Hugh Peterson, Sr. Papers

Hugh Peterson, Sr. Papers

Descriptive Summary

Title: Hugh Peterson, Sr. Papers
Creator: Peterson, Hugh, 1898-1961.
Inclusive Dates: 1814-1961
Language(s): English
Extent: 71 box(es) (70 linear feet), including 685 photographs, 98 maps, and 2 sound recordings
Collection Number: RBRL107HPS
Repository: Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies
Abstract: Hugh Peterson (1898-1961), of Ailey, Georgia, served as a representative to the Georgia legislature from 1923 to 1931, a state senator from 1931 to 1932, and a United States Representative from Georgia's First Congressional District from 1934 to 1946. His wife, Patience Elizabeth Russell Peterson (1902-2002), was the daughter of Judge Richard B. Russell, Sr. and sister of Senator Richard B. Russell, Jr. Peterson was heavily involved in creating the Georgia State Government Reorganization Bill of 1931 and, as a U.S. Representative, was active in sponsoring farm legislation. His congressional work included service on the Transportation, Territories, Rivers and Harbors, Public Lands, and Elections committees. After losing the 1946 election to Prince Preston of Statesboro, Peterson worked with General Lucius Clay in Germany in 1947 as a consultant. After his return, he devoted his time to practicing law in Ailey and serving as a lobbyist in Washington, D. C., for various businesses with interests in Georgia. The collection includes political, business and personal papers as well as campaign memorabilia, photographs, artifacts, maps, and books, all generated and collected by Hugh Peterson, Sr. The collection documents Hugh Peterson, Sr., Patience Russell Peterson (wife), Hugh Peterson, Jr. (son), their extended family (the Petersons and the Russells), and persons active in Georgia politics as well as members of Congress, other politicians and various business people active in Washington, D.C. during the 1920s through the 1960s.

Collection Description

Biographical Note

Hugh Peterson was born on August 21, 1898 to William J. Peterson (1849-1915) and Joanna Calhoun Peterson (1856-1914) in Ailey, Montgomery County, Georgia. Ailey was founded by the Peterson family and incorporated in 1893. It was originally named Peterson although the name was changed in tribute to Ala Peterson, the mother of William J. Peterson and misspelled as Ailey. It is located on U. S. Highway 280 between Vidalia and Mt. Vernon, Georgia.

In 1905, Hugh Peterson entered the Union Baptist Institute and continued his education there through 1916, graduating from Brewton-Parker Institute (both of which now are Brewton-Parker College). He matriculated at the University of Georgia and graduated in 1918, immediately after which he enlisted in the United States Army. Peterson entered West Point in October of the same year and remained in the military until honorably discharged at the end of World War I. He returned to Ailey and established an insurance agency in 1919 while managing the Peterson family farm holdings and studying law under a private course. In 1921, he was admitted to the Georgia Bar Association and elected mayor of Ailey, serving from 1922 to 1923.

In 1922, Peterson won a seat in the Georgia House of Representatives as a representative of Montgomery County. He continued his insurance and farming enterprises while in office and established the Monitor Publishing Company in 1924, serving as president of the publishing company and editor of the Montgomery Monitor into the 1950s. Peterson also maintained his law practice in Ailey while serving in the legislature and worked on parole, divorce, collections and other various civil litigation cases. Information regarding this can be found in Series I. Personal/Business.

Peterson was a member of the Georgia House of Representatives until 1930, during which he served on numerous committees including: Amendments to the Constitution, Appropriations, Aviation, Conservation, General Agriculture Number 1, General Judiciary Number 2, Pensions, Public Highways, Public Printing, Rules, Sanitarium at Alto, State of the Republic, University of Georgia and its Branches, and Ways and Means Committees. He also became close friends with other young legislators from around the state of Georgia, including Roy V. Harris and Richard B. Russell, Jr. Peterson's high level of involvement with fellow legislators, committees, and state agencies allowed him to contribute to Governor Lamartine Hardman's plan to reorganize the state government of Georgia in 1928 and 1929. This effort was led by Ivan Allen, an Atlanta businessman, and consisted of a major survey of the departments and organization of the state government. Series III, State Legislative, contains information regarding Peterson's work in the Georgia legislature.

In late 1929, Hugh Peterson met Patience Elizabeth Russell, the daughter or Judge Richard B. Russell, Sr. and Ina Dillard Russell and sister of Richard B. Russell, Jr. The couple was married on June 24, 1930 in Winder, Georgia and resided in Ailey. Later in the year, Peterson ran for a seat in the state senate as his new brother-in-law, Richard B. Russell, Jr. ran for governor. Both won their respective elections and immediately set to work modifying and implementing former Governor Hardman and Ivan Allen's plans. Russell named Peterson chair of a special legislative committee on the reorganization of state government in 1931 through which extensive hearings of all state agencies were held. Peterson then authored the State Reorganization Act of 1931, which included the consolidation of over 100 state departments into 19 and included the creation of the Board of Regents. Governor Russell signed the act into law on August 28, 1931.

Peterson's term as a state senator came to an end in 1932 and he elected not to run again, instead deciding to focus on running for the United States Congress as the representative of the First Congressional District, which had been recently re-surveyed to consist of Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Candler, Chatham, Effingham, Emanuel, Evans, Jenkins, Long, McIntosh, Montgomery, Screven, Tattnall, Toombs, and Wheeler Counties. His opponent was Homer Parker, who won the election. Peterson spent the next two years carefully planning his campaign for the 1934 election, networking in the First Congressional District, practicing law, and running his insurance, newspaper and agricultural businesses. In 1934, he ran against incumbent Parker and Albert Cobb for the same seat in the 74th Congress and won in the Democratic Primary held on September 12. The Petersons moved to an apartment on Connecticut Avenue in Washington, D.C. soon thereafter, which they kept through the end of Peterson's life. Series II, Campaigns, contains information regarding theses campaigns as well as those through the 1946 election.

Hugh Peterson remained in office until 1946 and his service as a congressman included extensive research on agriculture and public lands and territories in the United States. He spent his first few terms drafting his primary piece of legislation, H.R. 8286 - A Bill to Provide Homesteads Free of Debt for Actual Farm Families, the goal of which was to help American farmers during the Great Depression with their farm debt. The rate of farmers carrying mortgages had risen exponentially from 1890 to 1930 as had the rate of tenant farmers over owner-operators, which Peterson thought to be a direct correlation with the amount of free land left for Americans to claim. The proposed legislation was originally introduced in 1936 and survived multiple sessions in the House of Representatives. In its report on the bill, the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Public Lands found that no national land legislation allowing persons to claim homesteads had been passed since the Homestead Law of 1862. Coincidentally, the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, which funded low-interest loans for tenants so that they might become land owners and created the Farm Security Administration, was introduced and passed in the same sessions of Congress. It is thought to be the reason that Peterson's land proposal never made it out of the House of Representatives. The Legislation subseries of Series IV, U. S. Congress, holds information and research material regarding the bill.

As in the state legislature, Peterson was active on numerous committees. His work on the Committee on Public Lands included a chairmanship of the Subcommittee of Public Domain and Homestead Laws. He also served as chair of the Committee on Territories and spent time studying Hawaii and Alaska, the latter in which he held hearings regarding statehood and traveled extensively. Peterson served on the Roads Committee, the service of which took him to Alaska to study the Alcan Highway as well as Central America to inspect the Inter-American Highway (now known as the Pan American Highway) as it was being built. He participated in the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, serving as chair for almost two years. He also served as chair of the Subcommittee on Beach Erosion and made trips to Texas and California for inspections of coastal property. Peterson also served on the Smith Committee, which was established as a special committee in the House of Representatives to investigate the Executive Branch of the Federal Government, as well as the Election Committee, which was in charge of investigating contested elections. Series IV, U. S. Congress, contains information regarding this work in the committees subseries. During his time in office, Peterson employed staff from Georgia to work in his office including Gladys Aaron, Bill Harris and Joe Underwood. Memos and correspondence from these individuals is found in Series IV, U.S. Congress, as well.

In 1946, returning veteran and former state legislator Prince Preston of Statesboro successfully ran against Peterson for the congressional seat, forcing him to pursue other avenues of political work and focus on his business ventures in Ailey. Upon entering Congress in 1935, Peterson gave up his insurance business but continued running the Monitor Publishing Company as well as the Ailey Gin Company and the Ailey Manufacturing Company, which he established in 1941. He also acquired the Vidalia Gum Turpentine Plant in 1947. While in office, he and his wife Patience spent time rebuilding the Peterson home place in Ailey, which was named Sandridge Manor. After two years of construction, the Petersons moved in with their son Hugh Peterson, Jr. (b. 1935) in 1940. Series I, Personal/Business, contains information regarding this period.

Peterson was able to obtain a position in Germany in 1948 under General Lucius Clay as an advisor after much negotiation and two trips to Europe in 1946 and 1947. While there, he was able to travel throughout Europe to observe the aftermath of World War II and witness the trials at Nuremburg. Unfortunately, he developed minor health problems soon after arriving in Germany and was advised to return to the United States. Series V, Post Congress, holds information about this venture.

From his retirement from Congress through his death in 1961, Peterson spent the rest of his career as a lobbyist for the Georgia Power Company, the United States Cane Refiners Association and the American Turpentine Farmers Association. He also pursued development interests around Montgomery County and the region of southeast Georgia, including the resurrection of the Ocean Steamship Company and the establishment of a radio and television station. He also researched further development around Sylva, North Carolina. It was there that he died of a cerebral hemorrhage on October 3, 1961. He was survived by his wife, Patience Russell Peterson, who died in 2002 at the age of 100, and his son, Hugh Peterson, Jr., who is a retired attorney in Atlanta, Georgia, and chairman and CEO of VNS Corporation, the successor to the Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company.

Scope and Content

Materials include personal, political, legal, and business correspondence, legislative files, campaign files as well as photographs, books, maps, and artifacts, all of which document Hugh Peterson's life. While the majority of materials date from Peterson's youth through his death in 1961, the earliest date back to 1814 and document family land holdings around Montgomery County, Georgia through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries primarily through tax receipts. The documents created by Hugh Peterson himself were generated for his legislative career and business interests and consist of clippings, correspondence, political committee materials, voter registration lists, legislative research, and drafts of legislation. The collection also contains numerous notes that Peterson took regarding office matters as well as telephone calls and visits he received and made while in office.

Series I, Personal/Business consists of documents associated with Peterson's work and life in Ailey, Georgia, before, during, and after his service in the United States Congress. The material includes information about his ownership of the Monitor Publishing Company (publisher of the Montgomery Monitor and the Thomasville Press) as well as his legal work including law suits, divorces, collections, and parole cases. Peterson also owned an insurance agency from 1919 through 1935. While his local interests included traditional agricultural pursuits via the Ailey Gin Company and the Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company, Peterson spent much time helping to establish the Ailey Shirt Company, Southland Securities, the Montgomery County Bank and the Mt. Vernon Bank. Much of the correspondence dating from the 1920s and 1930s came from letter books that were alphabetized. Subject files were maintained by Peterson after he retired from Congress.

Series II, Campaigns consists of Peterson's personal campaign files for the elections in 1932, 1934, 1936, 1938, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1946 as well as records of Richard B. Russell's presidential campaign in 1952. Each sub series contains information regarding the District and State Democratic Committees as well as the paperwork that Peterson submitted to each in order to run and after he won. Information about opponents and campaign flyers are also included. Peterson worked on Richard Russell's campaign in 1952 for President of the United States and subseries H contains clippings and information about the Democratic National Convention. Subseries I consists of hand-painted cloth campaign banners.

Series III, State Legislative consists of documents from Peterson's service in the Georgia House of Representative from 1922 to 1930 and the Georgia Senate from 1931-1933. He was a major architect of the state reorganization bill, first in the House and later in the Senate, which became law in 1931 under Richard B. Russell's governorship. Correspondence ranges from fellow politicians writing about intra-personal matters in the legislature to citizens responding to the idea of reorganizing state governmental agencies. The subject files and legislation pertain to the state reorganization bill.

Series IV, United States Congress contains items documenting Peterson's career representing the First Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives. While in office, Peterson proposed bills regarding farm homesteads and was active on several congressional committees, including Rivers and Harbors, Public Lands, Territories, and Roads. Peterson's activity in the House of Representatives during the 1930s and 1940s provides a unique view of the national political scene during the Great Depression and World War II.

Series V, Post Congressional documents Peterson's work as a lobbyist and in Europe after World War II where he witnessed the Nuremburg Trials, the Paris Peace Conference, and was appointed by General Lucius D. Clay to an advisory panel on West Germany. Until his death in 1961, Peterson worked as a lobbyist for such companies as Georgia Power and the American Cane Sugar Refiners Association.

Overarching themes in the collection include road building (Series I and III), the penal system in the state of Georgia (Series I and III), state reorganization (Series I, II, III and IV), agriculture (Series I and IV), and land use (Series IV). Information about politics and politicians in the state of Georgia from the 1920s through the 1950s is found in every series of the correspondence in the sections containing correspondence and subject files.

Organization and Arrangement

The collection is organized into eleven series: I. Personal/Business, II. Campaigns, III. State Legislative, IV. United States Congress, V. Post Congressional, VI. Photographs, VII. Maps, VIII. Architectural Drawings, IX. Artifacts, X. Books, and XI. Audiovisual Materials. In general, original order has largely been maintained in Series I, II, III, IV, and V. Maps are organized by geographical area. Photographs are organized by date.


Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

Confidential materials have been restricted for 75 years from date of creation.

Preferred Citation

Hugh Peterson, Sr. Papers, Richard B. Russell Library for Political Research and Studies, University of Georgia Libraries, Athens, Georgia, 30602-1641.

Processing Notes

Clippings have been copied onto bond paper for protection of content. Oversize material, maps, artifacts and photographic materials have been separated for preservation and storage purposes.

User Restrictions

Library acts as "fair use" reproduction agent.

Copyright Information

Before material from collections at the Richard B. Russell Library may be quoted in print, or otherwise reproduced, in whole or in part, in any publication, permission must be obtained from (1) the owner of the physical property, and (2) the holder of the copyright. It is the particular responsibility of the researcher to obtain both sets of permissions. Persons wishing to quote from materials in the Russell Library collection should consult the Director. Reproduction of any item must contain a complete citation to the original.

Finding Aid Publication

Finding aid prepared on: 2009.


Related Materials and Subjects

Subject Terms

Related Collections in this Repository

Richard B. Russell, Jr. Collection

Richard B. Russell, Sr. Papers

Patience Russell Peterson Papers

Thomas W. Hardwick Papers

Lamartine Griffin Hardman Papers

Herman E. Talmadge Collection

Prince H. Preston, Jr. Papers

Roy V. Harris Papers

James L. Gillis, Sr. Papers

American Turpentine Farmers Association Minute Books

Related Collections in Other Repositories

American Turpentine Farmers Association Papers, Georgia Agrirama, State Museum of Agriculture

Philip Weltner Papers, Oglethorpe University

Ivan Allen, Sr. Papers, Atlanta History Center Kenan Research Center

Georgia Legislative Documents, Georgia Archives

Clark Howell Papers, Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library, Emory University


Series Descriptions and Folder Listing

 

I. Personal/Business

23 box(es)
(20.75 linear feet)
This series consists of documents associated with Peterson's work and life in Ailey, Georgia, before, during, and after his service in the United States Congress. The material includes information about his ownership of the Monitor Publishing Company (publisher of the Montgomery Monitor and the Thomasville Press) as well as his legal work including law suits, divorces, collections, and parole cases. Peterson also owned an insurance agency from 1919 through 1935 that represented Fidelity, Hartford, and New York Life. While his local interests included traditional agricultural pursuits via the Ailey Gin Company and the Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company, Peterson spent much time helping to establish and run the Ailey Shirt Company, Southland Securities, the Montgomery County Bank and the Mt. Vernon Bank. Regionally, Peterson's development activities involved a radio and television station and the revival of the Ocean Steamship Company of Savannah, which lost its entire fleet in World War II. The items are organized into the following categories: A. Business, B. Financial, C. Construction in Ailey, and D. Family. Each subseries contains supplemental information to other series in the Peterson Collection as explained in the subseries descriptions.



A. Business

( 641 folder(s) )
Business correspondence from the 1920s contains political material from Peterson's work in the Georgia General Assembly during this period although he kept the majority of his business and political correspondence separate during and after his time in Congress.
Alphabetical subject files from 1947 through 1961 contain correspondence and notes. Although Peterson kept separate sets of alphabetical files dating from the late 1940s through the early 1960s, each set is no different from the others and was not separated by date. Original order has been maintained in these sets, hence the sets are designated by a number within the sub series.Material includes information about Peterson's ownership of the Monitor Publishing Company (publisher of the Montgomery Monitor and the Thomasville Press) including correspondence with Herman McBride, who ran the Monitor while Peterson was away in Atlanta and Washington, D.C.Material also pertains to Peterson's early legal work, which consisted of law suits, divorces, collections, and parole cases, including those of local African-Americans. His business ventures also included an insurance agency that he owned from 1919 through 1935, which represented Fidelity, Hartford, and New York Life. While many of Peterson's local business interests were in the form of traditional agricultural pursuits such as the Ailey Gin Company and the Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company (now VNS Corporation), he spent much time and effort helping to establish and run the Ailey Shirt Company, Southland Securities, the Montgomery County Bank and the Mt. Vernon Bank. Outside of Montgomery County, Peterson's development activities involved creating a radio and television station based in Savannah, Georgia. After World War II, he worked to revive the Ocean Steamship Company of Savannah, which had lost its fleet in the war although the company finally liquidated in 1951. From the 1950s until his death in 1961, Peterson concentrated on a mining interest in Sylva, North Carolina.


1. General , 1814-1961
boxfolder
I.A.11AAA Maps: Southwester States, South Central states, Northwestern States, Colorado, Wyoming and Utah (oversize items removed), 1959
I.A.12[Agriculture, Cattle, 1921 – 1924]
I.A.13[Ailey, Georgia, Political, 1921 – 1925]
I.A.14Ailey Manufacturing Company (folder 1 of 3), 1941 – 1947
I.A.15Ailey Manufacturing Company (folder 2 of 3), 1941 – 1947
I.A.16Ailey Manufacturing Company (folder 3 of 3), 1941 – 1947
I.A.17[Ailey, Georgia, Windmill, J.B. Camp, 1923]
I.A.18[Ailey United Methodist Church donors (oversize item removed), undated
folder
OS I[List of members of Ailey United Methodist Church and donors to church with subscription amounts] [oversize], 1918 March 20
boxfolder
I.A.19[Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity, University of Georgia, 1921]
I.A.110Altamaha (oversize item removed), 1947 – 1958
I.A.111[Automobile correspondence, 1923]
I.A.112The Benefits of a Multi-Purpose Development Altamaha River System, Georgia (includes oversize maps and charts), 1947 August
I.A.113[Book orders, 1922 – 1925]
I.A.114Brewton Parker Alumni list, 1955 September
I.A.115[Brewton Parker Junior College, 1925]
I.A.116Brewton Parker Institute, 1927 – 1928
I.A.117[Business Cards – The Home Insurance Company, New York, undated]
I.A.118[Business, A, 1934]
I.A.119[Business, B, 1934]
I.A.120[Business, C, 1934]
I.A.121[Business, D, 1934]
I.A.122[Business, F, 1934]
I.A.123[Business, G, 1934]
I.A.124[Business, H, 1934]
I.A.125[Business, I, J, 1934]
I.A.126[Business, K, 1934]
I.A.127[Business, L, 1934]
I.A.128[Business, M, 1934]
I.A.129[Business, P, Q, 1934]
I.A.130[Business, R, 1934]
I.A.131[Business, S, 1934]
I.A.132[Business, T, 1934]
I.A.133[Business, U, V, 1934]
I.A.134[Business, W, 1934]
I.A.135[Business, Correspondence, B, 1922 – 1926]
I.A.136[Business, Correspondence, W, 1921 – 1923]
I.A.137Calhoun, Thomas B., et al, 1948 – 1950
I.A.138California Exposition Invitation, 1935
I.A.139Camp, J. B., Sandersville, Georgia, 1923 – 1924
I.A.140[Campaign contributions,, 1946]
I.A.141[Certificates, 1948]
I.A.142[Christmas card, Hugh Peterson, 1920s]
I.A.143[Clippings, 1919 – 1922]
I.A.144[Clippings, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.145[Clippings, 1948]
I.A.146[Collections business, 1922 – 1925]
I.A.147The Commonwealth of Heaven vs. John Rich, Mary Stingy, 1922
I.A.148Congressional Elections, 1946
I.A.149Conquest of the Land Through 7,000 Years, Agriculture Information Bulletin No. 99, 1953 August
I.A.150[Correspondence, A, 1915 – 1920]
I.A.151[Correspondence, B, undated]
boxfolder
I.A.21[Correspondence, C, 1914]
I.A.22[Correspondence, E, F, undated]
I.A.23[Correspondence, G, 1914]
I.A.24[Correspondence, H, 1920
I.A.25[Correspondence, K, L, 1896
I.A.26[Correspondence, M, 1914 – 1921
I.A.27[Correspondence, N, O, undated
I.A.28[Correspondence, P, Q, 1896 – 1914
I.A.29[Correspondence, R, 1920
I.A.210[Correspondence, U, V, W, 1912 – 1915
I.A.211[Correspondence, 1925
I.A.212[Correspondence, 1926
I.A.213[Correspondence, A, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.214[Correspondence, B, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.215[Correspondence, C, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.216[Correspondence, D, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.217[Correspondence, E, F, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.218[Correspondence, G, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.219[Correspondence, H, I, J, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.220[Correspondence, K, L, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.221[Correspondence, M, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
folder
OS I1928 Election Tally, Montgomery County [oversize], 1928
boxfolder
I.A.222[Correspondence, N, O, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.223[Correspondence, P, Q, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.224[Correspondence, R, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.225[Correspondence, S, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.226[Correspondence, T, U, V, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.227[Correspondence, W, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.228[Correspondence, Y, 1928 January 1 – 1929 April 27]
I.A.229[Correspondence, A, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.230[Correspondence, B, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.231[Correspondence, C, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.232[Correspondence, D, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.233[Correspondence, E, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.234[Correspondence, F, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.235[Correspondence, G, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.236[Correspondence, H, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.237[Correspondence, I, J, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.238[Correspondence, K, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.239[Correspondence, L, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.240[Correspondence, M, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.241[Correspondence, N, O, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.242[Correspondence, P, Q, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.243[Correspondence, R, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.244[Correspondence, S, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.245[Correspondence, T, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.246[Correspondence, U, V, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.247[Correspondence, W, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.248[Correspondence, Y, Z, 1929 – 1930]
I.A.249[Correspondence, A, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.250[Correspondence, B, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.251[Correspondence, C, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.252[Correspondence, D, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.253[Correspondence, E, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.254[Correspondence, F, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.255[Correspondence, G, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.256[Correspondence, H, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.257[Correspondence, I, J, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.258[Correspondence, K, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.259[Correspondence, L, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.260[Correspondence, M, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.261[Correspondence, N, O, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.262[Correspondence, P, Q, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.263[Correspondence, R, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.264[Correspondence, S, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.265[Correspondence, T, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.266[Correspondence, U, V, 1930 – 1931]
I.A.267[Correspondence, W, 1930 – 1931]
boxfolder
I.A.31[Correspondence, A, 1931]
I.A.32[Correspondence, B, 1931]
I.A.33[Correspondence, C, 1931]
I.A.34[Correspondence, D, 1931]
I.A.35[Correspondence, E, 1931]
I.A.36[Correspondence, F, 1931]
I.A.37[Correspondence, G, 1931]
I.A.38[Correspondence, H, 1931]
I.A.39[Correspondence, I, J, 1931]
I.A.310[Correspondence, K, 1931]
I.A.311[Correspondence, L, 1931]
I.A.312[Correspondence, M, 1931]
I.A.313[Correspondence, N, O, 1931]
I.A.314[Correspondence, P, Q, 1931]
I.A.315[Correspondence, R, 1931]
I.A.316[Correspondence, S, 1931]
I.A.317[Correspondence, T, 1931]
I.A.318[Correspondence, U, V, 1931]
I.A.319[Correspondence, W, 1931]
I.A.320[Correspondence, Y, Z, 1931]
I.A.321[Correspondence, A, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.322[Correspondence, B, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.323[Correspondence, C, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.324[Correspondence, D, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.325[Correspondence, E, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.326[Correspondence, F, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.327[Correspondence, G, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.328[Correspondence, H, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.329[Correspondence, I, J, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.330[Correspondence, K, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.331[Correspondence, L, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.332[Correspondence, M, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.333[Correspondence, N, O, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.334[Correspondence, P, Q, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.335[Correspondence, R, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.336[Correspondence, S, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.337[Correspondence, T, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.338[Correspondence, U, V, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.339[Correspondence, W, 1931 – 1933]
I.A.340[Correspondence, A, 1933]
I.A.341[Correspondence, B, 1933]
I.A.342[Correspondence, C, 1933]
I.A.343[Correspondence, D, 1933]
I.A.344[Correspondence, F, 1933]
I.A.345[Correspondence, G, 1933]
I.A.346[Correspondence, H, 1933]
I.A.347[Correspondence, I, J, 1933]
I.A.348[Correspondence, K, 1933]
I.A.349[Correspondence, L, 1933]
folder
OS I[An Act to regulate the practice of law and the performance of legal services] [oversize], 1931
boxfolder
I.A.350[Correspondence, M, 1933]
I.A.351[Correspondence, N, O, 1933]
I.A.352[Correspondence, P, Q, 1933]
I.A.353[Correspondence, R, 1933]
I.A.354[Correspondence, S, 1933]
I.A.355[Correspondence, T, 1933]
I.A.356[Correspondence, U, V, 1933]
I.A.357[Correspondence, W, 1933]
I.A.358[Correspondence, 1945]
I.A.359[Correspondence, Road Project, 1933]
I.A.360[Cotton, 1922 – 1926]
I.A.361Cotton Crop Price Chart, 1831–1937, 1937
folder
OS I[139 Years of Cotton, Savannah Cotton Factorage Co., table of cotton prices and crop output 1794-1932] [oversize], 1932
boxfolder
I.A.362Coursey, Richard R., Mt. Vernon, Georgia, Montgomery County, 1945
I.A.363[Cunard Line luggage label, 1950]
boxfolder
I.A.41Downey, Mable, 1961
I.A.42Eaton's Ranch, Wolf, Wyoming, 1957
I.A.43[Election, Ailey, Georgia, Mayor, City Council, 1940]
I.A.44Elk's Club handbook, bylaws (item removed), 1954
I.A.45Essay on Process and Service in Georgia (Philip Weltner), 1929
I.A.46[Express Railway Service, Ailey, Georgia, 1923]
I.A.47First Speech Hugh Peterson delivered in Georgia Legislature, 1923 November
I.A.48[Forestry, 1949]
I.A.49[Fountain vs. Wardlaw, 1921 August]
I.A.410Franklin Vaccines and Supplies for Livestock, 1961
I.A.411General Specifications for shirt factory
I.A.412[Georgia Public Service Commission Residential Electric Light and Power Rates, 1928]
I.A.413[Georgia Prison Board, 1922]
I.A.414[Girtman, Henry, legal case, 1922]
I.A.415[Graduation speech, 1950 May]
I.A.416[Hicks, Luther, legal case, 1948]
I.A.417Histomap of Religion, John B. Sparks (item removed), 1947
folder
OS I[The Histomap of Religion, John B. Sparks] [oversize], 1947
boxfolder
I.A.418History of Longpond Baptist Church, undated
I.A.419[History of Montgomery County, Georgia, undated]
I.A.420[Holding Commission of the Baptist Convention of the State of Georgia, 1919 April]
I.A.421How America Can Be Adjusted by Huey Long, 1933 March 17
I.A.422Howard, Lawton, 1948
I.A.423Inauguration Invitation, 1961
I.A.424[Insurance, 1922 – 1926]
I.A.425[Insurance (folder 1 of 3), 1921 – 1925]
I.A.426[Insurance (folder 2 of 3), 1921 – 1925]
I.A.427[Insurance (folder 3 of 3), 1921 – 1925]
I.A.428[Insurance collections, 1924 – 1925]
I.A.429[Insurance, monthly report, 1921 – 1922]
I.A.430[Kitchens – Fuqua Case, 1926]
I.A.431"Know Your Congressman" Edition of the Pictorial Directory of the 83rd Congress, 1953
I.A.432[Legal, 1921 – 1925]
I.A.433Library of Congress Library Card, 1955
I.A.434License to Practice Law, [undated]
I.A.435Literary Digest, 1922, January – May
I.A.436Literary Digest, 1922, May – June
I.A.437[Masons (item removed), 1922 – 1924]
folder
OS I[List of Masonic Lodges of the 12th District and their numbers by County, Secretary, and P.O. [oversize], 1922
boxfolder
I.A.438[McGregor, Douglas D., legal case, 1922]
I.A.439[Membership cards, 1932 – 1938]
I.A.440Members of the Legislature of Georgia, 1919 – 1920
I.A.441Miscellaneous from my desk, H.P. (folder 1 of 3), 1948 February 9
I.A.442Miscellaneous from my desk, H.P. (folder 2 of 3), 1948 February 9
I.A.443Miscellaneous from my desk, H.P. (folder 3 of 3), 1948 February 9
boxfolder
I.A.51Miscellaneous letters (item removed) (folder 1 of 2), 1947
I.A.52Miscellaneous letters (item removed) (folder 2 of 2), 1947
I.A.53Montgomery County 150th Anniversary, Mt. Vernon, Georgia, 1943
I.A.54Montgomery County Bank Incorporation, 1926
I.A.55Montgomery County, Georgia Ballots, Primary, 1916 – 1920
folder
OS I[Official Ballot, Montgomery County Democratic White Primary] [oversize], 1926 September 8
boxfolder
I.A.56[Montgomery Monitor, Sale, 1956]
I.A.57[Montgomery Monitor, A, B, 1955 – 1956]
I.A.58[Montgomery Monitor, C, [1954 – 1956]
I.A.59[Montgomery Monitor, G, 1955]
I.A.510[Montgomery Monitor, H, I, J, 1955]
I.A.511[Montgomery Monitor, K, L, M, 1927 – 1956]
I.A.512[Montgomery Monitor, P, Q, R, 1955 – 1956]
I.A.513[Montgomery Monitor, S, T, U, V, 1955 – 1956]
I.A.514[Montgomery Monitor, W, 1955]
I.A.515Monitor Publishing Company, 1955 – 1959
I.A.516Monitor Publishing Company, Montgomery Monitor, Thomasville Press, 1929 – 1955
I.A.517Mount Vernon Bank, 1920 – 1925
I.A.518National Geographic Society Membership, 1923 March 5
I.A.519Notary Public, 1922 – 1934
I.A.520[Notes, undated]
I.A.521[Notes, 1957 – 1961]
I.A.522Ocean Steamship Company (folder 1 of 2), 1950
I.A.523Ocean Steamship Company (folder 2 of 2), 1950
I.A.524[Ocean Steamship Company] Blueprints and Ship Plans (oversize items removed), 1950
I.A.525[Ocean Steamship Company] C-4 Conversion to Rail Road Car Ferry for Ocean Service, undated
I.A.526Ocean Steamship Company Report, 1950 January 24
I.A.527Oconee Fertilizer Company, Ailey, Georgia, blue prints (architectural drawings removed), 1950 July 30
I.A.528Official State of Georgia Tabulation by Counties, 1962
I.A.529O. K. Sunday School Record Teacher's Class Book, 1919
I.A.530[Papers in Hugh Peterson's briefcase at time of death, 1961]
I.A.531[Passes to United States Senate and House of Representatives, circa 1937]
I.A.532[Palmer, Clayborn, Bankruptcy Case, 1923]
I.A.533Parole, Henry Goings, 1922
I.A.534[Personal, 1922 – 1924]
I.A.535Personal, 1945
I.A.536Personal [Brownsville, Texas (oversize item removed), 1946]
boxfolder
I.A.61Personal [Congressional, Montgomery Monitor] (folder 1 of 3), 1942 – 1943
I.A.62Personal [Congressional, Montgomery Monitor] (folder 2 of 3), 1942 – 1943
I.A.63Personal [Congressional, Montgomery Monitor] (folder 3 of 3), 1942 – 1943
I.A.64Personal [Farm, Congressional, Apartment], 1944
I.A.65Personal [Farm, Congressional, St. Andrews Society], 1946
I.A.66Personal [Financial, Congressional, Novelty, 1941 – 1943]
I.A.67Personal [Contested Election], 1944 – 1946
I.A.68Peterson, Hugh, Automobile Accident, Sanford, North Carolina, 1944 December 21
I.A.69Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (1), [1935 – 1939]
I.A.610Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (3) (folder 1 of 2), [1937 – 1938]
I.A.611Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (3) (folder 2 of 2), [1938 – 1939]
I.A.612Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (4) (folder 1 of 2), [1941 – 1942]
I.A.613Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (4) (folder 2 of 2), [1939 – 1941]
I.A.614Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Stamp Collection, Ailey, Georgia (6), [1936 – 1945]
I.A.615Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (7) (folder 1 of 2), 1943 – 1944
I.A.616Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (7) (folder 2 of 2), 1943 – 1944
I.A.617Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (8) Miscellaneous (folder 1 of 2), [1945 – 1946]
I.A.618Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Ailey, Georgia (8) Miscellaneous (folder 2 of 2), [1945 – 1946]
I.A.619Peterson, Hugh, Personal, [Insurance], 1956
boxfolder
I.A.71Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Proposed Broadcasting Station, 1945 – 1946
I.A.72[Peterson v. Wilbanks, 1923 – 1925]
I.A.73Pictorial Directory of 74th Congress, 1935
I.A.74Plans of New House Office Building [Longworth House Office Building], 1933
I.A.75[Political, 1922 – 1928]
I.A.76[Political, 1922 – 1928]
I.A.77[Posthumous biography, 1964 April]
I.A.78[Prospecting, 1961]
I.A.79[Promissory notes, 1926]
I.A.710Rand McNally Washington Guide, 1932
I.A.711[Receipts, 1922 – 1927]
I.A.712[Resin (item removed), undated]
I.A.713Revised Constitution of the State of Georgia, 1944
I.A.714C. H. Rice and Son Livestock, 1923
I.A.715[Road Map, Europe (items removed), 1958]
I.A.716[Road Maps, United States (items removed), 1948 – 1953]
I.A.717[Ryals, Mobley, Calhoun legal case, 1922 – 1924]
I.A.718[St. Andrews Society programs, 1943 – 1945]
I.A.719Seaboard Atlantic Line Railway, 1921
I.A.720Singing Tribe of Wahoo, 1943 August
I.A.721Southern States Phosphate and Fertilizer Company, 1924 – 1927
I.A.722Southland Securities Inc., Ailey, Georgia, 1926
I.A.723[Speeches, 1929, undated]
I.A.724The State vs. Joe Henry Wolfe (folder 1 of 2), 1928
I.A.725The State vs. Joe Henry Wolfe (folder 2 of 2), 1928
I.A.726Stillwell Realty Company, Realty Savings and Trust, Savannah, Georgia, 1924 – 1926
I.A.727[Stock Claim, Georgia and Florida Railway, 1922]
I.A.728[Stock Claim, Seaboard AirLine Railways, 1922 – 1925]
I.A.729Stockholders, Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company, 1960 January
I.A.730The Stolen Will, 1881
I.A.731[Stone Mountain, Robert E. Lee, Traveler unveiling invitation, 1928]
I.A.732Street map of Atlanta and Vicinity (item removed), circa 1945
I.A.733[Supreme Court of Georgia, Letter of Admittance, 1947 January 10]
I.A.734[Sylva, North Carolina, 1961]
I.A.735[Tally, undated]
I.A.736[Telephone exchange location, 1961]
I.A.737That Same Old Face, Riley Scott, 1926
I.A.738Timber, 1948
I.A.739Trip to England, expenses, etc., 1956
I.A.740Trip West, File Miscellaneous (items removed) (folder 1 of 2), 1959 August
I.A.741Trip West, File Miscellaneous (items removed) (folder 2 of 2), 1959 August
I.A.742[U. S. 19 pamphlet, undated]
I.A.743Clifford Walker's Platform, copy of speech, [1922]
I.A.744[Wardlaw, Fountain legal case, 1922 – 1924]
I.A.745B. Way's Book of fun, Facts and Homemade Philosophy, 1936
I.A.746[Women's Suffrage, 1916]
I.A.747[Wood, Greer divorce, 1922]
I.A.748A World to Live In, 1942
I.A.749Your National Capitol, 75th Congress, 1937
2. Alphabetical Subject Files
a. 1947-1961
boxfolder
I.A.81American Legion, see G. O. Stone, 1950
I.A.82Anderson, Leeman, 1950 – 1959
I.A.83Atlanta Journal, The, 1949 – 1951
I.A.84Augusta Courier, The, also see Roy V. Harris, 1949
I.A.85Banks, 1950
I.A.86Beet Sugar, 1950
I.A.87Bergen, Cletus W., 1951
I.A.88Bishop, Max, 1950 – 1960
I.A.89Blitch, Mrs. Iris Faircloth, 1957 – 1958
I.A.810Bloch, Charles, 1951
I.A.811Bouhan, John J. etc. Wilson, Jenkins, Cook, 1949 – 1958
I.A.812Bradley, Gen. Omar, 1950 – 1951
I.A.813Brewton-Parker Junior College, See Rev. C. L. Shelby, Georgia Power Company, 1949 – 1960
I.A.814Broun, Paul, M. C., 1949 – 1956
I.A.815Brunswick Marine Construction Corporation, 1951
I.A.816Buchholz, Mrs. Leone B., 1961
I.A.817Bunker, Elsworth, 1950 – 1956
I.A.818Burch, Col. A. J., 1951
I.A.819Camp, Thomas L, 1949 – 1960
I.A.820Carpenter, Robert (Bob) Judge, 1949
I.A.821Central America, 1949 – 1956
I.A.822Chapman, Philips Felder, Jeannette Calhoun Chapman and family, 1958
I.A.823Chevy Chase Club, see Dillard Lassiter, 1949 – 1960
I.A.824Cloister Hotel, 1950 – 1951
I.A.825Coca-Cola, 1949
I.A.826Cocka, Earl, Jr., 1950 – 1958
I.A.827Cole Manufacturing Company, 1951
I.A.828Coleman, Mose, 1949 – 1960
I.A.829Conger, A. B., 1949 – 1950
I.A.830Congress, Members of, 1950
I.A.831Conner, Byron E., 1961
I.A.832Cowan, J. Francis, 1949
I.A.833Cox, Eugene, M. C., 1950 – 1952
I.A.834Dagg, Zoe, 1960
I.A.835Davis, James C., M. C., 1949 – 1956
I.A.836Davis, John W., M. C. 7th District, Georgia, 1960
I.A.837Dearing, A. K., 1951
I.A.838DeLoach, Waldo, 1950
I.A.839DeSoto Hotel. J. B. Pound, Chas. Day, 1949 – 1950
I.A.840Dixon, F. L., 1950
I.A.841Dunlap, Ed., 1949 – 1951
I.A.842Dunning, M. O., 1954 – 1956
I.A.843Dutton, Edward A., 1950
I.A.844Eaton's Ranch, 1959
I.A.845Expenses, 1950
I.A.846Espy, Carl, 1949 – 1951
I.A.847Espy, Joe, 1950 – 1960
I.A.848Federal Bureau of Investigation, 1950
I.A.849Flynt, John J., M. C., 1958
I.A.850Ford, Aaron, 1948 – 1956
I.A.851Forrester, E. L., M. C., 1950 – 1959
I.A.852Fulmer, Olin F., 1949
I.A.853George, Senator Walter F., 1949 – 1957
I.A.854Georgia Bar Association, 1949 – 1958
I.A.855Georgia Marble Company, 1949
I.A.856Georgia Press Association, 1949 – 1950
I.A.857Georgia, State of, 1949 – 1958
I.A.858Georgia State Society, see also Herman Talmadge, 1949
I.A.859Gilbert, Judge Price, 1949
I.A.860Glass, 1954 – 1957
I.A.861Goree, John T., 1949 – 1950
I.A.862Grayson, Spence M., Anthanassios Theodore Stathapoulos, Michael Patrinas, 1955
I.A.863Greer, Frank H., 1950
I.A.864Green, Mr. and Mrs. S. Gordon and their family, 1949 – 1959
I.A.865Griffin, Shelly, 1955
I.A.866Haar, W. H., Fred, 1949 – 1951
I.A.867Hand, Frank M., 1950
I.A.868Harris, Oren, M. C., 1949 – 1950
I.A.869Hartridge, Julian, 1950
I.A.870Hasbrouck, Gen. Robert W. (Bob), 1950 – 1954
I.A.871Heflin, Cecil R., 1951
I.A.872Hephzibah Orphanage, 1949 – 1961
I.A.873Hibernian Society, Savannah, Georgia, 1950 – 1951
I.A.874Hornestein, Max, 1949
I.A.875Houlihan, J. P., 1949
I.A.876Lee, Willie (negro), 1950
I.A.877Manneschmidt, J. F., 1950
I.A.878Middleton, John W. (Jack), 1950
boxfolder
I.A.91Muller, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph, [1947 – 1948]
I.A.92Muller, J. C., P & B Flying Services, 1948 – 1949
I.A.93Murdaugh, Lamar L., 1949 – 1954
I.A.94Ocean Steamship Company see Rivers and Harbors, 1949
I.A.95Peurifor, John E., 1949
I.A.96Peterson, J. Hardin, M. C., 1949 – 1950
I.A.97Ray, Charles, Jr., 1950
I.A.98Reynolds, R. J., Jr, 1949 – 1950
I.A.99Richardson, John H (Hinkney) and John A. Richardson, 1950 – 1951
I.A.910Ross, Lady, 1949 – 1950
I.A.911Rossiter, Joe, 1949
I.A.912Rourke, John, et al, 1950
I.A.913Saint Andrews Society, 1948 – 1949
I.A.914Saint Andrews Society, 1950 – 1951
I.A.915Savannah Sugar Refinery, 1949
I.A.916Savannah Sugar Refinery, 1950 – 1951
I.A.917Simpson, J. H., 1949 – 1951
I.A.918Smith, G. C., 1949
I.A.919Soperton Manufacturing Company, 1947 – 1949
I.A.920Stafford, H. N., 1950
I.A.921Thomas, Alfred, 1950
I.A.922Trinity Furniture Shop, 1950
I.A.923United States Government, 1949
I.A.924Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company (includes data on trip to England Germany 1947), 1947 – 1948
I.A.925Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1949
I.A.926Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1950
I.A.927Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1951
I.A.928Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1951
I.A.929Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1952
boxfolder
I.A.101Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1952 – 1953
I.A.102Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1954
I.A.103Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1955
I.A.104Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company Vidalia Naval Stores Company, 1956
I.A.105Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1957
I.A.106Vidalia Gum Turpentine Company, 1958
I.A.107Whatley, Jack, 1949 – 1950
b. 1947-1958
boxfolder
I.A.108Allen, Marion, 1950
I.A.109Bailey, Lewis and Williams (see J. M. Williams), 1951
I.A.1010Camp, A. Sidney, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1011Candler Hospital, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1012Cooper, Miss Mildred C., 1949 – 1955
I.A.1013Georgia Consolidated Contracting System, John J. Neely and R. C. Brooks, 1950
I.A.1014Hitch, Robert M., 1950 – 1951
I.A.1015Hollingsworth, C. D., 1949 – 1950
I.A.1016Hooper, Frank A. Judge, 1949
I.A.1017House, 1949 – 1951
I.A.1018Howley, Col. Frank L., 1949 – 1950
I.A.1019Jefferson Loan Society, 1950
I.A.1020Kohlmeier, Elmer, 1951
I.A.1021Kronheim, Milton S., 1949
I.A.1022Lassiter, Dillar see Chevy Chase Club, 1949 – 1954
I.A.1023Latham, John, 1951
I.A.1024Laurel Park Inn, Hendersonville, N. C., Mr. and Mrs. John Prescott, 1949
I.A.1025Lawrence, Alex A., 1949 – 1950
I.A.1026Ledford, Roscoe E., 1949
I.A.1027Long, J. C. Charleston, S. C. (photographs removed), 1950 – 1951
I.A.1028Matthews, Pat, 1949
I.A.1029McDaniel, Thad, 1950
I.A.1030McDougall, Robert L., 1949 – 1951
I.A.1031McGregor, John and Max, 1950 – 1951
I.A.1032McLeod, John D., 1950 – 1951
I.A.1033McRae, P. J., 1950
I.A.1034Metter, Georgia, Tobacco Market, Buyers, 1949
I.A.1035Mingledorff, Walter Lee, Jr., 1949 – 1950
I.A.1036Miscellaneous, 1949
I.A.1037Miscellaneous, 1950
I.A.1038Miscellaneous, 1951
I.A.1039Miscellaneous, 1952
boxfolder
I.A.111Miscellaneous, 1953
I.A.112Miscellaneous, 1954
I.A.113Miscellaneous, 1955
I.A.114Miscellaneous, 1956 – 1958
I.A.115Miscellaneous, 1957
I.A.116Mt. Vernon Manufacturing Company, 1, 1955 – 1958
I.A.117Mount Vernon Garment Company, Mt. Vernon Manufacturing Company, 2, 1958
I.A.118Patchen and Zimmerman, 1950 – 1952
I.A.119Political, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1110Public Health Service, 1949
I.A.1111Quigley, Frank, 1949 – 1951
I.A.1112Rivers and Harbors, see Shipping, 1949
I.A.1113Rourke Iron Works, 1950 – 1951
I.A.1114Russell, Robert L., 1949 – 1951
I.A.1115Russell, Walter B., 1951
I.A.1116St. Simon's Island, 1950
I.A.1117Savannah Electric and Power Company, 1949
I.A.1118Sharpton, Samuel Ralph, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1119Shelby, Rev. C. L., see Georgia Power Company, 1949
I.A.1120Siegel, Nathan, 1949
I.A.1121Silver, Wolfe (Bo Peep), undated
I.A.1122Sloan, Boyd, 1949
I.A.1123Smith, T. J., 1951 – 1952
I.A.1124Soperton Manufacturing Company, 1952
I.A.1125Stacy, J. K. Col, 1949
I.A.1126Stone, Mr. and Mrs. Guy O., 1950 – 1951
I.A.1127Strickland and Zorn, 1950
I.A.1128Thomson, H. V., 1950
I.A.1129Troutman, Henry and Junior, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1130Wheeler, William McDonald (Don), M. C., 1949 – 1954
I.A.1131Wilkerson, John, 1950 – 1952
I.A.1132Williams, J. M. (Bailey, Lewis Williams), 1951
I.A.1133Wilson, Fred, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1134Wood, John S., M. C., 1950 – 1951
c. 1814-1961
boxfolder
I.A.1135Aaron, Miss Gladys, 1951
I.A.1136Artley, Will H, 1949
I.A.1137Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1948 – 1951
I.A.1138Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1952
I.A.1139Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1953 – 1954
I.A.1140Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1955
I.A.1141Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1956
boxfolder
I.A.121Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1957
I.A.122Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1958
I.A.123Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1959
I.A.124Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1960
I.A.125Ailey Manufacturing Company, 1961
I.A.126Ailey Methodist Church, 1950
I.A.127American Express Company, 1959
I.A.128American Turpentine Farmers Association, 1949
I.A.129Bell, Robert L. see McAllister Place, 1959
I.A.1210Blankart and Cie, Zurich, Switzerland (see also Hugh Peterson, Jr., also Hanover Bank, New York), 1955 – 1961
I.A.1211Byrd, Grady, 1959
I.A.1212Cemetery File, 1956
I.A.1213Citizens and Southern National Bank, see Bank Statements, 1951 – 1959
I.A.1214Clodfelter, Clarence, 1949 – 1951
I.A.1215Colson, Mrs. D. C. (Jessie May Peterson), 1961
I.A.1216Cornelia Place (see J. J. and H. H. McAllister), 1961
I.A.1217Cows (see ledger record for details), 1957 – 1961
I.A.1218Farm, 1952
I.A.1219Farms, 1952 – 1961
I.A.1220Foster, Roy, 1951
I.A.1221Georgia Farm Bureau Federation, 1949
I.A.1222Hagan, Elliott, 1959 – 1961
I.A.1223The Hanover Bank, New York, 1959 – 1961
I.A.1224Harris, William C., 1950 – 1961
I.A.1225Income, 1956
I.A.1226Insurance, 1959 – 1963
I.A.1227Johns Hopkins Hospital [RESTRICTED], 1956
I.A.1228Kennedy, E. S., 1949 – 1961
I.A.1229Kerr, William, 1949 – 1951
I.A.1230Kiker, Cadman R. Serviceman, Discharge, 1953
I.A.1231Kirkpatrick, Andrew, 1961
I.A.1232Lady, Dr. Howard R., 1958 – 1960
I.A.1233Landrum, Phil M., M. C., 1953 – 1960
I.A.1234Lanham, Henderson, M. C., 1950 – 1952
I.A.1235Lawrence, Alex, 1958 – 1959
I.A.1236Long, Captain Michael, 1951 – 1953
I.A.1237Loomis-Sayles and Company, Incorporated, 1960 – 1961
I.A.1238Lowe, John W., 1949
I.A.1239Magnolias, 1949
I.A.1240McAllister data and notes on effort to purchase Calhoun land (folder 1 of 2), 1840 – 1868
I.A.1241McAllister data and notes on effort to purchase Calhoun land (folder 2 of 2), 1814 – 1951
I.A.1242McAllister land line, 1959
I.A.1243McAllister, Joe Jack, home, land at Cornelia, Isaac Freedman, Billie Robert Evans, 1950 – 1959
I.A.1244McAllister Place, flowing well, Bud Adams Place, 1960
folder
OS I[Irrigation Plan, Bud Adams Place] [oversize], 1953
boxfolder
I.A.1245McAllister, Joe Jack, 1950
I.A.1246McBride, Herman, 1949 – 1959
I.A.1247McLaurine, W. M., 1949 – 1959
I.A.1248Mercury Auto, 1958 – 1960
I.A.1249Miscellaneous, 1959 – 1960
I.A.1250Mount Vernon – Ailey Public School, 1949 – 1950
I.A.1251Mount Vernon Office and Rental Property, 1957 – 1959
I.A.1252Munsey Trust Company, see bank St. tementa, 1959
I.A.1253Mitchell, Erwin, M. C., 1958
boxfolder
I.A.131Montgomery County Bank (see Bank Statements), 1950 – 1954
I.A.132Morrison, Walter, 1950
I.A.133National Press Club, 1949 – 1954
I.A.134Newton, B. B., Vidalia, Georgia, 1957
I.A.135Oglethorpe Club, 1960
I.A.136O'Neal, R. D., 1958
I.A.137Oxnard, Thomas (see Savannah Sugar Refinery), 1959
I.A.138Pace, Hon. Stephen, 1949 – 1951
I.A.139Parker, Jim (see Brewton-Parker Junior College, Rev. C. L. Shelby), 1949
I.A.1310Peterson, Carter C. (see Sen. George, Herman Talmadge), 1956 – 1961
I.A.1311Hugh Peterson Personal, 1950
I.A.1312Hugh Peterson Personal, 1951
I.A.1313Hugh Peterson Personal, 1952
I.A.1314Hugh Peterson Personal, 1953
I.A.1315Hugh Peterson Personal, 1954
I.A.1316Hugh Peterson Personal, 1955
I.A.1317Hugh Peterson Personal, 1956
I.A.1318Hugh Peterson Personal, 1957
I.A.1319Hugh Peterson Personal, 1958
I.A.1320Hugh Peterson Personal (see McAllister land lines), 1959
I.A.1321Hugh Peterson Personal (see McAllister land lines, see U. S. Cane Sugar Refiners, see Hugh Peterson Personal 1961), 1960
I.A.1322Hugh Peterson Personal, 1961
boxfolder
I.A.141Peterson, Jr. Hugh, No. 1 (Yale, Somary), 1949 – 1959
I.A.142Peterson, Jr. Hugh, No. 2 (see Blankart and Cie, Zurich, Switzerland, Somary, Hanover Bank, New York), 1959-1961
I.A.143Peterson, Mrs. Hugh (Pat), 1950 – 1961
I.A.144Peterson, Jim Neal, 1951
I.A.145Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Jim, 1949 – 1953
I.A.146Peterson, John C., 1949 – 1960
I.A.147Peterson, John C. and Hugh, 1959
I.A.148Peterson, J. H. and Emmitt Williams, 1955
I.A.149Peterson, John R., 1949 – 1961
I.A.1410Peterson, John R. (oil), 1961
I.A.1411Peterson, Dr. T. A., 1949 – 1955
I.A.1412Peterson, Thomas A. (U. S. Navy), 1950 – 1959
I.A.1413Peterson, W. J., 1950 – 1959
I.A.1414Peterson, Will J., Jr., Soperton, Georgia, 1949 – 1952
I.A.1415Peterson, W. M., 1958
I.A.1416Pilcher, J. L., M. C., 1960
I.A.1417Preston, Prince H., 1949 – 1958
I.A.1418Raburn, Howard Wallace, 1959 – 1960
I.A.1419Revere Sugar Refinery, 1949
I.A.1420Roads, 1949
I.A.1421Road by old place, 1960
I.A.1422Robison, John Louis, 1950
I.A.1423Russell, Senator Richard B., 1950 – 1958
I.A.1424Saint Albans (see National Cathedral School for Boys), 1949 – 1960
I.A.1425Saint Andrews Society, Washington and Savannah, 1952 – 1959
I.A.1426Savannah, Georgia, 1949
I.A.1427Savannah Sugar Refinery, 1952 – 1960
I.A.1428Sharpe, W. Claude, 1951
I.A.1429Snooks, B. R. and family, 1950 – 1960
I.A.1430Somary, Felix, Hannes, Wolfgang (see Blankart and Cie, Zurich, Switzerland, also Hugh Peterson, Jr), 1959 – 1961
I.A.1431Southern Company, 1959
I.A.1432States Rights Council, 1956 – 1959
I.A.1433States Rights Council of Georgia, 1961
I.A.1434Stephens, Robert G., Jr., M. C., 1960 – 1961
I.A.1435Strickland, Herbert, 1957
I.A.1436Stubbs, J. M., 1949 – 1961
I.A.1437Summa, Mrs. Kathleen, 1961
I.A.1438Talmadge, Gov., Sen. Herman and Elizabeth, 1949 – 1959
I.A.1439Tarver, Malcolm C., 1950 – 1960
I.A.1440Tasev, Athanas, 1950 – 1960
I.A.1441Thurmond, Strom, U. S. Senator, 1961
I.A.1442Toronto Dominion Bank, 1959 – 1961
I.A.1443Tyson, W. S., 1949 – 1960
I.A.1444Union Trust Company, Washington, D. C., 1961
I.A.1445U. S. Cane Sugar Refiners Association, 1960
boxfolder
I.A.151Underwood, Joe, 1958
I.A.152Vandiver, Gov. Ernest and Mrs., 1959
I.A.153Vidalia Country Club, 1950 - 1954
I.A.154Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company, 1959 – 1960
I.A.155Vidalia Gum and Turpentine Company, 1961
I.A.156Vinson, Carl, M. C., 1949 – 1961
I.A.157Wheeler, Don, 1956
I.A.158Wilson, Lady (Hester) Maitland, 1950 - 1955
I.A.159Wilson, Lady (Hester) Maitland, 1955 – 1960
I.A.1510Wright's Real Estate Company, Cornelia, Georgia, 1961



B. Financial

( 76 folder(s) )
Files include Peterson's financial records from 1920 through 1961. The financial statements add an extra element to Peterson's business dealing throughout his life as a farmer, lawyer, publisher, insurance agent, congressman, lobbyist, and developer.
boxfolder
I.B.11Bank, 1954
I.B.12Banks and taxes, 1955
I.B.13Banks, 1956
I.B.14Expenses, 1951
I.B.15Expenses (folder 1 of 3), 1954
I.B.16Expenses (folder 2 of 3), 1954
I.B.17Expenses (folder 3of 3), 1954
I.B.18Expenses (folder 1 of 3), 1955
I.B.19Expenses (folder 2 of 3),, 1955
I.B.110Expenses (folder 3 of 3), 1955
I.B.111Expenses (folder 1 of 3), 1956
boxfolder
I.B.21Expenses (folder 2 of 3), 1956
I.B.22Expenses (folder 3 of 3), 1956
I.B.23Expenses (folder 1 of 2), 1960
I.B.24Expenses (folder 2 of 2), 1960
I.B.25[Financial, undated]
I.B.26[Financial, 1920 – 1924]
I.B.27[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1927]
I.B.28[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1927]
I.B.29[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1935]
I.B.210[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1935]
I.B.211[Financial, 1936]
I.B.212[Financial, 1937]
I.B.213[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1938]
boxfolder
I.B.31[Financial (item removed) (folder 2 of 2), 1938]
I.B.32[Financial, 1939]
I.B.33[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1940]
I.B.34[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1940]
I.B.35[Financial, 1941]
I.B.36[Financial, 1942]
I.B.37[Financial, 1943]
I.B.38[Financial, 1944]
I.B.39[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1945]
I.B.310[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1945]
I.B.311[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1946]
I.B.312[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1946]
I.B.313[Financial (folder 1 of 2), 1947]
I.B.314[Financial (folder 2 of 2), 1947]
boxfolder
I.B.41[Financial (folder 1 of 4), 1951]
I.B.42[Financial (folder 2 of 4), 1951]
I.B.43[Financial (folder 3 of 4), 1951]
I.B.44[Financial (folder 4 of 4), 1951]
I.B.45[Financial (folder 1 of 4), 1955]
I.B.46[Financial (folder 2 of 4), 1955]
I.B.47[Financial (folder 3 of 4), 1955]
I.B.48[Financial (folder 4 of 4), 1955]
I.B.49[Financial (folder 1 of 4), 1956]
I.B.410[Financial (folder 2 of 4), 1956]
I.B.411[Financial (folder 3 of 4), 1956]
I.B.412[Financial (folder 4 of 4), 1956]
I.B.413[Financial, Ailey Gin Company (folder 1 of 2), 1936-1953]
boxfolder
I.B.51[Financial, Ailey Gin Company (folder 2 of 2), 1936-1953]
I.B.52[House of Representatives Financial Statements, 1936-1943]
I.B.53Income Tax, 1951
I.B.54Income Tax, Banks, 1952
I.B.55Income Tax, Expenses, 1952
I.B.56Income Tax, copies of 1952 Income Tax returns, 1952
I.B.57Income Tax, Bank statements, Ailey Gin, 1952
I.B.58Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 1 of 4), 1952
I.B.59Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 2 of 4), 1952
I.B.510Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 3 of 4), 1952
I.B.511Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 4 of 4), 1952
I.B.512Income Tax, Banks, 1953
I.B.513Income Tax, Expenses, 1953
I.B.514Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 1 of 4), 1953
I.B.515Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 2 of 4), 1953
I.B.516Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 3 of 4), 1953
I.B.517Income Tax, Bank Statements (folder 4 of 4), 1953
I.B.518Income Tax, 1954
I.B.519Income Tax correspondence re: tax, 1952-1955
I.B.520Income, 1955
I.B.521Income Tax, 1956
I.B.522[Ledger, 1923-1955]
I.B.523[Receipts, undated]
I.B.524[Receipts, 1930-1939]
I.B.525[Receipts, 1940-1946]



C. Construction in Ailey/Property

( 18 folder(s) )
Files include records from Peterson's property in Ailey, Georgia, and Montgomery County. He rebuilt the Peterson home place in Ailey from 1938 to 1940 and renamed it Sandridge Manor. Oversize items and artifacts have been removed.
boxfolder
I.C.11Annfield House, Old Telephone Exe. Building, Mt. Vernon, Georgia, 1956
I.C.12Asphalt tile, 1950
I.C.13Brick walks, Ailey, 1952
I.C.14Bud Adams Place, 1952
I.C.15Data re: deep well drilled at W. J. Peterson old home place, Ailey, Georgia (artifacts removed), 1959 September
I.C.16House, 1948
I.C.17[House, Ailey, Georgia (oversize item removed), 1954]
folder
OS I[House, Ailey, Georgia, Electrical plan of basement] [oversize]
boxfolder
I.C.18Horses, 1954
I.C.19[Notes, bedroom, Ailey house, undated]
I.C.110Personal [farm, property, 1941]
I.C.111Personal [house, Ailey, Georgia (oversize item removed) (folder 1 of 2), 1940 – 1941]
I.C.112Personal [house, Ailey, Georgia (oversize item removed) (folder 2 of 2), 1940 – 1941]
I.C.113[Plan for planting part of Peterson Old Place, 1961]
I.C.114[Property, 1922 – 1924]
I.C.115Property of Kathleen Conner, Montgomery County, Georgia, 1951 March
I.C.116Richardson Place, Georgia, Ohoopee River, Montgomery County, 1953 August
I.C.117[Sandridge Manor sign (oversize items removed), 1956]
folder
OS I[Proof of marble marker text created for Sandridge Manor, Ailey, Georgia] [oversize], 1956
OS I[Proof of text for bronze sign at Sandridge Manor, Ailey, Georgia] [oversize], 1956
boxfolder
I.C.118Tile roofing, 1954



D. Family

( 12 folder(s) )
Material includes artifacts and manuscripts generated by Hugh Peterson's father, W. J. Peterson, who served in the Georgia legislature in 1907 and 1908, as well as correspondence regarding educational matters. Also included are trial transcripts from 1908 that document a trial of Hugh Peterson, the uncle of Hugh Peterson, Sr. Artifacts have been separated from manuscript materials and placed in Series IX.
boxfolder
I.C.119a[Ailey, Georgia town plan (oversize item removed)], 1894
I.C.119b[Ailey, Georgia, minutes from incorporation][photocopies], 1894
I.C.120[Ballots, Democratic Primary, Montgomery County, Georgia, 1906 April 26]
I.C.121A Bird's Eye View of the Lower House of the General Assembly of Georgia and the Farmer's Union, 1907
I.C.122[Clippings, 1876 – 1914]
I.C.123[Coin purse, contents (artifacts removed), circa 1897]
I.C.124Items saved by Flora Snooks regarding Hugh Peterson, 1943
I.C.125Peterson, Hugh, Personal, Family Records, Ailey, Georgia, 1937 – 1941
folder
OS I[Family Record of Hugh Peterson prepared by Marie Peterson] [oversize], 1939 Spring
boxfolder
I.C.126Peterson, Hugh, Jr. School, 1944
I.C.127[Peterson, John C., medical school admission, 1924]
I.C.128[Peterson, W. J., correspondence, 1897 – 1913]
I.C.129[Peterson, W. J., papers, 1874 – 1914]
I.C.130[Plug of tobacco (artifact removed), undated]
I.C.131[Trial transcripts, Hugh Peterson, 1908]
folder
OS I[The Flag of Destiny, print of Eagle shredding Nazi and Japanese flags, Clarence Switzer][oversize], circa 1941-1945
OS I[Russell Writes Hardman! Asks Who Duped Him Into Signing Card, article][oversize], circa 1927
OS I[Atlanta Independent Negro Newspaper Endorses Dick Russell, article][oversize], 1930 September 18
OS I[Carswell and Rivers against Holder and Russell: The Truth][oversize]
OS I["See What Rivers Says About Carswell" broadside][oversize], circa 1930
OS I[Resolution to commend Jim Peterson, Hugh Peterson, Jr., William James Peterson, John Calhoun Peterson for their service in the Georgia Senate][oversize], 1956
boxfolder
I.D.21-2Correspondence: Patience Russell to Hugh Peterson, Sr., 1929 - 1930 June
I.D.28-9Correspondence: Patience Russell Peterson to Hugh Peterson, Sr., 1930 October - 1931
I.D.210Correspondence, 1922-1927
I.D.211Correspondence: Friends - Envelopes to Letters from girlfriends after he began dating, 1926-1929
I.D.212Correspondence: Friends, 1930
I.D.213Correspondence: Patience Russell Peterson to Hugh Peterson, Sr., 1947
I.D.214Hugh Peterson, Sr. Trip to England, 1957
I.D.215Photographs: Hugh Peterson, Sr., 1900-1920s
I.D.216Photographs: Thomas Beckon Calhoun (Grandfather of Hugh Peterson, Sr.), undated
I.D.217Masonic Materials, 1901, 1920
I.D.218Histories of Old Place and Sandbridge Manor, Ailey Georgia, 1949
I.D.219Funeral Guestbook, 1961
 

II. Campaigns

8 box(es)
(8 linear feet)
This series consists of Peterson's personal campaign files for the elections in 1932, 1934, 1936, 1938, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1946 as well as records of Richard B. Russell's presidential campaign in 1952. The items are arranged into the following categories: A. 74th Congress (1932, 1934) B. 75th Congress (1936) C. 76th Congress (1938), D. 77th Congress (1940), E. 78th Congress (1942). F. 79th Congress (1944), G. 1946, H. Russell Campaign. Each sub series contains information regarding the District and State Democratic Committees as well as the paperwork that Peterson submitted to each in order to run and after he won. Information about opponents and campaign flyers are also included. Non-manuscript materials have been separated and placed into corresponding series for preservation purposes.



A. 1932 Campaign and 74th Congress

( 52 folder(s) )
This sub series includes lists of registered voters by county, correspondence regarding political contacts in the First Congressional District, newspapers containing information about opponents Homer Parker and Albert Cobb, campaign materials for Peterson as well as Parker and Cobb, photographs, multiple maps, and copies of the Congressional Record with marginalia showing Parker's speeches in the House of Representatives.
boxfolder
II.11[Article – Hugh Peterson Congressional Candidacy, 1932]
II.12[Article – Hugh Peterson, possibly by Jim Perkins, 1934]
II.13[Barwick, Milton, Campaign Pamphlet, undated]
II.14"The Billy Goat Man's Dream" by Jim Perkins,, [undated]
II.15[Clippings, Campaign, Election, 1932]
II.16[Clippings, Campaign, Election, 1934]
II.17[Cobb, Albert, Campaign Material (item removed, 1934]
II.18[Contacts – Bulloch County, undated]
II.19[Contacts – Liberty County, Long County, Bryan County, undated]
II.110[Contacts – McIntosh County, undated]
II.111[Contacts – Screven County, undated]
II.112[Contacts – Treutlen County, undated]
II.113[Contacts – Wheeler County, undated]
II.114Congressional Record, 1932 February 19
II.115Congressional Record, 1932 February 25
II.116Congressional Record, 1932 February 29
II.117Congressional Record, 1932 May 9
II.118Congressional Record, 1932 May 13
II.119[Correspondence, Campaign, 1932]
II.120[Correspondence, Campaign, 1933]
II.121[Correspondence, Campaign, 1934]
II.122Delegates to the First District Congressional Convention, 1934 September 23
II.123[Election return notes, undated]
II.124[Election returns, 1932]
II.125[Election returns (item removed), 1934]
II.126[Election returns, 1934]
II.127[Election returns, undated]
II.128Election rules as resolved by the Democratic Executive Committee of the First Congressional District, 1934
II.129Endorsements of Co-operative Legislative Committee Representing Four Brotherhoods and Maintenance of Ways, State of Georgia, 1934
II.130First Congressional District Executive Committee, [1934]
II.131[First Congressional District farm statistics, undated]
II.132First Inaugural Address by Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States
II.133aList of qualifies voters of Emanuel County, Georgia on the Registration List and Qualified to Vote in the September Primary, 1932
II.133b[Maps of Georgia with Congressional districts marked] (item removed_, circa 1930
II.134Names of J. P. [Justices of the Peace] and Ex. Off. J. P. for Emanuel County, GA, [undated]
II.135Official Consolidation of Votes in Primary of September 12, 1934, First Congressional District (item removed), 1934 September 12
II.136Parker, Homer – Campaign Flyers, Letters, 1934
II.137[Parker, Homer – Speeches, Legislation (item removed), 1932 - 1934]
II.138[Peterson, Hugh – Campaign Flyers, Cards, 1934]
II.139Platform of Hon. Hugh Peterson, Jr. Candidate for Congress – First Congressional District of Georgia, [undated]
II.140[Qualified Voters – Bryan County, undated]
II.141Qualified List of Voters in the 1634 – 1640 Districts, G.M. of Jenkins County, Georgia, 1932
II.142[Qualified Voters, Bulloch County, Georgia, by precinct (folder 1 of 3), 1930]
II.143[Qualified Voters, Bulloch County, Georgia, by precinct (folder 2 of 3), 1930]
II.144[Qualified Voters, Bulloch County, Georgia, by precinct (folder 3 of 3), 1930]
II.145Registered Voters, 60 – 62 Districts, G.M. of Burke County Georgia, [1932]
II.146[Statements released against Homer Parker, undated]
II.147No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Delegates to District Convention in Swainsboro September 22, 1934, and program, of said convention (Folder 1 of 7), 1934 September 22
II.148No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Form letters to Committee Members (Folder 2 of 7), 1934
II.149No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Official list of votes cast by counties in 1934 primary from Secretary of State Democratic Executive [Committee] (Folder 3 of 7), 1934
II.150No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Official Consolidation of votes in primary of Sept. 12, 1934 showing votes by militia districts in Congressional contest (Folder 4 of 7), 1934
II.151No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Miscellaneous material and clippings regarding Talmadge, Road Bill Hearing, Democratic National Campaign (Folder 5 of 7), 1934
II.152No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Letter from Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees recommending certain candidates in Georgia (Folder 6 of 7), 1934
II.153No. 1 Political 74th Congress – Date with reference to Roosevelt Homecoming in Atlanta (Folder 7 of 7), 1934
folder
OS II[Ballots with return numbers written. 1934 Election: Effingham County, Treutten County, and Bryan County][oversize], 1934



B. 75th Congress

( 25 folder(s) )
Within these files are programs; rules and resolution of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meeting in Sylvania, Georgia, June 24, 1936; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included is correspondence from the Democratic National Committee regarding the presidential race as well as races in Georgia.
boxfolder
II.154No. 2 Political 75th Congress – Formal announcement by Hugh Peterson to Secretary of Committee of intentions to become candidate and secretary's acknowledgement thereof (Folder 1 of 8), [1936]
II.155No. 2 Political 75th Congress – Rules and resolutions of the First District Democratic Executive Committee Meeting at Sylvania, (Folder 2 of 8), 1936 June 24
II.156No. 2 Political 75th Congress – Program of Meeting (folder 3 of 8), 1936
II.157No. 2 Political 75th Congress – Letters appointing proxies to Meeting from Jim L. Gillis, Soperton, and Joe A. Pope of Alamo (Folder 4 of 8), 1936
II.158No. 2 Political 75th Congress – Letters from J. Henry Howard, of Sylvania, advising Secretary had not certified Peterson's name for Ballot, from W.T. Wright, Metter, secty and treasurer, Candler Co. Democratic Ex. Committee, assessing candidates for Congress an additional fee. (Folder 5 of 8), 1936
II.159No. 2 Political 75th Congress – [Correspondence regarding First Congressional District Executive Meeting, Sylvania, Georgia (Folder 6 of 8), 1936 June 24]
II.160No. 2 Political 75th Congress – [Relief funds to Georgia for Educational Purposes (folder7 of 8), 1936]
II.161No. 2 Political 75th Congress – [Correspondence (Folder 8 of 8), 1935 - 1936]
II.162No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Program of convention, messages, press notices, consolidated vote of primary (Folder 1 of 11), 1936
II.163No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Executive Committee elected by Convention to serve during 75th Congress, and letters from Peterson to same advising them of their selection (Folder 2 of 11), 1936
II.164No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Formal notice to Governor by Peterson of his election in General Election and acknowledgement Thereof (Folder 3 of 11), 1936
II.165No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Formal notice of nomination from the Secretary of State Democratic Committee (Folder 4 of 11), 1936
II.166No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Peterson's formal notice to secretary of state of his election in primary (Folder 5 of 11), 1936
II.167No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Acknowledgement of receipt by Clerk Trimble of House of statement of receipts and expenditures (Folder 6 of 11), 1936
II.168No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Secretaries certificates of results to Ordinaries and their acknowledgement (Folder 7 of 11), 1936
II.169No. 3 Political 75th Congress – Sworn statements to Clerks of Superior Court re: campaign expenditures (Folder 8 of 11), 1936
II.170No. 3 Political 75th Congress – [List of delegates appointed, First Congressional District Convention] (Folder 9 of 11), 1936
II.171No. 3 Political 75th Congress – [Secretary's formal notification of qualification fee to secretary and treasurers of county Democratic Executive Committees] (Folder 10 of 11), 1936
II.172No. 3 Political 75th Congress – [Correspondence (Folder 11 of 11), 1937]
II.173No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – Democratic National Campaign (Folder 1 of 6), 1936
II.174No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – Democratic National Campaign (Folder 2 of 6), 1936
II.175No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – Letters and telegrams of congratulations (Folder 3 of 6), 1936
II.176No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – [Potential run for Governor, 1938] (Folder 4 of 6), 1936
II.177No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – [D.C. office] (folder 5 of 6), 1936
II.178No. 4 Political 75th Congress Miscellaneous – [Campaign button samples] (Folder 6 of 6), 1936
II.179Bryan (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.180Bulloch (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.181Burke (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.182Candler (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.183Chatham (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.184Effingham (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.185Emanuel (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.186Evans (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.187Jenkins (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.188Liberty (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.189Long (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.190McIntosh (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.191Montgomery (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.192Screven (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.193Tattnall (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
folder
OS IIElection Returns Tattnall County
boxfolder
II.194Toombs (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.195Treutlen (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]
II.196Wheeler (Political) 75th Congress, [1937-1938]



C. 76th Congress

( 37 folder(s) )
Within these files are programs; rules and resolutions of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meetings in Savannah, Georgia, April 26, 1938, and in Reidsville, Georgia on September 23, 1938; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included is correspondence regarding the failure of the government to issue tobacco allotments on time during the summer of 1938. Tom Edwards of Claxton, Georgia ran as Peterson's opponent and the files contain notes regarding his campaign and Cobb flyers. Le Monde Illustre magazine, published on August 7, 1937, is included in this series as the front cover depicts Hugh Peterson, Sr. and guests eating watermelon in his office in Washington, D.C. The original photograph is in the Peterson Papers in Series VI, Photographs.
boxfolder
II.21No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Correspondence regarding First Congressional District Democratic Executive Committee meeting, Savannah, (Folder 1 of 7), 1938 April 26]
II.22No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Announcement of candidacy, (Folder 2 of 7), 1938]
II.23No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Campaign, (Folder 3 of 7) (item and photographs removed), 1938]
II.24No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Correspondence, Washington, D.C. Office, (Folder 4 of 7) (items removed), 1938]
folder
OS IIEvans County Primary Returns, 1938 September 14
OS IIUnofficial Ballot of Chatham County, 1938 September 14
boxfolder
II.25No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Clippings, (Folder 5 of 7), 1938]
II.26No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Tobacco Allotments, (Folder 6 of 7), 1938]
II.27No. 5 Political 76th Congress (5) – [Speech of E.E. Cox, Accepting Nomination as Democratic Candidate for Congress, at District Convention held at Moultrie, GA, (Folder 7 of7), 1938 October 14]
II.28(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Minutes of meeting of 1st District Executive Committee at Savannah, (Folder1 of 13), 1938 April 26
II.29(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) Notice of Secretary Pope of District Executive Committee to county officials advising of Congressional entries and distribution of fees paid (Folder 2 of 13), [1938]
II.210(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Notice of appointment by H.P. of delegates to convention at Reidsville (Folder 3 of 13), [1938]
II.211(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Miscellaneous matter concerning convention, including newspaper articles (Folder 4 of 13), [1938]
II.212(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Program and proceedings of Convention at Reidsville, including District Committee for 1939-40 (Folder 5 of 13), [1938]
II.213(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Notice of primary results to Ordinaries by Secretary Pope of District Committee (Folder 6 of 13), [1938]
II.214(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Notice of primary results to Secretary of State, Atlanta, Ga., by H.P. and Secty. Pope of District Committee, and acknowledgement thereof (Folder 7 of 13), [1938]
II.215(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Letter of H.P. to members of District Committee advising of their selection (Folder 8 of 13), [1938]
II.216(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Notice of Hugh Peterson to Clerks of Court re: campaign expenditures (Folder 9 of 13), [1938]
II.217(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Letter of Hugh Peterson to Clerk of House Trimble re: campaign expenditures and acknowledgement thereof (Folder 10 of 13), [1938]
II.218(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Letters to official of County Committees requesting list of Executive Committees (Folder 11 of 13), [1938]
II.219(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – [Correspondence, (Folder 12 of 13), 1938]
II.220(6) Political – 76th Congress (No. 6) – Le Monde Illustre, 7 Aout 1937 (Folder 13 of 13) (item removed), 1937
folder
OS IILe Monde Illustre [oversize], 1937 August 7
boxfolder
II.221(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 1 of 6), [1938]
II.222(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 2 of 6), [1938]
II.223(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 3 of 6), [1938]
II.224(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 4 of 6), [1938]
II.225(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 5 of 6), [1938]
II.226(7) Political – 76th Congress (7) – Campaign and Election Day Materials (Folder 6 of 6), [1938]
II.227(8) 76th Congress Political (8) – Members of Democratic Executive Committees of 18 counties of 1st Dist. And their militia districts and p.o. address (Folder 1 of 1), [1938]
II.228(9) Political – 76th Congress (9) – Consolidated returns by precincts of Congressional Primary, (Folder 1 of 2) (items removed), 1938 September 14
II.229(9) Political – 76th Congress (9) – Source material used in consolidating Congressional Primary returns (Folder 2 of 2) (items removed), 1938 September 14
folder
OS IIGeorgia State Democratic Primary Tally Poster, [1938]
boxfolder
II.230(10) Political – 76th Congress (10) – Miscellaneous (Folder 1 of 4) (items removed), [1939 - 1940]
II.231(10) Political – 76th Congress (10) – Miscellaneous (Folder 2 of 4), [1939 - 1940]
II.232(10) Political – 76th Congress (10) – Miscellaneous (Folder 3 of 4), [1939 - 1940]
II.233(10) Political – 76th Congress (10) – Miscellaneous (Folder 4 of 4) (items removed), [1939 - 1940]
II.234(11) Political – 76th Congress (11) – Miscellaneous (Folder 1 of 4), [1940]
II.235(11) Political – 76th Congress (11) – Miscellaneous (Folder 2 of 4), [1940]
II.236(11) Political – 76th Congress (11) – Miscellaneous (Folder 3 of 4), [1940]
II.237(11) Political – 76th Congress (11) – Miscellaneous (Folder 4 of 4), [1940]
folder
OS IIWheeler for President Circular (newspaper) [oversize], [1940]



D. 77th Congress

( 17 folder(s) )
Within these files are details of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meeting held in Metter, Georgia on May 10, 1940; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included is correspondence regarding Peterson's rumored inclusion on the Wilkie ticket of Independent Democrats. Albert L. Cobb of Emanuel County, Georgia, ran as Peterson's opponent and the files contain notes regarding his campaign and Cobb flyers.
boxfolder
II.23812 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – Material re: H.P.'s name on Wilkie Ticket, etc. (Folder 1 of 14), [1940]
II.23912 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 1. Material re: plans for meeting of District Executive Committee at Metter, Ga., (Folder 2 of 14), 1940 May 10
II.24012 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 2. Rules for primary adopted by committee at Metter meeting (Folder 3 of 14), [1940]
II.24112 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 3. Notice of closing date for Primary (Folder 4 of 14), [1940]
II.24212 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 4. Formal Announcement of Hugh Peterson of his candidacy for re-election as sent to county weeklies (Folder 5 of 14), [1940]
II.24312 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 5. Correspondence re: placing of announcement in weekly papers (Folder 6 of 14), [1940]
II.24412 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 6. Letters to committee members following meeting in Metter (Folder 7 of 14), [1940]
II.24512 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 7. Letter to Secretary A.L. Mosley, Lyons, formally qualifying for primary; also his acknowledgement of same, also affidavit of H.P. agreeing to abide by results of primary (Folder 8 of 14), [1940]
II.24612 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 8. List of newspapers and their editors of District (Folder 9 of 14), [1940]
II.24712 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – 9. Materials re: Fourth District Committee meet at Griffin, Ga., 6th District announcement for, etc. (Folder 10 of 14), [1940]
II.24812 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 –10. Note re: call from A.S. Mosley on June 1, 1940, advising that Albert L. Cobb had qualified (11 of 14), 1940 June 1
II.2492 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – [Correspondence, (Folder 12 of 14), 1940]
II.25012 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – [Notes, (Folder 13 of 14) (items removed), 1940]
II.25112 – Political – 77th Congress – 12 – [Cobb, Albert L. – Campaign Materials, (Folder 14 of 14), 1940]
II.25213 Political – 77th Congress – 13 – General Election – (Folder 1 of 3), 1940
II.25313 Political – 77th Congress – 13 – General Election – (Folder 2 of 3), 1940
II.25413 Political – 77th Congress – 13 – General Election – (Folder 3 of 3), 1940
II.25514 – Political – 77th Congress – 14 (H.P.'s speech opposing HR 1776) (Folder 1 of 2), [1941]
II.25614 – Political – 77th Congress – 14 (H.P.'s speech opposing HR 1776) (Folder 2 of 2), [1941]
II.25715 – Political – 77th Congress – 15 – Consolidated returns by precinct of 1st District Congressional Contest of Sept. 1, 1940, [1940]
boxfolder
II.3116 – Political – 77th Congress – 16 – List of delegates to 1st District convention at Savannah. List of Members of 1st Dist. Dem. Comm., 1940 September 20
II.3217 – Political – 77th Congress – 17 – Material re: convention at Savannah and formalities re: qualifying as Democratic candidate. Also list of Congressional Democratic Committee, 1941 – 1942
II.3318 – Political – 77th Congress – 18 – Material re: campaign, election day and convention (Folder 1 of 2), [1940]
II.3418 – Political – 77th Congress – 18 – Material re: campaign, election day and convention (Folder 2 of 2), [1940]
II.3519 – Political – 77th Congress – 19 – Source material for consolidation of returns for 77th Congress, [1940]
folder
OS IIPoster with Emanuel County return, [1940]
OS IIThe Pembroke Journal, Headline: "Gene Wins for Governor" [oversize], 1940 September 13
OS IIBallot-Candler County Primary, 1940 September 11
boxfolder
II.3620 – Political – 77th Congress – 20 – Miscellaneous, [1941]
II.3721 – Political -77th Congress – 21 – List of Justices of the Peace, 1940 – 1941
II.3822 – Political – 77th Congress – 22 – County Democratic Executive Committees, 1940 – 1941
II.3923 – Political – 77th Congress – 23 – Letters with reference to political situation (Folder 1 of 4), 1942
II.31023 – Political – 77th Congress – 23 – Letters with reference to political situation (Folder 2 of 4), 1942
II.31123 – Political – 77th Congress – 23 – Letters with reference to political situation (Folder 3 of 4), 1942
II.31223 – Political – 77th Congress – 23 – Letters with reference to political situation (Folder 4 of 4), 1942



E. 78th Congress

( 36 folder(s) )
Within these files are details of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meeting held in Savannah, Georgia on June 12, 1942; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included is information about Peterson's opponent, Albert Cobb.
boxfolder
II.31324 – Political – 78th Congress – 24 – Material re: Meeting of District Executive Committee, Savannah, (Folder 1 of 2), 1942 June 12
II.31424 – Political – 78th Congress – 24 – Material re: Meeting of District Executive Committee, Savannah, (Folder 2 of 2), 1942 June 12
II.31524 – Political – 78th Congress – 24 – Letters to county papers announcing candidacy, [1942]
II.31624 – Political – 78th Congress – 24 – Letter of HP to committee secretary, formally announcing candidacy, [1942]
II.31725 – 78th Congress – Political – 25 –Opponent's propaganda, [1942]
folder
OS II"Do We Want to Win This War?" [oversize]
OS IIPeople of America:-Share our Wealth Society. Motto: "Every Man a King" Huey P. Long Poster
boxfolder
II.31826 – 78th Congress – Political – 26 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 1 of 3), [1942]
II.31926 – 78th Congress – Political – 26 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 2 of 3), [1942]
II.32026 – 78th Congress – Political – 26 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 3 of 3), [1942]
II.32127 – 78th Congress – Political – 27 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same, [1942]
II.32228 – 78th Congress – Political – 28 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 1 of 2), [1942]
II.32328 – 78th Congress – Political – 28 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 2 of 2), [1942]
II.32429 – 78th Congress – Political – 29 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 1 of 2), [1942]
II.32529 – 78th Congress – Political – 29 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same (Folder 2 of 2), [1942]
II.32630 – 78th Congress – Political – 30 – Campaign materials and Materials re: same, [1942]
II.32731 – 78th Congress – Political – 31 – Material re: campaign, election day and convention (Folder 1 of 2), [1942]
II.32831 – 78th Congress – Political – 31 – Material re: campaign, election day and convention (Folder 2 of 2), [1942]
II.32932 – 78th Congress – Political – 32 – Letters of congratulations received after primary of Sept. 9, 1942 (Folder 1 of 3), 1942
II.33032 – 78th Congress – Political – 32 – Letters of congratulations received after primary of Sept. 9, 1942 (Folder 2 of 3), 1942
II.33132 – 78th Congress – Political – 32 – Letters of congratulations received after primary of Sept. 9, 1942 (Folder 3 of 3), 1942
II.33233 – 78th Congress – Political – 33 – Letters of congratulations received after primary of Sept. 9, 1942 (Folder 1 of 2), 1942
II.33333 – 78th Congress – Political – 33 – Letters of congratulations received after primary of Sept. 9, 1942 (Folder 2 of 2), 1942
boxfolder
II.4134 – 78th Congress – Political – 34 – Consolidated Returns by Precincts of Primary, Sept. 9, 1942, 1942
II.4235 – 78th Congress – Political – 35 – Source materials for consolidation of primary returns of Sept. 9, 1942, 1942
II.4336 – 78th Congress – Political – 36 – List of delegates to 1st District Demo. Convention, Savannah, Sept. 25, 1942. List of members of First Congressional District democratic Executive Committee, elected at convention in Savannah on Sept. 25, 1942., 1942 September 25
II.4437 – 78th Congress – Political – 37 – Material re convention at Savannah and formalities re qualifying as nominee (Folder 1 of 2), [1942]
II.4537 – 78th Congress – Political – 37 – Material re convention at Savannah and formalities re qualifying as nominee (Folder 2 of 2), [1942]
II.4638 – 78th Congress – Political – 38 – Newspaper accounts of primary results, [1942]
II.47General Election, 1942 November 3
II.48Clippings, 1942 – 1943
II.49[Campaign Press, 1942]
II.410No. 3 Justices of the Peace – 78th Congress –, 1942 – 1944
folder
OS IILife Magazine [oversize], 1944 September 11
boxfolder
II.411No. 4 List of Democratic Executive Committee in First District,– 78th Congress, 1942 – 1944
II.412Contested Election – Edward T. McEvoy vs. Hugh Peterson (Folder 1 of 5), [1942-1943]
II.413Contested Election – Edward T. McEvoy vs. Hugh Peterson (Folder 2 of 5), [1942-1943]
II.414Contested Election – Edward T. McEvoy vs. Hugh Peterson (Folder 3 of 5), [1942-1943]
II.415Contested Election – Edward T. McEvoy vs. Hugh Peterson (Folder 4 of 5), [1942-1943]
II.416Contested Election – Edward T. McEvoy vs. Hugh Peterson (Folder 5 of 5), [1942-1943]



F. 79th Congress

( 74 folder(s) )
Within these files are details of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meeting held in Statesboro, Georgia on March 9, 1944; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included are documents pertaining to Edward T. McEvoy, who contested the election, and research on Sidney Hillman, founder of the Committee for Industrial Organizing (CIO) and the first chair of the Political Action Committee (PAC) under that organization.
boxfolder
II.416Political - 79th Congress No. 1 [Correspondence, 1943 - 1944]
II.417Political - 79th Congress No. 2, (Folder 1 of 2), February 1944 – March 1944
II.418Political - 79th Congress No. 2, (Folder 2 of 2), February 1944 – March 1944
II.419Political - 79th Congress No. 3, (Folder 1 of 2), April 1944
II.420Political - 79th Congress No. 3, (Folder 2 of 2), April 1944
II.421Political - 79th Congress – File No. 4 – Convention nominating Hugh Peterson for Congress for 79th Congress, Rules and Regulations adopted, Formal Announcement, etc., [1944]
II.422Political - 79th Congress No. 5 (General Correspondence), [1944]
II.423Political - 79th Congress No. 6 (General Correspondence) (Folder 1 of 2), [1944]
II.424Political - 79th Congress No. 6 (General Correspondence) (Folder 2 of 2), [1944]
II.425No. 7 Lists from the various counties to whom form letters have been written, 1944
boxfolder
II.51Political – 79th Congress – No. 8 – General Correspondence (Folder 1 of 3), [1944]
II.52Political – 79th Congress – No. 8 – General Correspondence (Folder 2 of 3), [1944]
II.53Political – 79th Congress – No. 8 – General Correspondence (Folder 3 of 3), [1944]
II.54Political – 79th Congress – Circulars, newspaper articles and other material used in campaign election on July 4, 1944, 1944
II.55No. 10 – 79th Congress – 10 – Material with reference to qualifying Nominee and election day returns by precinct from 18 counties of First District, [1944]
II.5679th Congress – Letters of Congratulations outside the District on Primary July 4, 1944 (Folder 1 of 2), 1944
II.5779th Congress – Letters of Congratulations outside the District on Primary July 4, 1944 (Folder 2 of 2), 1944
II.58Platforms of the Two Great Political Parties, 1932 to 1944 compiled by William Graf under the direction of South Trimble, 1944
II.59Materials to [illegible] precinct returns (Folder 1 of 4), [1944]
II.510Materials to [illegible] precinct returns (Folder 2 of 4), [1944]
II.511Materials to [illegible] precinct returns (Folder 3 of 4), [1944]
II.512Materials to [illegible] precinct returns (Folder 4 of 4), [1944]
II.513Political – 79th Congress – Newspapers containing articles and ads with reference to election on July 4, 1944 (Folder 1 of 2), 1944
II.514Political – 79th Congress – Newspapers containing articles and ads with reference to election on July 4, 1944 (Folder 2 of 2), 1944
II.515CIO-PAC – 1944 – Also statement of Sidney Hillman, President CIO Political Action Committee before the House Committee to investigate Campaign Expenditures wherein he lists donation to campaign of J. Ellis Pope, opponent of Hugh Peterson (Folder 1 of 2), 1944
II.516CIO-PAC – 1944 – Also statement of Sidney Hillman, President CIO Political Action Committee before the House Committee to investigate Campaign Expenditures wherein he lists donation to campaign of J. Ellis Pope, opponent of Hugh Peterson (Folder 2 of 2), 1944
folder
OS II"No Race, Creed, Color"--CIO Flyer [oversize], 1938 November
boxfolder
II.517Bryan County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.518Bulloch County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.519Burke County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.520Emanuel County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.521Evans County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.522Screven County – City and county Officers, [1944]
II.523[Commission, [1944]
II.524Bryan County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.525Bulloch County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.526Burke County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.527Candler County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.528Chatham County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc. Campaign contributions note (Folder 1 of 2), 1944
II.529Chatham County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc. Campaign contributions note (Folder 2 of 2), 1944
II.530Effingham County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.531Emanuel County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.532Evans County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.533Jenkins County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.534Liberty County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
boxfolder
II.61Long County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.62McIntosh County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.63Montgomery County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.64Screven County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.65Tattnall County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.66Toombs County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.67Treutlen County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on 1944primary election July 4, 1944, etc.
II.68Wheeler County – 79th Congress – Letters of congratulations on primary election July 4, 1944, etc., 1944
II.69News Items by Hugh Peterson, [1944]
II.610General Election of 1944, 1944 November 7
II.61179th Congress – Political File No. 1 (Re: Vote on salary Allowance legislation for Members of Congress), [1945]
II.612Bryan County News Items, [1944]
II.613Bulloch County News Items, [1944]
II.614Burke County News Items, [1944]
II.615Candler County News Items, [1944]
II.616Chatham County News Items, [1944]
II.617Effingham County News Items, [1944]
II.618Emanuel County News Items, [1944]
II.619Evans County News Items, [1944]
II.620Jenkins County News Items, [1944]
II.621Liberty County News Items, [1944]
II.622McIntosh County News Items, [1944]
II.623Montgomery County News Items, [1944]
II.624Screven County News Items, [1944]
II.625Tattnall County News Items, [1944]
II.626Toombs County News Items, [1944]
II.627Wheeler County News Items, [1944]
II.628[Albert Cobb – Correspondence, 1944]
folder
OS II"Albert Cobb is the Man for Congress" Broadside [oversize]
OS IIAlbert Cobb flyer (uncut) [oversize], 1940 September 11
OS IIAlbert L. Cobb Campaign newspaper (3 copies) [oversize], 1940 July 1
OS IIAlbert Cobb poster with flyer stuck to it [oversize]



G. 80th Congress

( 44 folders, 1 box of clippings )
Within these files are details of Georgia's First Congressional District Executive Committee meeting held in Swainsboro, Georgia on May 15, 1946; lists containing names of the members of the Executive Committee; official correspondence regarding Peterson's qualification to run in each Democratic Primary; official consolidated returns for each Democratic Primary; and correspondence and clippings relating to announcements of Peterson's candidacy in county weeklies throughout the First Congressional District. Also included are research and correspondence regarding Prince Preston's entry in the race as well as documents regarding the official recount of the election. Several newspapers in their entirety as well as many clippings are in this subseries.
boxfolder
II.629Political file no. 1- Miscellaneous (folder 1 of 2), 1946
II.630Political file no. 1- Miscellaneous (folder 2 of 2), 1946
II.631Convention nominating Peterson for Congress, 1946
II.632Letters and literature used during campaign for re-election Primary, 1946 July
II.633List of veterans and other voters of the first district, list of box holders and rural route boxes, 1946
II.634List of veterans and other voters of the first district, list of box holders and rural route boxes, 1946
II.635Letters and material sent out during campaign, radio address, 1946
II.636Letters and material sent out during campaign, radio address, 1946
II.637Precinct returns from 18 counties in first district primary (folder 1 of 2), 1946
II.638Precinct returns from 18 counties in first district primary (folder 2 of 2), 1946
II.639Prince Preston - Statesboro-Bulloch, 1946
II.640Bryan County - miscellaneous correspondence, 1946
II.641Bulloch county - miscellanous correspondence, 1946
II.642Burke County correspondence, 1946
II.643Candler County correspondence, 1946
II.644Chatham County correspondence (folder 1 of 4), 1946
II.645Chatham County correspondence (folder 2 of 4), 1946
boxfolder
II.71Chatham County correspondence (folder 3 of 4), 1946
II.72Chatham County correspondence (folder 4 of 4), 1946
II.73Effingham correspondence, 1946
II.74Emanuel county correspondence, 1946
II.75Evans County correspondence, 1946
II.76Jenkins County correspondence, 1946
II.77Liberty County correspondence, 1946
II.78Long County correspondence, 1946
II.79McIntosh County correspondence, 1946
II.710Montgomery County correspondence, 1946
II.711Screven County correspondence, 1946
II.712Screven County correspondence, 1946
II.713Tattnall County correspondence, 1946
II.714Tattnall County correspondence, 1946
II.715Toombs County correspondence, 1946
II.716Treutlen County correspondence, 1946
II.717Wheeler County correspondence, 1946
II.718Out of district correspondence, 1946
II.719Voting record on veterans legislation
II.720Prince Preston voting record
II.721Mr. Peterson [clippings], 1946
II.722Mr. Peterson [clippings], 1946
II.723Clippings, 1946
II.724Justices of Peace - Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Candler Counties
II.725Justices of Peace - Effingham, Emanuel, Evans, Jenkins
II.726Justices of Peace - Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Montgomery
II.727Justices of Peace - Screven, Tattnall, Toombs, Treutlen, Wheeler, 1946
box
II.8Clippings



H. Russell Campaign

( 5 folder(s) )
The records in this sub series contain information about Senator Russell's run for the presidency in 1952. Included are Peterson's notes from phone calls and visits with supporters and campaign aides; copies of speeches by Russell and recommended strategy from his camp, and details of Russell's Florida campaign as well as information about the Democratic National Convention held at the International Amphitheater in Chicago, Illinois, July 21 - 26, 1952. Artifacts have been removed for preservations purposes and are located in Series IX. Artifacts.
boxfolder
II.728R. B. Russell Campaign (Folder 1 of 4), 1952
II.729R. B. Russell Campaign (Folder 2 of 4), 1952
II.730R. B. Russell Campaign (Folder 3 of 4), 1952
II.731R. B. Russell Campaign (Folder 4 of 4), 1952
folder
OS IIPoster: Political History of Senator Russell's Family
boxfolder
II.732Washington Times Herald,, 1952 July 26



I. Campaign Banners

( 5 item(s) )
Five cloth campaign banners are made of cotton and hand painted in bright colors. The largest measures 72"x35.5" and the other four average 35" long by 17.5" high. Slogans include "Peterson for Congress. Young, Bold, Brainy, Sincere, and Patriotic. Let's vote for him!" and "Peterson for Congress"
drawer
1Peterson for Congress. Young, Bold, Brainy, Sincere, and Patriotic. Let's vote for him! [72" x 35.5", red, black paint on white cotton, undated]
1Peterson for Congress [34.5" x 17", red, green paint on white cotton, undated]
1Peterson for Congress [35" x 17.5", yellow, blue, green paint on white cotton, undated]
1Peterson for Congress [36" x 17.75", blue, yellow, green paint on white cotton, undated]
1Peterson Congress [36" x 17.5", blue, yellow paint on white cotton, undated]
box
II.OS2Oversize
 

III. State Legislative

3 box(es)
(3 linear feet)
This series consists of documents from Peterson's service in the Georgia House of Representative from 1922 to 1930 and the Georgia Senate from 1931 to1933. He was a major architect of the state reorganization bill, first in the House and later in the Senate, which became law in 1931 under Richard B. Russell's governorship. The items are organized into the following categories: A. Correspondence, B. Subject Files, and C. Legislation.



A. Correspondence

( 106 folder(s) )
The correspondence files contain a large amount of information involving the mechanics of Georgia state government in the 1920s and early 1930s from legislation and research to key players and personalities. The majority of correspondence was originally kept in a series of 5 letterboxes that contained both letters received and copies of Peterson's responses alphabetized from 1923 through 1934. Among those with whom Peterson corresponded are Walter F. George, John Slaton, Eugene Talmadge, Roy V. Harris, E. D. Rivers, Thomas Hardwick, and Lamartine G. Hardman. Communication between Peterson and Richard B. Russell, Jr. is especially profuse and ranges from Russell's early bid to be Speaker Pro Tem in 1924 to patronage in his first years in the United States Senate. In the series of letters from 1923 to1928, there is correspondence regarding the governor's race in 1926 as well as the condition of prisons in the state and the prospect of road building. Peterson's correspondence from 1929 through 1931 is primarily concerned with the Committee for State Reorganization, in which he was an active participant during his service in both the Georgia House and Senate. The letters are from a variety of writers around the state ranging from high-ranking state officials to civic groups defending specific departments under scrutiny in the reorganization process. Many letters are from average citizens letting Peterson know that they support his efforts. In the late portion of correspondence from 1932 to 1934, Peterson recommended many people for government positions both to Senator Russell and Governor Eugene Talmadge and discussed his two runs for United States Congress in 1932 (in which he was defeated by Homer C. Parker) and 1934, in which he won.
boxfolder
III.11[Correspondence, undated]
III.12[Correspondence, 1923]
III.13[Correspondence, 1924]
III.14[Correspondence, 1925]
III.15[Correspondence, 1926]
III.16[Correspondence, 1929]
III.17[Correspondence, A, 1922 – 1926]
III.18[Correspondence, B, 1922 – 1926]
III.19[Correspondence, C, 1923 – 1926]
III.110[Correspondence, D, 1924 – 1926]
III.111[Correspondence, E, F, 1922 – 1926]
III.112[Correspondence, G, 1923 – 1926]
III.113[Correspondence, H, I, J, 1923 – 1926]
III.114[Correspondence, K, L, 1922 – 1926]
III.115[Correspondence, M, 1922 – 1926]
III.116[Correspondence, N, O, 1922 – 1926]
III.117[Correspondence, P, Q, 1924 – 1926]
III.118[Correspondence, R, 1924 – 1926]
III.119[Correspondence, S, 1922 – 1926]
III.120[Correspondence, T, U, V, 1923 – 1926]
III.121[Correspondence, W, 1922 – 1926]
III.122[Correspondence, A, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.123[Correspondence, B, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.124[Correspondence, C, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.125[Correspondence, D, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.126[Correspondence, E, F, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.127[Correspondence, G, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.128[Correspondence, H, I, J (Folder 1 of 2), 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.129[Correspondence, H, I, J (Folder 2 of 2), 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.130[Correspondence, K, L, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.131[Correspondence, M, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.132[Correspondence, N, O, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.133[Correspondence, P, Q, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.134[Correspondence, R, S, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.135[Correspondence, T, U, V, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.136[Correspondence, W, 1926 September 22–1928 January 1]
III.137[Correspondence, January – April, 1931]
III.138[Correspondence (folder 1 of 3), 1931 May]
III.139[Correspondence (folder 2 of 3), 1931 May]
III.140[Correspondence (folder 3 of 3), 1931 May]
III.141[Correspondence (folder 1 of 2), 1931 June]
III.142[Correspondence (folder 2 of 2), 1931 June]
III.143[Correspondence (folder 1 of 4), 1931 July]
III.144[Correspondence (folder 2 of 4), 1931 July]
III.145[Correspondence (folder 3 of 4), 1931 July]
III.146[Correspondence (folder 4 of 4), 1931 July]]
III.147[Correspondence (folder 1 of 2), 1931 August]
III.148[Correspondence (folder 2 of 2), 1931 August]
III.149[Correspondence, A, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.150[Correspondence, B, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.151[Correspondence, C, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.152[Correspondence, D, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.153[Correspondence, E, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
folder
OS IIIJ.J. Brown Scores A.O. Blalock in Refuting Latter's Charges broadside
boxfolder
III.21[Correspondence, F, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.22[Correspondence, G, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.23[Correspondence, H, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.24[Correspondence, I, J, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.25[Correspondence, K, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.26[Correspondence, L, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.27[Correspondence, M, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.28[Correspondence, N, O, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
folder
OS IIIMell M. Stephens Campaign Flyer [oversize], 1932
boxfolder
III.29[Correspondence, P, Q, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
folder
OS IIITalmadge Tribune, 1932 September
boxfolder
III.210[Correspondence, R, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.211[Correspondence, S, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.212[Correspondence, T, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.213[Correspondence, W, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.214[Correspondence, X, Y, Z, 1931 July – 1931 December 31]
III.215[Correspondence, A, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.216[Correspondence, B, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.217[Correspondence, C, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.218[Correspondence, D, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.219[Correspondence, E, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.220[Correspondence, F, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.221[Correspondence, G, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.222[Correspondence, H, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
folder
OS IIIOpening Address of Tom Hardwick at Albany, Georgia, June 16, 1932, 1932 June 16
boxfolder
III.223[Correspondence, I, J, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.224[Correspondence, K, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.225[Correspondence, L, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.226[Correspondence, M, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.227[Correspondence, N, O, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.228[Correspondence, P, Q, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.229[Correspondence, R, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.230[Correspondence, S, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.231[Correspondence, T, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.232[Correspondence, U, V, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.233[Correspondence, W, 1932 January 1 – 1933 January 1]
III.234[Correspondence, A, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.235[Correspondence, B, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.236[Correspondence, C, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.237[Correspondence, D, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.238[Correspondence, E, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.239[Correspondence, F, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.240[Correspondence, G, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.241[Correspondence, H, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.242[Correspondence, I, J, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.243[Correspondence, K, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.244[Correspondence, L, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.245[Correspondence, M, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.246[Correspondence, N, O, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.247[Correspondence, P, Q, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.248[Correspondence, R (Folder 1 of 2), 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.249[Correspondence, R (Folder 2 of 2), 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.250[Correspondence, S, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.251[Correspondence, T, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.252[Correspondence, U, V, 1933 January 1 – 1934]
III.253[Correspondence, W, 1933 January 1 – 1934]



B. Subject Files

( 66 folder(s) )
The subject files consist of publications, reports and audits from state agencies. The majority of the material was gathered for Peterson's work on the reorganization of Georgia's state government, first in the House under the governorship of Lamartine G. Hardman and then in the Senate under the governorship of Richard B. Russell, Jr. Select research focuses on education in the state of Georgia, including reports on textbook costs, eleemosynary (i.e. charitable) institutions, the expenses of the Georgia State College for Women and the organization and expenses of the University System of Georgia. Various reports and audits of state agencies include the Report of the State Auditor, Tom Wisdom, as well as the State Highway Board of Georgia Accounting Report, the Georgia Securities Commission, the Soldier Roster Commission, and the Georgia State Board of Health.
boxfolder
III.254Abstract of Special Bulletins: Wealth, Debt, and Taxation, 1913
III.255Agenda, State Legislative Council of Women's Organizations, 1931 July 9
III.256[Attorney General's Testimony, 1931 May]
III.257Audit of State Department of Education, 1930
III.258[Board of Eleemosynary Institutions, 1932]
III.259[Bowdon State College, undated]
III.260Bulletin of the Georgia State College for Women, 1931 June
III.261Chart showing the proposed Plan of Simplification and Coordination of the Departments, Boards, Commissions and Institutions of the State Government of Georgia (oversized removed), [1930]
III.262[Clippings, 1929]
III.263[Clippings, 1930]
III.264[Clippings, 1931]
III.265Condition of Public funds – State of Georgia,, 1916 January 1
III.266Constitution of the State of Georgia,, 1925
III.267Constitution of the United States of America, First Inaugural Address by Thomas Jefferson, 1920
III.268Cost of Textbooks per Pupil by Grades with and without Supplementary Readers, [undated]
III.269[Department of Law Proposal, Supervisor of Purchases Proposal, undated]
III.270Departments, Boards, Commissions, Institutions, Experiment Stations, Schools and College [sic] of the State Government of Georgia, [1931]
III.271Detail of Labor, State Board of Health, [undated]
III.272Estimated costs – Proposed Annex and Alterations to State Capitol Building, [undated]
III.273Fourteenth Census of the United States, 1920, Bulletin, Population: Georgia, 1920
III.274Fourteenth Census of the United States – State Compendium – Georgia, 1924
III.275[Free Government – speech, undated]
III.276The Georgia Education Association Report of Committee on Textbooks, 1931 April 18
III.277Georgia Real Estate Commission, [1931]
III.278Georgia Soldier Roster Commission, [undated]
III.279Georgia Public Service Commission Letter of Transmittal and Review, 58th Report, Atlanta, 1931 June 1
III.280[Georgia State Board of Health, 1930]
III.281[Georgia State College for Women Statistics, 1931]
III.282Hearing before Special Committee Appointed by Governor-Elect Russell for the Revision of State Government, 1931 April 28
III.283[Income Tax Form, 1922]
III.284Industrial Commission Receipts and Disbursement, [1931]
III.285Information for Prospective Homesteaders, 1932
III.286[Judicial Circuits, undated]
III.287"Let Us Have a Tax-Free City" City of Cartersville, GA, 1928
III.288Members and Standing Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives of Georgia, 1929 - 1930
III.289Members and Standing Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives of Georgia, 1930 - 1931
III.290Members of the Senate of Georgia, 1931 – 1933
III.291Members of the Senate and House of Representatives of Georgia, 1931 - 1932
III.292Message of Lamartine Griffin Hardman to the General Assembly, 1931
III.293The Mob Murder of S. S. Mincey, [undated]
III.294[Name cards, Hugh Peterson, undated]
III.295[Name list, undated]
III.296[Notes, undated]
III.297[Oil Inspectors, undated]
III.298Printing by the Board of Health, [undated]
III.299[Prison Commission, 1930]
III.2100Proposed Georgia Congressional Districts, [1931]
boxfolder
III.31[Proclamation by Governor Clifford Walker, 1923]
III.32Public Land System of the United States Historical Outline, 1926
III.33Public Welfare Laws of Virginia, 1928
III.34Regulations Under Timber and Stone Law, 1926
III.35Report of the Committee on the Conservation and Administration of the Public Domain, 1931 January
III.36Report of the Georgia Securities Commission to the Governor of the State for 1929 and 1930, 1931 May 6
III.37Report of the State Auditor Pursuant of Senate Resolution No. 9, 1931 January 8
III.38[Rhodes Memorial Hall Expenses, 1931]
III.39Salaries and Travel Expenses of Personnel of State Institutions, List of State-owned Automobiles and Trucks, Personnel of Boards of Trustees, Members of Boards and Commissions of the State of Georgia, 1931 June 26
III.310Salaries of Personnel Reports from University Branches and Institutions of the State of Georgia, List of State Owned Automobiles and Trucks, Boards of Trustees of Institutions, Members of Boards and Commissions of the State of Georgia, 1931 June 2
III.311The Situation that Confronts Banking, 1931
III.312Soil Survey of McIntosh County, Georgia (map oversize remove, Map V-24), 1929
III.313Soldiers' and Sailors' Homestead and Preference Rights, 1930
III.314[State Departments, undated]
III.315State Highway Board of Georgia Accounting Department Report, 1931 April 30
III.316Statement of Thomas W. Hardwick, [undated]
III.317Statement showing the book value of assets, the liquidation accomplished, the remaining assets of 68 banks which were closed within the period January 1, 1927 to December 31, 1930, 1927 January 1 – 1930 December 31
III.318Statutes and Regulations Governing Entries and Proofs Under the Desert Land Laws, 1928
III.319[Steam Railroad Ad Valorem Taxes, 1910 - 1928]
III.320Suggestions to Homesteaders and Persons Desiring to Make Homestead Entries, Department of the Interior, 1926
III.321Summary of Work Done be Reorganization Committee for Week of April 27, 1931, 1931 April 27
III.322[Summons to hearings to State Reorganization, 1931]
III.323Tariff Act of 1930, 1930
III.324Tax Collections and Cost of Collections Year, 1930
III.325Tax on Gross Receipts, [undated]
III.326[Tax Reform Speech], 1922
III.327Textbook Report Rebuttal, 1931
III.328Travel Expenses of Personnel of State Institutions, Experiment Stations and the University and its Branches, 1931 June 13
III.329[Trustees Expense, University of Georgia System,, 1929 June 30]
III.330Trustees Expenses – University of Georgia System, 1930
III.331United States Systems of Highway, Corrected to September 1, 1931 (map removed), 1931 September 1
folder
OS IIIRoosevelt Business and Professional League [oversize], circa 1930-1932
OS IIIDirectory of Telephones Capitol Switchboard, Printed for official use of the House of Representatives, 1940 March 28



C. Legislation

( 43 folder(s) )
The state reorganization efforts of the late 1920s and early 1930s comprise the majority of legislation in this sub series. House Bill 397, Georgia's Proposed Administrative Reorganization Act, was written in 1929. House Bill 194, The State Reorganization Act of 1932, used the framework of H.B. 397 to construct the bill that passed in the Georgia House of Representatives and in the state senate as Senate Bill 46 in 1931.
boxfolder
III.332Amendments and Substitutes, H.B. 194 (State Reorganization Act), [1931]
III.333Amendments to H.B. 196 and H.B. 194, [1931]
III.334Amendments to S.B. 5 Motor Carrier Act of 1931, 1931
III.335An Act to simplify the operations of the Executive Branch of the State Government, [1931]
III.336[Appropriations legislation and reports], 1931
III.337[Board of Architects Bill, State Highway Board Bill, 1931]
III.338A Bill to provide for a tax on the gross receipts of public utilities of every character, [undated]
III.339[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – Executive Department], 1931 June
III.340[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – State Highway Department, Department of Audits and Accounts, Veterans Service Office], 1931 June
III.341[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – Health Department, Department of Natural Resources, Eleemosynary Institutions], 1931 June
III.342[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – University of Georgia and Branches, Comptroller General, Treasury], 1931 June
III.343[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – Secretary of State, Legal Department, Department of Education], 1931 June
III.344[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – Department of Agriculture, Prison Commission, Department of Industrial Relations], 1931 June
III.345[Committee for the Reorganization of State Government Finals Report June 1931 Introduction, Findings – Georgia Public Service Commission, Board of Public Welfare], 1931 June
III.346[Committee for State Reorganization Decision, 1931]
III.347Committee Substitute to H.B. 397 [State Reorganization Bill], [1929]
III.348[Draft Articles – Act to Simplify the Operation of the Executive Branch of the State Government, 1931]
III.349[Draft of Report on State Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (folder 1 of 2), 1931]
III.350[Draft of Report on State Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (folder 2 of 2), 1931]
III.351[Draft of Summary Report, Committee to investigate the administrative machinery of Georgia,, 1931]
III.352[Galley of Report on state Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (removed for size), 1931 July 1]
folder
OS III[Galley of Report on State Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia][oversize], 1931 July 1
boxfolder
III.353General Appropriation Act Biennium, 1930 - 1931
III.354Georgia's Proposed Administrative Reorganization Act Committee Substitute to H.B. 397 (folder 1 of 2), [1929]
III.355Georgia's Proposed Administrative Reorganization Act Committee Substitute to H.B. 397 (folder 2 of 2), [1929]
III.356H.B. 36 [Section 2A Amendment to Georgia Constitution, 1925]
III.357H.B. 151 [An act to abolish Bowdon State Normal and Industrial College, 1924]
III.358[H.B. 194 Minority Report Request to File (removed oversize), 1931]
folder
OS III[H.B. 194 Minority Report Request to File][oversize], 1931 August 7
boxfolder
III.359H.B. 194 [The State Reorganization Act of 1932, 1931]
III.360H.B. 876 [And act to abolish the 12 Agriculture and Mechanic Art Schools in this state], 1924
III.361[Notes regarding State of Georgia Reorganization Act, undated]
III.362Plan of the Simplification and Coordination of the Departments, Boards, Commissions and Institutions of the State Government of Georgia (3 copies), 1929
folder
OS IIIChart showing the proposed plan of simplification and coordination of the departments, boards, commissions, and institutions of the state government of Georgia, [1930]
boxfolder
III.363Report on State Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (3 copies), 1931 July 1
III.364[Report on State Reorganization to the General Assembly of the State of Georgia, Draft, 1931]
III.365Report on a Survey Relating to the Proposed Administrative Reorganization of the State Government of Georgia (2 copies), 1930 November 29
III.366Resolution [Abraham Baldwin Day, 1929 October 12]
III.367Roll Call, House of Representatives, Extraordinary Session, 1926, H.B. No. 3, School Bond Bill, 1926
III.368Roll Call, House of Representatives, Extraordinary Session, 1926, H.B. No. 9, Highway Bond Bill, 1926 April 8
III.369Roll Call of Senate Session, 1931 – 1932
III.370S.B. 17 [The Banking Law, undated]
III.371S.B. 46 [The State Reorganization Act of 1932, 1931]
III.372S.B. 116 [The Mechanics Lien Law of Georgia, 1931]
III.373S.B. 243 [An act to repeal an act providing for the creation of the Department of Archives for the State of Georgia, being an act to insure the protection of state Records by establishing a Department of Archives and History for the State of Georgia, 1924]
III.374Substitute to H.B. 314 [An Act to provide for a tax on gross receipts of public utilities, 1929]
 

IV. United States Congress

12 box(es)
(11 linear feet)
This series contains items documenting Peterson's career representing the First Congressional District in the United States House of Representatives. While in office, Peterson proposed bills regarding farm homesteads and was active on several congressional committees, including Rivers and Harbors, Public Lands, Territories, and Roads. Peterson's activity in the House of Representatives during the 1930s and 1940s provides a unique view of the national political scene during the Great Depression and World War II. His office staff included William C. Harris, Gladys Aaron, and Joe Underwood. The items are organized into the following categories: A. Correspondence, B. Committees, C. Legislation, D. Subject Files, and E. Patronage.



A. Correspondence

( 169 folder(s) )
Included in this subseries are correspondence related to Peterson's farm bill (H.R. 8286 and H.R. 1675) as well as name files of persons in the First Congressional District and Washington, D.C. Among notable state politicians with whom Peterson corresponded were Governors Eugene Talmadge and Ellis Arnall. The subject matters addressed in this sub series range from farm legislation and agriculture to local patronage. Peterson corresponded with former office aides and friends who served in World War II and their letters include details of service in the Pacific Theater and on the European front. Files labeled William Harris, Joe Underwood, and Reports (to and from office) all contain day-to-day accounts of work in the congressman's office, including who telephoned, called, and wrote; current legislation; and goings on in Washington, D.C. in the 1930s and 1940s.
boxfolder
IV.11Allen, Harold, Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N.Y., 1944 – 1946
IV.12Arnall, Ellis, Governor, State of Georgia, Atlanta, Georgia, 1944 – 1945
IV.13Bradley, Lt. Gen. O. N., U. S. Army, 1944
IV.14Breedlove, T. R., AAA, Athens, Georgia, 1945
IV.15Brogden, A. L. Turpentine Rosin Factors, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida and Washington, D. C., 1944 – 1946
IV.16Broun, Paul, M. C., Elberton, Georgia, 1945
IV.17Bryant, F. S., Standard Oil Company, San Francisco, California, 1943 – 1944
IV.18Burt, Struthers, Southern Pines, North Carolina and Wyoming, 1945 – 1946
IV.19Camp, Thomas L., Atlanta, Georgia, 1944 – 1946
IV.110Castellow, B. T., Cuthbert, Georgia, 1944
IV.111Cheves, Cecil Langdon, Savannah, Georgia (formerly of Alaska Highway System), 1946
IV.112Congressional Scholarship to Emory University Medical School, 1940 – 1945
IV.113[Constituent Mailing, Report on H. R. 8286, Congressional Record of September 28, 1935, letter], 1936 June 11
IV.114[Correspondence, 1942 August]
IV.115Correspondence, 1935 – 1939
IV.116[Correspondence, 1936 – 1940]
IV.117[Correspondence, Road and Public Building Construction in Georgia since 1933, 1944]
IV.118Contributions, 1946
IV.119Democratic National Committee, 1945 – 1946
IV.120[Farm Bill (H. B. 1037), Correspondence, Notes, Congressional Record of March 4, 1941, 1941 – 1942]
IV.121[Farm Bill (H. R. 8286) Correspondence, 1935 - 1936]
IV.122Farm Bill, District of Columbia, [1937 – 1939]
IV.123Farm Bill, Georgia (1) – Outside District (folder 1 of 2), [1935 – 1936]
IV.124Farm Bill, Georgia (1) – Outside District (folder 2 of 2), [1936 – 1937]
IV.125Farm Bill, Georgia (2) – Outside District, [1935 – 1938]
IV.126Farm Bill, Georgia (3) – Outside District (folder 1 of 2) (oversized materials removed), [1937 - 1938]
IV.127Farm Bill, Georgia (3) – Outside District (folder 2 of 2) (oversized materials removed), [1937 – 1940]
IV.128Farm Bill, Government Agencies, [1936 – 1939]
IV.129Farm Bill, State of Alabama, [1935 – 1937]
IV.130Farm Bill, State of Arizona, [1936 – 1937]
IV.131Farm Bill, State of Arkansas, [1935 – 1937]
IV.132Farm Bill, State of California, [1935 – 1940]
IV.133Farm Bill, State of Colorado, [1935 – 1939]
IV.134Farm Bill, State of Connecticut, [1937]
IV.135Farm Bill, State of Florida, [1935 – 1939]
IV.136Farm Bill, State of Idaho, [1937]
IV.137Farm Bill, State of Illinois, [1935 – 1936]
IV.138Farm Bill, State of Indiana, [1935 – 1937]
IV.139Farm Bill, State of Iowa, [1935 – 1937]
IV.140Farm Bill, State of Kansas, [1935 – 1936]
IV.141Farm Bill, State of Kentucky, [1935 – 1937]
IV.142Farm Bill, State of Louisiana, [1935]
IV.143Farm Bill, State of Maine, [1935]
IV.144Farm Bill, State of Maryland, [1935 – 1937]
IV.145Farm Bill, State of Massachusetts, [1935 – 1939]
IV.146Farm Bill, State of Michigan, [1936 – 1937]
IV.147Farm Bill, State of Minnesota (folder 1 of 2), [1935-1936]
boxfolder
IV.21Farm Bill, State of Minnesota (folder 2 of 2), [1935-1936]
IV.22Farm Bill, State of Mississippi, [1935 – 1940]
IV.23Farm Bill, State of Missouri, [1935]
IV.24Farm Bill, State of Nebraska, [1935 – 1937]
IV.25Farm Bill, State of New Jersey, [1935]
IV.26Farm Bill, State of New York, [1935 – 1937]
IV.27Farm Bill, State of North Carolina, [1935 – 1937]
IV.28Farm Bill, State of North Dakota, [1935 - 1939]
IV.29Farm Bill, State of Ohio, [1935 – 1936]
IV.210Farm Bill, State of Oklahoma, [1935 – 1939]
IV.211Farm Bill, State of Oregon, [1935 – 1937]
IV.212Farm Bill, State of Pennsylvania, [1935-1939]
IV.213Farm Bill, State of Rhode Island, [1935-1937]
IV.214Farm Bill, State of South Carolina, [1935 – 1939]
IV.215Farm Bill, State of South Dakota, [1935 – 1939]
IV.216Farm Bill, State of Tennessee, [1935 – 1939]
IV.217Farm Bill, State of Texas, [1935 – 1936]
IV.218Farm Bill, State of Utah, [1937 – 1939]
IV.219Farm Bill, State of Washington, [1936 – 1937]
IV.220Farm Bill, State of Wisconsin, [1935 – 1938]
IV.221Farm Census, List of appointees and applicants, 1934 - 1935
IV.222Farm Census, Mr. B. L. Brinson, Supervisor, 1934 – 1935
IV.223Farm Census, Mr. H. M. Roach, Assistant Supervisor, 1934 - 1935
IV.224Farm Census, correspondence with Census Bureau, 1934 - 1935
IV.225Farm Census, Bryan, 1934 – 1935
IV.226Farm Census, Bulloch, 1934 – 1935
IV.227Farm Census, Burke, 1934 – 1935
IV.228Farm Census, Candler, 1934 – 1935
IV.229Farm Census, Chatham, 1934 – 1935
IV.230Farm Census, Effingham, 1934 – 1935
IV.231Farm Census, Emanuel, 1934 – 1935
IV.232Farm Census, Evans, 1934 – 1935
IV.233Farm Census, Jenkins, 1934 – 1935
IV.234Farm Census, Liberty, 1934 – 1935
IV.235Farm Census, Long, 1934 – 1935
IV.236Farm Census, McIntosh, 1934 – 1935
IV.237Farm Census, Montgomery, 1934 – 1935
IV.238Farm Census, Screven, 1934 – 1935
IV.239Farm Census, Tattnall, 1934 – 1935
IV.240Farm Census, Toombs, 1934 – 1935
IV.241Farm Census, Wheeler, 1934 – 1935
IV.242Farm Bill, Bryan County, [1937 – 1938]
IV.243Farm Bill, Bulloch County, [1935 – 1937]
IV.244Farm Bill, Burke County, [1935 – 1937]
IV.245Farm Bill, Candler County, [1935]
IV.246Farm Bill, Chatham County, [1935 – 1938]
IV.247Farm Bill, Effingham County, [1935 – 1937]
IV.248Farm Bill, Emanuel County, [1935 – 1937]
IV.249Farm Bill, Evans County, [1935 - 1938]
IV.250Farm Bill, Jenkins County, [1935 - 1938]
IV.251Farm Bill, Liberty County, [1935 – 1937]
IV.252Farm Bill, Long County, [1935 - 1938]
IV.253Farm Bill, McIntosh County, [1937]
IV.254Farm Bill, Screven County, [1935 - 1937]
IV.255Farm Bill, Tattnall County, [1935 - 1938]
IV.256Farm Bill, Toombs County, [1935 – 1939]
IV.257Farm Bill, Treutlen County, [1936 - 1937]
IV.258Farm Bill, Wheeler County, [1935 - 1939]
boxfolder
IV.31Fletcher, Captain Frank U., San Leandro, California, [1944 – 1945]
IV.32Form letters written to various officials, [1938 – 1946]
IV.33Georgia State Legislature, Legislative Manuel, Standing Committees, etc., [1945]
IV.34Georgia State Society, Washington, D. C., [1940 – 1941]
IV.35Georgia State Society, Washington, D. C., [1945]
IV.36Hamilton, C. A., Santa Monica, California (National Park Service matter) (photographs removed), [1944 – 1945]
IV.37Hanes, Harold F., Washington, D. C., [1946]
IV.38Harris, Ed (Bill's brother), Chatham County, Knoxville, Tennessee (now in Army), [1943]
IV.39Harris, William, Chatham, Savannah, [1936 – 1940]
IV.310Harris, William, Daily Reports, Washington, D. C. (folder 1 of 2), [1939 – 1940]
IV.311Harris, William, Daily Reports, Washington, D. C. (folder 2 of 2), [1939 – 1940]
IV.312Harris, William, (3) Chatham, Savannah, [1940 – 1943]
IV.313Harris, William, (4) Chatham, Savannah, Daily Reports, etc., [1941]
IV.314Harris, William C., Personal Correspondence, Temporary File (photographs removed), [1944 – 1945]
IV.315Harrison, Walter, Jenkins, Millen, [1935 – 1941]
IV.316Jones, Boisfeuillet (Lt.) Washington, D. C. (formerly of Atlanta), [1945]
IV.317Kolodny, Joseph, National Association of Tobacco Distributors, Inc. New York, N. Y., [1944]
IV.318Kroeger, Captain Arthur F. c/o Petroleum Admns. Of War, Washington, D. C., [1944]
IV.319Langdale, Harley, Pres. American Turpentine Farmers Assn. Coop., Valdosta, Georgia, [1945 – 1946]
IV.320Lasseter, Dillard B., Atlanta, Georgia, [1945 – 1946]
IV.321Linder, Tom, Atlanta, Georgia, [1946]
IV.322Long, Captain Michael, England (now in British Army) (photographs and artifacts removed), [1943 – 1946]
IV.323Martin, Raymond W., Atlanta, Georgia, [1945]
IV.324McLaurine, Hon. W. M., [1941 – 1942]
IV.325Menicon, Captain Menicos N., U. S. Army, [1942 – 1944]
IV.326Miller, Roy, Mayflower Hotel, Corpus Christi, Texas, [1945 – 1946]
IV.327[Minker, Howard Lewis, [1945]
IV.328North, Roy M., Deputy Third Assistant Postmaster General, Washington, D. C., [1944-1945]
IV.329Ochs, Colonel William V., Camp Stewart, Georgia, [1945 – 1946]
IV.330Oliver, Mae, Secretary to R. J. Reynolds, Mrs. R. J. Reynolds, [1944]
IV.331Outside District (folder 1 of 2), 1940 May
IV.332Outside District (folder 2 of 2), 1940 May
IV.333Outside District, 1940 June
boxfolder
IV.41Outside District, 1940 July
IV.42Outside District (folder 1 of 2), 1940 August
IV.43Outside District (folder 2 of 2), 1940 August
IV.44Patterson, Mrs. S. C., President, Georgia Educational Association, Homerville, Georgia (re: H. B. 1296), 1946
IV.45Peterson, Carter C., Montgomery State Senate, Atlanta, Georgia, [1935 – 1946]
IV.46Political (folder 1 of 2), [1944]
IV.47Political (folder 2 of 2), [1944]
IV.48Political, 1946
IV.49Political (folder 1 of 3), 1946
IV.410Political (folder 2 of 3), 1946
IV.411Political (folder 3 of 3), 1946
IV.412Quigley, Frank, Attorney, Washington, D. C., [1944 – 1946]
IV.413Reed, Mrs. Lelia Brown, Washington, D. C., [1943]
IV.414Report to and from office (including Trip on Rivers and Harbors and Territories), Central American, [1945 – 1946]
IV.415Rushing, L. K., Tattnall, Glennville, [1935 – 1940]
IV.416Rushing, Mrs. L'Bertie, Postmaster, Glennville, Tattnall (folder 1 of 2), [1935 - 1941]
IV.417Rushing, Mrs. L'Bertie, Postmaster, Glennville, Tattnall (folder 2 of 2), [1935 - 1941]
IV.418Rustin, John W., Mount Vernon Methodist Church, Washington, D. C.,, [1945]
IV.419Smith, J. Lundie (Lt. Navy), Valdosta, Georgia (Law partner of Harley Langdale), [1945]
IV.420St. Andrews Society,, [1945 – 1946]
IV.421Seaboard Airline Railway, [1945]
IV.422Stacy, Major J. K., U. S. Army (now in England), [1942 – 1945]
IV.423Stubbs, J. M., Savannah, Georgia, Personal Correspondence, [1944]
IV.424Talmadge, Eugene, Atlanta, Georgia, [1940 - 1945]
IV.425Thomas, Captain Walter H., Assistant Superintendent Metropolitan Police, Washington, D. C.,, [1946]
IV.426Underwood, Joe, Montgomery (contact for help from H.P.) (photographs removed), [1940 – 1944]
boxfolder
IV.51Underwood, Joe, Montgomery, Mt. Vernon, [1936 – 1945]
IV.52Underwood, John, Montgomery, Mt. Vernon, [1936 – 1940]
IV.53Underwood, Col. L. C., Montgomery, T. Vernon, [1935 – 1940]
IV.54Whelchel, B. Frank, Gainesville, Georgia, [1944 – 1945]
IV.55Wingate, H. L., President, Georgia Farm Bureau Federation, Pelham, Georgia, [1941 - 1946]



B. Committees

( 30 folder(s) )
This subseries relates to Peterson's work on the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, the Committee on Public Lands, the Committee on Territories, and the Committee on Roads. Peterson participated in several trips with these committees including a trip to inspect certain national parks in the western United States in 1943 with the Public Lands Committee and an extended trip to Texas, California, Washington, and Alaska in 1945 with the Rivers and Harbors committee. In 1946, Peterson went to Central America to inspect the construction of the Pan American Highway with the Roads committee. These official trip files contain several maps (that have been removed to Series VII, Maps) of states, national parks and countries in Central America, some of which are marked. Multiple photographs related to the, files from all of the trips including unique pictures of the Chilkat (or Jilkaat) Tribe of the Tlingit people indigenous to Alaska making a presentation to the congressional party, have been removed to Series VI. Photographs.
boxfolder
IV.56Altamaha River (folder 1 of 2), [1935 – 1938]
IV.57Altamaha River (folder 2 of 2), [1934 – 1935]
IV.58Altamaha River 2 Flood Control Measure, 1935
IV.59National Park Trip to West as Member of Public Lands Committee (folder 1 of 2) (photographs and maps removed), 1943 August
IV.510National Park Trip to West as Member of Public Lands Committee (folder 2 of 2) (photographs and maps removed), 1943 August
IV.511Texas Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors (folder 1 of 2), 1945 July
IV.512Texas Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors (folder 2 of 2) (map removed), 1945 July
IV.513California Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors, File #1, Correspondence (folder 1 of 2), 1945 July
IV.514California Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors, File #1, Correspondence (folder 2 of 2) (maps removed), 1945 July
IV.515California Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 1 of 3) (report including photographs), 1945 July
IV.516California Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 2 of 3) (map removed), 1945 July
IV.517California Trip, Subcommittee of Rivers and Harbors, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 3 of 3) (photographs removed), 1945 July
IV.518[California trip photographs, Hollywood, California (items removed), 1946 July]
IV.519[Rivers and Harbors Committee Trip, Seattle, Washington, 1945]
IV.520Alaska Trip, File #1, Correspondence (folder 1 of 4), 1945
boxfolder
IV.61Alaska Trip, File #1, Correspondence (folder 2 of 4), 1945
IV.62Alaska Trip, File #1, Correspondence (folder 3 of 4), 1945
IV.63Alaska Trip, File #1, Correspondence (folder 4 of 4), 1945
IV.64Alaska Trip, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 1 of 3) (maps removed), 1945
IV.65Alaska Trip, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 2 of 3) (maps removed), 1945
IV.66Alaska Trip, File #2, Publications, etc. (folder 3 of 3) (maps removed), 1945
IV.67[Alaska trip photographs (items removed), 1945]
IV.68[Alaska trip photographs (items removed), 1946]
IV.69[Travel Log, Alaska, 1945 August]
IV.610Trip to Alaska, Hotel Bills, etc., 1945
IV.611Trip to Central America (photographs removed), 1946
IV.612Trip to Central America and Mexico as Member of Roads Committee (folder 1 of 3), 1946
IV.613Trip to Central America and Mexico as Member of Roads Committee (folder 2 of 3), 1946
IV.614Trip to Central America and Mexico as Member of Roads Committee (folder 3 of 3), 1946
IV.615Maps and Drafts of Report of Trip to Central America (maps and photographs removed), 1946
folder
OS IV[Galley of article for NEA Daily News on Pan American Highway][oversize], 1946 May 29



C. Legislation

( 17 folder(s) )
This subseries contains drafts and final prints of Peterson's proposed bills and amendments as well as committee reports for legislation. His primary piece of legislation, H.R. 8286 A Bill to Provide Homesteads Free of Debt for Actual Farm Families, was originally introduced in 1936 and survived multiple sessions in the House of Representatives. In its committee report on the bill, the Subcommittee on the Public Lands of the House of Representatives found that no national land legislation allowing persons to claim homesteads had been passed since the Homestead Law of 1862 and the rate of farmers carrying mortgages had risen exponentially from 1890 to 1930 as had the rate of tenant farmers over owner-operators, which appeared to be a direct correlation with the amount of free land left for Americans to claim. Peterson's goal was to help American farmers during the Great Depression with their farm debt. The Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act, which funded low-interest loans for tenants so that they might become land owners and created the Farm Security Administration, was passed in the late 1930s and is thought to be the reason for the death of Peterson's land proposal in the House.
boxfolder
IV.616Amendments offered by Mr. Peterson of Georgia to H. R. 8157, 1940 August 13
IV.617Bankhead-Jones, et al, 1937 – 1940
IV.618[Congressional Record, 1939 – 1940]
IV.619[Congressional Record, 1941 – 1944]
IV.620[Congressional Record Speeches, 1935 – 1945]
IV.621Department of Agriculture Appropriation Bill, Fiscal Year 1942, 1942
boxfolder
IV.71Farm Credit Administration Appropriation Bill for 1940, 1939
IV.72Farm Security Act of 1937, Report of accompany H. R. 7562, 1937
IV.73H.R. 1675 [typed amendments], 1939
IV.74H.R. 1675 [accompanying report, draft], 1939 June
IV.75H.R. 6748 [draft], 1937 May 3-12
IV.76H.R. 6748 [correspondence, draft, report], 1937 April 28 – 1937 August 3
IV.77H.R. 8286 [draft], 1935 May 31
IV.78H.R. 8286 [report], 1935
IV.79H.R. - , H.R. 1036, H.R. 2371, H.R.3735, H.R. 4693, H.R. 7120, H.R. 8157, H.R. 8668, H.R. 8747, H.R. 8748, 1939 – 1941
IV.710Military Establishment Appropriation Bill, Fiscal Year 1941, 1940
IV.711S. 136, S.591, S. 1836, 1939 - 1940
folder
OS IV[GA S.R. thanking Hugh Peterson (1 of 2)][oversize], 1937 December
OS IV[GA S.R. thanking Hugh Peterson (2 of 2)][oversize], 1937 December
OS IV[GA S.R. 9 A Resolution Imploring the Georgia Delegation in Congress to assist in enacting laws to relieve the deplorable conditions of the Georgia farmer (1 of 2)][oversize], 1937 December 1
OS IV[GA S.R. 9 A Resolution Imploring the Georgia Delegation in Congress to assist in enacting laws to relieve the deplorable conditions of the Georgia farmer (2 of 2)][oversize], 1937 December 1
OS IV[Poster, St. Andrews Society of Washington, D.C. Concert][oversize], 1945 September 30
OS IV[Suggestions for Amendments to H.B. 8157 from Martin Korges, Sr.][oversize], 1940 March



D. Subject Files

( 120 folder(s) )
The Subject Files sub series contains a large amount of research regarding agriculture in the United States during the late 1930s and early 1940s. Several folders contain research for H.R. 8286, Peterson's bill to grant homestead rights to farmers in need, and include reports from the United States Department of Agriculture as well as from the Farm Security Administration and its predecessor, the Resettlement Administration.
boxfolder
IV.712A.M.E. Discipline, 1936
IV.713Agricultural Finance Review, Volume 2, Number 2, 1939 November
IV.714American Cotton Grower, Washington Viewpoints, 1940
IV.715American Highways, Inter American Highways Issue, 1946 October
IV.716[Automobile tag, District of Columbia, 77th Congress (removed), 1941]
IV.717[Automobile tag, Georgia (removed), 1944]
IV.718[Automobile tag, Inauguration, 1937]
IV.719Bankhead Tenant Aid Bill Explained, undated
IV.720Biennial Report to the Chief of Staff of the United States Army, 1941 - 1943
IV.721The Book of Presidents, 1932
IV.722Brief Account of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, 1905
IV.723Bureau of Fisheries Application for Fish, undated
IV.724"The Case of Jessie Dell" The American Alliance of Civil Service Women, undated
IV.725[Caucus flyer and letter, 1940 January 8]
IV.726Charter of the United Nations, 1945 June 26
IV.727[Clippings, 1939 January]
IV.728[Clippings, 1939 – 1941]
IV.729The Congressional News, Fourth District, South Carolina, 1940 August
IV.730Constitution of the United States of America, 1920 – 1935
IV.731A Constitutional Catechism, 1936 February 24
IV.732Cost of Production, S. 570 and Identical House Bills, 1939
IV.733[Cotton Program Flyer, American Cotton Manufacturers Association, 1939 January 10
IV.734County Officers of Georgia, Mailing List (item removed), [1937]
folder
OS IV[1937 State and County Officers of Georgia Poster][oversize], 1937
OS IV[County Officers of Georgia Poster][oversize], 1945
boxfolder
IV.735Democratic National Committee Primary Dates, 1938
IV.736Democratic Register and Congressional Yearbook Cut (Photograph removed), 1936
IV.737Department of Interior Circulars, 541 Suggestions to Homesteaders, 523 Stock Raising Homestead Act, 302 Soldiers and Sailors Homestead and Preference Rights, 1925 – 1930
IV.738[Desk blotters, 1940 – 1946]
IV.739Digest of the Purposes of Federal Agencies, 1939
IV.740Extension of remarks sent to all Justices of Peace, 1935 June 30
IV.741Facts Regarding Federal Land Grants to the Railroads of the U. S., 1938 November 8
IV.742Farm Bill Miscellaneous (Speeches, Newspaper, Articles, etc.), [1936 – 1940]
IV.743Farm Bill Miscellaneous (Speeches, Miscellaneous Articles, etc.) (folder 1 of 2), [1935 – 1940]
IV.744Farm Bill Miscellaneous (Speeches, Miscellaneous Articles, etc.) (folder 2 of 2), [1935 – 1940]
IV.745[Farm Bill, News Story Release, 1935 June 30]
IV.746Farm Bill (Personal Data) (folder 1 of 2), [1935 - 1936]
IV.747Farm Bill (Personal Data) (folder 2 of 2), [1935 - 1936]
IV.748Farm Bill (Source Material) (folder 1 of 2), [1932 – 1935]
IV.749Farm Bill (Source Material) (folder 2 of 2), [1934 – 1939]
boxfolder
IV.81[Farm Bill, speech, undated]
IV.82[Farm Bill speech sent to home addresses of all Congressmen and Senators, 1935 November]
IV.83[Farm Credit Administration, 1939]
IV.84Farm Credit Administration Monthly Report on Loans and Discounts, 1938 January – March
IV.85Farm Credit Administration Press Release, 1939 April 24
IV.86The Farm Debt Problem, Letter from the Secretary of Agriculture, 1933
IV.87[Farm Legislation Research Envelope (folder 1 of 2), 1937 – 1940]
IV.88[Farm Legislation Research Envelope (folder 2 of 2), 1937 – 1940]
IV.89[Farm Legislation Research Envelope, 1938 – 1941]
IV.810[Farm Legislation Research Envelope, 1940]
IV.811[Farm Legislation Research Envelope (folder 1 of 2), 1941]
IV.812[Farm Legislation Research Envelope (folder 2 of 2), 1941]
IV.813[Farm Legislation Statements, 1935]
IV.814Farm Operators by Age, Number of Years on Farm, and Farm Experience, Department of Commerce, 1923
IV.815Farm Progress Under the Roosevelt Administration, 1937 August 20
IV.816Farm Tenancy, Message from the President of the United States, 1937
IV.817[Farmers Bulletins Request Form, 1939]
IV.818Federal Emergency Relief Administration [Memo, 1934 August 15]
IV.819Flying Cadets, undated
IV.820Footprints of the Trojan Horse: Some Methods used by Foreign Agents within the United States, 1940
IV.821[Form letter, 1944 June 26]
folder
OS IV[Government Payments analyzed by programs, divisions, and state for all commodities][oversize], 1938 January 19
OS IV[Government Payments from May 12,1933-January 31, 1938 Analyzed by Commodities][oversize], 1938
OS IV[Government Payments made in connection with the commodity programs from May 12, 1933 through February 29, 1938][oversize], 1938
boxfolder
IV.822Halftone portrait, 1938
IV.823Historical sketch of "Louisiana" and the Louisiana Purchase, 1933
IV.824[Homestead, land bill research, 1846 – 1862]
IV.825House of Representatives Order of Memorial Exercises, 1936 April 21
IV.826Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 74th Congress, 1935 – 1936
IV.827Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 75th Congress, 1937 – 1938
IV.828Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 76th Congress, 1939 – 1940
IV.829Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 77th Congress, 1941 – 1942
IV.830Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 78th Congress, 1943 - 1944
IV.831Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 78th Congress, 1944
IV.832Individual Voting Record by Roll Calls, 79th Congress, 1945-1946
IV.833Invitation to Sesquicentennial of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1940
IV.834Ketchikan Alaska Chronicle, 1945 July 23
IV.835Law Relating to Agriculture, 1934
IV.836[Legislative Reference Service suggestion for amendment to H. R. 1675, 1939]
IV.837[Library of Congress Research, 1938]
IV.838List of Justices of the Peace, County Democratic Committee, Congressional Committee, County Offices, Delegates to 1942 Convention, Persons corresponding in 1945–1946 (items removed), 1942-1946
IV.839Members and standing Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Georgia, 1943-1944
IV.840Men People Talk About, Andrew Jackson "Old Hickory", [undated]
IV.841Names of Producers Having Contracts Under which Payments to Owner-Operator Alone, or to Land Owner and Tenants Combined, Totaled $10,000 or Over for One Year, 1936 June 19
IV.842A National Land Policy Radio Address, 1937 May 12
IV.843National Resources Development Report for 1943, 1943
IV.844Neutrality: The Immediate Problem, Walter Lippmann, 1936 January 18
IV.845New Constitution of the United States of Brazil, 1937
IV.846[Notebook, undated]
IV.847[Notes, memos, 1938–1940]
IV.848Peterson Auto Wreck [RESTRICTED], 1944
IV.849Hugh Peterson and Richard B. Russell, Jr., on the occasion of Peterson being admitted to the Supreme Court (photograph removed), 1938
IV.850Pictorial Directory of the War Congress, 78th Congress, 2nd session, 1944
IV.851Pictorial Directory of the Victory Congress, 79th Congress, 1st session, 1945
IV.852Pictorial Directory of the 80th Congress, 1947
IV.853Pictures of outstanding Generals in World War No. II (photographs removed), 1945
IV.854[Postmaster petition, Vidalia, Georgia, 1936]
IV.855[Presidential speeches, sections marked regarding farm policy, 1933–1936]
IV.856Principles on which Thomas Jefferson Founded the Democratic Party, 1938
IV.857Public Improvements for Montgomery, Tattnall, Toombs Counties, Public Works Study No. 10, 1946 June
IV.858Public Land System of the United States, 1924
IV.859Regulations Pertaining to Cotton Marketing Quotas for the 1941–1942 Marketing Year, 1941 February
IV.860Remarks and form letter sent to all editors of Georgia Weeklies, [1935] June 30
IV.861Remarks with copy of bill sent to all white farmers of first District, 1935 August 27
boxfolder
IV.91Report of the Administrator of the Farm Security Administration, 1938
IV.92Report on the Progress of the Works Program, 1937 December
IV.93Social Security Board Public Assistance and Relief Publications, 1937
IV.94South Eastern Reporter, second series, 1940 August 22
IV.95Speech made by Hugh Peterson of Georgia in the House of Representatives of Congress, 1937 May 3
IV.96[speeches, undated]
IV.97[Story for papers regarding appointment of committee, 1935 August 1]
IV.98"Tallapoosa, Georgia", "Prospectus of the Tallapoosa Land, Mining and Manufacturing Company", 1887 – 1889
IV.99Telephone Directory, National War Agencies, 1942 November, 1943 July
IV.910[Thomas Jefferson broadside and letter, 1937]
IV.911USDA Farmers Bulletin No. 1087. Beautifying the Farmstead, 1929
IV.912[USDA Research (folder 1 of 3), 1936 – 1940]
IV.913[USDA Research (folder 2 of 3), 1936 – 1940]
IV.914[USDA Research (folder 3 of 3), 1936 – 1940]
IV.915[USDA Research (folder 1 of 2), 1938 – 1940]
IV.916[USDA Research (folder 2 of 2), 1938 – 1940]
boxfolder
IV.101[U. S. Department of Commerce Publications (item removed), 1936 – 1941]
IV.102United States Civil Service Employment Opportunities (removed, oversize), 1942
folder
OS IV[United States Civil Service Employment Opportunities 1942 Poster][oversize], 1942 September 1
boxfolder
IV.103United States Department of the Interior, Taylor Grazing Act, 1934 July
IV.104United States Supreme Court, 1935
IV.105Vacant Public Lands, 1932 July 1
IV.106Vest Pocket Congressional Directory, 1939 March
IV.107Vote of Congressman Hugh Peterson (Georgia) on passage of all farm bills, 74th to 78th Congresses, 1935 – 1944
IV.108Vote Cast in Presidential and Congressional Elections, 1928 – 1944
IV.109Washington Times, 1937 January 11
IV.1010Withdrawal for Classification of All Public Land in Certain States, Executive Order, 1935 February 5
IV.1011World War II Honor List of Dead and Missing, State of Georgia, War Department, 1946 June
folder
OS IVInstruments of Surrender, Japanese declaration of surrender at the end of World War II [oversize], 1945 July 26
boxfolder
IV.1012[Yes, no list by state, undated]
box
IV.OS1Oversize
 

V. Post Congressional

4 box(es)
(3.5 linear feet)
This series documents Peterson's work as a lobbyist and in Europe after World War II where he witnessed the Nuremburg Trials, the Paris Peace Conference, and was appointed by General Lucius D. Clay to an advisory panel on West Germany. Until his death in 1961, Peterson worked as a lobbyist for such companies as the Georgia Power Company and the American Cane Sugar Refiners Association. The materials are arranged into the following categories: A. European Trip and B. Lobbying.



A. European Trip

( 23 folder(s) )
The subseries pertaining to Peterson's trips to Europe to work in Germany under General Lucius Clay contains correspondence and paperwork relating to his position. He knew by September 1946 that he would not be returning to Congress, due to Prince Preston's winning the Democratic Primary, and was interested in pursuing contract work in post-war Europe. Peterson traveled to England, Scotland, Ireland, France, and Germany in the fall of 1946 to meet foreign officials as well as Americans working abroad and determine where he could find a post. Although he was given a position by Clay to work in West Germany in 1948, Peterson's time in Europe was limited as he developed minor health problems, and medical staff advised that he return to the United States.
boxfolder
V.11Analysis of General Agreement on Tariff and Trade signed at Geneva, 1947 October 30
V.12[Cunard White Star Line menus, 1947]
folder
OS V[H.M.T. Queen Mary Steward's List Sailing from New York to South Hampton, Thursday, September 5, 1946][oversize], 1946 September 5
boxfolder
V.13Europe (folder 1 of 2), 1946
V.14Europe (folder 2 of 2) (item removed), 1946
V.15Europe (item removed), 1948 September, October
V.16The Geneva Charter for an International Trade Organization, 1947
V.17Germany, etc. (folder 1 of 2) (item removed), 1948 September
V.18Germany, etc. (folder 2 of 2), 1948 September
V.19Miscellaneous 1, 1948
V.110Miscellaneous 2 (item removed), 1948
V.111Miscellaneous 3 (folder 1 of 2), 1948
V.112Miscellaneous 3 (folder 2 of 2), 1948
V.113Miscellaneous 4 (item removed), 1948
V.114Position, Europe, 1947
V.115Position, Europe, Trip to Berlin, 1948 March 19 – 31
V.116Position, European Recovery Program, 1948
V.117State Department, 1948
V.118Trip to Europe (folder 1 of 2), 1946 November
V.119Trip to Europe (folder 2 of 2), 1946 November
V.120Trip to Europe, 1946
folder
OS V[USDA Poster-"4 out of 10 Pigs Never Grow Up, Save More of your Pigs for Market"][oversize], 1947
OS V[Office of Military Government Bremen, Organizational Chart][oversize], 1948 September 15
boxfolder
V.121Trip to Europe, Office File, 1946
boxfolder
V.21Trip to Europe (folder 1 of 2), 1947
V.22Trip to Europe (folder 2 of 2), 1947



B. Lobbying

( 32 folder(s) )
The Lobbying sub series relates to Peterson's work for the Georgia Power Company from 1948 to 1961 and the American Cane Sugar Refiners Association from 1947 to 1959. In the files are pieces of legislation relevant to both organizations that are marked with notes. Peterson also made copious notes regarding meetings he had in Washington, D.C., and telephone calls he made. Some financial records are in these files in the form of expense statements submitted by Peterson and bank statements reflecting payment from the companies he represented. Further information about Peterson's lobbying activities can be found in Series I.
boxfolder
V.23Georgia Power Company, 1961
V.24Georgia Power Company, 1960
V.25Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1959
V.26Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1959
V.27TVA, Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1959
V.28TVA, Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1959
V.29Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1958
V.210Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1958
V.211Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1957
V.212Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1957
V.213Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1956
boxfolder
V.31Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1956
V.32Georgia Power Company, 1955
V.33Georgia Power Company, 1954
V.34Georgia Power Company, 1953
V.35Georgia Power Company, 1952
V.36Georgia Power Company, 1951
V.37Georgia Power Company, 1950
V.38Georgia Power Company (folder 1 of 2), 1948 - 1949
V.39Georgia Power Company (folder 2 of 2), 1948 – 1949
V.310Bank, 1951
V.311United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1947
V.312United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1948
V.313Cuban Sugar Council, also United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1948
V.314United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1949
boxfolder
V.41United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1950 – 1951
V.42United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1952
V.43United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1953 – 1954
V.44United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1956
V.45United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1957
V.46United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1958
V.47United States Sugar Cane Refiners Association, 1959
 

VI. Photographs

685 photographs, 12 negatives
The collection contains a variety of black and white photographs from Peterson's home and office in Ailey, Georgia. Peterson displayed several signed photographs from political peers and photographs of the Peterson family in his office, which was located in the backyard of Sandridge Manor in Ailey. Photographs found in the Montgomery Monitor office in Mt. Vernon, Georgia, consist of multiple photographs of senior class groups visiting Washington, D.C. from the First Congressional District, 1937-1941 and 1946. Also in this series are early photographs of Peterson as a child and teenager saved by Flora Peterson Snooks and Marie Peterson Palmer, his sisters.Peterson's papers yield many photographs from the trips he took as a member of the congressional Committee on Territories, the Committee on Rivers and Harbors, and the Committee on Public Roads. People corresponding with Peterson also sent photographs, which include photographs from men serving in World War II. Corresponding manuscript materials are found in Series IV, United States Congress.
folder
OS VI[Aerial] Along U.S. 280 East through Hugh McNatt Peterson property to local road south thru [sic] Jim Peterson property toward W. J. Peterson Old Home Place (KY-3A-64) [oversize], undated. (1 (22x26.75"), b/w [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VI[Aerial] Ailey, Georgia and east along U. S. 280 thru [sic] Hugh McNatt Peterson property [oversize], undated. (1 (22x27"), b/w [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VI[Aerial] Town of Ailey, Montgomery County, Georgia (KY-3A-64)[oversize], undated. (1 (30x30"), b/w, [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VI[Aerial] U.S. Route 280 east from W. J. Peterson Old Home Pace (KY-3A-96) [oversize], undated. (1 (30x30"), b/w, [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VIU. S. Capitol and grounds, west façade, Washington D. C. [oversize], undated. (1 (16.125x12.75"), b/w [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VIWashington Monument, night view with reflecting pool, Washington D. C., undated. (1 (17.5x14.5") b/w, (U.S. Army Signal Corp) [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VIArlington National Cemetery, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Arlington, Virginia [oversize], undated. (1 (16.5x14") b/w (U.S. Army Signal Corp) [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VIWhite House, north façade, Washington D. C. [oversize], undated. (1 (16x13") b/w, [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VIU. S. Capitol Dome in winter, Washington D. C. [oversize], undated. (1 (16.5x13.75") b/w (U. S. Army Signal Corp) [oversize – located in Map Case])
boxfolder
VI.110[Hinesville, Georgia, High School Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D. C.], undated. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.111[Collegeboro, Georgia, High School Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D. C.], undated. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.112South Georgia State Teachers College High School Graduating Class, Statesboro, Georgia at U.S. Capitol with Congressman Hugh Peterson, [Washington, D. C.], undated. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.113[Georgia High School Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D. C.], undated. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.114[Georgia High School Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D. C.], undated. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.115Robert Ramspeck [M.C. GA – 5th Dist], portrait, inscribed, undated. (1 (8.75x10.75) b/w (Harris and Ewing, Washington, D. C.))
VI.116Sidney Camp, [M.C. GA – 4th Dist], portrait, undated. (1 (8x10") b/w (--- & Underwood))
VI.117"Greetings" photo postcard, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Collins, undated. (1 (3.5x5) b/w)
VI.118William James Peterson, Montgomery County, Georgia, Georgia House of Representatives, circa 1907. (1 (7x9") b/w)
VI.119Pete Clifton, Lyons County, Georgia, Georgia House of Representatives, circa 1907. (1 (10x12") b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.120Unidentified Georgia Legislator, Georgia House of Representatives, circa 1907. (1 (10x12") b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.121Hugh Peterson in his yard in Ailey, Georgia with friend, circa 1909. (1 (2x3") b/w)
VI.122Alfred Truitt, circa 1920. (1 (4.5x3") b/w)
VI.123Robert Fix, Whit Fether [sic], portrait of man dressed as Native American, undated. (1 (6.5x10") b/w)
VI.124Hugh Peterson, portraits from photo-engraving, undated (5 (8x10") b/w (Washington Press Photo Bureau))
VI.125Hugh Peterson and Donald Frazer, Troika Club, Washington, D. C., circa 1943. (2 (5x7") b/w)
VI.126Generals of World War II (Eisenhower, Marshall, Bradley, Harmon, Doolittle, Hodges, Kenney, Krueger, Spatz, Patch, Wedemayer, Lear, Patton, Sulton, Truscott, Arnold, MacArthur, Simpson, Clark), undated. (19 (8x10") b/w (U. S. Army Signal Corps))
VI.127Captain Michael Long, undated. (2 (1 – 2.5x3.5", 1 – 3.5x4.5) b/w)
VI.128Geiserwater Swimming Pool, Yellowstone Park, Wyoming, photo postcard (Haynes Picture Shops, Inc.), circa 1944. (2 (3.5x5") b/w)
VI.129Hugh Peterson at desk, portrait (Modell), circa 1936-1940. (2 (8x10") b/w)
VI.130Hugh Peterson, portrait (Modell), circa 1936-1940. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.131Hugh Peterson, Jr., circa 1903. (1 (4x6") b/w)
VI.132Hugh Peterson, Jr., circa 1920. (1 (2.25x3.5") b/w)
VI.133Peterson Campaign Rally, Lyons, Georgia, circa 1934-1940. (6 (4.5x3"), 10 (2.75x3"), 12 negatives, b/w)
VI.134Hugh Peterson, portrait at desk, (Harris and Ewing), circa 1945. (1 (9.5x13") b/w)
VI.135Hugh Peterson, State Legislature, circa 1929. (2 (5x7") b/w)
VI.136Joe Underwood, circa 1944. (1 (3.5x4") b/w)
VI.137"To Hon. Hugh Peterson with every good wish, James A. Farley" [portrait of James Farley], undated. (1 (7.5x9.5") b/w (Hal Phyfs) [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.138"To Hugh Peterson from his friend Franklin Delano Roosevelt" [portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt], undated. (1 (21.75x18.25) b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.139J. J. McAllister and Sport (dog), 1904. (1 (4.25x6.5") b/w)
VI.140Hugh Peterson, Jr. (D. A. Warlick and Son), Spring 1914. (1 (4x10"), b/w)
VI.141Pythian Literary Society, Brewton Parker Institute, Mt. Vernon-Ailey, Georgia, Spring 1914. (1 (14x12") b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.142Hugh Peterson, Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity Portrait, Athens, Georgia (F. U. Ball), 1917 March. (1 (5x7") b/w)
VI.143Alpha Tau Omega, Alpha Beta Chapter, University of Georgia, 1917. (1 (13.75x10.75) b/w (Frederick J. Ball, Athens, GA) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.144Georgia House of Representatives, 1923-1924. (1 (19.75x13.75") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.145Georgia Legislators [standing on steps of Georgia Capitol], 1923-1924. (1 (26.25x8") [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.146Georgia House of Representatives, 1924-1925. (1 (18x15.25) b/w (Metz photo service) [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.147Hugh Peterson, State Legislature, 1925. (1 (5x7") b/w)
VI.148Hugh Peterson, Herman McBride, L. S. Thompson in Montgomery Monitor Building, Mt. Vernon, Georgia, 1925 November. (2 (5x7") b/w)
VI.149Hugh Peterson, State Legislature, 1927. (1 (5x7") b/w)
VI.150Georgia House of Representatives, 1929-1930. (1 (14.75x19) b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.151No. 14, View of Pierpont Recreation Area prior to destruction [Pierpont Bay, Ventura, California], 1929. (1 (--x10") b/w (Bernie's Photo Shop) [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.152No. 15, Same area as No. 14 taken from Pier [Pierpont Recreation Area, Pierpont Bay, Ventura California], 1929. (1 (--x10") b/w (Bernie's Photo Shop) [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.153Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Peterson, Jr. (Hugh and Patience Russell Peterson) the day after they were married, 1930 June 25. (1 (5x7") b/w)
VI.154Hugh Peterson (Wheelen Studios), 1931 February. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.155Georgia State Senate, [stuck to glass – CAUTION], 1931-1933. (1 (20.5x16") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
folder
OS VIPresident Franklin D. Roosevelt addressing the 74th Congress of the United States, Washington, D. C. [oversize], 1935 January 4. (1 (21.5x9"), b/w (Schutz photo 4884) [oversize – located in Map Case])
OS VISpeaker Joseph W. Burns opening the 74th Congress of the United States, Washington D. C. [oversize], 1935 January 4. (1 (30x9"), b/w (Schutz photo 4884A) [oversize – located in Map Case])
boxfolder
VI.158Flora Snooks holding Hugh Peterson, Jr., 1935 October 6. (1 (2.75x4.5") b/w)
VI.159Congressman Hugh Peterson (Underwood ad Underwood), 1935. (2 (8x10") in folder, b/w)
VI.160Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Proctor, 1936 January 6. (1 (3.5x5") b/w (R. H. Hicks))
VI.161Committee on the Public Lands, House of Representatives, United States Congress, [Washington, D. C.], 1936 April 23. (1 (--x10") b/w (U.S. Capitol Photo Service) [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.162"Election Eve Conference, 11/2/36, Sincerely C---p Robert" [Four men in suits sitting together laughing, second from left James Farley], 1936 November 2. (1 (14x11") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.163Hugh Peterson, portrait, used in Democratic Register and Congressional Yearbook (Underwood and Underwood), 1936. (2 (8x10") b/w)
VI.164Hugh Peterson and his son Hugh Peterson, Jr. taken in his office, Room 325, House Office Building,Washington, D. C. on Saturday January 9, 1937, by O. B. troy for the Washington Times, and published in the Washington Times on Monday January 11, 1937. Hugh Peterson at this time represented the First Congressional District of Georgia in the 75th Congress, 1937 January 9. (1 (7.5x9.5") b/w)
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OS VISecond Inauguration, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Vice- President John N. Garner, Washington D. C. [oversize], 1937 January 20. (1 (37.75x8.5") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in Map Case])
boxfolder
VI.166Congressman Peterson and his visitors from Georgia in Washington D.C., 1937 April 14. (1 (13x10") b/w (Athanas Bros., Washington, D. C.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.167Class of 1937, Swainsboro High School, U. S. Capitol, [Washington D. C.], 1937 May 11. (1 (13x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.168Hugh Peterson, Sr. holding Hugh Peterson, Jr. looking at zebra at Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey Circus, Washington, D.C., 1937 May 22. (1 (8x10") b/w (Washington Times))
VI.169Hugh Peterson, Jr. with donkey, [1937 May 22]. (1 (7.5x10") b/w)
VI.170Ludowici High School group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1937 May 27. (1 (11.75x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.171Glenwood High School Seniors with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1937 June 2. (1 (12x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.172Claxton High School Graduating Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson at U. S. Capitol, 1937 June 9. (1 (12x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.173Bradwell Institute and Willie High School, Liberty County Graduating Classes with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1937 June 11. (1 (11.25x10") b/w (P.I.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.174Hugh Peterson at desk, Washington, D.C., 1937 July 15. (2 (8x10") b/w (International News Photos))
VI.175Hugh Peterson, M. C. 1st Ga. District in Room 325 House Office Building, Thursday July 15, 1937. [measuring watermelon] To his right is C. W. Reed, M. C. 11th District. Others in picture are, left to right: Joe Clairty, California (Speaker of Little Congress), Sims Garrett, Secty to Pace of Georgia, Bill Harris, Secty to Peterson of Georgia, D. M. riddle, Secty to Allen of Louisiana, David Raymond of Louisiana, Owen Deatrick, Secty to Transue of Michigan, 1937 July 15. (1 (8x10") b/w (International News Photos))
VI.176Hugh Peterson eating watermelon, 1937 July 15. (2 (8x10") b/w (International News Photos))
VI.177Photograph taken in office of Hugh Peterson, M. C. First District of Georgia on Thursday, July 15, 1937 showing Cong. Peterson and Cong. C. W. Reed of Eleventh [Florida] District (stout man in front) enjoying watermelons sent by J. M. Stubbs of Savannah, Georgia. Others in picture are secretaries as follows: H. M. Ja—s, Sec, Drew of Pennsylvania, (in front), Mrs. Bessie Krank with Reed of [Fl.], S[rius] Garrett, Sec., Park of Georgia, D. M. Riddle, Sec., Allen of Louisiana, Bill Harris, Sec., Peterson of Georgia, Owen Deatrick, Sec., Transue of Michigan, David Raymond of Louisiana, Mrs. Harold Kropf with Thom of Ohio, Robert Mitchell of Maryland, Clerk Claims Comm., Miss Gladys Aaron with Peterson of Georgia, L.B. LeBas, Sec., DeRouen of Louisiana, Harold Kropf, Sec., Thom of Ohio, Miss Jean Kennedy of Maryland with Claims Committee, 1937 July 15. (2 (8x6.25", 8x10") b/w)
VI.178South Georgia State Teacher's College High School group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1937. (1 (12.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.179House Committee on Rivers and Harbors, 75th Congress (Harris and Ewing), 1937-1939. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.180Congressman Hugh Peterson and his wife Pat[ience Russell Peterson], Georgia Society Dinner, Shoreham Hotel, Washington, D.C., 1937. (1 (10.5x8") b/w)
VI.181Son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miles, Metter, Georgia, 1938 February 8. (1 (3.5x2.5") b/w)
VI.182Hugh Peterson in office at desk, Washington, D. C., 1938 April. (1 (3.25x4.25") b/w (negative))
VI.183Mrs. Hugh Peterson of Georgia, wife of Hugh Peterson, Member of Congress, First District of Georgia, and President of Seventy Fourth Club (wives of members of Congress whose services began during the seventy fourth Congress), Mrs. Emmet O'Neal, M. C. from Kentucky and vice-president of 74th Club – and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of President F. D. Roosevelt of U. S. at meeting of 74th Club at Shoreham Hotel in Washington, D.C., 1938 April. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.184Senator Richard B. Russell and Congressman Hugh Peterson in the United States Supreme Court on the occasion of Peterson being admitted to practice before the Supreme Court (International News Photos), 1938 May 23. (3 (8x10") b/w)
VI.185Ludowici High School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 May 26. (1 (15.25x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.186Bradwell Institute, Hinesville, Georgia High school Graduating Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1938 May 27. (1 (13.25x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.187Willie, Liberty County High School Graduating Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, 1st District of Georgia at U. S. Capitol [Washington D.C.], 1938 May 28. (1 (14x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.188Hugh Peterson, Mrs. Herman Kennedy, Mrs. Hugh Peterson, Dr. Herman Kennedy at Shoreham Hotel Terrace, Washington, D.C., 1938 May 28. (2 (7.25x11") b/w)
VI.189Ben Gibbs, M.C. Georgia and Hugh Peterson, M.C. Georgia riding mules (Associated Press), 1938 May. (5 (7x9") b/w)
VI.190Rivers and Harbors Committee of House of U. S. Congress, 75th Term, 2nd session, 1938, May. Front row seated: Lex Green, Florida, Claude V. Parsons, Illinois, Rene L. DeRouen, Louisiana, Joseph J. Mansfield, Chairman, Texas, Albert E. Carter (Republican), California, Francis D. Culken, New York, Harold G. Mosier, Ohio. Standing, left to right: M. Gouer, Secty of Committee, Hugh Peterson, Georgia, C. Jasper Bell, Missouri, William M. Colman, Mississippi, Martin F. Smith, Washington, Alfred F. Beiter, New York, Elmer H. Wene, New Jersey, Chas. R. Eckert, Pennsylvania, unknown, Assistant Clerk of Committee, 1938 May. (1 (4x5") b/w)
VI.191Claxton High School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 1. (1 (12.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.192Lyons High School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, 1st District of Georgia at U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 2. (1 (18.25x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.193Brewton Parker Institute, Mt. Vernon-Ailey, Georgia School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 3. (1 (11.75x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.194Register High School group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 5. (1 (13.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.195Georgia State Teachers College High School group, Statesboro, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 6. (1 (14x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.196Darien, Georgia High School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1938 June 8. (1 (12.75x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.197Eula Peterson Smith holding Hugh Peterson, Jr. at Peterson family reunion, 1938 July 23. (1 (2.25x4.5) b/w)
VI.198Farley Day (visit of Postmaster General James Farley and Governor E. D. Rivers), Ailey, Georgia, 1938. (5 (4.5x2.75"), 23 (3.5x2.5) b/w)
VI.199Collage, six photographs of Hugh Peterson with high school groups, 1938-1941. (1 (30.75x19.5) b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.1100Norris Dam, [Tennessee] photo postcard, 1938. (1 (3.5x5") b/w (Clements))
VI.1101William Russell, Hugh Peterson, Jr. , Sallie Camp at an Easter egg hunt on the White House lawn, Washington, D.C., 1939 April 10. (1 (4.5x3") b/w)
VI.1102Hon. Malcolm Tarver, M.C. 7th District, Georgia, portrait, inscribed (Modell Studios, Washington, D.C.), 1939 April 12. (2 (8x10") b/w [Caution: 100b stuck to glass])
folder
OS VIAmerican Retail Federation Banquet, the Retailers National Forum, Washington D. C., Mayflower Hotel (Tenschert Studio, Washington D.C.) [oversize], 1939 May 22. (1 (41.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in Map Case])
boxfolder
VI.1104Senior Class, Swainsboro, Georgia High School Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1939 May 25. (2 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1105Senior Class of Lyons High School with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 May 26. (2 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1106Senior Class Hinesville, Georgia High School with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 May 27. (2 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1107Senior Class, Willie, Georgia, High School, with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 May 27. (3 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1108Senior Class Glennville, Georgia High School with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 May 28. (, 1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1109Senior Class South Georgia College High School, Collegeboro, Georgia [with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C.] (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 June 5. (3 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1110Group of High School Graduates from Brewton Parker Junior College, Mt. Vernon, Georgia, and Walde High School, Walde, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, [U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C.] (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1939 June 10. (2 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1111Hugh Peterson, Sr., Patience Russell Peterson and Hugh Peterson, Jr. in front of the U.S. Capitol, 1939 June 10. (2 (10x10") b/w [1 oversize – located in HPO2, 1 rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1112Soperton, Georgia High School Senior Class of 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C. (Washington Photo Co., Inc.), 1940 April 24. (2 (12.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1113Swainsboro High School Senior Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U.S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 23. (3 (18x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1114Bradwell Institute, Hinesville, Georgia Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 25. (2 (13.375x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1115Willie, Georgia High School Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 25. (2 (12.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1116Metter, Georgia High School Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 28. (1 (13.5x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1117Register, Georgia High School Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 29. (3 (14x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1118Emanuel County Institute Senior Class of 1940, Graymont Summit, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 May 30. (2 (12x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1119Georgia Teachers College High School, Collegeboro, Georgia Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 June 5. (2 (12x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1120Brewton Parker Junior College High School, Mt. Vernon-Ailey, Georgia Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 June 6. (3 (12.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1121Collins, Georgia High School Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 June 6. (2 (14x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1122Newington, Georgia High School Senior Class 1940 with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 June 7. (2 (14.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1123Screven County, Georgia School Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1940 June 17. (2 (13.75x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1124Ben Gibbs, [M. C. GA – 8th Dist], portrait, inscribed, 1940. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1125Dinner given by Knute Hill, M.C., 4th District, Washington and other members of delegations from Washington, Montana, and Idaho at Mayflower Hotel [Washington, D.C.], Thursday night, 1941 March 6. (1 (13.75x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.1126Claxton High School, Claxton, Georgia Senior Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 9. (1 (11.5x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1127Glenwood, Georgia High School Senior Class with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 21. (1 (12.5x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1128Senior Class of Shiloh High School, Lumber City, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 21. (1 (12.5x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1129Senior Class of Summertown High School, Summertown Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 22. (1 (12x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1130Senior Class of Register High School, Register, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 23. (1 (14.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1131Senior Class Soperton High School, Soperton, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 23. (1 (11.5x10") b/w [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1132Edward Eugene Cox, [M.C. GA – 12th Dist.], portrait, inscribed, 1941 May 27. (1 (8x10") b/w (Pat Photograph, Washington, D.C.))
VI.1133Senior Class Metter High School, Metter, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 28. (1 (16x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1134Senior Class of Lyons High School, Lyons, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 May 30. (1 (18.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1135Congress of the United States House Committee, Rivers and Harbors, 1941 May. (1 (8x10") b/w (Harris and Ewing))
VI.1136Senior Class Waynesboro High School, Waynesboro, Ga. with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 4. (2 (23.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in Map Case])
VI.1137Lyons, Georgia High School Senior Class Group with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 4. (2 (23.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [2 oversize – located in HPO1, 1 rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1138Senior Class of Swainsboro High School, Swainsboro, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 4. (1 (16x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1139Senior Class Emanuel County Institute, Graymont Summit, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 4. (1 (23.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1140Hilltonia High School Group, Hilltonia, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 4. (1 (18x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1141Brewton Parker Institute Graduating Class, Mt. Vernon-Ailey, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 5. (1 (13.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1142Senior Class Millen High School, Millen, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 5. (1 (19.75x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1143Senior Class Newington High School, Newington, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 6. (1 (15x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1144Bradwell Institute Graduating Class, Hinesville, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 6. (1 (13.75 x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1145Senior Class Rocky Ford High School, Rocky Ford, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 6. (1 (15.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1146Senior Class Ludowici High School, Ludowici, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 6. (1 (14.5x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1147Georgia Teachers College High School, Collegeboro, Georgia with Congressman Hugh Peterson, U. S. Capitol, Washington D.C., 1941 June 7. (1 (14.25x10") b/w (Washington Photo Co., Inc.) [oversize – located in HPO1])
VI.1148John Gibson, [M.C. GA – 8th Dist], portrait, inscribed, 1941. (1 (10x8") b/w)
VI.1149Hugh Peterson with group of men, Washington Hotel, March 2 or 9, 1943 March. (2 (1 – 7x9", 1 8x10") b/w)
VI.1150House and Senate Public Lands Committee Trip, 1943 August. (2 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1151House and Senate Public Lands Committee Trip, 1943. (6 (8x10"), b/w (Crandall, Grant))
VI.1152Public Hearing, Hoboken Government Piers Situation, Municipal Building, Hoboken, New Jersey, February 7, 1944. Members, Sub-Committee of House Committee on Public Lands seated and reading, left to right: Hal Holmes (Washington), J. Edgar Chenoweth (Colorado), Hugh Peterson (Georgia), Hardin Peterson (Florida, Chair), Karl Le Compte (Iowa), Claire Engle (California); standing and reading, left to right: Edward J. Murname (Commissioner and Directory of Dept. of Revenue and Finance, City of Hoboken), John T. Soltmann (Executive secretary, Hoboken Chamber of Commerce), Rudolph Schroeder (Director, Hoboken Chamber of Commerce), A. A. Langer (Editor, Jersey Observer), George B. Bernheim (President, Hoboken Chamber of Commerce), Edward J. Hart (New Jersey), Bernard M. McFeely (Mayor, City of Hoboken), Frederick Hopkins (Past president, Hoboken Chamber of Commerce), John J. Fallon (Vice Chancellor, Corporation Council, City of Hoboken), Clarence H. McQueen (Hoboken Chamber of Commerce), Frank P. Romano (Commissioner, Director of Dept. of Parks and Public Property, City of Hoboken), Thomas J. McAleer (Commissioner, Director of Dept. of Public Works, City of Hoboken), 1944 February 7. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1153Hugh Peterson at podium at Camp Stewart, Hinesville, Georgia, 1944 February 22. (1 (8x10") b/w (U. S. Army Signal Corps))
VI.1154Lyons, Georgia voting precinct, July 4, 1944, Mrs. Ellis Pope, Gladys Aaron at door behind friend, 1944 July 4. (1 (3.5x5) b/w)
VI.1155Bill Harris, World War II Pacific Island, 1944 August. (7 (3.5x5") b/w)
VI.1156William T. Harris, portrait, inscribed, 1944 December. (1 (7.5x8.5") b/w)
VI.1157Joe Underwood, W. T. Black, Jr., 1944. (1 (3.5x4") b/w)
VI.1158Truman's first Congressional address as President, 1945 April 16. (1 (19.25x11.75") b/w (Associated Press) [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.1159General Dwight D. Eisenhower Addressing Joint Session of Congress, Washington, D.C., 1945 June 18. (1 (--x10") b/w (Schutz Photo 7792) [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1160Congressman Hugh Peterson, E. A. Meeks (Secretary, National League of District Postmasters), Mrs. L'Bertie Rushing (President, National League of District Postmasters), 1945 October 23. (4 (2 – 7x9", 2 – 8x10") b/w (Frank Alexander))
VI.1161Patience R. Peterson, Cpt. Arthur McClellan, Sue Peterson, Hugh Peterson, Jr. Hugh Peterson, Sr., 1945. (1 (5x7"), b/w (U. S. Coast Guard))
VI.1162Port Hueneme, [California], Rivers and Harbors [Committee], 1945. (16 (8x10), b/w (U. S. Navy))
VI.1163Congressional Rivers and Harbors Trip, Alaska, 1945. (22 (3.5x6") b/w)
VI.1164Congressional Rivers and Harbors Trip, Alaska, 1945. (25 (3.5x6") b/w)
VI.1165Congressional Rivers and Harbors Trip, California, 20th Century Fox Studios, 1945. (11 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1166Aerial view, Fairbanks, Alaska photo postcard, 1945. (1 (3.5x5") b/w)
VI.1167Joe Underwood with Sword Fish, 1945. (1 (2.5x3.5") b/w)
VI.1168House Representatives Sub-Committee on Roads arrives at Cristobal, Canal Zone, Frank T. Hines, Hugh Peterson, Lt. Gen. Willis D. Crittenberger, J. W. Robinson, 1946 February 22. (4 (5x7") b/w)
VI.1169[Album] Inspection of the Inter-American Highway, Panama to Guatemala by the Sub-committee of the House Committee on Roads, February – March, 1946, compliments of the American Association of State Highway Officials, [signed] Hal. H. Hale, 1946 March. (47 (3.5x3.5") b/w (American Association of State Highway Officials))
VI.1170[Loose photographs] Inspection of the Inter-American Highway, Panama to Guatemala by the Sub-committee of the House Committee on Roads, February – March, 1946, compliments of the American Association of State Highway Officials, [signed] Hal. H. Hale, 1946 March. (47 (3.5x3.5") b/w (American Association of State Highway Officials))
VI.1171Winter Ice Carnival, Fairbanks, Alaska, March 6-9, 1946, 1946 March. (11 (2 – 4.25x3.5", 4 – 4.5x2.75", 5 3.5x2.5") b/w)
VI.1172Mexico, photo postcard, 1946 March 11. (1 (3.5x5") b/w)
VI.1173Central America, Roads Committee Trip, 1946 May. (16 (4x5") b/w)
VI.1174Central America, Roads Committee Trip, 1946 May. (26 (16 – 3.5x5", 7 4x4", 3 – 3.5x5") b/w)
VI.1175Senior Class, Swainsboro, Georgia High School, Washington Trip, 1946 June 7. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1176Senior Class, Waynesboro, Georgia High School, Washington Trip, 1946 June 7. (1 (--x10") b/w [oversize, rolled – located in HPO3])
VI.1177Oren Harris, portrait, inscribed to Hugh Peterson, 1946 December 18. (1 (8x10") b/w (Blackstone Studios, Inc.))
VI.1178W.M. McLaurine, portrait, inscribed on mat, 1947 May 17. (1 (8x10") b/w (Shelburne Studios, New York City))
VI.1179Robin Long (son of Capt. Michael Long), 1947. (1 (2.75x3.5") b/w)
VI.1180Thomas Oxnard, portrait, inscribed, 1948 July 6. (1 (15x11") b/w (Kay Hart, N.Y.) [oversize – located in HPO2])
VI.1181Thomas Camp, portrait, inscribed, 1949 March 25. (1 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1182American Turpentine Farmers Association Annual Meeting Beauty Pageant, Valdosta, Georgia, 1949 April 20. (2 (8x10") b/w)
VI.1183Don Wheeler, [M.C. GA – 8th Dist.], portrait, inscribed, 1949 October 11. (1 (7x9") b/w)
VI.1184Sheriff William Harris of Chatham County, Georgia, Hugh Peterson, General Frank Howley, DeSoto Hotel, Savannah, Georgia, Spring, 1950. (2 (8x10") b/w (Southern Photo Service, Inc.))
VI.1185John S. Wood, [M. C. GA – 9th Dist.] portrait, inscribed, 1950 July 12. (1 (9.5x7.5") b/w (Chase, Washington, D. C.))
VI.1186Model of hotel, 1950. (2 (8x10") b/w (Alt Lee Photographers))
VI.1187Hugh Peterson Sr.'s trip to Europe, includes snapshots of Ireland, Iceland, Scotland, England, France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and the Netherlands [most photos identified on verso], 1946 September-November. (171 (3x3") b/w)
VI.1188Hugh Peterson, Jr. and unidentified girl in a canoe, circa 1940s. (1 (3x5") color)
box
VI.OS1HPPF 67 - HPPF 147 [oversize photographs]
box
VI.OS2Oversize photographs
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VI.OS3Oversize photographs [rolled]
 

VII. Maps

98 item(s)
The collection contains maps of the state of Georgia as well as areas of the United States and Central America. The majority of maps are road maps of regions of the United States and most display routes that have been marked in colored pencil. A series of Central American maps mark Peterson's trip with the congressional Committee on Public Roads. The maps of Georgia from the 1920s are from Peterson's time in the Georgia legislature and are colored.
item
Map II-13Pan American Highway Location and Limits of Contracts (1 inch = 25 miles) Corp of Engineers, U. S. Army, 1944 April ((13.5x20") black)
Map II-13Physiographic Diagram of Europe (1 inch = 200 miles) A. K. Lobeck, The Geographical Press, 1923 ((19x24") black)
Map II-13Germany and Its Approaches with International Boundaries as of September 1, 1939 (1 mile = 23.67 miles) National Geographic Society, 1944 ((35x44") color)
item
Map III-22Western and Central United States (1 inch = 75 miles) Shell, 1954 ((30.5x18") color)
Map III-22Eastern United States and Pennsylvania (1 inch = 13 miles) Atlantic Refining Company, 1953 ((29x18") color)
Map III-22British Isles (1 inch = 29 miles) National Geograpic Magazine, 1958 ((25x19") color)
Map III-22Southeast United States Interstate Map (1 inch = 32 miles) Esso, 1953 ((24x33.5") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map of the United States (1 inch = 75 miles), 1959 ((26.5x41") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map South Central States (1inch = 30.5 miles), 1959 ((26"x38") Color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map Northwestern States (1 inch = 30.5 miles), 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map Southwestern States (1 inch = 30.5 miles), 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map Southwestern States (1 inch = 30.5 miles), 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map Northwestern States (1 inch = 30.5 miles), 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-22AAA Official Road Map North Central States (1 inch = 31 miles, 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
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Map III-33AAA Official Road Map North Central States (1 inch = 31 miles, 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-33AAA Official Road Map Northeastern States (1 inch = 24 6/10 miles, 1959 ((26.5x38") color)
Map III-33U. S. Department of Agriculture United States System of Highways (1 inch = 75 miles), 1931 September ((28x42") color)
Map III-33U. S. Department of Agriculture United States System of Highways (1 inch = 75 miles), 1931 September ((28x42") color)
Map III-33Panama, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, 1945 December ((20x24") blue)
Map III-33Costa Rica, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, 1945 December ((20x24") blue)
Map III-33Nicaragua, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, 1945 December ((20x24") blue)
Map III-33Honduras, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, 1945 December ((20x24") blue)
Map III-33El Salvador, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, E1945 December ((20x24") blue)
Map III-33Guatemala, Inter-American Highway, (1 inch = 25 miles) Public Roads Administration, Federal Works Agency, 1945 December ((20x24") blue)
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Map III-43Story Map of Scotland, 1939 ((17x13.5") color)
Map III-43United States Recreational Areas with Connectiong Railways and Airways including Alaska and Hawaii (1 inch = 25 miles) Department of the Interior, 1936 September ((28x37.5) color)
Map III-43United States Recreational Areas with Connection Railways and Airways including Alaska and Hawaii (1 inch = 25 miles) Department of the Interior, 1934 May ((32x43") color)
item
Map III-46U.S. Department of the Interior Geological Survey, United States (1" = 40 miles), 1932 (43" rolled, color)
item
Map III-47United States including Territories and Insular Possessions showing the extent of public surveys, undated (86" rolled, color)
drawer
07Seaboard Airline Railway and Connections [southeastern United States], undated (45" rolled, color)
item
Map IV-60North Carolina Highways (1 inch = 20 miles, 1948-1949 ((17x46") color)
Map IV-60Happy Motoring in Kentucky and Tennessee (1 inch = 19.5 miles) Esso, 1952 ((24x33.5") color)
Map IV-60Happy Motoring in North Carolina and South Carolina (1 inch = 15.5 miles) Esso, 1949 ((24x33.5") color)
Map IV-60Happy Motoring in Pennsylvania (1 inch = 9.5 miles) Esso, 1952 ((24x33.5") color)
Map IV-60Happy Motoring in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia (1 inch = 15 miles) Esso, 1950 ((24x33.5") color)
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Map IV-65Happy Motoring in New York (1 inch = 10.8 miles) Esso, 1952 ((24x33.5") color)
Map IV-65State Highway Department of Georgia System of Roads, 1931 March ((20.5x15.25") color)
Map IV-65U. S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service Pisgah National Forest (1 inch = 5 miles), 1940 ((31.5x31.5) color)
Map IV-65Vacation Map of the Great Smokies and Blue Ridge Region, 1951 ((18x27.75") color)
Map IV-65Altamaha River Basin, Georgia Survey Report Flood Control (1 inch = 10 miles), 1941 November ((32x41") black)
Map IV-65AAA Official Road Map: Colorado, Utah, Wyoming (1 inch = 26 miles), 1959 ((26x38") color)
Map IV-65State Highway Department of Georgia System of State Roads (1 inch= 10 miles), 1932 January ((20.25x15.25") color)
Map IV-65U. S. Department of the Interior Geological Survey (1 inch = 80 miles) Alaska, 1942 ((19x26") color)
Map IV-65The Grand Canyon of Arizona, [ca. 1945] ((11x16") color)
Map IV-65Map Showing Water Utilization in Snake River Basin (1 inch = 50 miles) U. S. Geological Survey, undated ((14.75x15.75") color)
item
Map IV-75Jackson Hole National Monument, Wyoming (1 inch = 3 miles) Department of the Interior, 1943 May ((15.25x12.25") black)
Map IV-75Galveston District, Rivers and Harbors, Flood Control (1 inch = 40 miles) Corps of Engineers, 1945 July ((18x18") color)
Map IV-75Minidoka Irrigation Project, Idaho (1 inch = 2 miles) United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation, 1937 ((17x22") color)
Map IV-75Railroad Map of Georgia (1 inch= 18 miles). Georgia Public Service Commission, 1925 ((23x32") color)
Map IV-75Official Map of Georgia (1 inch = 18 inches) Issued by the Georgia Department of Agriculture, 1929 ((31x22") color)
Map IV-75Official Map of Georgia (1 inch = 18 inches) Issued by the Georgia Department of Agriculture, 1929 ((31x22") color)
Map IV-75Official Map of Georgia (1 inch = 18 inches) Issued by the Georgia Department of Agriculture, 1928 ((36x28") color)
Map IV-75Alaska (1 inch = 100 miles) United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey, 1941 ((1.-75x16") back)
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Map IV-87Georgia Minor Civil Divisions, Militia Districts, 1941 (36" rolled b/w)
Map IV-87Post Route Map of Georgia showing Post Offices with intermediate distances on mail routes (1.25" = 10 miles), 1940 August 15 (37" rolled, color)
Map IV-87Post Route Map of Georgia showing Post Offices with intermediate distances on mail routes (1.25" = 10 miles), 1937 November 1 (37" rolled, color)
Map IV-87Hudgings Map of Georgia (1 3/8" = 10 miles), 1915 (42" rolled, color)
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Map III-48Hudgings Map of Georgia (1 3/8" = 10 miles), 1915 (42" rolled, color)
Map III-48Post Route Map of Georgia showing Post Offices with intermediate distances on mail routes (1.25" = 10 miles), 1940 August 15 (37" rolled, color)
item
Map IV-93New Commercial and Census Map of Georgia (1" = 8 miles), undated (51" rolled, color)
item
Map III-46Post Route Map of Georgia showing Post Offices with intermediate distances on mail routes (1.25" = 10 miles), 1943 November 1 (37" rolled, color)
Map III-46Post Route Map of Georgia showing Post Offices with intermediate distances on mail routes (1.25" = 10 miles), 1943 November 1 (37" rolled, color)
Map III-46U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey, State of Georgia (1" = 10 miles), 1935 (41" rolled, color)
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Map V-21Soil Map, Georgia McIntosh County (1inch = 1 mile), 1929 ((31x32") color)
Map V-21Cameron County, Texas, 1943 ((20x17") color)
Map V-21Land use map, Ohopee Soil Conservation District [Montgomery County], undated ((13x26") back)
Map V-21Soil Map, Georgia McIntosh County (1inch = 1 mile), 1929 ((31x32") color)
Map V-21Santa Cruz County, California (1 in = 1 mile) Thomas Brothers, Santa Cruz Chamber of Commerce, ca. 1945 ((22"x25") black)
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Map V-39Map of Chatham County, Georgia Showing the Location of Properties, Public Roads, etc. Compiled for the Commissioners of Chatham County and Ex-Officio Judges (1" = 3,000'), 1930 copy of 1906 map (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Map of Tattnall County, Georgia showing militia districts], 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Map of Bryan County, Georgia showing militia districts], 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39Montgomery County, Georgia, Georgia Power Company Land Department Map, 1927 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39Wheeler County, Georgia, Georgia Power Company Land Department Map, 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39Toombs County, Georgia, Georgia Power Company Land Department Map, 1927 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Map of Evans County, Georgia showing militia districts], 1930 (17.5" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Map of Burke County, Georgia showing militia districts], 1930 copy of 1906 map (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39Candler County, Georgia, 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Bulloch County, Georgia Soil Map copy marked with militia districts], 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39[Map of Screven County, Georgia showing militia districts], 1930 (20" rolled, black)
Map V-39Map of Emanuel County, Georgia, 1930 copy of 1909 map (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39[McIntosh County, Georgia], 1930 (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39Map of Jenkins County, Georgia, 1930 copy of 1909 map (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39Long County, Georgia, 1930 (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39Treutlen County, Georgia, 1930 (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39Effingham County, Georgia, 1930 (18" rolled, black)
Map V-39School Districts, Liberty County, Georgia, 1927 (19.75" rolled, black)
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Map VI-15Brownsville [Texas], undated ((12.5x12.5") black)
Map VI-15The Premier Map of Atlanta and Vicinity Featuring Transit Lines and House Numbers (1 inch = .5 miles) Geographia Map Company, circa 1945. ((41x27") color)
 

VIII. Architectural Drawings

13 item(s)
The collection contains plans for ship modifications from Peterson's post-congressional work with the Ocean Steamship Company. There are also plats and surveys of property in Montgomery County, Georgia, including the layout of the town of Ailey in 1894 and the Ailey Manufacturing Company.
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VIII.11Ailey shirt factory drawings, unitdate (22x17")
VIII.11Ailey manufacturing company, unitdate (50x24")
VIII.11Blueprint, Marcus B. Calhoun tract, Montgomery County, Georgia, unitdate. (10x13")
VIII.11Ailey, Georgia, town plan, unitdate. (15x19")
VIII.11Disposal System Peterson home, Ailey, Georgia, unitdate. (36x23")
folder
OS VIIIHugh Peterson Disposal System [oversize]
OS VIIILSD No. 9-12 Booklet of General Plans [oversize], 1944 December 15
OS VIIIDesign C4-S-A4 Cargo Vessel-Turbine Stowage and Capacity Booklet, U.S. Maritime Commission, #15096 Sea Train Line, New York [oversize], circa 1950
OS VIIIBlueprint, Town plan of Ailey, Georgia [oversize], 1894
OS VIIIBlueprint Marcus B. Calhoun Tract, Montgomery County, Georgia, Timber on property cruised by Otto Vogel [oversize], 1926 May 15
OS VIIIAiley shirt factory architectural drawings [oversize] , 1941
OS VIIIPlans for Ailey Manufacturing Company [oversize], 1941
OS VIIIBlueprints, Fertilizer Building for J.T. Cochran, Butler, Georgia [oversize], 1939 August 4
OS VIIILSD Conversion to Railway Car Ferry Proposed Arrangement [oversize] , 1950 March 9
OS VIIIBlueprint S.S.H.F. Alexander and S.S. Ruth Alexander [oversize], 1948 October 15
OS VIIIProposed LSD Conversion, Typical Stowage Section of Box Cars [oversize], 1950 January 27
OS VIIIStudy Plan- Conversion of C4-S-B5 to train ferry [oversize], circa 1950
OS VIIIProposed LSD Conversion, Typical Deck Plans of Box Car Stowage [oversize], 1950 January 27
OS VIIIStudy Plan Conversion of C4-S-B5 to Train Ferry [oversize], circa 1950
 

IX. Artifacts

8 box(es)
(6.25 linear feet)
This series includes artifacts from the manuscripts including campaign items, such as buttons, as well as items from Peterson's time as a politician in Washington, D.C., including automobile tags. Some items pertain to Peterson's home and property in Ailey, Georgia, which include rock samples from well drilling. Hand-painted campaign banners are described in Series II. Campaigns in Subseries I, Campaign Banners.
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IX.1Washington, George, John Clement Fitzpatrick, and David Maydole Matteson. The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Volumes 1 – 8, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1931
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IX.2Washington, George, John Clement Fitzpatrick, and David Maydole Matteson. The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Volumes 9 – 16, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1931
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IX.3Washington, George, John Clement Fitzpatrick, and David Maydole Matteson. The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Volumes 17 – 24, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1931
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IX.4Washington, George, John Clement Fitzpatrick, and David Maydole Matteson. The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Volumes 25 – 32, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1931
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IX.5Washington, George, John Clement Fitzpatrick, and David Maydole Matteson. The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745-1799. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Volumes 33 – 39, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1931
IX.5Bloom, Sol. History of the Formation of the Union Under the Constitution: With Liberty Documents and Report of the Commission. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1941
IX.5United States, et al. Special Report on Diseases of Cattle. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. print. off, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1942
IX.5United States, et al. Special Report on Diseases of the Horse. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, Wrapped – DO NOT UNWRAP, 1942
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IX.6Resin, 2" high, 7" diameter, 2 pounds, undated
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IX.7German mine field marking flags, 3 (4.5x3.5" triangular), yellow with black skull painted, undated
IX.7"Re-elect Peterson for Congress" buttons, navy blue and white, 1938
IX.7Print blocks, Hugh Peterson portrait, 2 (2.25x2.25x1", 2x3.5x1"), undated
IX.7Leather coin purse with contents (two lead bullets), undated
IX.7Leather coin purse with contents (ring – plain band, buckeye, 1901 U. S. quarter, "Good Luck" coin, "Good Luck" coin with 1907 penny, undated
IX.7Plug of tobacco with two metal buttons attached, undated. (7x2.5x.25")
IX.7Automobile license plate, District of Columbia, 77th Congress, [1941] ((13x4"))
IX.7Automobile license plate, Inaugural #316, District of Columbia (with original envelope), 1937. ((12.75x6"))
IX.7Automobile license plate, Georgia, 1944. ((12x3.5"))
IX.7Democratic National Convention Honorary Sergeant at Arms Medal, 2 (green, white), 1952
IX.7Cardboard with estimates and receipts attached, 1954. ((23.5x3.75"))
IX.7Cotton drawstring bag containing rock samples from well dig, Ailey, Georgia, 6, 1959 October 1
IX.748-star American flag, nylon, 1954
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IX.8Calendar: Great Northern Railway, Route of the Empire Builder, 1937
 

X. Books

121 volume(s)
This series consists of books from Peterson's office at his home in Ailey, Georgia as well as volumes from the offices of the Montgomery Monitor in Mt. Vernon, Georgia. Some are textbooks from Peterson's childhood and youth. The majority was acquired when he was in both state and federal office and pertains to law, government, American history and politics.
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X.1New York Marine News Company. Deep Water. New York: New York marine news Co, 1941
X.1Short, C. W., and R. Stanley-Brown. Public Buildings: A Survey of Architecture of Projects Constructed by Federal and Other Governmental Bodies between the Years 1933 and 1939 with the Assistance of the Public Works Administration. Washington, D.C.: Public Works Administration, 1939
X.1United States. Official Congressional Directory. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1936
X.1Archer, Gleason Leonard. On the Cuff. Boston, Mass: Suffolk university press, 1944
X.1Cannon, Clarence, and Asher C. Hinds. Cannon's Precedents of the House of Representatives of the United States: Including References to Provisions of the Constitution, the Laws, and Decisions of the United States Senate. Washington: G.P.O., (2 copies), 1939
X.1Cannon, Clarence, and Asher C. Hinds. Cannon's Precedents of the House of Representatives of the United States: Including References to Provisions of the Constitution, the Laws, and Decisions of the United States Senate. Washington: G.P.O., 1944
X.1United States. Manual of Instructions for the Survey of the Public Lands of the United States. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1930
X.1United States. Pocket Congressional Directory. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off.; [for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.], 1955
X.1Georgia. Georgia's Official Register. Atlanta: The Dept.], 1937
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X.2Gilroy, Marion. Loyalists and Land Settlement in Nova Scotia, 1937
X.2Jones, Marvin. How Food Saved American Lives. Washington: National Capital Press, 1947
X.2Baker, Marcus. Geographic Dictionary of Alaska. Washington: Govt. Print. Off, 1906
X.2Deschler, Lewis, and Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Third Congress. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1931
X.2United States, and Daniel M. Greene. Public Land Statutes of the United States. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1931
X.2Federal Writers' Project. Washington, City and Capital. Federal Writers' Project, Works Progress Administration ... Washington, 1937. American guide series. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1937
X.2Europe at War: A "Red Book" of the Greatest War of History; Why and How Europe Went to Battle--Men, Guns, Forts, Ships, and Aircraft of the Warring Countries--Food Supply, Finances--the Kaiser and Other Great Personalities--Stories of Alsace-Lorraine, Kiau-Chau, Kiel Canal--Maps--Effect of the War on the United States. With More Than 200 Illustrations. [New York]: Pub. by Doubleday, Page & Co. for the Review of Reviews Co, 1914
X.2Bloom, Sol. History of the Formation of the Union Under the Constitution: With Liberty Documents and Report of the Commission. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1941
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X.3Castellow, Bryant Thomas. Diary of Bryant Thomas Castellow; Second Trip Around the World, 1938-1939, 1944
X.3Stovall, Pleasant A. Switzerland and the World War. Savannah, Ga: Mason, 1939
X.3Stephens, John Lloyd. Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan. New York: Harper & Bros, 1841
X.3Holden, Frank A. War Memories. Athens, Ga: Athens Book Co, 1923
X.3Trueblood, Thomas Clarkson, William G. Caskey, and Henry Evarts Gordon. Winning Speeches in the Contests of the Northern Oratorical League. New York: American Book Co, 1909
X.3West, Willis Mason. The Ancient World from the Earliest Times to 800 A.D. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1904
X.3Thomas, Norman. America's Way Out: A Program for Democracy. New York: Macmillan Co, 1931
X.3Voorhis, Jerry. Out of Debt, Out of Danger; Proposals for War Finance and Tomorrow's Money. New York: Devin-Adair Co, 1943
X.3Katona, George. War Without Inflation, The Psychological Approach to Problems of War Economy. New York: Columbia university press, 1942
X.3United States. Peace and War, United States Foreign Policy, 1931-1941. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1943
X.3Blakely, William Addison. American State Papers on Freedom in Religion. Takoma Park, Wash: Pub. for the Religious Liberty Association, Washington, D.C., by the Review and Herald, 1943
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X.4Cyr, Ellen M. The Children's First Reader. Boston: Ginn & Co., The Atheneum Press, 1892
X.4Cyr, Ellen M. The Children's Second Reader. Boston: Ginn & Co, 1894
X.4Cyr, Ellen M. Cyr Graded Art Readers: Book One. Boston: Ginn & Co, 1904
X.4Holmes, Prescott. Lives of the Presidents: With Portraits and Numerous Illustrations. Altemus' young people's library. Philadelphia: H. Altemus, 1899
X.4Franklin, Benjamin. Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin: With an Introdution and Notes. Macmillan's pocket American and English classics. New York: Macmillan, 1915
X.4Washington, George, William T. Peck, and Daniel Webster. Washington's Farewell Address; And, Webster's Bunker Hill Oration. New York: The Macmillan Co, 1913
X.4Shakespeare, William, and Charles Wallace French. Shakespeare's Macbeth. New York: Macmillan, 1913
X.4Evans, Lawton B. A History of Georgia for Use in Schools. New York: University Pub. Co, 1904
X.4Hyde, Mary F. Two-Book Course in English. Boston: D.C. Heath, 1909
X.4Dickens, Charles. A Child's History of England. Chicago: W.B. Conkey Co, 1900
X.4Trumbull, H. Clay. Child Life in Many Lands. New York: F.H. Revell Co, 1903
X.4Branson, E. C. Common School Speller. Richmond: B.F. Johnson Pub. Co, 1900
X.4Tappan, Eva March. A Short History of America's Literature: With Selections from Colonial and Revolutionary Writers. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1907
X.4Field, L. A. A Grammar School History of the United States. New York: American Book Co, 1897
X.4Milne, William J. Standard Arithmetic; Embracing a Complete Course for Schools and Academies. New York: American Book Co, 1911
X.4Bacon, Mary A. A Primary and Intermediate Arithmetic: (Special Book for Georgia Adoption), 1903
X.4Wentworth, George, and David Eugene Smith. Plane Trigonometry and Tables. Boston: Ginn and Co, 1914
X.4Halsey, Francis W. Great Epochs in American History: Described by Famous Writers from Columbus to Roosevelt. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1912
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X.5Hibbard, Benjamin Horace. A History of the Public Land Policies. New York: P. Smith, 1939
X.5Watson, Thomas E. The Life and Times of Andrew Jackson. Thomson, Ga: Press of the Jeffersonian pub. co, 1912
X.5Watson, Thomas E. The Life and Times of Thomas Jefferson. Thomson, Georgia: Jeffersonian pub. co, 1912
X.5McQueen, Alexander Stephens, and Hamp Mizell. History of Okefenokee Swamp. Clinton, S.C.: Press of Jacobs and Co, 1926
X.5Ashley, Roscoe Lewis. American History, for Use in Secondary Schools. New York: Macmillan Co, 1913
X.5Pearson, Drew, and Robert S. Allen. The Nine Old Men. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran & Co, 1936
X.5Georgia. Members of the General Assembly of Georgia, State Senate and House of Representatives. Atlanta, Ga: Secretary of State, 1945
X.5Kent, Frank R. The Great Game of Politics: An Effort to Present the Elementary Human Facts About Politics, Politicians, and Political Machines, Candidates and Their Ways, for the Benefit of the Average Citizen. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran, 1928
X.5Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States: Seventy-Third Congress. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1934
X.5Knight, Lucian Lamar. Memorials of Dixie-Land; Orations, Essays, Sketches, and Poems on Topics Historical, Commemorative, Literary and Patriotic. Atlanta, Ga: Byrd Print. Co, 1919
X.5McLendon, Samuel Guyton. History of the Public Domain of Georgia. Atlanta: Foote & Davis, 1924
X.5Kellogg, Brainerd. A Text-Book on Rhetoric: Supplementing the Development of the Science with Exhaustive Practice in Composition : a Course of Practical Lessons Adapted for Use in High-Schools and Academies and in the Lower Classes of Colleges. New York: Clark & Maynard, 1900
X.5Fowler, Nathaniel C. Stories and Toasts for After Dinner. The Toastmaster, His Duties and Responsibilities. Toasts and After-Dinner Stories for All Occasions and How to Tell Them. New York: Sully and Kleinteich, 1914
X.5Webster, Noah, and Noah Webster. The Elementary Spelling Book; Being an Improvement on the American Spelling Book. New York: American Book Co, 1908
X.5Lawrence, Alexander A. James Moore Wayne, Southern Unionist. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1943
X.5Truesdell, Leon E. Farm Population of the United States. An Analysis of the 1920 Farm Population Figures, Especially in Comparison with Urban Data, Together with a Study of the Main Economic Factors Affecting the Farm Population. Washington: Govt. Print. Off, 1926
X.5Goldenweiser, E. A., and Leon E. Truesdell. Farm Tenancy in U.S. Analysis of Results of 1920 Census Relative to Farms Classified by Tenure,Supplemented by Pertinent Data from Other Sources. [Washington?]: U.S. G.P.O., 1924
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X.6Georgia. Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Georgia. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co, 1929
X.6Georgia. Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Georgia. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co, 1931
X.6Georgia. Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Georgia at the Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co., 1931
X.6Georgia. Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia Passed at the Extraordinary Session. Atlanta, Ga: Stein, 1931
X.6Georgia. Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta, Ga: Stein, 1931
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X.7Georgia. Journal of the Senate of the State of Georgia. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co., 1929
X.7Georgia. Journal of the Senate of the State of Georgia. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co., 1931
X.7Georgia. Journal of the Senate of the State of Georgia at the Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Print. Co., 1931
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1905-1906
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1907-1908
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1921-1922
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1923-1924
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1925-1926
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1927-1928
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1929-1930
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1931-1933
X.7Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1945-1946
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X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1906. Atlanta, Ga: Franklin-Turner Co., 1907
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1907. Atlanta, Ga: Franklin-Turner Co., 1908
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1922. Atlanta, Ga: Byrd Printing, Co., 1922
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1923. Atlanta, Ga: Foote and Davies Printing Co., 1923
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1924. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1924
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1926. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1926
X.8Georgia. Report of the Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia for the Year Ending December 31, 1934. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1934
X.8Georgia. Georgia's Official Register. Atlanta, Ga: Index Printing Co., 1923
X.8Georgia. Georgia's Official Register. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1925
X.8Georgia. Georgia's Official Register. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1927
X.8Georgia. Georgia's Official Register. Atlanta, Ga: Stein Printing Co., 1929
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X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Fourth Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1935
X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Fifth Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1937
X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Sixth Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1939
X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Seventh Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1941
X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Eighth Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1943
X.9Deschler, Lewis, and Thomas Jefferson. Constitution, Jefferson's Manual, and Rules of the House of Representatives of the United States, Seventy-Ninth Congress. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1945
X.9United States, et al. Special Report on Diseases of the Horse. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1942
X.9United States, et al. Special Report on Diseases of Cattle. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt. print. off, 1942
box
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Charles H. Brand: Late a Representative from Georgia. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1934
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Charles G. Edwards, Late a Representative from Georgia. Washington: Govt. Print. Off, 1932
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of William J. Harris, Late a Senator from Georgia. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1932
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Henry Mahlon Kimball, Late a Representative from Michigan. Washington: U.S. Govt. print. off, 1936
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Samuel Rutherford, Late a Representative from Georgia. Seventy-Second Congress, First Session. Washington: U.S. Govt. print. off, 1932
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Leslie J. Steele, Late a Representative from Georgia. Seventy-First Congress, Second Session. Washington: U.S. Govt. print. off, 1930
X.10United States. Memorial Services Held in the House of Representatives of the United States, Together with Remarks Presented in Eulogy of Charles Vilas Truax, Late a Representative from Ohio. Washington: U.S. Govt. print. off, 1936
X.10United States. Investigation of Un-American Propaganda Activities in the United States. Hearings Before a Special Committee on Un-American Activities, House of Representatives, Seventy-Fifth Congress, Third Session-Seventy-Eighth Congress, Second Session, on H. Res. 282, to Investigate (L) the Extent, Character, and Objects of Un-American Propaganda Activities in the United States, (2) the Diffusion Within the United States of Subversive and Un-American Propaganda That Is Instigated from Foreign Countries or of a Domestic Origin and Attacks the Principle of the Form of Government As Guaranteed by Our Constitution, and (3) All Other Questions in Relation Thereto That Would Aid Congress in Any Necessary Remedial Legislation. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1943
X.10Hartman, W. A., and H. H. Wooten. Georgia Land Use Problems. Experiment, Ga: Georgia Experiment Station of the University System of Georgia, 1935
X.10United States. Acceptance and Unveiling of the Statue of Alexander Hamilton Stephens. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1929
X.10United States. The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States of America. Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off, 1934
X.10Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1933-1935
X.10Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1935-1936
X.10Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1937-1938
X.10Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1939-1940
X.10Georgia. Manual of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: s.n.], 1941-1942
 

XI. Audiovisual Materials

2 item(s)
Hugh Peterson, Sr. Papers, Series XI. Audiovisual Materials includes two aluminum transcription discs from May 12, 1937, created by WABC. They contain Hugh Peterson's speech, "National Land Policy."
Reference copies of the audiovisual recordings are available upon request. Research requests will be filled as soon as possible and will be dependent upon the condition of the recordings.
item
UC_RBRL/107/HPS/PD_0001Representative Hugh Peterson, "National Land Policy," WABC, Sides 1 and 3, 1937 May 12 ( 1 sound_recording(s) )
item
UC_RBRL/107/HPS/PD_0002Representative Hugh Peterson, "National Land Policy," WABC 5/12/37, Sides 2 and 4, 1937 May 12 ( 1 sound_recording(s) )

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