman's University Library). WorldCat record id: 50327301 Eunice Sullivan Gray was born in Texico, New Mexico. She was the youngest of three children. Mrs. Gray was raised primarily in Sanger, Texas where she attended grade school. ...