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Unidentified Softball Team

Members of an unidentified softball team pose for a group photo. 4 Members stand while five members are sitting on a bench. Those on the bench are holding their bats, while the one in the center has a catcher's mitt. The last person in each row is Black.

UAW - CIO Local 599

A newspaper article from a Buick factory magazine featuring a team photo reads, "Eye-Revenge-- With the hope that they'll meet AC CIO in the finals, Buick CIO starts competition in the City Invitational Basketball Tournament, at Berston Auditorium today in a meeting with Draftees at 4PM. Buick Local won the seasonal championship in the City Class A League, but dropped playoff honors to the second-place Sparkers. The Buick CIO roster (left to right). Front Row, Sonny Wells, Willie Moore, Manager Luther Guy and Arzo Thames; back row, Max Brandon, Cliff Fielder, Gus Wells, Eli Copeland and Jim Luckado."

Thomas B.W. Stockton Papers

  • 1959.1
  • Collection
  • 1800 - 1947

The records contained in this collection span over two centuries. Their media compose correspondence (with envelopes in some instances), military manuals, a marriage certificate between Louisa Smith and Chauncey S. Payne, a document detailing the estate of Jacob Smith, banking records, a reunion roster for the 16th Michigan Infantry, and newspaper clippings. The majority of the records focus on the early military career and Civil War service of Thomas B.W. Stockton. The records are limited to correspondence and orders received for various assignments after he graduated from West Point in 1827. He initially saw service in the Western Department of the US Army, which oversaw territory between the Mississippi River to California. He later transferred to Washington, D.C. to serve as an assistant quartermaster.

Later service saw him transferred to Detroit to participate in what correspondence describes as construction of the Sagana Road. Stockton resigned in 1837 to assume a civilian post with the Army as an engineer. He left in 1840 and returned in 1844. He sought a commission in the army to raise regiments for the coming Mexican-American War. From there a gap exists until orders were received for him to remove the 16th Michigan to Washington, D.C. in late 1861. Correspondence details his time as a prisoner of war before being paroled and a request to assistance Andrew Johnson in raising three regiments to participate in operations in Tennessee.

Personal aspects of his life remain absent from the records. Other records focus on Jacob Smith, which include correspondence between him and family members. Related to these are correspondence from his children. Later records represent children and other descendants of Stockton and their efforts to carry on his legacy. These are documented in correspondence and newspaper clippings.

Stockton, Thomas, B.W.

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