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   <eadheader audience="internal" langencoding="iso639-2b" findaidstatus="unverified-full-draft">
      <eadid publicid="-//Duke University::David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library//TEXT (US::NDD::::Craven-Pegram Family Papers)//EN" countrycode="us" mainagencycode="ndd" url="http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/findingaids/cravpeg/">cravpeg</eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <titleproper>Register of the Craven-Pegram Family Papers, <date normal="1785/1966" type="inclusive">1785-1966</date></titleproper>
            <author>Processed by Janie C. Morris; machine-readable finding aid created by
Alvin Pollock, Electronic Text Unit, UC Berkeley Library</author>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            
            <date> 1997</date>
            <p>Duke University. All rights reserved.</p>
         </publicationstmt>
         <notestmt>
         <note><p>Aleph Number: <num type="aleph">001020703</num></p></note></notestmt>
      </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <creation>Machine-readable finding aid derived from MS Word.
Date of source: <date>October 31, 1990.</date>
         </creation>
         <langusage>Description is in <language>English.</language>
         </langusage>
      </profiledesc>
      <revisiondesc>
         <change>
            <date normal="20050812">08-12-2005</date>
            <item>PUBLIC "-//Duke University::David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library//TEXT (US::NDD::::Craven-Pegram Family Papers)//EN" "cravpeg.sgm"
 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (sy2003-10-15).</item>
		<item>Also, the top level of the finding aid (above the dsc) changed to conform to current Rubenstein Library and NC EAD standards as laid out in the Inventory Style Guide and in the NCEAD Best Practice Guidelines.  Within the dsc, dates for series were normalized. These changes were made by Michelle Belden.</item>
<item>Also, container TYPE and LABEL attribute values were standardized according to the Rubenstein Library EAD 2002 manual and the NCEAD eadlocal.ent by Ruth E. Bryan.</item><item>The tag list inside index was changed to indexentry by Ruth E. Bryan.</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date>June 29, 1998</date>
            <item>Updated to EAD Version 1.0 from EAD Beta by Stephen Miller</item>
         </change>
      </revisiondesc>
   </eadheader>
   <frontmatter>
      <titlepage>
         <titleproper>Register of the Craven-Pegram Family Papers, 1785-1966</titleproper>
         <publisher>David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library<lb/>
            
            <lb/>Duke University<lb/>Durham, North Carolina 27708-0185</publisher>
         
         <p> 1997 Duke University. All rights reserved.</p>
      </titlepage>
   </frontmatter>
   <archdesc level="collection">
      <did>
         <head>Descriptive Summary</head>
         <unittitle label="Title">Craven-Pegram Family Papers,
<unitdate normal="1785/1966" type="inclusive">1785-1966</unitdate>
         </unittitle>
         <origination label="Creator">Craven-Pegram Family</origination>
         <physdesc label="Extent">
		<extent>11.4 linear feet</extent>
		<extent>Approximately 6,565 items</extent>
	   </physdesc>
         <repository label="Repository">
            <corpname>Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library</corpname>
            <address>
               <addressline>Durham, North Carolina 27708-0185</addressline>
            </address>
         </repository>
         <physloc label="Location">For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the library's online catalog.</physloc>
         <langmaterial label="Language">
            <language langcode="eng">English.</language>
         </langmaterial>
      </did>
      <descgrp type="admininfo">
         <head>Administrative Information</head>
		<accessrestrict>
			<head>Access Restrictions</head>
			<p>Collection is open for research.</p> 
			<p>However, patrons must sign the Acknowledgment of Legal Responsibility and Privacy Rights form before using this
collection.</p> 
			<p>Also, all or portions of this collection may be housed off-site in Duke University's Library Service Center. Consequently, there may be a 24-hour delay in obtaining these materials.</p>   
			<p>Please contact Research Services staff before visiting the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library to use this collection.</p> 
		</accessrestrict>
		<userestrict>
			<head>Use Restrictions</head>
            	<p>The copyright interests in this collection are unknown at this time. For more information, consult a Reference Librarian and the copyright section of the Regulations and Procedures of the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library.</p>
		</userestrict>
         <prefercite>
            <head>Preferred Citation</head>
            <p>[Identification of item], Craven-Pegram Family Papers,
David M. Rubenstein Rare Book &amp; Manuscript Library, Duke University.</p>
         </prefercite>
         <acqinfo>
            <head>Provenance</head>
            <p>The Craven-Pegram Family Papers were given to Duke University Library
in 1968 through the settlement of the Annie McKinnie Pegram estate.
Copyright interests in these papers have not been transferred to the
University.</p>
         </acqinfo>
	   <processinfo>
		<head>Processing Information</head>
			<p>Processed by Janie C. Morris</p>
            	<p>Completed October 31, 1990</p>
            	<p>Encoded by Alvin Pollock, Electronic Text Unit, UC 			Berkeley Library</p>
			<p>This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.</p>
	   </processinfo>
      </descgrp>
      <bioghist>
         <head>Biographical Note</head>
         <p>The children and grandchildren of Braxton Craven (1822-1882),
first president of Trinity College in Randolph County, N.C., and his wife,
Irene (Leach) Craven, are the principals in the Craven-Pegram Family
Papers. The children of Braxton Craven most prominently represented
are Sallie Kate (Kate) and Emma Lenora Craven, who married William
Howell (W. H.) Pegram. The grandchildren primarily featured are those of
Emma L. and W. H. Pegram, George Braxton, Annie McKinnie, Irene
Craven, John Edward, and William Howell Pegram, Jr.</p>
         <p>Kate Craven, who attended Greensboro College, returned to her
family's home in Trinity, N.C. to live until 1928, when she moved to
Durham. Kate lived with two of Emma and W. H. Pegram's children,
Irene and John Edward (Edward or Ned) Pegram, until her death in
1945.</p>
         <p>Emma L. Craven (d. 1904) and W. H. Pegram (d. 1928) married in
1875 and lived in Trinity, N.C. until 1892, when they moved to Durham,
N.C. W. H. Pegram was a professor in Trinity College from 1873 to 1919
and professor emeritus from 1919 to 1928. He taught chemistry and for
many years was secretary to the faculty.</p>
         <p>Annie M. Craven (d. 1966) graduated from Trinity College and
began teaching German and mathematics at Greensboro Female College
in 1901. She was involved with the social and religious life on the
campus and also taught Sunday school at the Greensboro jail for several
years. During the 1920s, the N.C. Board of Charities and Public Welfare
appointed her to the Guilford Board of Public Welfare. In 1938, she
became a fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. With only a brief interruption in her tenure at Greensboro
Female College, after a fire in 1904, she retired from the College in 1948.
After her retirement, she lived in Durham with her sister Irene and her
brother John Edward.</p>
         <p>William H. Pegram, Jr. worked in Florida, Alabama, Georgia,
Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, and Texas. In 1916 he married Rosalie Pitzlin of
Houston, and they settled there.</p>
         <p>John Edward Pegram (d. 1951) tried several different occupations
including school principal, lawyer, businessman, and farmer. </p>
         <p>Irene Craven Pegram (d. 1958) taught for several years at West
Durham High School and in the Durham city school system into the
1920s. After a period of ill health, she retired to manage the Pegram
family home. Irene and John Edward, both of whom never married,
continued to live in the home.</p>
         <p>George Braxton Pegram (1876-1958) graduated from Trinity
College and served as a school administrator in Trinity and Roxboro,
N.C. In the fall of 1899, he went to Columbia University where, during
his fifty seven years of association with the school, he was a student,
professor of physics, dean of graduate studies, vice-president, and
adviser to the president. He was a pioneer in the field of atomic energy
research, became one of the country's leading physicists. During the
1950s, he was an educational consultant at the Oak Ridge Institute of
Nuclear Studies in Tennessee. He married Florence Bement in 1909,
and they had two children William Braxton and John Bement Pegram.
The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections, 1970-1971
describes a collection of about 35,000 items of his professional and
personal papers located at Columbia University. </p>
         <p>The daughter-in-law of Braxton and Irene (Leach) Craven, Nannie
(Bulla) Craven (d. 1937), married James Lucius Craven, a physician. He
died in 1885 at the age of thirty-five, leaving her with five sons to rear.
She supported herself and the children by teaching at Archdale and then
at Trinity High School in Trinity, N.C.</p>
      </bioghist>
      <scopecontent>
         <head>Collection Overview</head>
         <p>The Craven-Pegram Family Papers span the period 1785 to 1966,
with the bulk dating from 1892 to 1958. The collection chiefly consists
of correspondence among various family members and friends, and
photographs. Included are legal and financial papers, writings and
speeches, genealogical material, newsclippings, and printed material.
While the principal focus of the collection is Sallie Kate Craven (Kate) and
her sister, Emma L. (Craven) Pegram and her family, information about
earlier generations of the Craven, Pegram, and Leach families is included
in the legal and genealogical material.</p>
         <p>The major strength of the collection is the information on the
descendents of the first president of Trinity College, Braxton Craven. The
letters document the lifestyles and roles of young girls and women in the
late 19th and early 20th century and the socialization process of girls.
Additionally, single career women, married women who raised a family at
home, and a widow supporting a family are represented in the collection.</p>
         <p>Other topics in the Correspondence Series include: the impact of
Trinity College on the development of a community and the effects of the
loss of the institution, Columbia University's Physics Department, the
economic depression of the 1930s and how it impacted upon Pegram
family members, high school and college education in North Carolina,
and the process by which young men obtained jobs and established
themselves in their occupation. Some of George B. Pegram's letters
describe his attendance at the New York World's Fair in 1939 and
describe social occasions he went to that were attended by Dwight David
Eisenhower (1949, Jan. 30 and Dec. 31), then president of Columbia.
Annie M. Pegram's letters home (1904-1948) recount her many activities
at Greensboro College and her involvement in community life in
Greensboro. A few letters dating from the turn of the century into the
1940s provide a glimpse at hiring domestic help, particularly cooks.
Through the collection, one is able to study the functions of the family
both as an economic and social unit.</p>
         <p>Of particular interest to those studying the history of Trinity
College are the weekly letters of Kate Craven to Emma L. Pegram (1892-
1903) after she and her family moved to Durham in 1892. In addition to
news about family and friends in Trinity, N.C., Kate also discussed her
bitterness over the movement of Trinity College to Durham and its effect
upon the Trinity community. The correspondence series also contains
an unsigned, undated letter, relating to a contract Braxton Craven had
signed with the U.S. government about the education of Cherokee boys
at Trinity College.</p>
         <p>Emma Pegram's letters, written chiefly to her son George from the
mid-1890s to 1903, contain many comments about the administrators
and faculty of Trinity College and Trinity Park School in Durham.
Scattered references are made to John Carlisle Kilgo, president of Trinity
College, and his family.</p>
         <p>A letterbook primarily containing letters which Nannie (Bulla)
Craven wrote to her son, Harvey Bernard Craven, details the financial
hardships faced by the widowed parent of five sons. She wrote the
majority of the letters, 1893 and 1896, from Trinity, N.C. while Harvey
was a student at Trinity College. Her letters also provide a glimpse of the
Trinity community after Trinity College moved to Durham. There are
scattered references to Trinity High School, a tuition based school in
Trinity that remained after the college was relocated, and its faculty. The
narrow parameters within which women of the period lived are clearly
illustrated.</p>
         <p>Correspondents other than family members include: M. H.
Lockwood (1897), who taught in the Department of Physics at Trinity
College; Thomas Arthur Smoot (1898-1900), who was the headmaster at
Trinity (N.C.) High School, 1895-1896, professor of physics and
chemistry at Greensboro (N.C.) Female College, 1898-1900, and later a
minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South; and Jerome Dowd
(1941-1945) who wrote a book about Braxton Craven, entitled The Life of
Braxton Craven.</p>
      </scopecontent>
    
 <dsc type="combined">
         <head>Contents of Collection</head>
            <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <container type="box">1-20</container>
               <unittitle>Correspondence,
<unitdate normal="1862/1965" type="inclusive">1862-1965 </unitdate>and undated
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>4,560 items. (7.8 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Primarily documents the relationships of family and friends in the
Craven and Pegram families. A letterbook, 1893-1898 contains about
150 letters, mostly from Mrs. Nannie (Bulla) Craven to her son Harvey
Bernard Craven while he was a student at Trinity College in Durham,
N.C.</p></scopecontent>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">1</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1862-1894, Mar.</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">2</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1894, Apr.-1896, Oct. 15 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">3</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1896, Oct. 16-1898, Dec. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">4</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1899, Jan.-1900, Feb. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">5</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1900, Mar.-1901, Feb. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">6</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1901, Mar.-1902, Sept. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">7</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1902, Oct.-1904, June </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">8</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1904, July-1906, Sept. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">9</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1906, Oct.-1908, May </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(6 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">10</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1908, June-1910, Dec. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(7 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">11</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1911, Jan.-1915 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(9 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">12</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1916-1927 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">13</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1928, Jan.-1937, May </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">14</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1937, June-1940, May </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(9 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">15</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1940, June-1943, Dec. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">16</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1944, Jan.-1946, Dec. </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(8 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">17</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1947, Jan.-1952 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(10 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">18</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1953-1961 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(9 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">19</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1962-1966 and undated </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(5 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>undated, </unitdate>letters and fragments, S. Kate Craven, Annie McKinnie Pegram, Irene Craven-Pegram </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(3 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">20</container>
                  <unittitle>Letterbook, 
<unitdate>1893-1898</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Legal Papers,
<unitdate normal="1785/1961" type="inclusive">1785-1961.</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>200 items. (.3 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Legal Papers, 1785-1961. 200 items. (.3 linear ft.)
Deeds, wills, insurance policies, summons, and teacher
contracts, principally relating to members of the Craven,
Pegram, and Leach families. Many of the earlier deeds concern
property in Randolph County, N. C. Also includes information
beginning in 1838 about the settlement of the Bucknier Lanier
estate which involved a number of slaves. Other documents
pertain to a court case (1891) brought by the High Point,
Randleman, Ashboro, and Southern Railroad to obtain the right
of way to property owned by the Cravens and Pegrams.</p>
               <p>There are folders for the estates of Braxton and Irene
(Leach) Craven; Sallie (Kate) Craven; John Edward Pegram; and
William Howell Pegram, Sr. Two categories: papers and estates.</p>
               
            </scopecontent>
	<arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged chronologically within each.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">21</container>
                  
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1785-1961 </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(4 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Estates of:</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Braxton Craven </persname>&amp; <persname>Irene Leach Craven </persname>
                        <unitdate>1884-1945 and undated, </unitdate>
                     </unittitle>
                     <physdesc>
                     
   <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                     </physdesc>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Sallie Kate Craven, </persname>
                        <unitdate>1928-1946</unitdate>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>John Edward Pegram, </persname>
                        <unitdate>1942-1952</unitdate>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>William Howell Pegram, Sr., </persname>
                        <unitdate>1916-1937</unitdate>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
         </c01>
        <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Financial Papers,
<unitdate normal="1898/1908" type="inclusive">1898-1908.</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>80 items. (.2 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Ledger (1898-1899) from the Roxboro Institute maintained during
the period George B. Pegram was principal of the school listing tuition
payments for students.</p>
               <p>Also receipts from various businesses, bank deposit slips, and
information pertaining to interest statements. Loose materials are
arranged chronologically.</p>
            </scopecontent>
	 <arrangement>
                  <p>The volumes are arranged chronologically immediately following the loose
materials.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">21</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1840s-1909</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">22</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1910-1965</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>
                     <persname>George B. Pegram's </persname>Ledger, <corpname>Roxboro Institute, </corpname>
                     <unitdate>1898-1899</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Pegram Family's Household Account, 
<unitdate>1906-1908,</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Writings and Speeches,
<unitdate normal="1914/1951" type="inclusive">1914-1951 and undated</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>80 items. (.2 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Political speeches before civic groups, primarily made by W. H. Pegram,
Sr. and John Edward Pegram. Also a eulogy delivered by W. H. Pegram,
Sr. honoring James H. Southgate as well as other eulogies, including one
for W. H. Pegram, Sr. Contains stories about Brazil by W. B. Lee, who
was with the Methodist Board of Missions in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and
travelogues prepared by Jerome Dowd about his families' trips to
Arkansas, Tennessee, and Florida during 1938. Some of the writings are
anonymous.</p>
            </scopecontent><arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged chronologically.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">22</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1914-1951 and undated</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Stories about <geogname>Brazil, </geogname>
                     <unitdate>1930s</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
        <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Genealogy,
<unitdate type="bulk">(bulk undated)</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>320 items. (.3 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Chiefly notes and correspondence concerning the genealogical history of
the Craven, Leach, and Pegram families. Most of the material relates to
the Pegram family, including a printed history of the family.</p>
            </scopecontent><arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged alphabetically by name of family.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">22</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <famname>Craven and Leach Families, </famname>
                     <unitdate>undated</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>
                     <famname>Pegram Family, </famname>
                     <unitdate>undated</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">23</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <famname>Pegram Family, </famname>
                     <unitdate>undated </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(3 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
        <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Miscellaneous,
<unitdate normal="1837/1958" type="inclusive">1873-1958 and undated</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>(.6 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Kate Craven's notes about the Braxton Craven house and family
cemetery in Trinity, N.C.; school reports for George Braxton, Irene, and
William H. Pegram, Jr.; information about John Edward's farm in Orange
County, N.C.; diplomas; certificates; a war ration book; a floor plan for
the Pegram house on Buchanan Blvd.; a 1963 list of items Annie Pegram
gave to Trinity Methodist Church in Durham; and notes about teaching
public speaking and English. Also miscellaneous volumes. Two
categories: loose materials and volumes.</p>
            </scopecontent><arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged chronologically within each.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">23</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1892-1963 and undated </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Record book, Greensboro jail, 
<unitdate>1919-1929</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Memorial volume, 
<unitdate>1951</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">24</container>
                  <unittitle>Memorial volume, 
<unitdate>1958, Jan.</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Memorial volume, 
<unitdate>1958, Aug</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Scrapbook, 
<unitdate>1876?-1904</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Scrapbook, 
<unitdate>undated</unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle>Clippings,
<unitdate normal="1890/1899" type="inclusive">1890s </unitdate>and <unitdate normal="1960/1969" type="inclusive">1960s </unitdate>and undated
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>70 items. (.1 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Chiefly obituaries of Craven, Pegram, and Leach family members. Also
information about a fire at the Greensboro Female College in 1904;
several clippings about the professional activities of George Braxton
Pegram, including information about his work in the atomic energy field;
and a few relating to James and Nannie (Bulla) Craven's children.</p>
            </scopecontent> <arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged chronologically by decade.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="box">25</container>
                  <unittitle>1890s-1960s and 
<unitdate>undated </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(4 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
        <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Printed Material,
<unitdate normal="1875/1942" type="inclusive">1875-1942 and undated</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>50 items. (.1 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Chiefly invitations and commencement programs of various schools and
academies in North Carolina, including Thomasville Female College,
Roxboro Institute, Trinity High School (Trinity, N. C.), Bethel Hill
Institute, Trinity Park High School (Durham, N.C.), and Bellwood
Institute. Also a few calling cards.</p>
            </scopecontent><arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged chronologically.</p>
               </arrangement>
            <c02>
               <did><container type="box">25</container>
                  <unittitle>
                     <unitdate>1875-1942 and undated </unitdate>
                  </unittitle>
                  <physdesc>
                     <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                  </physdesc>
               </did>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               
               <unittitle>Pictures,
<unitdate normal="1850/1959" type="inclusive">1850s to 1950s.</unitdate>
               </unittitle>
               <physdesc>1,080 items. (1.8 linear ft.)</physdesc>
            </did>
            <scopecontent>
               <p>Primarily photographs of Craven and Pegram family members,
including Braxton and Irene (Leach) Craven. The oldest photographs are
a daguerreotype of Irene (Leach) Craven, a tintype of Braxton Craven,
and an ambrotype of Emma (Craven) Pegram.</p>
               <p>Also includes photographs of persons associated with Trinity
College, including John Spencer Bassett, Julian S. Carr, Robert Lee
Flowers, John Carlisle Kilgo and his family, M. H. Lockwood, Samuel Fox
Mordecai, Dred Peacock, and James Haywood Southgate, as well as a
photograph of Josephus Daniels, Southern Conservatory of Music
students, and Trinity High School faculty and students.</p>
               <p>A few are of various locations and events in Durham, Durham County,
and Trinity, N. C. They include for Durham, the Bennett Place, the fire
on March 23, 1914, the William Howell Pegram home at 308 Buchanan
Blvd., and for Durham County the Bennehan Cameron home. There are
photographs of the following places in Trinity, N. C. the: Braxton Craven
home; Trinity Hotel; railroad station; and Springfield and Trinity
cemeteries. Two categories: people and geographic.</p>
               <arrangement>
                  <p>Arranged alphabetically within each.</p>
               </arrangement>
            </scopecontent>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>People</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did><container type="box">25</container>
                     <unittitle>A (4 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Bassett, John Spencer</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Bassett, L.-B </persname>(2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Carr, Julian Shakespeare </persname>and American Indian Couple</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Carr, O.-Ch </persname>( 3 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, Braxton </persname>(2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, Harvey Bernard </persname>and Family</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="box">26</container>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, Irene (Leach)</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, J. </persname>(2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, Sallie (Kate)</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Craven, W.</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Daniels, Josephus</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Do-E (3 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Flowers, Robert Lee</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Fr-H ( 9 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <famname>Kilgo, John Carlisle Family</famname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Kin-Le ( 5 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Lockwood, M. H.</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Mer-Mi (2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Mordecai, Samuel Fox</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Ne-Page (2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Peacock, Dred </persname>and Family</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="box">27</container>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, Annie McKinnie </persname>
                     </unittitle>
                     <physdesc>
                        <extent>(3 folders)</extent>
                     </physdesc>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, Emma Lenora (Craven)</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, George Braxton </persname>&amp; Family</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, George Washington</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, Irene Craven </persname>(2 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, John D. </persname>&amp; Family</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, John Edward </persname>et.al. </unittitle>
                     <physdesc>
                        <extent>(4 folders)</extent>
                     </physdesc>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="box">28</container>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, William </persname>&amp; <persname>Gladys Blacknall Pegram </persname>et.al.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, William Braxton </persname>&amp; Family</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, William Howell, </persname>
                        <unitdate>d. 1928</unitdate>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Pegram, William Howell, Jr., </persname>
                        <persname>Rosalie (Pitzlin) Pegram </persname>et.al.</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>Pl-Rol (7 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Smoot, Thomas Arthur</persname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <persname>Southgate, James Haywood </persname>et.al</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>St-Tur (6 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>People (Identified) Miscellaneous </unittitle>
                     <physdesc>
                        <extent>(3 folders)</extent>
                     </physdesc>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <container type="box">29</container>
                     <unittitle>People (Identified) Miscellaneous</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>People (Unidentified) </unittitle>
                     <physdesc>
                        <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                     </physdesc>
                  </did>
               </c03>
            </c02>
            <c02 level="subseries">
               <did>
                  <unittitle>Geographic</unittitle>
               </did>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <geogname>Georgia. Stone Mountain </geogname>(Carving)</unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <geogname>Massachusetts. Amherst</geogname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <geogname>New York. Niagara Falls</geogname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
               </c03>
               <c03>
                  <did>
                     <unittitle>
                        <geogname>North Carolina:</geogname>
                     </unittitle>
                  </did>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Bath</geogname>
                        </unittitle>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Durham </geogname>(9 picture envelopes)</unittitle>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Durham County </geogname>
                        </unittitle>
                        <physdesc>
                           <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                        </physdesc>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Lake Junaluska</geogname>
                        </unittitle>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Salisbury</geogname>
                        </unittitle>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>
                           <geogname>Trinity </geogname>(5 picture envelopes and folders)</unittitle>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
                  <c04>
                     <did>
                        <unittitle>Miscellaneous </unittitle>
                        <physdesc>
                           <extent>(2 folders)</extent>
                        </physdesc>
                     </did>
                  </c04>
               </c03>
            </c02>
         </c01>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle>Oversize Materials</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="opaperfolder">1</container>
                  <unittitle>Miscellaneous Papers, 
<unitdate>1873-1908</unitdate>                 </unittitle>
               </did>
            
          <scopecontent>
   <p>Chiefly diplomas and certificates.</p></scopecontent>
   
   </c02>           <c02>
               <did>
                  <container type="opaperfolder">2</container>
                  <unittitle>Legal Papers, 
<unitdate>1836-1944</unitdate>                   </unittitle>
               </did>
            
            <scopecontent>
   <p>Chiefly deeds and insurance papes.  </p>
   
   </scopecontent>
   </c02>
         </c01>
      </dsc>
   </archdesc>
</ead>
