Josina Lott and the Lott School
Josina Jones Lott believed that every child, regardless of physical or mental limitations, had ability and could learn. She began Lott Day School in her apartment in September of 1938. Mrs. Lott had seen children turned away from the public schools because parents were told that there was no place for them in the classroom. [Read the complete article]
Related resources:
Josina Lott and the Lott School (slide show)
Josina Jones Lott Collection, 1949-2000, MSS-186 (Canaday Center Finding Aid)
Our Club Magazine for Working Girls
Toledo working women banded together in the early twentieth century for support and camaraderie. Our Club Girls Magazine stood for the "social and commercial education of young wage-earning women." Experience life for young working women through its pages. This exhibit is drawn from four issues of Our Girls Club Magazine, published in 1913 and 1914. The magazines are held in the Canaday Center of the University of Toledo's Carlson Library. No other known issues exist. If you have any copies of Our Girl's Club in your attic, please let us know! [Read the complete article]
Toledo Area World War II Veterans
The Ward M. Canaday Center in Carlson Library at the University of Toledo is fortunate to have the manuscript collection of "Steph" Pecsenye, including numerous "V-mail" letters he sent home during the War. "V-mail" or "Victory Mail" was written by service people on pre-printed envelope sheets supplied by the government. The letters were microfilmed and sent back to the United States where they were printed out on paper and mailed to the addressee. V-mail dramatically reduced the bulk of mail, freeing thousands of tons of shipping space for war materials. [Read the complete article]
Toledo Women in World War II
The Great Depression of the 1930s had thrown America into flux. The American family did not escape unscathed as jobs became scarce. With the continual drop in family incomes, which in turn led to a drop in the birth and marriage rates, the battle over the place of woman in the household and her place in the work force raged. [Read the complete article]
Related resources:
Toledo Women in World War II (slide show)
Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company Records, 1851-1991, MSS-066 (Canaday Center finding aid)
Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Company Records, 1851-1991, MSS-066 (Digital Collection)
Acklin Stamping Company Records, 1911-1997, MSS-139 (Canaday Center finding aid)
Faces of Steel: People and History of the Acklin Stamping Plant (Canaday Center virtual exhibit)