University of Oklahoma Libraries
Western History Collections
Charles N. Gould Collection
Table of Contents
Box Number:
Biographical Information
1. Biographical
Information, General Correspondence, and Programs
2 Personal
Published Works
3 Oklahoma
Place Names
4 Oklahoma
Place Names
5 Oklahoma
Place Names
6 Oklahoma
Place Names
7 Oklahoma
Place Names
8 Covered
Wagon Geologist
9 Published
Materials - Articles, Papers and Reports, 1898-1908
10
Published Materials - Articles, Papers and Reports, 1908 - 1920
11
Published Materials - Articles, papers and Reports, 1921-1929
12
Published Materials - Articles, papers and Reports, 1930 - 1933
13
Published Materials - Articles, papers and Reports, 1933-1946
14 Oklahoma Geological
Survey Publications, 1908-1927
15 Reprints,
1908-1926
16 Reprints,
1926-1929
17 Reprints,
1930-1948
18 Manuscripts
- Published, 1907 - 1927
19 Manuscripts
- Published, 1927 - 1946
Manuscripts
- Newspaper Articles, 1900 - 1916
Unpublished Works
20 Unpublished
Manuscripts - Book Length “Geological Story of Oklahoma.”
21 Unpublished
Manuscripts - Book Length “Geological Story of Oklahoma.”
22 Unpublished
Manuscripts - Articles
23 Unpublished
Manuscripts - Articles
24 Published
and Unpublished Manuscripts - “Geologettes”
25 Manuscripts
- Lectures and Addresses
26 Manuscripts
- Lectures and Addresses
27 Manuscripts
- Lectures, Addresses, and Radio Talks
28 Manuscripts
- Book Reviews, Poetry, Miscellaneous Notes, Microfilm
Research and Teaching Materials, Miscellaneous
29 Bibliographies,
Research and Teaching Materials
30 Geological
Materials, Miscellaneous Manuscript Material
31 Manuscript
Material, Memos and Reports, Miscellaneous Envelopes, Letter, Data Form
32 Newspaper
Clippings
33 Newspaper
Clippings
34 Manuscripts
- works by Gould’s Colleagues
Outsized Material
1 Outsized
Material
Charles Newton Gould Collection
Inventory
Box 1: Biographical
Information, General Correspondence and Programs
Folder
1. Memorial
to Charles Newton Gould by Roland L. Clifton. The Geological Society of
America, Publishers, June, 1950.
2. Biographical
Sketches of Charles N. Gould:
“Gould
The Pioneer,” by S. R. Hadsell, eight typewritten copies.
“Charles
Newton Gould,” published in Oklahoma Leaders 1928, pp. 207-217, two
typewritten copies.
One
carbon copy of biography printed in Who’s Who in America.
Biographical
outline included in Who’s Who in Biographical Sketch, author and date
unknown, two carbon copies.
Biographical
sketch written about 1933, author unknown, one incomplete typewritten copy.
3. “Nina
Swan Gould,” by Charles N. Gould and Reverend E. N. Comfort.
The
four mimeographed pages contain a summary of the events leading to the final
illness and death of Nina Swan Gould, written by Charles N. Gould, and the
eulogy delivered by Reverend Comfort at her funeral.
4. Correspondence
with W. B. Bizzell, 1928.
5. Correspondence
with E. D. Bunker, 1932.
6. Correspondence
with J. Frank Dobie, newspaper clipping including, 1931.
7. Correspondence
with Fred Elder, 1930.
8. Correspondence
with Roy Gittinger, 1942.
9. Correspondence
with Don B. Gould, 1936.
10. Correspondence
with William P. Haseman and Family, 1928, 1932.
11. Correspondence
with Peter J. Hudson, 1925.
12. Correspondence
with D. W. Ohern, 1912.
13. Correspondence
with W. N. Rice, 1930.
14. Correspondence
with Alvin Rucker, 1932.
15. Correspondence
with Ray L. Six, 1930-1931.
16. Correspondence
with Mrs. Evelyn Van Fleet, 1932.
17. Miscellaneous
Correspondence, 1914, 1925, 1934-1936, 1940-1941.
18. Personal
Correspondence, 1932, 1937, 1941, 1945.
19. Programs
of conferences, meetings, conventions, banquets, etc. in which Charles N. Gould
took part.
20. Programs
of conferences, meetings, conventions, banquets, etc. in which Charles N. Gould
took part.
21. Miscellaneous
programs.
22. Programs
of the inauguration of William Bennett Bizzell as President of the University
of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, February 4th and 5th, 1926. C. N. Gould is
listed as a delegate.
23. Correspondence
1921-1928, with courts, general description of Geological Survey and its
purpose.
Box 2: Personal
Box 2 contains the following
items:
Cordelia
Blossom, by George Randolph Chester
(New York: Star Library Company, 1914), 384.
Just
You, by Elizabeth Gordon (New York:
P. F. Volland Company). This small book was given to Dr. Gould by his wife,
Nina Swan Gould, April 6, 1925.
McGuffey’s
Eclectic Spelling Book, Revised
Edition (New York: American Book Company, 1920), 144.
Two
Passbooks - The Local Building and Loan Association of Oklahoma City. One Book
is in the name of Charles N. Gould, December 13, 1914; one book is in the name
of Nina S. Gould, April 20, 1927.
One
Sinclair Prairie Oil Company sample bag.
Folder
1. Newspaper
clipping - picture of Dr. Charles N. Gould and son, Dr. Donald Gould. Wichita,
Kansas newspaper, 1935 (no date).
2. Newspaper
clipping with picture of Mrs. Charles N. Gould - “Local Business Woman is
Honored - Picked as One of Ten Greatest in America,” The Oklahoma News,
October 26, 1923. Two copies of clipping.
3. Newspaper
clipping describing the wedding of Miss Grace D. Stevenson and Mr. Van Kelly
Bruner, from the Winfield Daily Courier, June 30, 1909.
Box 3: Oklahoma Place
Names - Signatures and Proofs
Box 3 contains the following:
Unbound
signatures of the second printing of Oklahoma Place Names, December,
1933.
One bound copy of signatures with
corrections, used for revision, 1940-1941.
One
bound copy of signatures with criticisms made by Peter J. Hudson. One set of
proofs of Oklahoma Place Names, 1st printing, October, 1933.
Box 4: Oklahoma
Place Names - Correspondence, publicity, reviews, newspaper clippings, and
miscellaneous
Folder
1. Correspondence
related to the 1st and 2nd printing of Oklahoma Place Names, 1932-1934.
2. Correspondence
related to Oklahoma Place Names, proposed revisions, 1934-1944
3. Replies
from various Oklahoma town Postmasters relating to the proposed revision of Oklahoma
Place Name, 1934 - 1940.
4. Correspondence
with W. B. Bizzell and Governor William Murray regarding Oklahoma Place
Names, 1933.
5. Correspondence
with Herbert Bolton regarding Oklahoma Place Names, 1941.
6. Correspondence
with J. Frank Dobie and Richard L Dobie regarding Oklahoma Place Names, 1934,
1941.
7. Correspondence
with Grant Foreman and Judge J. T. Barnes regarding Oklahoma Place Names,
1932.
8. Correspondence
with James R. Knight regarding Battiest, Oklahoma and translation of Choctaw
names and language, 1934.
9. Correspondence
with J. Thoburn regarding Oklahoma Place Names, 1932.
10. Correspondence
with Muriel H. Wright regarding Oklahoma Place Names, 1932.
11. Printed
photographs of Allen Wright, used as the front piece of Oklahoma Place Names.
12. Oklahoma
Place Names publicity - lists of radio programs and talks, 1932.
13. Reviews
of Oklahoma Place Names - published reviews and newspaper clippings,
1933, 1934; (see also newspaper clippings in Outsized Box.)
14. “Origin
of Names of Oklahoma Counties and County Seats,” excerpted from Oklahoma
Place Names, numerous typewritten lists.
15. “Name
of Origin and Other Historical Facts of Santa Fe Towns in Oklahoma.” Booklet
published by the Department of Public Relations, Santa Fe System Lines,
Oklahoma City, November, 1944.
16. Lux
Classensis XVI (April 1941), 120 pp. This publication of Classen High
School, Oklahoma City contains a short article on place names in Oklahoma of
Latin origin written with the assistance of Charles N. Gould, (p. 11). The
Melting Pot V (November 1941), 16 pp. This publication of Classen High
School contains a short article on place names in Oklahoma with French origin,
written with the assistance of Charles N. Gould, (p. 15).
Box 5: Oklahoma Place
Names - Notes and Early Drafts
Folder
1. Typewritten
and handwritten notes related to a proposed revision of Oklahoma Place Names.
2. Typewritten
and handwritten notes related to a proposed revision of Oklahoma Place Names.
3. “Obsolete
Terms,” a section of Chapter 5 of Oklahoma Place Names. One complete
typewritten draft and miscellaneous notes and lists.
4. “Names
of Foreign Origin”. One typewritten and one handwritten draft.
5. “Names
of River Bends, Flats, and Prairies”. One typewritten draft with corrections.
6. “Names
of Mountains and Hills,” a section of Chapter 11 of Oklahoma Place Names,
one typewritten draft with corrections.
7. “Names
of Streams,” a section of Chapter 11 of Oklahoma Place Names. One
typewritten draft with corrections.
8. “Oil
Towns and Coal Towns”. One typewritten draft.
9. “Old
Timers,” a section of Chapter V of Oklahoma Place Names. One typewritten
draft and handwritten notes.
10. Notes
to historical maps, handwritten.
11. Miscellaneous
notes, mostly handwritten.
12. One
typewritten list of Oklahoma Post Offices and Postmasters, 1941.
Box 6: Oklahoma Place
Names - Manuscripts
Folder
1. Oklahoma
Place Names - Typewritten manuscripts with handwritten corrections, 1st
edition, 1933.
2. Oklahoma
Place Names - two typewritten, incomplete manuscripts, 1st edition, 1933.
3. Oklahoma
Place Names - typewritten manuscript
(final drafts), March, 1933.
4. Oklahoma
Place Names - typewritten manuscripts with handwritten corrections, 1st
edition, 1933.
5. Oklahoma
Place Name - typewritten manuscripts with handwritten corrections, 1st
edition, 1933.
6. Oklahoma
Place Names- typewritten manuscript with handwritten corrections, 2nd
edition.
Box 7: Oklahoma Place
Names - Card index
Box
contains 3" x 5" cards utilized by Gould in compiling the index for Oklahoma
Place Names.
Box 8: Covered Wagon
Geologist - Manuscripts and Miscellaneous
Red Wallet
1. Covered
Wagon Geologist - typewritten manuscript with corrections.
2. Covered
Wagon Geologist - photostatic copy of typewritten manuscript.
3. “A
Happy Life,” (Covered Wagon Geologist) - typewritten manuscript with
corrections, November 27, 1931. The subject matter of this manuscript is the
same as that in Covered Wagon Geologist, but the organization of the
material differs slightly. “A Happy Life” may have served as a preliminary
draft of Covered Wagon Geologist.
Folder
1. Covered
Wagon Geologist - typewritten manuscript, 1948.
2. “The
Lone Cabin on Possum Flats” - typewritten manuscripts with corrections, two
copies. These pages are a part of the larger manuscript, Covered Wagon
Geologist; however, the story was originally published in Sturm’s
Oklahoma Magazine, IX, No. 2 (October, 1909), pp. 76-79.
3. Folder
3 contains four short sketches included in Covered Wagon Geologist.
These typewritten sketches probably appeared as short talks or lectures.
4. Introduction
to Covered Wagon Geologist signed by B.W. Beebe, but actually written by
Savoie Lottinville in order to provide a schematic guide for Mr. Beebe in
composing his own account (February 1959). Mr. Beebe’s version appears as the
introduction to the published Covered Wagon Geologist.
5. One
piece of correspondence from B. W. Beebe to the underwriters of Gould Memoirs
regarding publication of the Gould autobiography (Covered Wagon Press)
by the OU Press June 4, 1958. One mimeographed copy of the letter.
6. List
of errors in galley proof of Covered Wagon Geologist as found by Don B.
Gould, February 19, 1959. Two handwritten pages.
7. List
of photography descriptions employed in Covered Wagon Geologist. Two
handwritten pages.
8. A review
of the autobiography of Charles Gould by Jerry B. Newby, based on the
manuscript of Covered Wagon Geologist found in Red Wallet 1, January 13,
1957. One typewritten copy, six pages.
9. List
of names and addresses. One typewritten and two carbon copies. The typewritten
copy is incomplete and the carbon copies number 34 pages each. Dr. Gould
designated the lists as pertaining to Covered Wagon Geologist; however,
the relationship in not clear. It may be that the people on the list assisted
him in writing Covered Wagon Geologist.
Note:
Geography
of Oklahoma, (Ardmore, Oklahoma: Bunn
Brothers, 1909), 178 pp., and Travels
Through Oklahoma, (Oklahoma City: Harlow Publishing Corporation, 1935), 174
pp., also by Dr. Gould, are a part of the Charles N. Gould Collection, but have
been transferred to the Library Division of the Western History Collections.
Box 9: Published material
- Articles, Papers, and Reports by Charles N. Gould, 1898-1908
Folder
1. List
of articles by Charles N. Gould, compiled by Dr. Gould himself. Two typewritten
pages, mounted on one piece of cardboard. No date.
“Prehistoric
Mounds in Cowley County.” Transactions of the Twenty-Eight and
Twenty-Nine Annual Meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science XV (1898),
79-80. This paper was read before the Academy January 1, 1897.
“The
Timbered Mounds of the Kaw Reservation.” Transactions of the
Twenty-Eight and Twenty-Nine Annual Meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science
XV (1898), 78-79. This paper was read before the Academy December 31, 1896.
“Ancient
Quarries in Kansas.” Popular Science News XXXIV (October 1900), 194-195.
Microfilm copy of article. (Microfilm - Box 28).
2. “Oklahoma
Building Stone.” Stone XXI, No. 4 (October 1900), 332-334. One photostat
and one microfilm copy of article. (Microfilm - Box 28.)
3. “Oklahoma
Geological Society.” Science, new series, XII, No. 302 (October 1900),
559-560. One photoprint copy of article.
“On
the Southern Extension of the Marion and Wellington Formations.” Transaction
of the Thirty-Second and Thirty-Third Annual Meetings of the Kansas Academy of
Science XVII (1901), 179-181. This paper was read before the Academy on
December 28, 1900.
4. “The
Dakota Cretaceous of Kansas and Nebraska.” Transaction of the Thirty-Second
and Thirty-Third Annual Meetings of the
Kansas Academy of Science XVII (1901), 122-128. This paper constitutes the
thesis submitted by Gould for the degree of Master of Arts, May 7, 1900,
University of Nebraska, accepted June 4, 1900.
“The Oklahoma
Salt Plains.” Transaction of the Thirty-Second and Thirty-Third Annual Meetings of the Kansas Academy of Science XVII
(1901), 181-184. This paper was read before the Academy on December 28, 1900.
“The Oklahoma Salt Plains,” along with two
papers directly proceeding, were also bound together and printed as The
Dakota Cretaceous of Kansas and
Nebraska and Other Papers, 1901.
“Oklahoma
Bat Caves.’ Popular Science News XXXV (April 1901), 76-77. On microfilm copy of the article. (Microfilm -
Box 28).
5. “Oklahoma
Limestone.” Stone XXIII (October 1901), 351-354. One photocopy of the
article.
“General
Geology of Oklahoma.” Second Biennial Report, Department of Geology and
Natural History, Territory of Oklahoma (1901-1902), 17-62. Eleven paper bound
copies of Second Biennial Report.
“Oklahoma
Gypsum.” Second Biennial Report. Department of Geology and Natural
History, Territory of Oklahoma (1901-1902), 75-137. Eleven paper bound copies
of Second Biennial Report; in addition, one copy of the Second
Biennial Report containing this paper and the one directly preceding, have
been bound in a hard back cover with two other journals, Colorado College
Studies VI (March 1896), 54, and The American Geologist XIX, No. 5
(May 1897), 293-366. These journals have been in a blue hardback labeled “Red
Beds.”
6. “Geology
of Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma.” Third Biennial Report, Department of
Geology and Natural History (1904), 15 - 22.
7. “The
Mineral Wealth of Oklahoma and Indian Territory.” Frisco System Magazine
IV, No. 1 (February 1905), 13-21. One photocopy of the article.
8. "Soils
of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Territorial Board of Agriculture, First Biennial
Report, 1903 - 1904 (1905), 32-41. One photocopy of article.
9. “Origin
of Oklahoma Names.” Sturm’s Oklahoma Magazine V, No. 3 (November 1907), 29-30.
10. “Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma.” Manufacturer’s Record LII, No. 21 (December
1907), 63. One photocopy of article.
11. “Oil
and Gas in Oklahoma.” Sturm’s Oklahoma Magazine V (January 1908), 74-80.
Also in this issue, “Dr. Charles N. Gould” by Henry Robbins, 85-87.
Box 10: Published Material
- Articles, Papers and Reports by Charles N. Gould, 1908-1920
Folder
1. “Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma - III.” Manufacturer’s Record (January 16, 1908),
45-46. One photocopy of article.
“Extent
and Importance of Oklahoma Oil Fields.” Mining Science LVII, No. 3
(January 16, 1908), 73 - 74. This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm -
Box 28).
2. “Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma - IV.” Manufacturer’s Record LIII, No. 6 (February
20, 1908), 46 - 47, 4 figures. One
photocopy of article.
3. “Notes
on the Oil and Gas Industry of Oklahoma.” The Mining World IXXX, No. 22
(November 28, 1908), 807 - 809. One photocopy of article.
“Asphalt
in Oklahoma.” Mining Science LVIII, No. 1540 (November 26, 1908), 427.
This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm - Box 28).
4. “Lead
and Zinc Industry of Oklahoma.” The Mining World XXIX, No. 23 (December
5, 1908), 842. One photocopy of article.
5. “The
Coal Resources of Oklahoma.” The Mining World XXIX, No. 24 (December 12,
1908), 880. One photocopy of article.
6. “The
Tripoli Deposits in Oklahoma.” The Mining World XXIX, No. 25 (December
19, 1908), 922. One photocopy of article.
7. “Oil
and Gas in Oklahoma,” Manufacturers’ Record LIV, No. 26 (January 7,
1901), 116. One photoprint copy of article.
8. “Asphalt
Deposits in Oklahoma.” The Mining World XXX, No. 3 (January 1901), 84.
Two photocopies of articles.
9. “The
Oklahoma Coal Fields.” Mines and Minerals XXIX (January, 1901), 275-276.
One photocopy of article.
10. “Geology
and Water Resources of Western Oklahoma and Contiguous Territory.” Proceedings, Northwest Oklahoma Irrigation
Congress, 1st Session, Woodward, Oklahoma (1909), 32-35. One photoprint
copy of article.
11. “Oklahoma
Building Stone.” Stone XXXI, No. 6 (December 1901), 64-65. One photocopy
of article
12. Speech
in Oklahoma’s Minerals. Published in Official Proceeding, American Mining
Congress (1901), 20-21. One photostatic copy.
13. “The
Mineral Wealth of Oklahoma.” The
Taylor-Trotwood Magazine X, No. 4 (January 1910), 281-288. One photocopy of
article.
14. (With
D. W. Ohern and L. L. Hutchison). “Proposed Group of Pennsylvanian Rocks
of Eastern Oklahoma.” The State University of Oklahoma Research Bulletin No.
3, (March 1, 1910), 15 pp,. three copies: two copies are paper bound and
the third is hardbound with the University of Oklahoma Bulletin No. 4
(December 1, 1910). The hardbound volume contains a foldout map.
15. Future
of Natural Gas in Oklahoma. (Columbus, Ohio: F. J. Heer Printing Company,
1910), 15 pp. Two pamphlets.
16. “Physiography
in the Oklahoma High Schools.” Proceedings of the Oklahoma State Educational
Association (February 1911), 64-69.
17. “Variety
of Building Material in Oklahoma.” Sturm’s Oklahoma Magazine XII, No. 2
(April 1911), 10-11.
18. “Oklahoma
Metalliferous Minerals.” Mining and Scientific Press CIII, No. 1 (July
1, 1911), 10-12, two maps. This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm- Box
28); also one photostat copy of article.
19. “Geology
of Natural Gas.” Natural Gas Association of America, Seventh Annual
Meeting (May 1912), 33-41.
“The
Occurrence of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the Mid-continent Filed,” advance
copy, Congress Geologique International Douzieme Session, Canada,
(1913), 8 pp.
20. “The
Occurrence of Volcanic Ash on the Great Plains of North America.” Journal of
the Royal Society of Arts LXIII, No. 139 (December 18, 1914) 94-95. One
photoprint copy of the article.
21. “The
Occurrence of Asphalt in the State of Oklahoma.” Journal of the Royal
Society of Arts LXIII, No. 3241 (January 1, 1915), 132-134. One photoprint
copy of the article.
22. “Gypsum
Deposits of the State of Oklahoma.” Journal of the Royal Society of Arts
LXIII, No. 3245 (January 29, 1915), 202. One photoprint copy of the article.
23. “Salt
in the State of Oklahoma.” Journal of the Royal Society of Arts LXIII, No.
3247 (February 12, 1915), 255-256. One photoprint copy of the article.
24. “The
Manufacture of Gasoline (Petrol) From Natural Gas in the Oil Fields of
Oklahoma.” Journal of the Royal
Society of Arts LXIII (June 11, 1915), 694-695. One photoprint copy of the
article.
25. Prospecting
for Oil and Gas in North America.” Journal of the Royal Society of Arts
LXIII, No. 3266 (June 25, 1915), 721-723. One photoprint copy of article.
26. “The Occurrence
and Distribution of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the Carboniferous Rocks of
Kansas and Oklahoma.” Institute of Petroleum Technology Journal I, Part
3 (January 1, 1915), 185-190. One photocopy of article.
27. “Oklahoma,
A World Beater in Output of Oil and Gas.” The Southwest Trail XXXVI, No. 3 (April 1916), 2. One
photocopy of article.
“Kansas
City Oil Possibilities.” Oil and Gas News (Kansas City) II, No. 7
(October 4, 1917), 42. This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm - Box 28).
“Oklahoma
Has Big Oil Future.” Oil and Gas News (Kansas City) II, No. 7 (October
4, 1917), 116, 118, 120, 124; two maps. This article has been microfilmed.
(Microfilm - Box 28).
“The
Geology of Oil.” Oil and Gas News (Kansas City) II, No. 21 (January 10,
1918), 34-36. This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm - Box 28).
“What
Geology Means to the War.” Oil and Gas News (Kansas City) II, No. 25
(February 7, 1918), 36-38. This article has been microfilmed. (Microfilm - Box
28).
28. “Anticline
and Pseudo-Anticlines (in Oklahoma).” Transactions IV (1918), 25. Oklahoma
Society of Engineers.
29. “Oil
Bearing Strata of Oklahoma and Texas - Compared.” Transactions VI
(1920), 31-33. Oklahoma Society of Engineers,
Box 11: Published Material
- Articles, Papers and Reports by Charles N. Gould, 1921-1929
Folder
1. “A
flock of Hawks.” (Abstract). Oklahoma Academy of Science, Proceedings I
(July 1921), 33.
“Plantanus
Occidentalis.” Oklahoma Academy of Science, Proceedings I (July 1921),
40-43.
“Where
Did the Indians of the Great Plains get Their Flint?” Oklahoma Academy of
Science, Proceedings I (July 1921), 71-76.
2. “Oklahoma
City the Geographic and Transportation Center of the Mid-Continent Field.” Oklahoma
VII, No. 17 (April 26, 1923), 1-3, 18-19.;
“Oklahoma City the Center of the Future
Development of the Mid-Continent Field.” Oklahoma VII, No. 17 (April 26,
1923), 5-7, 20;
“Oklahoma City the Center of High Grade Oil
of the World.” Oklahoma VII, No. 17 (April 26, 1923), 10-11, 19.
3. “Oklahoma
is Center of Mid-Continent Oil Field.” Rock Island Magazine XIX, No. 12
(December 1924), 22. On typewritten copy with cover letter and one photoprint
copy of article.
4. “Minerals
and Natural Resources Are Waiting Development.” Treasures of the Great Southwest,
Southwestern Light and Power Co., Oklahoma City, (August 1925), 34-35. One
photoprint copy of article.
5. “Oklahoma’s
Hidden Treasure.” Stroud Democrat (c. 1925) 1, 4. Two newspaper clippings.
6. “Billion
Dollar Baby.” Public Service Magazine XXXXI, No. 6 (December 1926),
171-172. Six copies of magazine.
7. “Oklahoma’s
Mineral Wealth.” Industrial Oklahoma I, No. 2 (December 1926), 2-5.
8. “Mineral
Resources Give Oklahoma Promise for Future Chemical Industry.” Chemical and
Metallurgical Engineering XXXIV, No. 7 (July 1927), 431-433.
9. “Oklahoma
Breaker of Records.” My Oklahoma I, No. 1 (April, 1927), 30-31, 42, 50.
Reprinted form Manufacturer’s Record.
10. “Sources
of Power.” My Oklahoma I, No. 2
(May 1927), 14-15, 54.
11. “Coal.”
My Oklahoma I, No. 4 (July 1927), 25-26.
12. “Oklahoma
Asphalt.” My Oklahoma I, No. 5 (August 1927), 19-20;
“Life
in Oklahoma.” My Oklahoma I, No.
5 (August 1927), 24-25, 40;
“The Name ‘Oklahoma’.” My Oklahoma I,
No. 5 (August 1927), 48. Two copies of magazine.
13. “Life
in Oklahoma.” My Oklahoma I, No. 6 (September 1927), 29, 56;
“Structural Material.” My Oklahoma I, No. 6 (September 1927),
31, 36, 39.
14. “Life
in Oklahoma.” My Oklahoma I, No. 7 (October 1927), 24, 59.
15. “The
Glyptoden and His Pals.” My Oklahoma I, No. 8 (November 1927), 22-33,
36, 52; “Gypsum and Salt.” Mineral Series, My Oklahoma I, No. 8
(November 1927), 22, 50, 55. Six copies
of magazine.
16. “Metal
Mined in Oklahoma.” My Oklahoma I, No. 9 (December 1927), 18, 50-51. Two
copies of magazine.
17. “Thirty-nine
Years of Civilization.” My Oklahoma I, No. 10 (January 1928) 11-13, 43.
18. “But
What of the Future.” My Oklahoma I, No. 11 (February 1928), 12-13, 21,
24. Two copies of magazine.
19. “Rocks
of Oklahoma: Their Story.” The Oklahoma Teacher X, No. 3 (November,
1928), 18-19, 30
20. “Rocks
of Oklahoma: Chapter III.” The Oklahoma Teacher X, No. 4 (December
1928), 14-15. Two copies of magazine.
21. Rocks
of Oklahoma: Their Story.” The Oklahoma Teacher X, No. 5 (January 1928),
16-17.
22. “Humanizing
Geology.” Abstract Engineering and Mining Journal CXXVII, No. 9 (March
1929), 357-358. Fourteen copies of abstract.
23. “Rocks
of Oklahoma.” The Oklahoma Teacher X, No. 7 (March 1929), 16-17, 41. Two
copies of magazine.
24. “Rocks
of Oklahoma: Their Story.” The Oklahoma Teacher X, No. 8 (April 1929),
22-24.
25. (With
S. R. Hadsell). “The Trail,” the Oklahoma Anthology for 1929, University of
Oklahoma Bulletin, New Series No. 424 (January 5, 1929), 36-37 - (poem). Three copies.
Box 12: Published Material
- Articles, Reports, and Papers by Charles N. Gould, 1930-1933
Folder
1. (With
J. O. Beach). Oklahoma Glass Sands. Norman, Oklahoma: January 1930, 12
pp.
“The
Part of Science in the Finding of Petroleum.” School Science and Mathematics XXX, No. 1 (January
1930), 33-38. Six copies of journal.
“Does
the Scientist Find Oil?” School Science and Mathematics XXX, No. 3,
(March 1930), 244-246. Six copies of journal.
2. “Structure
of Oklahoma City Oil Field.” Professional Engineer XVI, No. 2 (February
1931), 10-12. Six copies of journal.
3. “Oklahoma
Mineral Resources.” Manufacturer’s Record XCIX, No. 13 (March 26, 1931),
36-37. Three copies of journal.
4. Nonmetallics
of Great Commercial Value Cover Much of Oklahoma’s Area.” Pit and Quarry
XXV, No. 3 (November 1932), 32-38, 48. Six copies of journal.
5. “William
Peter Haseman, Physicist.” The Sooner Magazine IV, No. 8 (May 1932),
271, 273-274.
6. (And
others). “Classification and Nomenclature of Rock Units.” Bulletin of
the Geological Society of America, XXXXIV (April 30, 1933), 423-459.
“Mountain
6,500 Feet Beneath Surface Is Found by Drill.’ Daily Oklahoman (December
8, 1930), 8. This newspaper clipping is located in the Outsized Material Box.
“City
Oil Pool Is Surprising to Geologist.” Daily Oklahoman (December 21,
1930), 8. This newspaper clipping is located in the Outsized Material Box.
Box 13: Published Material - Article, Reports, and
Papers by Charles N. Gould, 1933-1946, and United States Geological Survey
Publications by Charles N. Gould, 1905-1907
Folder
1. “The
Most Northern Occurrence of Mesquite on the Great Plains.” Science
LXXVII, No. 2004 (May 26, 1933), 511-512. Nine copies of journal.
Review
of Introduction to a Survey of Missouri Place Names, written by Robert
L. Ramsey, Allen Walker Read, and Esther Gladys Leech. American Speech
IX, No. 4 (December 1934), 304-306. Five copies of journal.
2. “Me
and My Pal.” The Compass of Sigma Gamma Epsilon XX, No. 2 (January
1940), 71. Four copies of journal.
3. “The
relation of Geology to Southwestern Archaeology.” The Mines Magazine XXXI, No. 5 (May 1941), 200-203.
4. “The
Red Beds and the Anadarko Basin.” The Oil Weekly CXVII, No. 12 (May
1945), 59-60, 62, 64.
5. “Pioneer
Geology in Oklahoma.” Abstract. Tulsa Geological Society Digest XIV
(1945-1946), 56;
“Pioneer
Geology of Texas Panhandle.” Abstract. Tulsa Geological Society Digest XIV
(1945-1946), 70.
U. S. Geological Survey Publications
“Geology
and Water Resources of Oklahoma.” Water Supply and Irrigation Paper No. 148,
U. S. Geological Survey. (Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1905),
178 pp. Three copies of paper, one is hardbound.
“The
Geology and Water Resources of the Eastern Portion of the Panhandle of Texas.” Water
supply and Irrigation Paper No. 154. U. S. Geological Survey (Washington D.
C. : Government Printing Office, 1906), 64 pp.
“The
Geology and Water Resources of the Western Portion of the Panhandle of Texas.” Water
supply and Irrigation Paper No. 191, U. S. Geological Survey (Washington D.
C. : Government Printing Office, 1907), 704 pp. This paper and the one
proceeding, No. 154, have been bound together in hard form; two paper bound
copies of No. 191 are also included.
Box 14: Oklahoma
Geological Survey Publications by Charles N. Gould, 1908-1927
(And
L. L. Hutchison and Gaylord Nelson). “Preliminary Report on The Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 1
(November 1908), 80 pp. Eight paper bound copies of Bulletin.
(And
L. C. Snider and F. Buttram). “Brief chapters on Oklahoma’s Mineral Resources,
Part II.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 6 (December 1910),
34-95.
(And
Charles H. Taylor, L. C. Snider, Frank A. Herald and Gaylord Nelson). “Preliminary Report on the Structural
Materials of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 5
(May 1911), 182 pp., map.
Folder
1. “Oklahoma
Among The Southern States.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Circular No. 3
(August 1911), 15 pp. Three copies of circular.
“Index
to the Stratigraphy of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 35
(September 1925), 115 pp. Seven copies of Bulletin, four of which are
hardbound.
“Geology
of Texas County, Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 37
(April 1926), 62 pp; with chapters: “Agriculture” by H. H. Finnell; and
“History” by M. L. Wardell. Three copies of Bulletin, one is hardbound.
“Geology
of Beaver County, Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin No. 38 (August
1926), 71 pp., five copies, one is hardbound. Contains chapters:
“Fossil Leaves From Beaver County” by E. W.
Berry;
“Agriculture
of Beaver County” by Ernest Locum;
“History of Beaver County” by F. C. Tracy.
2. “The
Permian of Western Oklahoma and the Panhandle of Texas.” Oklahoma Geological
Survey Circular No. 13 (December 1926), 29 pp. Two copies of circular.
“Stratigraphy
and Areal Geology: The Upper Paleozoic Rocks of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma
Geological Survey Bulletin No. 41 (January 1927), 5-21.
3. ”
Oklahoma the Geologists Laboratory.” Oklahoma Geological Survey
Circular No. 16 (December 1927), 16 pp. Ten copies of circular.
Box 15: Reprints of
Charles N. Gould, 1908-1926
Folder
1. “Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma - IV”. Reprinted from Manufacturers’ Record,
February 20, 1908.
“Petroleum
and Natural Gas in Oklahoma.” Reprinted from Economic Geology VII, No. 8
(December 1912), 719-730. Fifteen Reprints.
“Petroleum
in the Red Beds.” Reprinted from Economic Geology VIII, No. 8 (December
1913), 768-780. Twenty-five reprints.
“The
Occurrence and Distribution of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the Carboniferous
Rocks of Kansas and Oklahoma.” Reprinted from the Journal of the Institution
of Petroleum Technologists I (March 1915), 185-190. Forty-five reprints.
“Crystalline
Rocks of the Plains.” Reprinted from the Bulletin of the Geological Society
of America XXXIV (September 30, 1923), 541-560. Thirty-one reprints.
“ A
New Classification of the Permian Red Beds of Southwestern Oklahoma.” Bulletin
of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists VIII, No. 3 (May - June
1924), 322-341. Thirty-six reprints.
2. “Oklahoma’s
Hidden Treasures.” Reprinted from “The South’s Development,” published December
11, 1924, by Manufacturers’ Record.
“The
Correlation of the Permian of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Northern Texas.” Reprinted
from Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists X, No.
2 (February 1926), 144-153. Twenty-four reprints.
Box 16: Reprints of
Charles N. Gould, 1926-1929
Folder
1. “Oklahoma
- An Example of Arrested Development.” Reprinted from Economic Geography
II , No. 3 (July 1926), 426 - 450. Three reprints.
“Our
Present Knowledge of the Permian of the Great Plains.” Reprinted from The
Journal of Geology XXXIV, No. 5 (July - August 1926), 415-421. Eighty-four
reprints.
“The
Subdivision of the Enid Formation.” Reprinted from Bulletin of the American
Association of Petroleum Geologists X, No. 8 (August 1926), 786-799.
Eighteen reprints.
(And
Robin Willis). “Tentative Correlation of the Permian Formations of the Southern
Great Plains.” Reprinted from the Bulletin of the Geological Society of
America XXXVIII (September 30, 1927), 431-442. Thirty-seven reprints.
2. “Oklahoma
Breaker of Records.” Reprinted from Manufacturers’ Record (March 17,
1927), 4 pp. Fifty-six reprints.
3. “Mineral
Resources Give Oklahoma Promise for Future Chemical Industry.” Reprinted form Chemical
and Metallurgical Engineering, (July 1927), 4 pp. Eleven reprints.
4. “Humanizing
Geology.” Reprinted from the Scientific Monthly XXVII (November 1928),
416 - 423. Twelve reprints.
“Oklahoma’s
Opportunity.” An address delivered before the Jobbers and Manufacturers
Association of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, December 11, 1928, and printed by B. H.
Hunter Company of Oklahoma city, fifty-five copies.
“On
the Recent Finding of Another Flint Arrow-Head in the Pleistocene Deposit at
Fredrick, Oklahoma.” Reprinted from Journal of the Washington Academy of
Sciences XIX, No. 3 (February 4, 1929), 66-68. Twenty-eight reprints.
5. “Comanchean
Reptiles from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas.” Reprinted from the Bulletin of
the Geological Society of America XV (June 30, 1929), 475-462. Six
reprints.
“The
Usefulness of the Useless.” Reprinted from the Scientific Monthly XXIX
(November 1929), 440-446. Forty reprints.
Box 17: Reprints of
Articles by Gould, 1930-1948
“The
Part of Science in the Finding of Petroleum.” Reprinted form School Science
and Mathematics XXX, Nos. 1, 2, 3, (January, February, and March 1930), 33-
38, 132-141, 224-246. Eighty-one reprints.
Folder
1. “Caliche
- A Neglected Oklahoma Resource.” Reprinted from Proceedings of the Oklahoma
Academy of Science XV (1935), 2 pp. Fifty-one copies of reprints.
2. “Government
Work on the Natural Resources of Oklahoma.” Reprinted from Proceedings of
the Oklahoma Academy of Science XVII (1936), 2 pp.
3. “Geology
of Oklahoma State Parks.” Reprinted from Proceedings of the Oklahoma Academy
of Science XVII (1937), 1 pp. Twenty-one reprints.
4. “Passing
of A Great Geologist - Robert T. Hill.” Reprinted from Proceedings of the
Oklahoma Academy of Science. (1941), 150-151.
“Forty
years of Oklahoma Geography.” Reprinted from The Pan-American Geologist LXXVII
(March 1942), 81-90. Eighteen reprints. (In Box 1, personal correspondence
folder, there is a note Gould wrote himself regarding the publication of this
article.
“Memorial
the Luther Crocker Snider.” Reprinted from The Geological Society of America
Annual Report of 1947 Proceedings, (May 1948), 191-193. Fifty-three
reprints.
Boxes 18 through 19
contain manuscripts of article length by Charles N. Gould that have been
published in some form.
Box 18: Manuscript -
Published 1907-1927
Folder
1. “Topography
of Oklahoma.” Chapter II in Geography of Oklahoma, Oklahoma School Herald,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma XV, No. 12 (December, 1907), 8 - 11, map. Typewritten
copy.
2. “Oil
and Gas in Oklahoma.” Published in Sturms Magazine V, No. 5 (January
1908), 74-80. Typewritten copy.
3. “Dual
Life of an Indian Maiden.” Published in Sturms Magazine VIII, No. 2
(April 1909), 61-63. Two copies, one typewritten, one handwritten.
4. “Oldest
Inhabitants of Oklahoma.” Published in Sturms Magazine VIII, No. 5 (July
1909), 29-32. Typewritten copy.
5. “Geology
and Water Resources.” Published in Proceedings, First Session of
Northwest Oklahoma Irrigation Congress, Woodward, Oklahoma (October 1901),
32-25. Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections.
6. “The
Lone Cabin no Possum Flats.” Published in Sturms Magazine IX, No 1
(October 1901), 76-79. One incomplete, handwritten copy.
7. “State
Fair” published as “The Mineral Exhibit at the State Fair.” Sturms Magazine
IX, No. 3 (November 1909), 71-74. Typewritten copy with corrections.
8. “Natural
Gas in Oklahoma.” Published in Manufacturer’s Record LIX, No. 25 (June
29, 1911), 51-52. Typewritten copy.
9. “Oklahoma
Among the Southern States.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Circular No. 3 (August
1911), 15 pp. Three typewritten copies.
10. “Geology
of Natural Gas.” Natural Gas Association of America Proceedings IV (
1912), 192-201. Typewritten copy.
11. “Petroleum
and Natural Gas in Oklahoma.” Economic Geology VII (1912), 719-731.
Typewritten copy.
12. “Occurrence
of Petroleum and Natural Gas in the Mid-Continent Field,” advance copy Congress
Geologique Internationale Deuzime Sessions, (August 1913), 8 pp. Typewritten copy with abstract, outline and
announcement of International Geological Congress Meeting.
13. “Petroleum
in the Red Beds.” Economic Geology VIII, No. 8 (December 1913), 768-780.
Two typewritten copies with corrections.
14. “Occurrence
of Volcanic Ash in the Great Plains of North America.” Journal of the Royal
Society of Arts LXIII, No. 239 (December 18, 1914), 94-95. Typewritten
copy.
15. “The
Occurrence of Asphalt in the State of Oklahoma.” Journal of the Royal
Society of Arts LXIII, No. 324 (January 1, 1915), 132-134. Typewritten
copy.
16. “The
Occurrence of Potash in Oklahoma,” partially published as “Possibilities of
Finding Potash in Western Oklahoma.” Daily Oklahoma, Oklahoma City,
December 5, 1915. Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections.
17. “Geological
Work in the Southwest.” Southwest Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin No. 1 (1917), 20-33.
Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections.
18. “Preliminary
Notes in the Geology and Structure of the Amarillo Region.” American
Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin IV (1920), 269-275. Two
typewritten copies.
19. “Comparison
of Oil-Bearing Strata of Oklahoma and Texas.” Transactions, Oklahoma Society of Engineers, VI (1920),
31-33.
20. “A New
Variation on the Hidden Treasure Myth.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings II (1922).
Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections. Also, included, “Hidden Treasure Myth.” Typewritten copy.
21. “Buried
Mountain Ranges in Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings II
(1922). Typewritten written copy with handwritten corrections.
22. “Where
Did the Indians of the Great Plains Get Their Flint?” Oklahoma Academy of
Science Proceedings II (1922). Typewritten copy.
23. “Crystalline
Rocks of the Plains.” Geological Society of America Bulletin XXIV
(1923), 541-560. Two Typewritten copies.
24. “Oklahoma
City: Geographic and Transportation Center of the Mid-Continent Field.” Oklahoma,
Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce, VII, No. 17 (April 26, 1923), 1, 3, 18-19.
Two typewritten copies, one of which in incomplete.
25. “Oklahoma
City: The Center of the Future Development of the Mid-Continent Field.” Oklahoma,
Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce, VII, No. 17 (April 26, 1923), 5, 7, 20. Two
typewritten copies.
26. “Oklahoma
City: The Center of the High Grade Oil Area of the World.” Oklahoma,
Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce, VII, No. 17 (April 26, 1923), 10, 19.
Typewritten copy, incomplete.
27. “Oklahoma’s
Hidden Treasure.” Manufacturer’s Record LXXXVI, No. 24, part 2 (December
11, 1924), 403-407. Three typewritten copies.
28. “Basement
Riches,” from booklet published by the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture,
Oklahoma City (March 1925), 10-13. Typewritten copy with corrections.
29. “Tribute
to W. D. Hunter.” Nebraska Alumnus, Lincoln, Nebraska (December 1925),
459. Typewritten copy.
30. The
Oklahoma Geological Survey and Oklahoma Minerals. Leaflet published by the
Oklahoma Geological Survey (July 1928), 8 pp. Typewritten copy.
31. “The
Wealth Beneath Our Feet.” Oklahoma (December 31, 1925), 3 -11.
Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections.
32. “Unsolved
Geological Problems in Oklahoma in 1925.” Oklahoma Academy of Science
Proceedings V (1925), 136-140. Two typewritten copies.
33. “Clays
and Shales of Oklahoma.” The Ceramicist VII, No. 4 (January 1926),
267-272. Three typewritten manuscripts.
34. “Radiate
Structure of Sand Barite Crystal Masses.” Oklahoma Academy of Science
Proceedings VI, part 2 (June 1926), 239-242. Six typewritten copies.
35. “The
Billion Dollar Baby.” Oklahoma Real Estate Exchange (June 1926), 49-50.
Typewritten copy.
36. “Oklahoma
- An Example of Arrested Development.” Economic Geology II, No. 3 (July
1926), 426-450. Typewritten copy with corrections.
37. “Oklahoma’s
Rank.” Oklahoma Real Estate Exchange I, No. 9 (November 1926), 15.
Typewritten copy.
38. “ The
Oklahoma That Oklahoman’s Do Not Know.” Harlow’s Weekly XXIX, No. 31
(November 13, 1926), 4. Typewritten copy with handwritten corrections.
39. “Celestite,
A New Mineral for Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings V
(1926), 145-147. Typewritten copy.
40. “Oklahoma’s
Varied Resources.” Professional Engineer XII, No. 4 (April 1, 1927),
11-15, 29. Two typewritten copies.
41. “Source
of Power.” My Oklahoma I, No. 2 (May 1927), 14-15. Two typewritten
copies.
42. “Oklahoma’s
Place in the Chemical Industry,” published as “Mineral Resources Give Oklahoma
Promise for Future Chemical Industry,” Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering XXXIV, No. 7 (July 1927),
431-433. Typewritten copy.
43. “Structural
Materials.” My Oklahoma I, No. 6 (September 1927), 31, 36, 39. Two
typewritten copies.
Box 19: Manuscripts -
Published 1927 - 1946
Folder
1. “Oklahoma
- The Geologist’s Laboratory.” Oklahoma Geological Survey Circular 16,
(December 1927), 16 pp. Typewritten copy.
2. “My
Friend Glyptoden and His Pals.” My Oklahoma I (1927), 32-33, 36, 52. Two
typewritten copies.
3. “Thirty-nine
Years of Civilization.” My Oklahoma I, No. 10 (January 1928), 11-13, 43.
Two typewritten copies.
4. “But
What of the Future?” My Oklahoma I, No. 11 (February 1928), 12-13, 21,
24. Two typewritten copies
5. “The
Oklahoma Mineral Exhibit at the St. Louis World’s Fair.” Chronicle of
Oklahoma VII, No. 2 (June 1928), 145-154.
6. “Humanizing
Geology.” Scientific Monthly XXVII (November 1928), 416-423. Four typewritten
copies with corrections, one manuscript is a variation of the published draft.
7. “Rocks
of Oklahoma and The Story They Tell.” A book length manuscript published in
chapters in Oklahoma Teacher X, Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9 (December 1928 -
May 1929). Two typewritten copies, incomplete and one handwritten chapter.
8. “Field
Conferences.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings VIII (1928),
117-120. Typewritten copy.
9. “The
Fossil Glyptodon in the Frederick Gravel Beds.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings
VII (1928), 148-150. Typewritten copy.
10. “Comanchean
Reptiles from Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.” Geological Society of America
Bulletin XXX (June 1929), 457-462. Six mimeographed copies and one carbon
copy.
11. Fossil
Bones and Artifacts at Frederick.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings
IX (November 1929), 90-92. Typewritten copy.
12. “Usefulness
of the Useless.” Scientific Monthly XXIX, No. 5 (November 1929),
440-446. Two typewritten copies, one with corrections.
13. Industrialization
of the Southwest - Oklahoma.” Oklahoma Southwestern Political and Social
Science Quarterly X, No. 3 (December 1929), 16-19. Two typewritten copies.
14. A
Drama in Three Acts.” Southwest Wilds and Water II, No. 1 (January
1930), 28-29. Typewritten manuscripts.
15. The
Water Resources of Oklahoma.” Proceedings of the Fifth Water Works
Short Course, Stillwater, Oklahoma, I, No. 2 ( March 1930), 90-96.
Typewritten manuscripts.
16. “The
Part of Science in the Finding of Petroleum.” School Science and Mathematics
XXX, No. 1, Part I ( January 1930), 33-38. Four typewritten copies.
17. “How
the Scientist Goes About It to Find Petroleum?” School Science and
Mathematics XXX, No. 2, Part II (February 1930), 132-141. Typewritten copy.
18. “Does
the Scientist Find Oil?” School Science and Mathematics XXX, No.
3, part II (March 1930), 244-246. Typewritten copy.
19. “Buchanan,
The Man.” The Sooner Magazine II, No. 8 (May 1930), 283. Typewritten
copy.
20. “Raw
Materials for Oklahoma Industries.” Oklahoma Chamber of Commerce Bulletin
(June 1930), 6-8. Two typewritten copies, one containing corrections.
21. “Petroleum
and Surface Vegetation.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings X
(1930), 110-114. Two typewritten copies.
22. “Structure
of the Oklahoma City Oil Field.” Professional Engineering XVI, No. 2
(February 1931), 10-12. Typewritten copy.
23. “Oklahoma’s
Mineral Resources.” Manufacturer’s Record IC, No. 3 (March 1931), 36-37.
Two typewritten copies, one handwritten copy and one typewritten outline.
24 “The Triumvirate.”
The Nebraska Alumnus (March 1930), 11. Typewritten copy.
25. “William
Peter Haseman, Physicist.” The Sooner Magazine IV, No. 8 (May 1932),
271, 273-274. Two typewritten copies.
26. “Beginning
of Geological Work in Oklahoma.” Chronicles of Oklahoma X, No. 2 (June
1932), 196-203. Three typewritten copies.
27. “Caliche
- A Neglected Oklahoma Resource.” Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings
XV (1935), 82-84. Typewritten copy with corrections and two typewritten
abstracts.
28. “Oklahoma’s
First Scientist.” Published in Oklahoma Academy of Science Proceedings
(1944), 74-75. Typewritten copy.
29. “Pioneer
Geology in Oklahoma.” Abstract published in Tulsa Geological Society Digest
XIV (1945-1946), 56-57. Two typewritten copies. This paper was also presented
as the Retiring President’s Address, Society of the Sigma Xi, Norman, Oklahoma,
on October 30, 1930.
Newspaper Publications
30. “Rugged
Parts of Oklahoma.” One copy of an article published in The Kansas City Star,
Monday, August 13, 1900. The article was not actually written by Dr. Gould, but
consists almost entirely of quotes made by him.
31. “The
Romance of Oil Finding.” Oklahoma City Times, Rotary Edition, July 26,
1915. Two typewritten copies.
32. “Mineral
Wealth of Oklahoma.” Oklahoma City Times, Rotary Edition, July 26, 1915.
Typewritten copy.
33. “What
is an Anticline?” Wichita Eagle, February 13, 1916. Typewritten copy.
Box 20: Unpublished manuscripts by Gould - Book length
“Geological Story of Oklahoma.” This manuscript has not been published as a
book; however, individual chapters and sections of chapters have appeared as
published articles.
Red Wallet
1. “Geological
Story of Oklahoma.” Incomplete typewritten manuscript with corrections.
2. “Geological
Story of Oklahoma.” Incomplete typewritten manuscript with corrections.
3. “Geological
Story of Oklahoma.” Incomplete typewritten manuscript with corrections.
4. “Geological
Story of Oklahoma.” Typewritten manuscript, last chapter is incomplete.
5. “Geological
Story of Oklahoma.” Incomplete handwritten draft.
Box 21: Unpublished
manuscripts by Gould - Book length “Geological work in Oklahoma.”
Red Wallet
1. “Geological
work in Oklahoma” or “Oklahoma Geologists and their work.” Complete typewritten
manuscripts, 1932.
2. “Geological
work in Oklahoma” or “Oklahoma Geologists and their work.” Incomplete
typewritten manuscript, 1932.
3. “Oklahoma
Geological Survey, 1908-1932.” Handwritten draft of Chapter V of “Geological
work in Oklahoma.”
Folder
1. “Program
for Charles N. Gould of December 1, 1941.” One short typewritten list of
proposed book length manuscripts.
Boxes 22 through 23 contain manuscripts of article
length by Charles N. Gould. These manuscripts have not been published; however,
excerpts or variations of these drafts may have been published under different
titles. The manuscript are arranged in alphabetical order.
Box 22: Unpublished
manuscripts - Articles
Folder
1. “Alkali
Ike and Comanche Bill.” Typewritten copy.
2. “Beaver
Lodge, A Cabin in South Pak.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
3. “Beginning
of the Panhandle Oil and Gas.” Typewritten copy and a handwritten copy of the
bibliography. This article was also presented as a lecture.
4. “Beginning
of Things Geological in Oklahoma.” Three typewritten copy with corrections and
handwritten notes.
5. “Brief
Outline of the Geology of Oklahoma.” Two typewritten copies.
6. “Clark
County Geology.” (Kansas) Typewritten copy.
7. “Comparison
of the Geology of Southern Kansas and Northern Oklahoma.” Two typewritten
copies.
8. “Conversation
of Natural Gas on the Mid-Continent Field.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
9. “Cut-Throat
Gap.” Typewritten copy.
10. “Dams,
Reservoirs, and Water Supplies in Oklahoma.” Typewritten copy about 1941.
11. “Discovery
Wells.” Typewritten copy.
12. “Early
Day Geology in Southern Kansas.” Two typewritten copies.
13. “Earthquakes
in Oklahoma.” Three typewritten copies.
14. “Erasmus
Haworth.” Four typewritten copies.
15. “Establishment
of a Geological Survey.” Typewritten copy. Also included are handwritten notes
and a letter from David Ross Boyd dated January 20, 1917, regarding the
subject.
16. “First
Oklahoma Anticline.” Typewritten copy.
17. “First
Oklahoma City Oil Well.” Typewritten copy.
18. “Future
Sources of power in Oklahoma.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
19. “Geological
Map of Oklahoma.” Typewritten copy.
20. “Geology
and Mineral Resources.” Typewritten copy.
21. “Geology
and Oil.” Typewritten copy.
22. “Geology
and Petroleum.” Typewritten copy.
23. “Geology
at the University of Oklahoma.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
24. “History
of Oklahoma City oil Filed.” Two typewritten copies.
25. “ How
long Will It Last?” Two typewritten copies.
26. “How
Much Oil In Oklahoma?” Typewritten copy.
27. “How We
Found the John Ray Dome at Amarillo.” Typewritten copy.
28. “How
Oil is Formed.” Typewritten copy.
29. “How
Oil Occurs.” Typewritten copy.
30. “Importance
of Chemistry in Oklahoma’s Dormant Mineral Wealth.” Typewritten copy with
corrections.
31. “Mineral
Raw Materials Along Island Lines in Oklahoma.” Three typewritten copies.
32. “Mineral
Resources of Oklahoma,” written for the Oklahoman (1924) actual publication
was unknown. Carbon copy, 8 pages.
33. “Mining
in the Wichitas.” Two typewritten copies.
34. “My
Scientific Societies.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
35. “No
Deep At All.” Handwritten copy.
36. “Oil
and Other Things.” Four typewritten drafts, one copy contains corrections.
37. “Oil,
It’s History and Development.” Two typewritten copies, one contains
corrections.
38 “Oklahoma.”
Typewritten copy.
39. “Oklahoma
Mastodons.” Typewritten copy.
40. “Oklahoma
Rock Asphalt.” Typewritten copy.
41. “Oklahoma’s
Structural Materials.” Typewritten copy.
42. “Origin
of Place Names in Oklahoma.” Two typewritten copies.
43. “Our
Future Prosperity Assured.” Two typewritten copies.
44. “Outline
of Conservation Problems in America.” Typewritten copy.
45. “Paper
Weights.” Typewritten copy.
46 “Pre
Cent.” Two typewritten copies.
47. “Petroleum.”
Four typewritten copies.
48. “Petroleum
in Oklahoma.” Typewritten outline with corrections.
Box 23: Unpublished
Manuscripts - Articles
Folder
1. “Railroad
Shipping.” Typewritten copy.
2. “Redbeds
at Oklahoma City.” Two typewritten copies.
3. “Relations
of Structure to Production in the Mid-Continent Filed.” Typewritten copy with
corrections.
4. “Thar’s
Oil in Them Thar Mountains.” Five typewritten copies with diagrams.
5. “The
Geology of the Ceramic Materials of Oklahoma.” Typewritten copy.
6. “The
Mineral Resources of Oklahoma.” Three typewritten copies.
7. “The
Mines and Their Yield.” Two typewritten copies.
8. “The Oklahoma
Geological Survey.” Typewritten copy.
9. “The
Peoples of Oklahoma.” Two typewritten copies.
10. “The
Rock Club.” Typewritten copy.
11. “The
Rock Hound and the Pebble Pup.” Three Typewritten copy, one containing
corrections.
12. “The
World’s Oil Supply.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
13. “Third
Annual Meeting of the Southwestern Association of Petroleum Geologists, 1918.”
Three typewritten copies.
14. “Trip
Across Oklahoma From East to West.” Handwritten manuscript.
15. “Valuable
Minerals.” Two typewritten copies.
16. “Volcanic
Rocks in Oklahoma.” Three typewritten copy, one containing corrections.
17. “What a
Farmer Should Know About Rocks.” Typewritten copy.
18. Untitled
manuscript dealing with camping, typewritten.
19. Untitled
manuscript dealing with Dr. Gould’s discovery of the Winfield Anticline. Two
typewritten copies.
20. Untitled
manuscript dealing with the early history of higher education. Two typewritten
copies.
21. Untitled
manuscript dealing with the early history of higher education. Two typewritten
copies.
22. Untitled
manuscript dealing with the assistance given runaway slaves near Marietta, Ohio
by Charles N. Gould’s paternal grandfather.
23. Untitled
manuscript dealing with Charles Gould’s maternal grandparents and their life in
Ohio.
24.
Untitled manuscript dealing with Dr. Gould’s “conversion” to Geology,
incomplete.
25. Untitled
manuscript dealing with settlement of Oklahoma Territory, typewritten with
corrections.
26. Untitled
manuscript dealing with John J. McAlester and his load of coal, handwritten.
27. Untitled
manuscript, parts of which were published as “Our Present Knowledge of the
Permian of the Great Plains,” Journal of Geology XXXIV, No. 5
(July-August, 1926), 415-421. Typewritten manuscript is incomplete.
28. This
typewritten manuscript is a draft of a letter written by Dr. Gould to his son
Don of his experience while on a geological field trip in the Rio Grande
Valley, October 1938.
29. Six
typewritten manuscripts of Dr. Gould’s recollection of the University of
Oklahoma. Two Variations, four copies of one, two of the other.
30. Untitled
one page numerous sketch of “modern” education, typewritten.
31. Untitled
typewritten manuscript of the American covered wagon.
32. Untitled
typewritten manuscript of the education of the Indian, writing about 1910.
33. Untitled
typewritten manuscript of the character of the typical Britisher, no date.
34. Untitled
typewritten manuscript of the unscrupulous promotional schemes, written at the
time of the boom in the Oklahoma City oil field. Two copies.
35. Untitled
incomplete manuscript on school conditions in Oklahoma soon after statehood, no
date. Typewritten with handwritten insets and corrections.
36. Untitled
typewritten manuscript on the topography of Oklahoma, no date.
37. One
page of an incomplete, handwritten manuscript on the state school system.
Box 24: Published and
unpublished manuscripts - “Geologettes.”
Box 24 contains manuscripts of short sketches related
to experiences on geological field trips and to pioneer life in Oklahoma. Some
of these manuscripts have been published, but the majority have not. Dr. Gould
grouped and named the sketches “Geologettes.”
Folder
1. “Wagon
Irons in the Prairie.” Published in “Life in Oklahoma,” a series, My
Oklahoma I, No. 5 (August 1927), 24-25. Two typewritten copies, one
containing corrections.
2. “No
Place to Sleep.” Published in My Oklahoma I, No. 7 (October 1927), 59.
Five typewritten copies.
3. “Oklahoma
Scenery.” Published in Outdoor Oklahoma I, No. 6 (June 1926), 10. Three
typewritten copies with corrections.
4. “Ashes
and Stalactites.” Three typewritten copies with corrections.
5. “How I
Found the St. Clair Marble.” Three typewritten copies.
6. “How Oklahoma
Got its Name,” published as “The Name Oklahoma.” Published in My Oklahoma
I, No. 5 (August 1927), 48. Three typewritten copies.
7. “Carlos,
My Mozo.” Three typewritten copies with pencil corrections.
8. “Leche
Frio.” Three typewritten copies.
9. “Jinnie
and the Coyote.” Three typewritten copies.
10. “When
Jinnie Dumped Me.” Two typewritten copies.
11. “The Best Advice I Ever Received.” Three typewritten copies
with corrections.
12. “My
First Elephant.” Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 1 (July 1926), 21. Five
typewritten copies.
13. “Sand.”
Two typewritten copies with corrections.
14. “The
New Foundation.” Three typewritten copies.
15. “The
Bat Cave.” Two typewritten manuscripts of the same title, differing slightly in
content.
16. “How I
Found the First Fossils in the Permian Red Beds.” Three typewritten copies.
17. “Copperhead
Camp.” Published in Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 2 (February 1926), 19.
Three typewritten copies.
18. “A
Prairie Storm in Camp.” Two typewritten copies.
19. “Platte
National Park.” Two typewritten copies.
20. “Too
Much Mineral.” Four typewritten copies.
21. “A
Treacherous River.” Published in Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. IV (October
26, 1926), 21. Two typewritten copies.
22. “Meat,
My House.” Published in “Life in Oklahoma,” My Oklahoma I, No. 5 (August
1927), 24. Two typewritten copies.
23. “Finding
A Plesiosaur.” Two typewritten copies.
24. “Snakes.”
Three typewritten copies, one with corrections.
25. “Rejects.”
Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 1 (July 1926), 17. Four typewritten copies, one
containing corrections.
26. “Hunting
Horses.” Three typewritten copies.
27. “The
Hot Jug.” Four typewritten copies.
28. “How
the Newkirk Anticlines Was Discovered.” Two typewritten copies.
29. “The
First Oklahoma Reptiles.” Two typewritten copies, one containing corrections.
30. “A
Prehistoric Workshop.” Four typewritten copies, one containing corrections.
31. “The
Big Salt Plain.” Published in “Life in Oklahoma,” My Oklahoma I, No. 5
(August 1927), 25, 40.
32. “The
Arbuckle Mountain Laboratory.” Three typewritten copies.
33. “What
You Can Get.” Two typewritten copies, one containing corrections.
34. “Cat
Hunting.” Three typewritten copies.
35. “Geologists
Noon Lunch.” Six typewritten copies.
36. “Chasing
Meteorites.” Two typewritten copies, one draft containing handwritten
corrections.
37. “The
Poteau Gas Field.” Four typewritten copies with corrections.
38. “Heavily
Armed.” Three typewritten copies.
39. “Black
Mesa.” Typewritten copy with corrections
40. “A
Pioneer.” Two typewritten copies.
41. “Ask
the River.” Six typewritten copies.
42. “My
Friend Henquenet.” Published in Outdoor Oklahoma I, No. 6 (June 1926),
17. Typewritten copy.
43. “Marsh
Gas.” Two typewritten copies.
44. “A
Certain Wise Man.” Published in My Oklahoma I, No. 7 (October 1927), 24.
Two typewritten copies, one with corrections.
45. “Why
Has Oklahoma No Irrigation.” Three typewritten copies.
46. “The
First Arbuckle Trip.” Two typewritten copies.
47. “Summer
in Glacier Park.” Typewritten copy.
48. “Charging
Batteries.” Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 1 (July 1926), 17. Typewritten
copies.
49. “Berries.”
Typewritten copies.
50. “Amarillo
Oil Field.” Published in Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 10 (1929), 21, 38.
Typewritten copy.
51. “The
Coyote’s Pup.” Typewritten copy.
52. “An
Oklahoma Meteorite.” Typewritten copy.
53. “Bell
Ranch Camp.” Typewritten copy.
54. “The
Triumvirate.” Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 10 (October 1926), 21.
Typewritten copy.
55. “Pisanos
and Cactus.” Typewritten copy.
56. “Johnnie
Walkingstick.” Three typewritten copies, one draft contains pencil corrections.
57. “Good
Bad Man.” Four Typewritten copies.
58. “Chuck.”
Published in Outdoor Oklahoma II, No. 1 (July 1976), 17. Six typewritten
copies.
59. Index
to geologettes, prepared by Charles N. Gould. Also lists of geologettes
published in My Oklahoma.
60. “Report
No. 176, Third Geological Report on White Sands National Monument,” from an
inspection made on April 25, 1938.
61. “Report
No. 184, Fourth Ecological Report on White Sands National Monument,” Report No.
57, from an inspection made June 25-26, 1938.
62. “Report
of Regional Geologist on Canyon De Chelly National Monument,” Report No. 57,
from an inspection made July 12, 1936. (Incomplete).
63. “Fourth
Geological Report on Hot Springs National Park,” Report No. 168, from an
inspection made April 12-13, 1938. (Incomplete).
64. “Geological
Report on Flagstaff Municipal Park,” Report No. 127, from an inspection made
May 11, 1939.
65. Incomplete
report, no date or report number.
Boxes 25-26 contain lecture and addresses written,
indexed and categorized by Charles N. Gould. As his organizational form has
been retained, repetitions within categories occur. Several lectures can also be
found in previous boxes as published manuscripts of article length and
“Geologettes.”
Box 25: Manuscripts -
Lectures and Addresses
Popular lectures A1-A17
Folder
1. A-1.
“The Billion Dollar Baby,” a paper presented at Southwestern State Teachers
College, Weatherford, OK., October 26, 1932 and at Oklahoma A & M College,
December 18, 1929. Three typewritten copies of lecture and one typewritten
outline. This lecture was published in Public Service Magazine XXXI, No.
6 (December 1926), 171-172.
2. A-2. “Science
in Oil Finding,’ a paper presented at the Oklahoma College for Women, April 25,
1929 and at Lion’s Club of Stillwater, Ok., December 17, 1929. The paper was
presented at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Science, February 18, 1929.
Five typewritten outlines.
3. A-3.
“Oklahoma’s Opportunity,” an address delivered before the Oklahoma City Jobbers
and Manufacturers Association, December 11, 1928. Six typewritten copies and
one typewritten outline, and two copies printed by B. H. Hunter Co., Oklahoma
City.
4. A-4.
“Oklahoma Place Names,” a paper presented to the Folklore Society, Oklahoma
Education Society, February 8, 1934. Four typewritten outlines. Two variations
are also included in folder 4. One variation is “Romance of Oklahoma Names,” an
address presented during Oklahoma Author’s Week, March 14, 1934 at Tulsa, OK.
Typewritten outline and printed program of “Oklahoma Author’s Week.” Another
variation is “Origin of Place Names in Oklahoma,” a lecture presented at
Oklahoma A&M College, December 17, 1929. One typewritten outline.
5. A-5.
“Public Land Survey,” a lecture presented to a journalism class, September 29,
1930; a class in special reporting, October 11, 1932; Oklahoma A&M College -
Engineering students, December 17, 1929; Southwestern State Teachers’ College,
November 12, 1929. Numerous typewritten outlines and one typewritten
manuscript.
6. A-6.
“The Story of Oklahoma’s Rocks.” Title page only, lecture missing.
7. A-7.
“Young Oklahomans,” a commencement address delivered at Ringwood, Oklahoma, May
16, 1929. Typewritten outline.
8. A-8.
“Oklahoma, the Wonder State,” a lecture presented at the Paul’s Valley Kiwanis
Club, March 17, 1926; and to a St. John’s Episcopal Church group, Oklahoma
City, April 12, 1926. Typewritten outlines.
9. A-9.
“Geology and Oil,” a lecture delivered before the North Texas Geological
Society, Wichita Falls, Texas, April 28, 1928. Five typewritten copies.
10. A-10.
“Oklahoma’s Mineral Wealth,” a lecture delivered before the students of
economic geology at Oklahoma A&M College. Three typewritten outlines.
11. A-11.
“Your State and My State,” a high school address. Title page only, lecture is
missing.
12. A-12.
“Thirty Years After.” Typewritten outline.
13. A-13
“Oklahoma’s Oldest Inhabitants,” an address presented before the General
Assembly, Oklahoma A&M College, December 18, 1929. Three typewritten
outlines, handwritten notes, and two large charts, one of geological time and
one of life forms.
14. A-14.
“Science in the Development of Oklahoma’s Natural Resources,” a lecture
presented to the Oklahoma Education Association, Oklahoma City, February 6,
1930. Typewritten copy.
15. A-15.
“Oklahoma’s Hidden Treasure,” a convocation lecture presented before Oklahoma
A&M College, March 14, 1931. Three typewritten drafts and five typewritten
outlines.
16. A-16.
“The Wealth Beneath Our Feet.” Two typewritten outlines, one is incomplete.
17. A-17.
“The Future Workshop of the Nation,” a lecture presented to the School of
Commerce, Oklahoma A&M College, March 14, 1931. Five typewritten outlines.
18. A-15-16-17.
“Oklahoma’s Hidden Treasure,” a ;lecture presented before the O.A.C.A.S.,
McAlester, Oklahoma, June 9, 1930. This lecture is a combination of “Oklahoma’s
Hidden Treasure,” “The Wealth Beneath Our Feet,” and “The Future Workshop of
the Nation.” Three typewritten outlines.
General Topics B-1 - B-13
Folder
19. B-1.
“Geology of Oklahoma,” an address presented at O.C.W., Chickasha, Oklahoma, on
March 27, 1929. Three typewritten outlines.
20. B-2.
“Sources of Power,” an address delivered at Southwestern State Teachers
College, November 11, 1929 and before the League of Women Voters, November 16,
1927. Three typewritten outlines.
21. B-3.
“Oklahoma Soils and Soils Conservation,” a lecture delivered before the class
in agriculture at Oklahoma College for
Women, Chickasha, March 27, 1929. Four typewritten copies.
22. B-4.
“Construction Material in Oklahoma,” A lecture delivered before the engineers
and architects of Oklahoma A&M College, December 10, 1925, and again before
the engineers at Oklahoma A&M College, January 17, 1929. Three typewritten
copies.
23. B-5.
“Water Resources of Oklahoma,” address delivered at the Fifth Oklahoma Water
Works Short Course, Oklahoma A&M College, May 8, 1929; before students in
engineering, May 1, 1929 and before the Engineering Society, December 10, 1925,
all at Oklahoma A&M College. Numerous typewritten outlines and notes.
24. B-6.
“The Profession of Geology,” an address presented before the Rotary Club of
Bartlesville, Oklahoma, May 9, 1927; a geology class at Southwestern College at
Winfield, Kansas, May 21, 1929; the Pick and Hammer Club, University of
Oklahoma, October 23, 1930; and the Rotary Club of Duncan, Oklahoma, February
10, 1932. Ten complete typewritten outlines and miscellaneous notes.
25. B-7.
“Unsolved Problems in Oklahoma Geography,” an address presented before a class
in geography and geology at Southwestern State Teachers College, October 26,
1932. Three differing typed outlines.
26. B-8.
“Oklahoma’s Three Most Important Problems,” an address presented before the
Tulsa Chamber of Commerce, October 30, 1925. Typewritten manuscript.
27. B-9.
“Conservation in Oklahoma.” Typewritten manuscript.
28. B-10.
“Geology and Oil Fields of the Mid-Continent Area,” a lecture presented before
the Engineering Society, Muskogee, February 14, no year given. Three
typewritten manuscripts.
29. B-11.
“Stratigraphy in Oklahoma,” a lecture delivered at Oklahoma A&M College, December
11, 1925 and January 17, 1929. Four typewritten outlines.
30. B-12.
“Why Is A Geologist?” A lecture delivered before the Ardmore Geological Society
at Ardmore, Oklahoma, June 9, 1928. Three typewritten outlines.
31. B-13. “History
of Oil and Gas Development in Oklahoma,” a lecture presented to a Special
Reporting Journalism Class, September 24, 1930. Fourteen typewritten outlines.
Box 26 Manuscripts -
Lectures and Addresses
Special topics C-1 - C-17
Folder
1. C-1.
“What Is It All About?” A lecture given at Oklahoma A&M College, January
17, 1929, and at Sigma Gamma Epsilon, University of Oklahoma, November 16,
1927. Nine typewritten outlines.
2. C-2.
“How to Prepare A Scientific Paper,” a lecture presented before Sigma Gamma
Epsilon, December 19, 1928. Two typewritten outlines.
3. C-3.
“The Pennsylvanian - Permian Problem in Texas and Oklahoma,” a lecture
presented in Fort Worth, Texas, November 17, 1928. Two typewritten copies.
4. C-4.
“The Permian Problem in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas,” a lecture presented
before the Shawnee Geological Society, January 27, 1930; the University of
Iowa, February 4, 1930, the Tulsa Geological Society, January 21, 1928; and the
Kansas Geological Society, December 3, 1927. Eight typewritten outlines.
5. “The
Permian Problem in Oklahoma and North Texas,” a lecture presented before the
North Texas Geological Society at Wichita Falls, Texas, March 7, 1925. Two
typewritten outlines.
6. C-6.
“Unsolved Geological Problems in Oklahoma in 1925.” Two typewritten outlines.
7. C-7.
“The Beginning of Things Geological in Oklahoma,” an address presented before
the Pick and Hammer Club, October 23, 1924. Handwritten notes.
8. C-8.
“The Importance of Chemistry in the Development of Oklahoma’s Dormant Wealth,”
a lecture delivered before the Chemical Society of Oklahoma A&M College,
December 10, 1925 and March 14, 1931. Three typewritten outlines.
9. C-9.
“Research,” a talk before the Graduate Club at Oklahoma A&M College,
December 10, 1925. Three typewritten outlines.
10. C-10.
“Ethics of a Geologist,” a lecture given before a geology class, University of
Oklahoma, November 14, 1928. Two typewritten outlines along with copies of
correspondence between Dr. Gould and a prospective geology student; also included
are copies of The American Association of Petroleum Geologists’ Code of Ethics.
11. C-11.
“Oil at Amarillo,” a lecture delivered before Geology 107, Petroleum Geology,
January 12, 1926. Two typewritten outlines and one typewritten manuscript on the
Amarillo region.
12. C-12.
“Cartography of Oklahoma,” presented before the Pick and Hammer Club, January
13, 1927. Typewritten outline.
13. C-13.
“Transportation and Marketing of Petroleum,” presented before a class in
economics, April 15, 1931. Three typewritten outlines; and “Marketing
Petroleum,” delivered before a class in Marketing School of Business, April 10,
1928. Typewritten manuscript.
14. C-14.
“State Parks in Oklahoma,” an address given before the District Federation of
Women’s Clubs, Sulphur, Oklahoma, October 31, 1930. Typewritten outline.
15. C-15.
“How Can the Geologist Help the Oil Man?” Two typewritten outlines.
16. C-16.
“Training and Work of a Geologist.” Typewritten outline.
17. C-17.
“Pioneer Geology in Oklahoma,” the Retiring President’s Address, Society of the
Sigma Xi, Norman, Oklahoma, October 30, 1930. Typewritten and handwritten
outline, Also a typewritten outline, “Four Pioneers in Oklahoma Geology.”
Church Addresses D-1 - D-2
Folder
18. D-1.
“Geology and the Bible.” Four typewritten outlines.
19. D-2.
“Moses - The Man of God.” Lecture is missing.
Indexes
Folder
20. Indexes
to lecture, compiled by Charles N. Gould.
“Geologettes” used in
reminiscence
21. “A
Certain Wise Man.” Two typewritten copies.
22. “A Pioneer.”
Typewritten copy.
23. “A
Prehistoric Workshop.” Typewritten copy.
24. “A
Treacherous River.” Typewritten copy.
25. “Bar
J’s or Limestone.” typewritten copy.
26. “The
Bat Cave.” Typewritten copy.
27. “Black
Mesa.” Typewritten copy.
28. “Carlos,
My Mozo.” Three typewritten copies.
29. “Chasing
Meteorites.” typewritten copy.
30. “Chuck.”
Typewritten copy.
31. “The
First Oklahoma Reptiles.” Two typewritten copies.
32. “Jonnie Walkingstick.” Typewritten copy.
33. “Leche Frio.”
Three Typewritten copies.
34. “Marsh
Gas.” Typewritten copy.
35. “No
Place to Sleep.” Three typewritten copies.
36. “The
Oklahoma That Oklahomans Do Not Know.” Typewritten copy with corrections.
37. “Ouachita,
Washita, Wichita.” Typewritten copy.
38. “Platte
National park.” Typewritten copy.
39. “Rejects.”
Typewritten copy.
40. “Too
Much Mineral.” Typewritten copy.
41. “Wagon
Irons on the Prairie.” Two typewritten copies.
42. “When
Jinnie Dumped Me.” Typewritten copy.
43. “Why
the Boll Weevil?” Three typewritten copies.
Miscellaneous Talks,
Lectures and Addresses
44. “Biology
in Oklahoma Place Names.” One typewritten copy.
45. “Coal,”
an address prepared about 1906. One typewritten copy.
46. “Comparison
of Permian of Western Oklahoma and Panhandle of Texas,” a lecture presented
before Pick and Hammer Club of Norman, November 6, 1919. One typewritten copy.
47. “Conservation
of Natural Gas in the Mid-Continent Field.” One typewritten lecture.
48. “Days
of 1899 at Southwestern,” after dinner talk at the Alumni banquet, Southwestern
College, Winfield, Kansas, June 4, 1929. One typewritten copy.
49. “Dedication
of the Geology Building,” a speech written in 1920. One typewritten copy.
50. “The
Discovery of the Panhandle Oil and Gas Filed,” a lecture presented before the
A.P.I., April 10, 1939. One typewritten copy of the lecture.
51. “The
Future of the Oil Industry in Oklahoma.” Two typewritten lectures differing
somewhat in content.
52. “Geological
Formations Suitable for Well Supplies,” a talk prepared for the Water and
Sewerage Conference at Fayetteville, Arkansas, April 17, 1935. Two typewritten
outlines and one typewritten draft of the talk. Also included are typewritten
drafts of talks given by others at the conference.
53. “Geology
in Oil Finding.” One typewritten outline.
54. “Geology
in Oklahoma Place Names.” One typewritten copy.
55. “Geology
of the Black Mesa Region,” an address given at the Dedication of the Monument
at the High Point of Oklahoma on Black Mesa, Cimarron County, on July 4, 1928.
Typewritten copy.
56. “The
Lawton Historical Society,” a talk presented before the Lawton Historical
Society, Lawton, Oklahoma, April 24, 1930. Three typewritten copies of
lectures.
57. “The
Mineral Resources of Southwestern Oklahoma,” a lecture written around 1906, One
typewritten copy.
58. “Oklahoma
Among the Southern States,” an address written about 1910. One typewritten
copy.
59. “Oklahoma,
The Geologists Laboratory,” the address of the retiring President, Oklahoma
Academy of Science, Norman, Oklahoma on November 25, 1927. Two typewritten
drafts.
60. “Oklahoma’s
Mineral Resources,” an address presented before the American Association of
Engineers in Tulsa, Oklahoma, June 6, 1927. Four typewritten copies.
61. “Oklahoma
Names,” an address presented to the Oklahoma City Kiwanis Club, May 18, 1933.
Two carbon copies of outlines.
62. “Oklahoma’s
Opportunity,” an address delivered before the Jobbers and Manufacturers
Association of Oklahoma City, December 11, 1928. One typewritten copy.
63. “Oklahoma’s
Three Major Problems,” an address presented before the Oklahoma Soil
Conservation Congress at the State Capital, November 1, 1929. Two carbon copies
of address.
Box 27: Manuscripts -
Lectures, Addresses, and Radio Talks
Folder
1. “Oklahoma’s
Vital Problems,” an address presented in Tulsa, Oklahoma, March 8, 1928. Two
typewritten copies.
2. “Oklahoma’s
Wealth,” an address presented October 25, 1925. Two typewritten copies.
3. “Origin
of Oklahoma Type Locality Names,” a lecture presented November 24, 1934. Two
typewrite copies of lecture.
4. “Origin
of Place Names in Oklahoma,” an address presented before Oklahoma Teachers,
Ada, Oklahoma, on October 24, 1930. Numerous typewritten outlines.
5. “Pioneer
Geology in Oklahoma,” the retiring president’s address, Society of the Sigma
Xi, Norman, Oklahoma, October 30, 1930. One typewritten outline prepared to
accompany slides.
6. “Public
Lands Surveys” or “Surveying as a Basis of land Titles.” One typewritten copy.
7. “The
Relation of Oil and Gas to modern Civilization.” an address presented to
librarians of the Southwest in Tulsa, Oklahoma, no date. Two typewritten copies
of address.
8. “Science
in Oil Finding,” a lecture presented before the Mid-Continent section of
A.I.M.E., Tulsa, Oklahoma, on April 8, 1929. Three copies of a typewritten
outline prepared to accompany slides, and one typewritten draft.
9. “Sedimentation
Cycles in the Pennsylvanian,” remarks made by Charles N. Gould at the
Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Illinois Geological Survey, May 1, 1930. Two
typewritten copies of remarks.
10. “Trends
in the Oil Industry,” an address presented before the Oklahoma Association of
Commercial Organization Secretaries, Norman, Oklahoma, June 15, 1931. Six
typewritten outlines and drafts if the address.”
11. “Unsolved
Problems in Oklahoma Geography,” a lecture presented before a class in
geography and geology at Southwestern State Teachers College, Weatherford,
Oklahoma, on October 26, 1932. Typewritten outline of lecture.
12. Lists
of available lectures by Charles N. Gould. Numerous typewritten schedules.
13. Schedules
of addresses given by Charles N. Gould. Numerous typewritten schedules.
Folders 14 through 29 contain radio talks prepared by
Charles N. Gould and presented on radio station W.N.A.D. The manuscripts are
arranged in chronological order according to date of presentation.
14. Two
differing schedules of radio talks, 1931.
15. “Oklahoma’s
Rank in New Wealth,” presented October 8, 1928. Two typewritten and two carbon
copies of talk.
16. “Geology
and Oil Finding,” presented October 22, 1928. One typescript and two carbon
copies of talk.
17. “Sources
of Power,” presented March 17, 1931. Three typewritten copies of talk.
18. “Coal”
or “Oklahoma Coal.” Two typewritten copies of talk.
19. “Petroleum,”
presented December 8, 1927 and march 31, 1931. Five typewritten copies of talk,
differing somewhat in content and organization.
20. “Need
of Development of Oklahoma’s Mineral Resources,” presented November 26, 1928
and April 28, 1931. Four typewritten copies of talk.
21. “Asphalt,”
presented April 8, 1931. Two typewritten and one carbon copy of talk.
22. “Oklahoma
Structural Materials” or “Structural Materials in Oklahoma,” presented April
13, 1931. Three typewritten and one
carbon copy of talk.
23. Gypsum
and Salt in Oklahoma,” presented April 21, 1931. Typewritten copy of talk.
24. Typewritten
outline of talk on Oklahoma drainage, presented October 17, 1933. (Untitled).
25. “Origin
of Names of Oklahoma Post Offices and Towns,” presented November 7, 1933. One
typewritten copy of talk.
26. Names
of Oklahoma Counties and Count Seats,” presented November 20, 1933. One
typewritten copy of talk.
27. “Names
of Oklahoma Counties and County Seats,” presented November 20, 1933. One
typewritten copy of talk.
28. Discussion
of gypsum and the gypsum industry in Oklahoma by Dr. Charles N. Gould and Mr.
J. O. Beach, November 6, 1944. One typewritten copy of discussion.
29. “The
Metals.” Two typewritten copies of talk.
Box 28: Manuscripts - Book
Reviews, Poetry, Miscellaneous Notes
Folders 1 through 7
contain reviews written by Charles N. Gould on the work of others.
Folder
1. Review
of Introduction to A Survey of Missouri Place Names, by Robert L.
Ramsay, Allen Walker Read, and Esther Gladys Leech, issued January 1, 1934 as
Volume IX, No. 1 of The University of Missouri Studies, 124 pp. Three typewritten
copies of the review and four pieces of related correspondence.
2. Review
of reprint, Preliminary Report of the Geology of the Arbuckle and Wichita
Mountains of Indian Territory and Oklahoma by Joseph A. Taff, first
published in 1904 as Professional Paper No. 31, by the United States
Geological Survey.
3. Review
of This Puzzling Planet by Edwin Tenney Brewster published by Bobbs
Merrill and Co., no date given. Typewritten copy of review.
4. Review
of Our Prehistoric Ancestors by Herdman Fitzgerald Cleland, published by
Coward - McCann, Inc., New York, no date given. Typewritten copy of review.
5. Review
of Forest Trees of Oklahoma, How to Know Them, by Wilbur R. Mattoon and
George R. Phillips, prints by the Agricultural and Mechanical College at
Stillwater, no date given. Typewritten copy of review.
6. Review
of The Story of Geology, by Allan L. Benson, published by Cosmopolitan
Book Corporation, New York, no date given. Two typewritten drafts of review.
7. Review
of Petroleum and Coal - The Keys to the Future, by W. T. Thom, Jr. The
review was presented before the Faculty Forum, University of Oklahoma, Norman,
April 3, 1929. Two typewritten copies of review.
Poetry by Charles N.
Gould.
8. “Black
Mesa.”
“Oklahoma
Coal.”
“Old
Tails.”
“Oklahoma
Oil.”
“Springtime
in the Kiamichis.”
“The
Arbuckle Mountains.”
“The
Red Beds.”
“The
South Canadian.”
“The
University Campus.”
“The
Wichita Mountains.”
The
poems by Charles N. Gould in folder 8 are most likely unpublished. There is one
typewritten copy of each poem, dates of composition were not given.
9. Notes
handwritten by Gould on “Oklahomans I Have Known.”
10. Notes
handwritten by Gould on David Ross Boyd.
Wallet
Folder: Wallet Folder contains cards and scraps of paper with typewritten and
handwritten lecture notes and outlines.
Reviews of Charles N.
Gould’s publications
11. Review
by S. R. Hadsell of Travels Through Oklahoma, printed on the literary
page of the Daily Oklahoman, Sunday, December 9, 1928. One typewritten draft of
review.
12. Review
(author and date unknown) of “Oklahoma, the Geologists’ Laboratory,” published
by the Oklahoma Geological Survey. One typewritten copy of review.
Box 28 also contains three rolls of microfilm with
articles by Dr. Gould which were obtained through interlibrary loan in 1959,
These articles have also been listed with “Published Material by Gould” in
boxes 9 and 10.
Microfilm Roll
1. Transactions,
Oklahoma Society of Engineers vols. I-VI (1914-1920). 186 frames. “Oklahoma
Metalliferous Minerals,” Mining & Scientific Press CIII (July -
December, 1911). 4 frames. “Oklahoma Building Stone,” in Stone XXI
(1900), 3 frames.
2. “Ancient
Quarries In Kansas,” in Popular Science News, XXXIV (1900), 194-195. 1
frame. “Asphalt in Oklahoma,” in Mining Science, LVIII (1908), 427. 2
frames. “Extent and Importance of Oklahoma Oil Fields,” in Mining Science,
LVII, No. 3 (1908), 73-74. 3 frames. “Oklahoma Bat Caves,” in Popular
Science News XXXV (1901), 76-77. 1 frame. (With C. A. Fisher) “The Dakota
and Carboniferous Clays of Nebraska,” in Nebraska State Board of
Agriculture, Annual Report of the year 1900, p. 185-194.5 figures, 6
frames.
3. “Kansas
City Oil Possibilities,” in oil and Gas News II, No. 7 (October 4,
1917), 42. “Oklahoma Has big Oil Future,” in oil and Gas News II, No. 7
(October 4, 1917), 116, 118, 120, 124, 2 maps. “The Geology of Oil,” in Oil
and Gas News II, No. 21 (January 10, 1918), 34, 36. “What Geology Meant to
the War,” in oil and Gas News II, No. 25 (February 7, 1918), 36-38. The
above four articles total 13 frames.
Folder
13. Correspondence
and interlibrary loan request slips for articles (microfilm copies) by Dr.
Gould ordered by Dr. C. C. Branson in 1959 (carbon copies).
Box 29: Bibliographies,
Research, and Teaching Materials.
Bibliographies of Charles
N. Gould
Folder
1. Typewritten
bibliography, 1896-1900.
Typewritten
bibliography, 1896-1925.
Typewritten
bibliography of important geological publications 1903-1932 (carbon copy).
Typewritten
list of publications, 1929-1930 (carbon copy).
List
of publications and papers read at professional meetings, 1928-1929, one
typewritten and several carbon copies.
Typewritten
list of articles published in My Oklahoma, 1927.
Typewritten
list of papers read by Dr. Gould before the Oklahoma Academy of Science, no
date.
Two
differing typewritten lists of articles and addresses by Dr. Gould, 1927-1929.
List
of miscellaneous publications, 1908-1930, one typewritten copy, one carbon
copy.
2. Galley
proofs of “Published Work of Charles N. Gould,” a comprehensive bibliography
compiled by Carl C. Branson, 1896-1959.
Wallet Folder:
Bibliography prepared by Dr. Gould on note cards, 1896-1944.
Miscellaneous
bibliographies, research and teaching materials.
Folder
3. “Summary
of Publications of the Oklahoma Survey, Norman, Oklahoma,” including dates,
titles, number of pages, number of copies printed, and number of printed pages
of all publications from January 1 1925 to May 1 1930. Two typewritten copies.
4. “List
of Publications of Faculty Members at the University of Oklahoma from May 1927
to May 1929, compiled under the Auspices of the Oklahoma Chapter of the
American Association of University Professors.” University of Oklahoma Bulletin, New Series 432 (March 2,
1929), 16 pp.
5. “Catalogue
of Books and Periodicals on Geology and Paleontology,” by Henry George Fiedler,
1942, 66 pp.
6. “The
Texas Folk-Lore Society Catalogue of Publications, History and Aims of the
Society.” University of Texas, Austin, Texas, no date, 6pp.
7. “Books
About Oklahoma and Frontier Life,” compiled by Dee Paradis Jackson, Oklahoma
Library Commission, March 1944, 11 pp.
8 “Books
By Oklahomans and About Oklahomans in the Oklahoma Library Commission, July 1,
1931,” compiled by Elaine Boyland, 9 pp.
9. “Bibliography
for Northwestern Oklahoma,” by H. F. Schweer, (geological), no date. 3 copies.
10. “Research
Materials Available in the Geological Library,” A. G. Skelton, Librarian,
Geological Library, University of Oklahoma, date unknown, 4 pp.
11. Notes
on bibliographies of Oklahoma Geology. No date, 1 p.
12. “Geological
Notes on My Oklahoma,” syllabus for Geology 114 and 214. Copyright by Ray L.
Six, 1940, 10 pp.
Catalogues and Directories
13. Colorado
College Summer School Catalogue, June 20 to July 29, 1938. Colorado
Springs, Colorado. 17 pages.
Colorado
College Publication, Catalogue
Number, Colorado Springs, Colorado, January, 1942. 153 pages, map of campus.
14. Directory,
Oklahoma City Geological Society, November 1, 1946.
15. Directory
of Graduates, Southwestern College, Winfield, Kansas, April 1943, 143
pages.
Box 30: Geological
Materials, Miscellaneous Manuscript Material
Geological Materials
Tributes and Biographies of Geologists
Folder
1. Mr.
John Hays Hammond’s speech of acceptance of the tributes of his friends at the
birthday party dinner in his honor, at the Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, May
3, 1926. Brochure, 4 pp.
2. Brief
biography of William Peter Haseman, Author and date unknown, One typewritten
page.
3. Biographical
entry (designed for publication) of Joseph B. Umpleby, written by Umpleby, date
unknown. One typewritten paragraph.
History of Geology
4. An act
providing for a Territorial Geologist and to establish Department of Geology
and Natural History in the Territory of Oklahoma. Two carbon copies of Act,
March 13, 1899.
5. Four
pieces of correspondence regarding the history of the Geology Department,
University of Oklahoma, 1932. The correspondents are: Charles H. Taylor, J. B.
Umpleby, Irving Parrine, and Alex W. McCoy.
6. Notes
regarding the personnel of the Oklahoma Geological Survey, 1908-1931.
Handwritten. Notes regarding the personnel of the Department of Geology,
University of Oklahoma, 1900-1931, typewritten.
7. History
of the Department of Geology at the University of Tulsa, 1913-1941.
Typewritten, 2 pages. Also included is a cover letter from A. N. Murray, Head
of the Department of Geology at Tulsa, to Dr. Gould, February 1942.
Geological Societies
8. List
of societies and publications, geological and otherwise and their addresses.
One handwritten page. List of Oklahoma’s Pioneer Geologists, Oklahoma City
Geological Society, April 1, 1940. One handwritten and one carbon copy.
9. List
of geologists present at a meeting which led to the establishment of A. A. P.
G. (Association of American Petroleum Geologists). The meeting took place in
the Old Science Building on the University of Oklahoma campus, 1916. Two
typewritten and numerous carbon copies, one page each.
10. List of
participants at a meeting of geologists and petroleum engineers of Oklahoma at
Norman on November 9-10, 1928. One carbon copy, one page.
11. Hoper
published in the Office of the Oklahoma Geological Survey, Norman, Oklahoma,
December 19, 1941. Ten mimeographed pages.
12. The
Outcrop, published by Pledges of Sigma Gamma Epsilon , No. 1 (April 15,
1931). Two mimeographed pages.
Itineraries and Reports
13. Itinerary
of a filed trip taken by Dr. Gould and S. Roy Hadsell of the English
Department, during the week of May 21, 1928. The route is the same one
traversed by Dr. Gould and Hadsell in a covered wagon June 1900. One carbon
copy, one page.
14. Itinerary
for the Tenth Field Conference - Arbuckle Mountains and the Ardmore Basin,
March 28 and 29, 1927. Six brochures of six pages with maps.
15. Itinerary
for the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the West Texas Historical Scientific Society
and Regional Meeting of the Texas Academy of Science, Alpine, Texas, April
10-11, 1936. Two typewritten pages with miscellaneous handwritten notes.
16. Tentative
program for a meeting of field personnel. National Park Service, May 2-29, 1936
at the Hotel Baltimore, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. One typewritten copy, 8 pp.
17. Delayed
schedule of Charles N. Gould, Regional Geologist, October 7, 1939. Two carbon
copies of the one page schedule.
18. Correspondence
regarding miscellaneous field conference dates and itineraries. Three
typewritten letters, October and November 1930.
19. Report
of the Twelfth Oklahoma Field Conference, February 18-23, 1928. Two typewritten
copies of the one page report dated March 1, 1928, with handwritten notes on
the back of each page.
20. Two one
page reports of the State Conference, held at the University of Oklahoma as
published in the University Oklahoman, January 7, 1916 and January 8,
1916. Two carbon copies of each article.
21. “Geological
Questions.” Meeting of Oklahoma Geologists, November 10, 928. Three typewritten
copies with four pages of questions each.
22. Minutes
of meetings of Oklahoma Steering Committee on oil Field Names, Standing
Committee on Oil Field Nomenclature, Kansas-Oklahoma Division, Mid-Continent
Oil and Gas Association, Tulsa, Oklahoma. Folder contains minutes for the
following dates: March 14, 1940, April 17, 1940, June 18, 1940, December 17,
1940.
23. Classification
of Indian territory Coal Fields by H. M. Chance, no date. Hand lettered on
Cardboard.
24. Geological
Map of the Northern Part of the Indian Territory by N. F. Drake, 1896-1897.
Also, one typewritten paragraph, an excerpt from a letter by N. F. Drake.
25. Map of
area covered by Robert T. Hill, 1892 (map of Oklahoma) Bulletin,
Geological Society of America, 1894. Also included, Hill’s Formation Names in
Oklahoma. Hand lettered on cardboard.
26. Map of
work of J. A. Taff, 1895-1907 (map pf Oklahoma). Taff’s Formation names in
Oklahoma. Hand lettered on cardboard. Also included, a list of publication of J.
A. Taff resulting from the Taff surveys in Indian Territory.
27. Maps of
routes traversed by early day geologists: Route of Marcy Expedition through
Texas and Oklahoma, 1852. Route of Wheeler Expedition through Oklahoma, Jules
Marcon, Geologist, 1853. Area of Oklahoma traversed by F. W. Cragin, 1896. Trip
of Lester F. Ward through Oklahoma, 1895.
Miscellaneous Geological Materials
Folder
28. Boulder
Dam - Grand Canyon Materials:
Boulder
Dam Brochure published by Union Pacific, 16 pages with large foldout, colored,
physiographic map of the Boulder Dam and Grand Canyon Area.
Boulder
Dam Brochure published by the Department of the Interior,
Boulder
Dam Recreational Area Brochure published by the National Park Service,
September 1938, 5 pp.
“Two
Wonders of the World,” a page sized colored, physiographic map of the Grand
Canyon and Boulder Dam area published by Grand Canyon-Boulder Dam Tours, Inc.
Seven maps.
Chart
of Composite columnar Sections, Boulder Dam Recreational Area.
29. Brochure
of Big Bend National Park, published by the National Park Service, 8 pp. Two
brochures are printed in English and two are printed in Spanish.
30. White
Sands National Monument, Alamogordo New Mexico - handout. Two mimeographed
pages of information designed to dispense to visitors.
31. List of
Oil Pools in Oklahoma as of July 1, 1938. Typewritten list is alphabetical by
oil pool name, 7 pages.
32. List of
Oil Pools in Oklahoma by township-range system, as of July 1, 1938. Typewritten
list, 19 p ages.
33. “New
Oklahoma Oil Pools Names.” Mid-Continent Bulletin (January 1940), 3.
“Names Selected for New Kansas Oil Pools.” Mid-Continent Bulletin
(January 1940), 4.
34. Progress
Correlation Chart of the Permian of Oklahoma and Kansas, 1896-1927. Eleven
typewritten copies of one page each.
35. Notes
on oil production and the petroleum industry taken by H. C. C. George for Dr.
Gould. Three typewritten pages.
36. Log of
the following wells: Skully #1, Skaare Wells, Penly #1 and Loomis #1. One typewritten
page, no locations or dates.
Miscellaneous Manuscript
Material
Wallet Folder “Extent
of Arid Regions in the United States.” This is a partially handwritten rough
draft of a book-length manuscript, author and date unknown. The manuscript
contains several pieces of correspondence and printed legal citations regarding
water and property rights. Manuscript is hardbound. Also bound in the
manuscript is a large linen-backed map entitled “Geographic and Climatic Map of
the State of California,” compiled from actual surveys and published by the
California State Board of Trade, 1888. Completed and projected routes of five
railroad lines are designated.
Box 31: Manuscript
Material, Memos and Reports and Miscellaneous
Folder
1. “History
and Discovery of Oil and Gas West of the Mississippi River by Edward Byrd of
Chelsea, Oklahoma.” An Autobiographical account with excerpts from Oklahoma
Geological Survey Bulletin #2 By L. L. Hutchison. One typewritten and four
carbon copies. The carbon copies do not contain the Oklahoma Geological Survey
Bulletin excerpts.
2. Folder
2 contains eight student themes on Oklahoma Folklore sent to Dr. Gould by J.
Frank Dobie, with cover letter dated March 30, 1934. Theme titles are:
“Sucker
Flats.” Handwritten.
“The
Legend of the Rock Tables.” Handwritten.
“The
Cut-Throat Gap.” Handwritten.
“Legend
of Horse Thief Canyon.” Handwritten.
“Dead
Man’s Valley.” Handwritten.
“The
Changing of the Elk River’s name.” Handwritten.
“How
Coweta Got Its Name,” “How Broken Arrow Got Its Name,” “How the Cimarron River
Got Its Name.” Typewritten.
“The
Dalton Boy’s Cave.” Handwritten.
3. “Mr.
John H. Seger, in Making Oklahoma History,” by his daughter, Miss Bessie Louise
Seger. Three page typewritten manuscript, date unknown. Also included in this
folder are three copies of a short paragraph by Miss Bessie Seger regarding the
material used to build Seger Indian School near Colony, Oklahoma (excerpts from
“Mr. John H. Seger, in making Oklahoma History”). One copy is handwritten by
Miss Seger, 1891, one copy is typewritten, and one is a carbon copy.
4. Book
Review of Unspent Treasures: A Study of Conservation in Oklahoma. Te author
and publication information are unknown. One typewritten copy.
5. Folder
5 contains an untitled, incomplete manuscript, author unknown. The Manuscript,
written in a humorous vein, relates events of a camping or field trip. The four
characters involved are nicknamed, but probably represent Dr. Gould and his
colleagues. One typewritten manuscript, 14 pages.
Miscellaneous Memos and
Reports
6. United
States Department of the Interior Memorandums for the Press: “Arnold Guyot,
First to Measure the Peaks of the Appalachians.” Release date December 21,
1938. One copy, 13 pp.
“Thomas
Nuttal, The Father of Western American Botany.” Release date October 21, 1938.
One copy, 13 pp.
“Ground-Water
Resources in the Houston District, Texas,” by W. N. White and Penn P.
Livingston. Release date December 29, 1933. One copy, 6 pp.
“Ground-Water
Resources of the Houston-Galveston Area, Texas,” by W. N. White, Penn
Livingston, and S. F. Turner. Release date October 17, 1932. One copy, 16 pp.
7. Extract
from Report of Hydraulic Engineers-Phillips, Alvord and Billingsley. Project
Number 7, 3 pp. No date.
8. Memorandum
for Mr. Clark J. Wells, Hot Springs National Park from John R. White, Acting
Chief of operations, National Park Service, April 13, 1939. One page carbon
copy.
9. “Report
on a Trade Survey” conducted during the month of June 1932. The survey was
sponsored by the Business and Professional Women’s Club with the cooperation of
the Chamber of Commerce. The object of the survey was to find out how many
Norman people were trading in Oklahoma City, and why they did not trade in
Norman. One carbon copy of survey, 33 pages, with accompanying cover letter and
example of “Norman Trade Survey” Questionnaire.
Miscellaneous
10. Proclamation
establishing Oklahoma as a state, November 16, 1907. One typewritten and two
carbon copies.
11. “Wagon
Yard” song, newspaper clipping, and words to other songs, handwritten.
12. “Des
Moines Ideas.” Three pages of typewritten quotes.
13. “Criticism.”
One page and two quotes on criticism, typewritten.
14. Leaflet
advertising Professional Writing by Walter S. Campbell.
15. List of
stamped paper on sale for face value, at the Philatelic Agency, Post Office
Department, Washington D. C. Typewritten list, 2 pages, January 14, 1943.
16. Miscellaneous.
17. Envelopes,
letters from Argentinean Minister of Agriculture, 1939. Data form.
Box 32: Newspaper
Clippings
Ledger Book Ledger book of newspaper clippings. Subjects
include:
Charles
N. Gould
Quotes
by Dr. Gould
Agriculture
History
Legislature
Minerals
Folder
1. Newspaper
clippings regarding Oklahoma and Texas place names.
2. Newspaper
clippings of lectures to be given by Dr. Gould.
3. Miscellaneous
newspaper clippings.
Box 33: Newspaper
Clippings
Notebook
1. Notebook
of newspaper clippings, 1926-1927. Subjects include:
Oklahoma
Geological Survey Publicity
Field
Conferences
Resources
Oil
A.
A. P. G.
2. Notebook
of newspaper clippings, 1926-27. Subjects include:
Flood
Control
Academy
of Science
Questions
and Answers
Campus
- History, Dr. Bizzell’s Inauguration
University
News Bulletins
Maps
Miscellaneous
1927
legislature
Box 34: Writing by Gould’s
Colleagues
Folder
1. “Only
a Matter of Time” by George H. Ashley. One complete typewritten manuscript, 4
pages, date unknown.
2. “Hawks
and Owls, the Farmer’s Friends” by R. D. Bird. One complete carbon manuscript,
1 page, date unknown.
3. Holding
Down a Claim” by Charles H. Bishop, with cover letter, October 12, 1928. One
complete carbon manuscript, 9 pages.
4. “Why the
University of Oklahoma is Located Where It Is” by J. J. Burke. One complete
typewritten manuscript, one complete carbon manuscript 10 pages, March 27,
1929.
5. “Early
Dawn of Creation,” as given to John H. Camp by Chief Tahlingwaler of the
Sankers Tribes in the South Congo of Central Africa in 1892, with cover letter,
November 17, 1927. One complete carbon manuscript, 16 pages.
6. “Rural
Religion in Cleveland County Oklahoma” by E. N. Comfort. One carbon copy, 4
pages, date unknown.
7. “A
Preliminary Paper on the Simpson Group of the Arbuckle and Wichita Mountains,
Oklahoma” by C. E. Decker, printed by permission of the Director of the
Oklahoma Geological Survey. One complete carbon manuscript, 14 pages, date
unknown.
8. “Mesquite”
by J. Frank Dobie, Published in the Southwestern Sheep and Goat Raiser,
December 1, 1938. One complete carbon manuscript, 17 pages.
9. “Address
Given in Commemoration of the Life and Work of the Late Dr. Stuart Weller,”
organized by M. M. Leighton, at the fall meeting of the Association of American
State Geologists held in the offices of the Illinois State Geological Survey,
Urbana, October 20, 1927; Addresses presented by T. C. Chamberlin, U. S.
Geological Survey (T. W. Stanton), Dr. H. B. Kummel, Dr. W. R. Jillson, Dr. E.
S. Bastin, with cover letter. One complete carbon manuscript, 16 pages.
10. “Presidential
Address,” by M. M. Leighton, with cover letter, May 9, 1930. One complete
carbon manuscript, 21 pages.
11. “Stabilization
of the Petroleum Industry,” by Leonard Logan, presented before the Petroleum
Division, American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, New York,
February 19, 1931, which is also the date for release of publication.
12. “Observations
of the Geological Structure of the Valley of the Mississippi,” by Thomas
Nuttall, copies from the Journal of the Academy of Natural Science of
Philadelphia II, part I.
(1821-1822), read December 1920. Three copies complete manuscript, one
typewritten and two carbon copies, 34 pages.
13. “Drainage
that Pays,” by S. H. McCrory with cover letter, March 10, 1926. One carbon
manuscript, 6 pages.
14. “Knowledge
of Geologists,” by M. J. Munn, date unknown. One complete typewritten
manuscript, 2 pages.
15. “The
need of the Nation’s Engineers,” by Dr. Henry Mace Payne, addressed to the 25th
Anniversary of the Illinois State Geological Survey, date unknown. One complete
typewritten manuscript, 3 pages.
16. “Economics
of the Crude Oil Potential of the United States,” by Joseph E. Pogue, presented
before the Petroleum Division, American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical
Engineers, New York, February 19, 1931, which is also date of release for
publication. One complete typewritten manuscript, 9 pages.
17. “A
Search for Water on the High Plains,” by Chester A. Reeds, 1905. One complete
typewritten manuscript, 9 pictures, 11 pages.
18. “Pennsylvania
Cycles in West Virginia,” by David B. Reger, delivered at the quarter
Centennial Celebration of the founding of the Illinois State Geological Survey,
April 30 and May 1, 1930. Includes map and charts of the Pennsylvania System.
One complete carbon manuscript, 42 pages.
19. “Coal
and Petroleum,” by Henry D. Rogers, copied from Harpers Monthly XXVII,
No. 158 (July 1863), 259-264. Four complete manuscripts, one typewritten, three
carbon copies, 16 pages.
20. “A New
Process for Producing Vitrified Ceramic Products,” by Joseph B. Shaw and Myril
C. Shaw. Reprinted from Journal of the American Ceramic Society, March
1, 1930. One complete typewritten manuscript, 14 pages.
21. “The
Petroleum Industry,” by George Otis Smith. A Speech delivered by G. O. Smith,
Director of the Geological Survey, Department of the Interior, before
International Petroleum Congress held at Tulsa, Oklahoma, October 7, 1924. One
complete typewritten manuscript, 8 pages.
“America
in High,” by George O. Smith. A Commencement Address, Colby College,
Waterville, Maine, June 18, 1928. One complete typewritten manuscript, 14
pages.
“Our
Share in the Nation’s Business,” by Gorge O. Smith, presented at a joint
meeting of the Los Angeles Section, American Institute of Mining and
Metallurgical Engineers, and the American Mining Congress September 12, 1928.
One complete typewritten manuscript, 6 pages.
“Engineering
Standards for Society,” by George O. Smith, an address delivered at the Annual
Dinner, American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, February 20,
1929. Two complete typewritten manuscripts, 8 pages.
“Geological
Survey has Large Tasks Ahead,” by George O. Smith, Annual Report, released for
afternoon papers November 26, 1930. One complete typewritten manuscript, 3
pages.
“Neskalonska,”
by George O. Smith, date unknown. Two complete manuscripts, one typewritten,
one carbon, 4 pages.
22. “Notes
on Geology on Indian Territory,” by John R. Stevenson, published in
Transactions of the New York Academy of Science XV (1892-1896). Three
complete manuscripts, one typewritten, two carbon, 17 pages.
23. “Lyons
Co., Kansas, Archeology,” by J. B. Thoburn, September 8, 1927. Two complete
manuscript, one typewritten, one carbon, 17 pages.
24. “The
Paleozoic Section of the Arbuckle and Wichita Uplifts in Oklahoma,” 1927 with
extensive cover letter. Two copies carbon manuscripts, 39 pages.
“E.
O. Ulrich’s Arbuckle Mountain,” table, 2 copies.
“Simpson
Group,” table, 1 copy.
“Revised
Section of Lower Paleozoic Rocks of the Arbuckle Mountains,” by E. O. Ulrich
and C. E. Decker, with table. One typewritten copy, 2 pages, one carbon copy,
last page is missing.
25. “Clinical
Sedimentation of the Pennsylvania Period and its Significance,” by J. Marvin
Weller. Published with permission of the Chief, Illinois State Geological
Survey in The Journal of Geology XXXVIII, No. 2 (February-March 1930),
97-135. One set of galley proofs of article.
26. “Researches
in the Geology of Finding and Recovering Oil,” by David White, an address
presented before the International Petroleum Congress, October 7, 1924 and
release October 7, 1924. One complete typewritten manuscript, 12 pages.
27. “Geology
106 - Fossils in Stratigraphy” by Ray Wilson. One complete typewritten
manuscript, 23 pages.
28. “First
oil Well in Choctaw Nation,” by Muriel H. Wright, with cover letter,
handwritten, December 24, 1927. Two complete manuscript, one typewritten, one
carbon, 9 pages.
29. “The
Mineral Resources of Oklahoma as a State Asset,” by J. G. Puterbaugh, President
of the McAlester Fuel Company, McAlester, Oklahoma, an address delivered at the
Annual meeting of the Oklahoma Mineral Institute Conference, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, December 10, 1942. One complete typewritten manuscript, 13 pages.
30. “Mineral
Raw Materials of the Paint Industry,” by K. J. Keating, Factory Manager,
General Paint Co., Tulsa, OK. One complete typewritten manuscript, 6 pages.
“Plastics
Derived from Coal” - chart, 2 copies.
31. “Development
of Technical Education for the Petroleum Industry,” by H. C. George. Reprinted
from Mining and Metallurgy, June, 1934, 2 pages.
“The
Role of the Combustion Engineer in Refining,” by Joseph W. Hays, 3 pages
(1928).
Outsized Material
The following materials are
contained in one outsized box:
Map
of Oklahoma depicting of a field trip made by Charles N. Gould, June 15 to
August 17, 1900.
Advertisement
- Martha Jane Oil Company
The
Oklahoma Daily, March 9, 1920. “First
Survey Trip in Covered Wagon,” and other articles related to geology.
The
Southwestern Collegian IV, No. 40,
June 25, 1898. Publication of Southwest Kansas College, Winfield, Kansas.
The
Poteau News 45, No. 34, March 7,
1940.
The
Amarillo Globe, February 23, 1925,
page J. “A Few Facts About Carbon Black.”
The
Daily Oklahoman, December 21, 1930,
page 8. “A City Oil Pool is Surprising to Geologist,” by Charles N. Gould.
The
Daily Oklahoman, May 6, 1928, page
2-D. “Choice Food for ‘Rock Hound’ Abounds in Arbuckles.”
The
Daily Oklahoman, October 10, 1926,
page 2-B. “Oklahoma Geology,” by Charles N. Gould, (question and answer).
The
Daily Oklahoman 33, No. 107, May 3,
1925. “Mid-Continent Oil News.”
The
Daily Oklahoman, September 27, 1925,
page 1-B. “Bizzell Opens New Era at Oklahoma University.” “Mid-Continent Oil
News,” page 2-B.
The
Daily Oklahoman, November 2, 1924,
page 14-D. “Prosperous Oklahoma.”
Newspaper Clippings:
The
Daily Oklahoman, June 11, 1926.
“Mexican Names provide Plenty Amusement for Readers of Signs.”
Wewoka
Times Democrat. “Keeping in Step,” a
review of Oklahoma Place Names written by Charles N. Gould.
The
Daily Oklahoman, July 25, 1926.
“North Fork is River of Many Names, Epics.”
Oklahoma
City Times, May 14, 1937. “El Reno’s
Name Variation of Nearby Points.”
The
Daily Oklahoman, January 8, 1928.
“Human Bones Unearthed in Recent Work.”
North
China Daily News, Shanghai, 1926.
“English Place Names.” “Trans-Pecos Place Names,” by Henry T. Fletcher, 2
clippings. “Books and Things,” by Lewis Gannet, (Oklahoma Place Names book
review).
“My
Texas” by J. Frank Dobie. “Texas Pace Names.”
Geological Map of the Pikes
Peak Region announcing courses in Geology to be taught at Colorado College Summer
Session, June 16 - July 25, 1941, by Donald B. Gould.
The Oklahoma News Bulletin, Norman, Oklahoma 14, No. 6, November 4, 1940.
“Rock Formations of Kansas,”
a chart compiled by Raymond C. Moore, State Geologist, Kansas Geological
Survey, Lawrence.
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