MUM00732
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University of Mississippi Libraries
Jamie L. Whitten Collection
MUM00732
Table of Contents
- Summary Information
- Biographical Note
- Scope and Content
- Administrative Information
- Related Materials
- Access Restriction
- PURL
- Collection Inventory
- Series 1:
Congressional Record - Series 2: Corps of Engineers
- Series 3: Daily Memos
- Series 4: Departments & Agencies
- Series 5: Federal Assistance
- Series 6: Green Sheets
- Series 7: Guest Books
- Series 8: Invitations
- Series 9: Logs of Assistance
- Series 10: Office Administration
- Series 11: Personal
- Series 12: Photographs
- Series 13: Politics
- Series 14: Post Office
- Series 15: Public Relations
- Series 16: Published Writings
- Series 17: Recordings
- Series 18: School Desegregation
- Series 19: Scrapbooks
- Series 20: Special Interest
- Series 21: Special Letters Scrapbooks
- Series 22: Speeches
- Series 23:
That We May Live - Series 24: Trips
- Series 25: University of Mississippi
- Series 26: Voting Records
- Series 27: Whitten’s Notes
- Series 28: Clippings
- Series 29: Calendars and Schedules
- Series 30: Legislation
- Series 31: Employment, Patronage, and Recommendations
- Series 32: Holiday Cards
- Series 33: Congratulations and Condolences
- Series 34: Memorabilia
Access Restriction
Open for research. This collection is stored at an off-site facility. Researchers interested in using this collection must
contact Archives and Special Collections at least two business days in advance of their planned visit.
PURL
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00732/
Summary Information
- Repository
- University of Mississippi Libraries
- Title
- Jamie L. Whitten Collection
- ID
- MUM00732
- Date
- 1927-1955
- Extent
- 2000.0 Linear feet
- Location
- Library Annex
- Language of Materials
- English
- Abstract
- Jamie L. Whitten represented Mississippi in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1941 to 1995 and chaired the powerful Committee
on Appropriations from 1979 through 1992.
Preferred Citation
Jamie L. Whitten Collection, Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, University of Mississippi
Biographical Note
Jamie L. Whitten was born in the community of Cascilla in Tallahatchie County, Mississippi on 18 April 1910. After attending
public schools, he studied literature and law at the University of Mississippi. In 1930-31, Whitten served as principal of
Cascilla School, and voters sent him to the Mississippi Legislature for a two-year term in 1931. Admitted to the state Bar
in 1932, the young lawyer opened a practice in Charleston, Mississippi and served as District Attorney for the state’s 17th
District from 1933 to 1941. A Democrat, Jamie Whitten won a special election to fill a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives
in 1941, and he remained in that chamber of Congress until his retirement on 3 January 1995. Only John Dingell of Michigan
holds a longer record of service in the House. During his reelections, Whitten rarely faced any serious opposition except
for two notable exceptions. The 1960 census resulted in the loss of a Mississippi congressional district, and the resulting
reapportionment forced a battle with fellow incumbent Frank Smith that Whitten won. Four years later, civil rights activist
Fannie Lou Hamer attempted to challenge Whitten for his congressional seat. Although her name did not appear on the ballot,
Hamer and other members of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party filed a formal challenge with Congress protesting the
seating of the state’s five white congressmen in the U.S. House of Representatives on the basis that whites had excluded African
Americans from participating in the primary and general election. A southern-dominated House Administration Committee dismissed
the complaint, arguing that the recent passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 had made the issue moot. On 17 September 1965,
the full House voted 228 to 143 to support the committee. For a brief period in 1941-42, Whitten served on the House Post
Office & Post Roads Committee. However, by 1943 he received an appointment to the powerful Appropriations Committee. Whitten
became chair of its Agriculture Subcommittee in 1950, and as the decades passed the Mississippi legislator became known as
the “permanent Secretary of Agriculture.” In 1979, he rose via seniority to chair the entire Appropriations Committee, and
his colleagues voted him “the most effective chairman in the U.S. Congress.” Whitten maintained that post until 1992 when
the Democratic Caucus replaced the eighty-two-year-old with William Huston Natcher. Other committee memberships during Whitten’s
career include the Joint Committee on Study Budget Control (1972-74), Joint Committee on Reduction of Federal Expenditures
(1970-74), and the House Budget Committee (1974-75). Throughout his career, Whitten promoted both the protection and the development
of natural resources in Mississippi and across the nation. He initiated legislation for the National Watershed and Flood Prevention
Program and championed public works projects like the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. His book,
That We May Live (1966) defended the benefits of agricultural pesticides in response to Rachel Carson’s environmental bestseller
Silent Spring. After declining to run for a 28th term, Whitten retired to his home in Oxford, Mississippi, where he died on 9 September
1995. He was survived by his wife Rebecca Thompson Whitten of Saltillo, Mississippi and his two children: Jamie L. Whitten
and Beverly Whitten Merritt. A few months before his death, Congress named the main building of the Department of Agriculture
in Washington, DC the “Jamie L. Whitten Building.”
Scope and Content
The collection is divided into the following series (see container list for more details on the individual series):
Series 1: Congressional Records Series 2: Corps of Engineers Series 3: Daily Memos Series 4: Departments & Agencies Series
5: Federal Assistance & Grants Series 6: Green Sheets Series 7: Guest Books Series 8: Invitations Series 9: Logs of Assistance
Series 10: Office Administration Series 11: Personal Series Series 12: Photographs Series 13: Politics Series 14: Post Office
Series 15: Public Relations Series 16: Published Writings Series 17: Recordings Series 18: School Desegregation Series 19:
Scrapbooks Series 20: Special Interest Files Series 21: Special Letters Scrapbooks Series 22: Speeches Series 23: That We
May Live Series 24: Trips Series 25: University of Mississippi Series 26: Voting Records Series 27: Whitten’s Notes Series
28: Clippings Series 29: Calendars and Schedules Series 30: Legislation Series 31: Employment, Patronage, and Recomendations
Series 32: Holidays Series 33: Congratulations
Administrative Information
Publication Information
University of Mississippi Libraries 2017
Access Restrictions
Series 1 through 27 are now open to the public, although researchers are cautioned that additional material and files may
be added to these series in the future as related items are discovered in currently unprocessed portions of the collection.
The following series remain closed to researchers while processing continues: Appropriations Committee, General Files, and
Memorabilia.
A 2010 IMLS grant permitted the archive to digitize most of the original recordings in the collection, and they are accessible
to researchers as a
digital collection. Although anyone on the internet may view the descriptions for all of the recordings, copyright may limit access to some
of the material. Researchers may view restricted recordings via onsite computers in the J.D. Williams Library.
Copyright Restrictions
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions
of copyrighted material. Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a
photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be “used
for any purpose other than private study, scholarship or research.” If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy
or reproduction for purposes in excess of “fair use,” that user may be liable for copyright infringement.
Additions
No further additions are expected to this collection.
Acquisition Information
Jamie Whitten donated his congressional papers to the University of Mississippi on 16 August 1994. In 2000, the Committee
on Appropriations contributed a box of Whitten’s remarks on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives. In 2007, the Tutwiler
Public Library donated one box of files and two boxes of publications that Whitten had previously transferred to the library.
Processing Information
Most of the collection’s recordings are processed and available to researchers. University of Mississippi’s Media & Documentary
Projects digitized the original recordings. Political Papers Archivist Leigh McWhite reviewed the recordings to compile content
descriptions and wrote the introductory fields for the finding aid. Digital Initiatives Librarian Jason Kovari encoded the
first version of the finding aid and created the digital collection. The digitization and preservation of the recordings in
this collection are the result of a project supported in part by a 2010 grant from the
Institute of Museum and Library Services. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed on this website do not necessarily represent those of the
Institute of Museum and Library Services. After work began on organizing the collection’s paper files, three more boxes of
original recordings in various formats surfaced. They remain unprocessed at this time until funding becomes available.
The Modern Political Archives began processing the manuscript files in January 2015. Leigh McWhite (Political Papers Archivist)
directed the effort with the assistance of Senior Library Assistant Tara Pawley and Library Specialist Lauren Rogers and the
following student workers: Alicia Bacon, Zibby Brenner, Sarah Brettin, Alicia Dixon, Abraham Kim, Rachel McLemore, Olivia
Morgan, Hannah Rogers, Nicholas Senften, and Morgan Woodard.
Series 1 through 27 opened to researchers in January 2016. Series 28 through 33 opened to researchers in January 2017. Work
continues on the following series: Appropriations Committee, General Files, and Memorabilia.
Related Materials
Related Materials at the University of Mississippi
Manuscript Collections in the Archives and Special Collections. For other politically-related holdings at the Archives & Special
Collections, see the
Politics & Government Subject Guide.
Thomas G. Abernethy Collection. 1924-1975. Abernethy represented Mississippi in the U.S. House of Representatives between
1943 and 1973. The papers includes correspondence with Whitten. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00001/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
Buildings and Grounds Collection. 1907-2002. Includes a file on the Jamie L. Whitten National Center for Physical Acoustics
building at the University of Mississippi. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00525/.
James O. Eastland Collection. 1930-1978. James O. Eastland represented Mississippi in the U.S. Senate in 1941 and from 1943
to 1978. The papers include correspondence with Whitten. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00117/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
Sidney Graves Collection. 1936-2008. Includes 1973 correspondence with Whitten. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM01723/.
R. Malcolm Guess Collection. 1922-1961. Includes two folders with Whitten correspondence (Box 1, Folders 9 & 16). Finding
aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00566/.
Fannie Lou Hamer Collection. 1965-1978. In 1964-1965, civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer filed a formal challenge in the
U.S. House of Representatives against the seating of Whitten. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00215/.
Ed King Collection. 1939-1983. Includes Fannie Lou Hamer’s testimony before Congress on the 1964-1965 contested election of
Whitten (Box 1, Folder 8 and Box 2, Folder 14). Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00251/.
George McLean Collection. 1947-1982. Includes notes of a speech on Whitten (Box 5) and a 1980 letter from Whitten (Box 10,
Folder 24). Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00291/. Bill Miles Collection. 1962-2011. An advertising and public relations firm in Tupelo, Mississippi, Bill Miles Associates
represented local political candidates including Whitten. The collection includes recordings and client files related to Whitten.
Finding aid available online at http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM01782/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
Mississippi Politics Collection. 1908-2011. Includes a file with material on Whitten. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00316/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
Franklin E. Moak Collection. 1943-1997. Includes three folders on Whitten (Box 61, Folder 20; Box 70, Folder 19; and Box 95,
Folder 58). Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00721/.
Willie Morris Collection. Includes a 1990 letter from Whitten to Mississippi author Willie Morris (Box 35, Folder 5). Finding
aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00321/.
Clarence Pierce Collection. 1946-195. Includes a 1977 letter of congratulations to Pierce, a state legislator and aide to
Senator James O. Eastland (Box 1, Folder 15). Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00364/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
John C. Satterfield/American Bar Association Collection. 1928-1974. Includes correspondence with Whitten in Box 11, Folder
200.2-5. Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00685/.
Note: Patrons should provide notice at least two business days prior to prospective visits so that staff may transfer requested
boxes from the Library Annex (an off-site facility) to the Special Collection Reading Room.
Small Manuscripts. Oversized Box 1 Broadsheets and Broadsides includes Folder 6 with a broadside “Friends of Frank E. Smith
want to ask Jamie Whitten some questions” and Folder 29 with another broadside from Smith on his opponent in that election.
Finding aid available online at
http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00400/. Vertical Files. Includes clippings files on “Politician – Whitten, Jamie.” Finding aid available online at http://purl.oclc.org/umarchives/MUM00459/.
Collection Inventory
Series 1:
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Series 2: Corps of EngineersScope and ContentThe United States Army Corps of Engineers is a military command responsible for public engineering, design, and construction This series of twenty-one boxes is based largely upon the filing system created by Representative Jamie Whitten’s congressional The Corps of Engineers series has four subseries. The first contains Mississippi water project files organized alphabetically Subseries 2 holds general miscellaneous files on the Corps. Material may include non-project specific correspondence as well The third subseries possesses subject files on topics such as leased federal land or soil conservation organized alphabetically Subseries 4 consists of oversized maps. Additional smaller and folded maps will appear throughout the entire series, not just Researchers should be aware that other material related to the Corps may be located within the Departments & Agencies series, |
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Series 3: Daily MemosScope and ContentFrom 1958 until 1993, office staff composed daily memoranda for Representative Jamie Whitten listing appointments, committee Additional daily memos from Whitten’s district offices are located in the Office Administration Series. |
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Series 4: Departments & AgenciesScope and ContentThe sixty-six boxes in this series contain material related to federal government departments, agencies, and commissions. This series preserves the original filing system of Representative Jamie Whitten, although the archives has removed constituent Researchers should check appropriate department-level folders for material on specific agencies even where files exist for The Corps of Engineers and the Post Office possess their own series within this collection due to the substantial number of |
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Series 5: Federal AssistanceScope and ContentThe twenty-two boxes in this series preserve the original files of Representative Jamie Whitten and contain documents related Subseries 1 holds general files arranged chronologically by year with documents related to state-wide project, out-of-district Subseries 2 contains files on counties within Whitten’s district. County files are arranged alphabetically and further subdivided Note that redistricting occurred several times during Whitten’s tenure in Congress changing the shape of his district. Consequently, |
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Series 6: Green SheetsScope and ContentThe Green Sheets series represents the original filing system of Representative Jamie Whitten’s office and contains green The files in the fifty-nine boxes are arranged chronologically by year. They are further subdivided alphabetically so that |
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Series 7: Guest BooksScope and ContentThe two boxes in this series hold guest books logging the names, addresses, and dates of visitors to Representative Jamie |
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Series 8: InvitationsScope and ContentThe Invitations Series contains twenty-four boxes of invitations Representative Jamie Whitten received to events and functions Subseries 1 holds all invitations accepted by Whitten, arranged chronologically by year. Subseries 2 consists of a selection |
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Series 9: Logs of AssistanceScope and ContentCongressional case files are created when constituents and other individuals seek the assistance of members of Congress in Due to privacy and confidentiality concerns, the Whitten Collection does not retain the case files of individual constituents. Subseries 1 hold constituent requests between 1955 and 1962. These log books are arranged within by county. Subseries 2 consists |
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Series 10: Office AdministrationScope and ContentThe nine boxes in the Office Administration Series contain material related to the personnel, equipment, and management of |
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Series 11: PersonalScope and ContentThe Personal series is comprised of seven boxes with three subseries. The first contains autobiographical manuscripts. The |
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Series 12: PhotographsScope and ContentDating from 1904 to 1994, the images in the eleven boxes of this series include portraits and candid shots of Jamie Whitten The series contains the following subseries: • Subseries 1: Portraits of Whitten • Subseries 2: Whitten Candids • Subseries |
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Series 13: PoliticsScope and ContentThe Politics series has four subseries held in a total of twenty-four boxes. The first consists of files related to Jamie Whitten won a special election to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1941. Starting in 1942, he ran for reelection every Subseries 1 is organized chronologically by year (although the elections occurred on even-numbered years, the campaign series During his reelections, Whitten rarely faced any serious opposition in either Democratic primaries or general elections except Documentation from the 1956 election is missing from the collection. Files for some of the uncontested elections may be small Arranged chronologically, Subseries 2 houses files on more general political topics at the state and national level. In particular, Files in Subseries 3 focus on redistricting, the process by which the state legislature draws new congressional and state Finally, Subseries 4 contains oversized material, primarily signs and newspapers related to Whitten’s campaigns. |
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Series 14: Post OfficeScope and ContentThis series holds material about the U.S. Postal Service. The files contain documents related to constituent issues with the Subseries 1 consists of general files arranged chronologically by year from 1942 to 1994, while Subseries 2 holds files arranged Researchers should note that redistricting altered the shape of Jamie Whitten’s congressional district several times over |
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Series 15: Public RelationsScope and ContentThe four boxes in the Public Relations series hold correspondence with media outlets, Whitten press releases, and Congressional |
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Series 16: Published WritingsScope and ContentThis series contains articles, letters, and editorials written by Jamie Whitten that appeared in newspapers and journals. Researchers may find additional material written by Whitten in the Clippings Series. The series That We May Live contains |
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Series 17: RecordingsScope and ContentRecordings in the Jamie Whitten Collection include government and special interest documentaries, campaign broadcasts and For preservation reasons, the original recordings are stored in a climate-controlled facility, and access is restricted. However, In 2010, the Institute of Museum and Library Services awarded a $450,000 grant to the University of Mississippi to preserve Not all of the recordings are accessible on the web due to copyright. Researchers may only review restricted recordings via The list of digital files provides the unique identifier (comprised of a format and numerical/alphabetical sequence); title; A number of physical recordings in the collection are duplicates, and the digital collection only makes available one of these While processing the rest of the collection in 2014, curators uncovered additional recordings that will remain undigitized |
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Series 18: School DesegregationScope and ContentDating from 1966 to 1971, the folders in the three boxes of this series focus on school desegregation. The Subject Files in |
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Series 19: ScrapbooksScope and ContentThis series consists of scrapbooks with newspaper clippings and publications documenting Representative Jamie L. Whitten’s |
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Series 20: Special InterestScope and ContentDating from 1932 to 1987, the Special Interest Files comprise two boxes. Whitten’s office applied the name “Special Interest The archives preserved the integrity of the office file names and content, with only minor changes for clarification with |
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Series 21: Special Letters ScrapbooksScope and ContentThis series consists of letters and other documents set aside in scrapbooks because Representative Jamie Whitten or his office Archivists removed the contents from scrapbooks to improve preservation and access since the adhesive and plastic covers on |
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Series 22: SpeechesScope and ContentThis series contains the speeches Jamie Whitten made on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives as well as addresses The second subseries consist of folders related to specific speeches arranged sequentially. The files may contain speech drafts, Subseries 3 consists of compilations “Contents of Alphabetical Speeches Files” (circa 1950s and 1960s) and “Floor Speeches |
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Series 23:
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Series 24: TripsScope and ContentWhitten participated in several congressional delegation trips both abroad and domestic. Many of these excursions inspected |
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Series 25: University of MississippiScope and ContentThe contents of this series feature material related to the inception, planning, fundraising, and implementation of two efforts Researchers should note that all other documents related to the University of Mississippi are held elsewhere in the collection, |
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Series 26: Voting RecordsScope and ContentThe five boxes in the Voting Records series contains lists of Jamie Whitten’s votes on legislation compiled by clerks in the |
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Series 27: Whitten’s NotesScope and ContentThe two boxes in this series contain handwritten notes and drafts by Jamie L. Whitten. The content consists of lists with |
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Series 28: ClippingsScope and ContentThe twenty-seven boxes in this series contain newspaper and magazine clippings collected by Jamie L. Whitten’s office or contributed Common topics that appear throughout the years include Agriculture, Appropriations, Civil Rights, Congress, Corps of Engineers, |
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Series 29: Calendars and SchedulesScope and ContentThe two boxes in this series contain material related to U.S. Representative Jamie L. Whitten’s calendars and schedules between |
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Series 30: LegislationScope and ContentThe 127 boxes in this series contain material related to bills introduced into Congress. Items may include printed bills, Subseries 1 contains the following general categories organized by year: Legislative Bills Introduced by Whitten; Legislative Subseries 2 consists of files arranged alphabetically by subject and then chronologically by two-year segments. Undated material Remember that legislation may require more than one congressional term to develop. For this reason, researchers should examine |
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Series 31: Employment, Patronage, and RecommendationsScope and ContentThe eight boxes in this series relate to employment and school admissions. A broad category, the documents may include information Files related to Post Office patronage and employment are stored separately in Series 14: Post Office. |
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Series 32: Holiday CardsScope and ContentThe one box in this series contain holiday cards received by U.S. Representative Whitten between 1961 and 1990. In addition, |
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Series 33: Congratulations and CondolencesScope and ContentThe four boxes of this series contain carbon copies of congratulatory and condolence letters Jamie Whitten sent to constituents |
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Series 34: MemorabiliaScope and ContentThis series consists of four subseries based upon physical format: artifacts, documents, framed items, and tubes. Within each |
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