[Houston Post article of W.L. Clayton's eulogy to Dag Hammarskjold] Metadata
Metadata describes a digital item, providing (if known) such information as creator, publisher, contents, size, relationship to other resources, and more. Metadata may also contain "preservation" components that help us to maintain the integrity of digital files over time.
Title
- Main Title [Houston Post article of W.L. Clayton's eulogy to Dag Hammarskjold]
Creator
-
Author: The Houston PostCreator Type: Organization
Contributor
-
Copyright holder: Houston ChronicleContributor Type: OrganizationContributor Info: Copyright 1961 Houston Post. Used with permission. All rights reserved.
Date
- Creation: 1961-09-30
- Digitized: 2006-09-19
Language
- English
Description
- Content Description: Houston Post article about secretary general of the United Nations Dag Hammarskjold's memorial service in which William Lockhart Clayton delivered a eulogy. William Lockhart Clayton is pictured.
- Physical Description: Newsclipping, black & white. Torn edges with missing text. Fragile.
Subject
- Library of Congress Subject Headings: Clayton, William Lockhart, 1880-1966
- Library of Congress Subject Headings: Hammarskjöld, Dag, 1905-1961
- University of North Texas Libraries Browse Structure: People - Individuals
Coverage
- Place Name: United States - Texas - Harris County - Houston
- Time Period: mod-tim
- Coverage Date: 1961-09-30
Collection
-
Name: Robert Joy CollectionCode: RJOY
Institution
-
Name: The Museum of Fine Arts, HoustonCode: MFAH
Rights
- Rights Access: public
Resource Type
- Photograph
Format
- Image
Identifier
- Accession or Local Control No: MS39-04-001
- Archival Resource Key: ark:/67531/metapth18564
Note
- Display Note: William Lockhart Clayton (1880-1966) co-founded Anderson, Clayton & Co., a leading cotton merchandiser that was headquartered in Houston from 1916. He served on the Committee of Cotton Distribution of the War Industries Board during World War I. During WWII he held a number of important government positions leading to his appointment as Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs in 1944, where he was instrumental in the development of the Marshall Plan. In the late '40s he returned to Houston but remained active and respected in the economic community continuing to voice his support for free trade. Through the Clayton Fund he contributed to many philanthropic causes, most notably to Johns Hopkins University, Tufts University and the University of Texas.
- Digital Preservation: creationAppName: MagicScan32 creationAppVersion: 4.5 creationAppName: Adobe Photoshop creationAppVersion: 7 creationHardware: UMAX Powerlook 2100 XL