3 Finding Aids.
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Commencement ceremonies (3)
Invitation cards[X]
Slavery[X]
African American college students (2)
African Americans (2)
Agriculture (2)
Alone Mill (2)
Archaeology -- Classification (2)
Archaeology -- Classification -- Data processing (2)
Architecture (2)
Art (2)
Arts (2)
Automobiles -- Road maps (2)
Bells (2)
Birds (2)
Book collecting (2)
Botany (2)
Bridges (2)
Buildings (2)
Bumper stickers (2)
Canals (2)
Cemeteries (2)
Charters (2)
Christianity (2)
Christmas (2)
Circus (2)
Civil rights (2)
Coeducation (2)
Coffee (2)
College trustees (2)
County government -- Officials and employees (2)
Courthouses (2)
Creek Indians (2)
De facto school segregation (2)
Declaration of Independence (2)
Deeds (2)
Dormitories (2)
Education (2)
Education, Secondary (2)
Educators -- Biography (2)
Farms (2)
Fashion (2)
Fire departments (2)
Fly fishing (2)
Football (2)
Foundations (2)
Fraternal organizations (2)
Free blacks (2)
Genealogy (2)
Ghosts (2)
Goshen Business Men's League (2)
Hazing (2)
Helplines (2)
Historic Brownsburg Newsletter (2)
Homecoming (2)
Honor system (Higher education) (2)
Hospitals (2)
Hotels (2)
Independent bookstores (2)
Iron Industry and Trade (2)
John Brown's Raid (Harpers Ferry, West Virginia : 1859) (2)
Journalism (2)
Libraries (2)
Little Sorrel (Horse) (2)
Livestock (2)
Local government -- Officials and employees (2)
Lucy Long (Horse) (2)
Monacan Indians (2)
Murder -- Investigation (2)
Music (2)
Natural Bridge State Park (2)
Nature trails (2)
Newspapers (2)
Orientation (2)
Postal service (2)
Postmasters (2)
Presbyterian Church (2)
Push ball (2)
Radio scripts (2)
Railroads (2)
Regional planning -- Laws, statutes, etc. -- U.S. states (2)
Religion (2)
Resorts (2)
Restoration (2)
Rings (2)
Roads (2)
School enrollment (2)
Schools (2)
Scrapbooks (2)
Social service (2)
Societies (2)
Songs (2)
Springs (2)
Stables (2)
Substance abuse (2)
Theater (2)
Traveller (Horse) (2)
Trees (2)
Troubadours (2)
Valentine's Day (2)
Veterans (2)
Virginia -- James River and Kanawha Canal (2)
Voting (2)
Washington and Lee University. Speaking Tradition (2)
Wills (2)
Women (2)
World War (1939-1945) (2)
Zoos (2)
Composition (Language arts) (1)
Confederate States of America. Army—Alabama Infantry Regiment, 44th (1)
Connecticut (1)
Delaware (1)
Devotional poetry (1)
Directories (1)
Education—Alabama—History (1)
Education—Georgia—History (1)
Episcopal Church—Alabama—History (1)
Fitzpatrick Family (1)
Freed persons (1)
Generals (1)
Georgia Military Institute (Marietta, Ga.) (1)
Hampton Roads, Virginia (1)
Kahn, Lee (1)
Maryland (1)
Medical education (1)
Mexican War, 1846-1848 (1)
Military education—Alabama—History (1)
Military education—Georgia—History (1)
New England (1)
New York (1)
Place cards (1)
Presbyterian Church in the U.S.—Presbytery of Lexington (1)
Rhode Island (1)
Richards family (1)
Ruff family (1)
September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 (1)
Textile fabrics (1)
Tidewater, Virginia (1)
United States—History—Civil War, 1861-1865 (1)
United States—History—Civil War, 1861-1865—Personal narratives—Confederate (1)
Virginia (1)
Virginia Military Institute—Academics—History—19th century (1)
Virginia Military Institute—Cadet drawings (1)
Virginia Military Institute—Cadet life—1840-1849 (1)
Virginia Military Institute—Class of 1848 (1)
Virginia Military Institute—Social life and customs (1)
Washington and Lee University (1)
Wild flowers (1)
William Byrd High School (Roanoke, Virginia) (1)
Content Warning

ARVAS is an aggregator of archival resources. ARVAS does not have control of the descriptive language used in our members’ finding aids. Finding aids may contain historical terms and phrases, reflecting the shared attitudes and values of the community from which they were collected, but are offensive to modern readers. These include demeaning and dehumanizing references to race, ethnicity, and nationality; enslaved or free status; physical or mental ability; religion; sex; and sexual orientation and gender identity. Many institutions and organizations are in the process of reviewing and revising their descriptive language, with the intent to describe materials in more humanizing, inclusive, and harm-reductive ways. As members revise their descriptive language, their changes will eventually be reflected in their ARVAS finding aids

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