Texas Archival Resources Online

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents

Arrangement

Restrictions

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Description of Series

Series I. Biographical, 1925-1995.

Series II. Correspondence, 1925-1996.

Series III. Health, Education and Welfare, 1952-1976.

Series IV. 1817-1978.

Series V. KPRC, 1912-1969.

Series VI. Photographs, 1909-1980's.

Series VII. Speeches, 1929-1983.

Series VIII. Women's Army Corps, 1941-1996.

Series IX. Audio-Visual Materials, 1965-1995.

Woodson Research Center, Rice University

Guide to the Oveta Culp Hobby Papers, 1817-1995



Descriptive Summary

Creator:Hobby, Oveta Culp, 1905-1995
Title:Oveta Culp Hobby Papers
Dates:1817-1995, Bulk Dates 1938-1985
Abstract: The Oveta Culp Hobby Papers detail the public life of Hobby, a Houston-based business, media, military, and political leader during the 1940s-1980s. Mrs. Hobby was the first secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, first commanding officer of the Women's Army Corps, chairman of the board of the Houston Post, and wife to Texas Lt. Gov. and later Governor, William P. Hobby. This collection consists of correspondence, newspaper and magazine clippings, speeches, photographs, reports, memos and video tapes.
Identification:MS 459
Quantity:25 linear feet
Language: Materials are in English.
Repository:Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University, Houston, TX

Biographical Note

Oveta Culp Hobby (1905-1995), first secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, first commanding officer of the Women's Army Corps, and chairman of the board of the Houston Post, second of seven children of Ike W. and Emma Elizabeth (Hoover) Culp, was born in Killeen, Texas, on January 19, 1905. Her father was a lawyer and state legislator. Oveta attended the public schools of Killeen and learned from her family the tradition of service to the community, to neighbors, to the state, and to the nation. Her mother, for instance, collected food, clothing, and money for the poor and sent her to deliver baskets of goods to neighbors who were going through hard times. She was only five or six when a temperance campaign swept Killeen, and at Sunday School all the small children were invited to sign a pledge and receive a Woman's Christian Temperance Union white ribbon to wear. Oveta thought it over and refused. She had no particular desire to drink liquor, she granted, but she might wish to when she grew up and thought it best not to give her word unless she was sure she was prepared to keep it.

From her father she acquired an early love for the law, horses, and the intricate workings of government. She stopped in his office every afternoon on her way home from school to listen to the talk and to read books far beyond her years or vocabulary. By age ten she had read the Congressional Record. At thirteen she had read the Bible three times. In the sixth grade she won a Bible as the best speller in her class. When Culp was elected to the state legislature in 1919, he took the fourteen-year-old Oveta with him to Austin, and she became a serious and interested observer of each day's sessions. Even though she missed many school days during her father's term in Austin, she graduated from Temple High School high in her class. In this period she took up elocution and recited "Alaska, the Brave Cowgirl" so dramatically that a visiting Chautauqua manager offered her a touring contract. Disappointed when her parents refused to consider the glittering offer, she turned her surplus energies to organizing the "Jolly Entertainers," a group of half a dozen teenage musicians. They toured neighboring towns and gave benefit performances to raise money to buy church organs.

In the next two years, Oveta Culp studied at Mary Hardin Baylor College in Belton, taught elocution, put on school plays, and became a cub reporter on the Austin Statesman. At nineteen, she had her own library of 750 volumes studded with such items as Cases of Common Law Reading, Revised Civil Statutes, Jefferson and Hamilton, The Private Papers of Colonel House, and the poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay. In 1925, at the age of twenty, she was asked by the speaker of the Texas House of Representatives to act as legislative parliamentarian. She served in that capacity until 1931, while continuing her education with tutors and classes at the University of Texas. She became a clerk of the State Banking Commission and codified the banking laws of the state of Texas. Later she became a clerk in the legislature's judiciary committee.

The National Democratic Convention was held in Houston in 1928, and Oveta Culp was released from her work as secretary of the Democratic Club to help with convention plans. When the campaign for Al Smith had gone its losing way, she was called to work in Tom (Thomas T.) Connally's campaign for United States senator against Earle B. Mayfield, the Ku Klux Klan candidate. She next worked on a Houston mayoral campaign, after which the new mayor offered her a post as assistant to the city attorney. She accepted, with the understanding that she would be released to return to Austin as parliamentarian when the next legislative session opened. At twenty-five she was persuaded to run for the state legislature from Houston, but was beaten by a candidate who whispered darkly that she was "a parliamentarian and a Unitarian." That ended her quest for elected office.

Oveta Culp knew former governor William Pettus Hobby because he was her father's friend. Hobby, after some years as publisher of the Beaumont Enterprise, had moved to Houston in 1924 as president of Ross S. Sterling's paper, the Post-Dispatch. In 1930, when Miss Culp was assistant to the city attorney, they resumed their friendship. On February 23, 1931, when she was twenty-six and Hobby fifty-three, they were married. "Everything that ever happened to me," she liked to say, "fell in my lap. And nothing in my life would have been possible without Governor." Up to this time, she had been too interested in books, politics, government, and horseback riding to give much thought to her own appearance. She used to say that when Will Hobby arrived for their wedding, her father warned his good friend, "Will, she'll embarrass you. She doesn't give a hang about clothes." But after her marriage, she added the art of dress to her studies. The couple had two children.

In 1931 Mrs. Hobby learned newspaper publishing. She reviewed books, edited copy, wrote editorials, and thought of herself as assistant to the editor and publisher--her husband. Her official titles were book editor from 1933 to 1936, assistant editor from 1936 to 1938, and executive vice president in 1938. The Hobbys had bought the Post and were working intensely together to pay off the large debt the purchase entailed. While riding in the park one day, Mrs. Hobby was thrown from her horse and shattered her leg and a wrist. She edited the book pages from her bed and continued a research study she had begun for the Post. She returned to the office on crutches and resumed her newspaper work and her duties as president of the League of Women Voters of Texas.

She retired as editor of the Sunday book page a few months after the birth of her son. She was at the same time becoming involved in community affairs-as a member of the board of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, a member of the Junior League, a member of the Houston Symphony Orchestra Committee, and regional chairman of the depression-born Mobilization for Human Needs.

The Hobbys had a second serious accident in the summer of 1936, when they were returning from Dallas in a private plane and the pilots discovered a fire in the oil line. They landed the plane in a cotton field, and Governor Hobby was knocked unconscious. While other passengers pulled the pilots out of their flaming control room, Mrs. Hobby pulled her husband from the plane and away from the inferno. They drove the injured men into town in an old car borrowed from field workers. Mrs. Hobby helped the doctor cut charred clothing from the badly burned pilot and went with him in the ambulance to the hospital in Dallas. She was so calm throughout that it occurred neither to the doctor nor to hospital attendants that she too had been a passenger in the plane. When the fact emerged, they promptly hospitalized her.

Meanwhile, she had been working on a book drawn from her experiences in the legislature. Mr. Chairman won quick acceptance as a handbook on parliamentary law. It was adopted as a textbook by the Texas public schools in 1938. In 1935 Buffalo Bayou flooded downtown Houston and a citizens' committee was appointed to plan a flood-control program. Mrs. Hobby was the only woman on the committee. She was also Texas chairman of the advisory committee on women's participation in the New York World's Fair.

She was in Washington in June 1941 on Federal Communications Commission business. The Hobbys now owned a radio station, KPRC. She received a call from General David Searles, who asked her to organize a section on women's activities for the army. The United States had just had its first peacetime draft, and the War Department was receiving up to 10,000 letters a day from women, many asking what they could do to serve their country. But Mrs. Hobby refused Searles's request, explaining that in Houston she had a husband, two children and a job. Besides that, travel between Houston and Washington was time-consuming. The general then asked if she would draw up an organizational chart with recommendations on ways women could serve. She did so, and Searles asked her to come to Washington to put the plan in operation.

Again Mrs. Hobby refused, but told her husband about the request. Hobby, according to his wife, "was a patriot in the real sense of the word" who "thought you must do whatever your country asks you to do." "Any thoughtful person," he said, "knows that we are in this war, and that every one of us is going to have to do whatever we are called on to do." Mrs. Hobby accepted the job. In her first press interview, she said she saw the task as one of telling the facts of the army in terms interesting to women. "For every one of the 1,500,000 men in the Army today," she stated, "there are four or five women-mothers, wives, sisters, sweethearts-who are closely and personally interested. Mothers are more interested in the son's health than they are in army maneuvers. They want to know what their man or boy is doing in his recreational hours, what opportunities the men have for training and promotion, about the health of camps and the provisions made for religious life."

Mrs. Hobby was head of the Women's Interest Section, War Department Bureau of Public Relations, in 1941-1942. At General George Marshall's request, she studied the British and French women's armies and prepared a plan by which the United States could avoid their mistakes. She was heading home to Houston by way of Chicago, where she had a speaking engagement, when the attack on Pearl Harbor occurred. In her speech she made-as General Marshall always claimed afterward-this nation's first declaration of war. She called Governor Hobby from Chicago, and the two agreed that she must go back to Washington, where Secretary of War Henry Stimson and General Marshall gave her the task of finding what jobs women could do in regular army procedures with the least training. Next, Marshall asked her to testify to Congress on the plan for a women's army. She was also asked to draw up a list of names of women who might command it. Marshall read the list, turned it face down on his desk and said, "I'd rather you took the job." Mrs. Hobby said she could not. Her husband said she could. She later stated "it would never have crossed my mind to command an army of women. I never did learn to salute properly or master the 30-inch stride." The job she undertook was hard, often exasperating, frequently amusing, and sometimes heartbreaking. The new director had to travel constantly, speaking to large groups of men and women on the radical subject of enlisting volunteer women into the army. She traveled with an electric fan and iron, so that at each overnight stop she could wash, dry, and iron her khaki uniform--the only WAAC uniform in existence at the time.

Though she always insisted she had never had to "fight for anything," and though she was never a militant feminist, she developed an abiding awareness of the barricades some women have to surmount. Because Congress had been unwilling to make the women's corps an integral part of the army the women in the War Department found themselves in limbo. When Director Hobby sent requests to army engineers for plans for WAAC barracks, the engineers replied that they worked only for the army and that the WAAC was not army. Director Hobby and her staff were forced to draw their own barracks plans.

To make the WAAC uniform attractive to large numbers of young women, Mrs. Hobby called in well-known designers. But the Army Quartermaster Corps vetoed the belt as a waste of leather and the pleat in the skirt as a waste of cloth, so the resulting WAAC uniform was a basic design of the Quartermaster Corps. Almost any army sergeant had his own jeep, but Director Hobby had to call for a car from the pool. She often worked all day and all night, went home for a shower, and returned for another day at the office. Commanding officers were horrified at the thought of women soldiers. One commandant ordered a fence built around the WAAC's barracks on the post and allowed WAACs to go the post movie only two nights a week, while men went on other nights. The comptroller general's office decreed that it could not pay the women doctors of the WAAC because they were authorized only to pay "persons in military service." Secretary of War Stimson had to ask for a special act of Congress to enable Director Hobby to pay her physicians. She was invited as an officer in the army to use the facilities of the Army-Navy Club. But would she mind, the club official added, coming in by the back door?

The WAACs, all volunteers, proved themselves quickly. It was soon evident that one WAAC could often do the work of two men in certain tasks--from secretarial work to PBX operation to kitchen patrol to parachute folding. When the corps was first organized, Congress had reluctantly agreed that perhaps the women could do fifty-four army jobs. By the time Colonel Hobby was through, they filled 239 types of jobs. By 1944 WAAC headquarters had requests for 600,000 women-more than three times the total authorized strength of the corps-from commanding generals around the world. The director's hair acquired a heavy frosting of silver during those army years, and the long days robbed her-temporarily-of her youthful look. By July 1945 she was exhausted. She requested permission to resign, and upon her release her husband was waiting for her with a stretcher. He took her to the train and to a hospital in New York for complete rest.

In January 1945 she received the Distinguished Service Medal for outstanding service. The citation stated, "without guidance or precedents in the United States military history to assist her, Colonel Hobby established sound policies and planned and supervised the selection and training of officers and regulations. Her contribution to the war effort of the nation has been of important significance." She also received medals from foreign countries, degrees from colleges and universities, and a welcome-home banquet in Houston.

Laying aside her colonel's uniform--the first worn by a woman in the United States Army--Mrs. Hobby resumed her career as director of KPRC radio and KPRC-TV and executive vice president of the Houston Post. The war years strengthened her conviction that all Americans deserve equal opportunity. Not long after the war, when she was co-chairman of the celebration of Armed Forces Day, the other chairman came to her office with plans for a big military dinner. "Fine," she agreed, "if we understand each other. No celebration of Armed Forces Day will be held in Houston which is not open to every one who has served in our armed forces-regardless of race." The man was upset and said so in terms that drew a rebuke from Governor, who had strolled in and overheard. During the war, Governor Hobby had been a member of the Houston board for the registration of aliens, and his voice of moderation saved Houstonians of Japanese ancestry from some of the injustices that later embarrassed other communities. Later, the Hobby team offered the Houston Post as a platform to Houston's religious leaders when the Supreme Court decision on desegregation of public schools was nearing public announcement. Distinguished men of every faith were invited to state their opinions on the decision, and the consensus, published on page one of the Post, was unanimously in favor of the decision. Given such wise leadership from men of God, Houston shaped a course of courtesy and sanity.

In 1946-1947, Mrs. Hobby served on boards of the Advertising Federation of America, the American Design Award Committee, the American National Red Cross, the American Cancer Society, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Citizens Committee for the Hoover Report, and the American Assembly. In 1948 she was a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on Freedom of Information and Press in Geneva, Switzerland. She was invited to fly around the world on a special circumnavigation flight of Pan American World Airways, with a stop in Japan for a conference with General Douglas MacArthur. In 1949 she was president of the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association. The University of Missouri School of Journalism awarded her its honor medal in 1950. In 1951 Governor and Mrs. Hobby were honored for distinguished service to the advancement of human relations by the National Conference of Christians and Jews.

In 1952, when General Dwight D. Eisenhower emerged as the leading candidate for the Republican nomination for president of the United States, Governor and Mrs. Hobby were immediately active on his behalf, first at the precinct level, then at the state convention. When Eisenhower was nominated at the Republican national convention, Mrs. Hobby became a key figure in the national Democrats for Eisenhower movement. After his inauguration, Eisenhower appointed her chairman of the Federal Security Agency--a non-cabinet post--but invited her to sit in on cabinet meetings. On April 11, 1953, she became the first secretary of the new Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Again she had to organize a new branch of the federal government.

To the secretary, this massive and complex department was held together by its humanitarian "common thread to family service." During that first year, an article in a New York newspaper carried the heading, "When she learns her job, Oveta Hobby may trim her week to 70 hours."

One of the major events during her term on the cabinet was the announcement of the Salk vaccine to prevent polio. Many Americans in that era were terrified of the widespread summer polio epidemics, and the demand was immediate. To hold back the vaccine until it had been properly tested was to risk children's lives, but to release it prematurely risked infecting healthy children. Mrs. Hobby was commended by Senator Alexander Smith of New Jersey for her wise handling of the issue. "Refusing to be precipitated into a hasty program of federal regimentation," Smith said, "Mrs. Hobby and her advisors with the full cooperation of the doctors, vaccine manufacturers, and distributors, worked out a program of voluntary distribution which promises maximum effectiveness and retains our basic American principle of non-federal control of the doctor-patient relationship."

Furthermore, while Mrs. Hobby was at HEW, Congress authorized $182 million for a three-year expansion of the federal-state-local hospital building program and authorized $150 million to build more chronic-disease hospitals, nursing homes, diagnostic and treatment centers, and medical rehabilitation centers. Mrs. Hobby sought grass-roots opinions with the first White House Conference on Education. To prepare for the baby-boom children, she proposed a three-year emergency plan to pool local, state, and federal funds to build $7 billion worth of schools.

In her thirty-one months as secretary, the department also improved the administration of food and drug laws, expanded the rehabilitation program, and designed a hospital insurance program to protect Americans against the rising cost of illness. In her last year in office, ten million people were added to the Social Security rolls. In 1955 Governor Hobby was ill, and Mrs. Hobby thought she could no longer stay away from Houston. She resigned in July. President Eisenhower called an unusual press conference-with himself and Mrs. Hobby seated at a table in the White House. He expressed his sadness and told her that, "None of us will forget your wise counsel, your calm confidence in the face of every kind of difficulty, your concern for people everywhere, the warm heart you brought to your job as well as your talents." One news service wrote of the conference: "Not since hundreds of people stood in Union Station and cheered Harry S. Truman of Independence, Missouri, at the end of his term has anyone left office in Washington with such fanfare as was accorded Mrs. Hobby at the White House Wednesday." Secretary of the Treasury George Humphrey called her "the best man in the Cabinet!"

In 1955 Mrs. Hobby resumed her position with the Houston Post as president and editor. In 1956 she became chairman of the board of directors of the newly organized Bank of Texas and the first woman in its 113-year history to be a member of Mutual of New York's board of trustees. Despite calls for her to return to public life, she spent the next years close to her husband, whom she rarely left for more than a few hours at a time.

She had received honorary degrees from Baylor University, Sam Houston State Teachers College, the University of Chattanooga (1943), Colorado Women's College (1947), Bard College (1954), Ohio Wesleyan University, Bryant College (1953), Columbia University, Smith College, Middlebury College (1954), Lafayette College (1954), the University of Pennsylvania, Colby College (1954), Fairleigh-Dickinson (1954), and C.W. Post College (1962).

She served on the Advisory Committee for Economic Development, the Continental Oil Company Scholarship Award Committee, the National Advisory Board of the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, the Committee of 75 at the University of Texas, the board of the Eisenhower Birthplace Memorial Park, the President's Commission on Employment of the Physically Handicapped, the President's Commission on Civilian National Honors, the Committee for the White House Conference on Education, the board of the Eisenhower Exchange Fellowships, the Southern Regional Committee for Marshall Scholarships, the Board of Director of the Houston Symphony Society, the Southwest Advisory Board of the Institute of International Education, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Special Studies Project, the Crusade for Freedom, the Visiting Committee of the Graduate School for Education of Harvard University, the Advisory board of the George C. Marshall Research Foundation, and the boards of the Society for Rehabilitation of the Facially Disfigured, the Texas Heart Association, the General Foods Corporation, the General Aniline and Film Corporation, and the Carnegie Commission on Educational Television.

President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed her to the National Advisory Commission of Selective Service. She flew to Vietnam as a member of the HEW Vietnam Health Education Task Force in 1966. In 1968 she was named to the board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. She supervised the construction of the Houston Post's new building on the Southwest Freeway at Post Oak Road. She also served on the board of Rice University and the Business Committee for the Arts. One of the honors that meant most to her was the naming of the library at Central Texas College in her hometown of Killeen in her honor, which was dedicated by President Johnson.

In 1984 Mrs. Hobby was named to the Texas Women's Hall of Fame. She died on August 16, 1995, in Houston, and was buried at Glenwood Cemetery.

Excerpted from William P. Hobby's article in The New Handbook of Texas, Volume 3, 1996

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Scope and Contents

The Oveta Culp Hobby Papers, consisting of 63 document boxes, detail the public life of Hobby - business, media, military, and political leader - during a period of history when most women stayed at home to be wives and mothers. This collection consists of correspondence, newspaper and magazine clippings, speeches, photographs, reports, memos and video tapes, gathered during Hobby's lifetime and donated to the Woodson Research Center after her death. Previously, Hobby donated papers gathered from her service with the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps and the Women's Army Corps (WAAC and WAC, respectively) to the Library of Congress, and papers from her career with the Federal Security Administration, subsequently called the Department of Heath Education and Welfare, to the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas. The materials in the series - Women's Army Corps and Health, Education, and Welfare, duplicate materials in those two libraries.

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Arrangement

  • Series I : Biographical
  • Series II : Correspondence
  • Series III: Health, Education and Welfare
  • Series IV: Houston Post
  • Series V: KPRC Radio-television, Houston
  • Series VI: Photographs
  • Series VII: Speeches, 1929-
  • Series VIII: Women's Army Corps
  • Series IX: Audio-Visual Materials

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Restrictions

Access Restrictions

No access restrictions; this material is open for research.

Use Restrictions

Permission to publish material from the Oveta Culp Hobby Papers, must be obtained from the Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library.

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Index Terms

Subjects (Persons)
Hobby, Oveta Culp, 1905- --Correspondence.
Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973.
Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973--Correspondence.
Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-
Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913- --Correspondence.
Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969--Correspondence.
Subjects (Organizations)
United States. Army. Women's Army Corps.
KPRC (Radio station : Houston, Tex.)
KPRC-TV (Television station : Houston, Tex.)
United States. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare.
Pan American World Airways, inc.
Titles
Houston post (Houston, Tex. : 1932)
Formats
Correspondence.
Photographs.
Military records.

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Oveta Culp Hobby Papers, 1817-1995, MS #459, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University

Acquisition Information

The Papers were a gift of William Hobby and Jessica Hobby Catto in the summer of 1997.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

 
Box
1-12Series I. Biographical, 1925-1995.
Extent 56 inches (11 1/2 document boxes).
This series includes a variety of personal information about Oveta Culp Hobby including awards and honors she received, magazine and newspaper articles about her life, and boards and committees she served on. There is a folder about her unsuccessful run for the Texas legislature in 1930. Also included in this series are manuscript copies of the book she wrote, Mr. Chairman and the biography of her husband, William Pettus Hobby, titled The Tactful Texan and written by James A. Clark. On a more private level, there is a limited amount of correspondence with family members, information about entertaining she conducted, art she owned, gifts she donated to several institutions and even a number of recipes for cooking. Obituaries and sympathy letters conclude the series.
Arranged in 14 sub-series:
  • Subseries A: Biographical, General, 1925-1974
  • Subseries B: Awards and Certificates, 1944-1996;
  • Subseries C: Books, 1936-1941
  • Subseries D: Candidate for Legislature, 1930
  • Subseries E: Clippings, 1930-1982
  • Subseries F: Correspondence, n.d.
  • Subseries G: Entertaining, 1965-1975
  • Subseries H: Family, 1926-1986
  • Subseries I: Financial Papers, 1937-1941
  • Subseries J: Gifts, 1962-1993
  • Subseries K: House and Art, 1952-61
  • Subseries L: Memberships, 1941-1992
  • Subseries M: Recipes, n.d.
  • Subseries N: Death, 1995
BoxFolder
11-4Subseries A: Biographical, General, 1925-1974
1Biographical data
2Biographical data and interview
3Personal identification papers
4Official Papers, 1925, 1947, 1953, 1964, 1969, 1974
Box
1-2Subseries B: Awards and Certificates, 1944-1996
BoxFolder
15147th Fighter Group - Texas Air National Guard, Honorary Life Membership, January 20, 1969
6Academy of Political Science, Honorary Membership, June 13, 1975
7Amazing Women, 1965
8Annenberg School of Communications Honorary Degree, October 1976
9American Airlines System Commission, December 19, 1946
10Anti-Defamation League Dinner - Torch of Liberty Award, October 1982
11Armed Forces Honorary Life Membership, February 3, 1966
12Bard College Honorary Degree, June 17, 1950
13Baylor College of Medicine, Honorary Degree of Doctor of Humanities in Medicine, June 8, 1978
14Mary Hardin-Baylor University Tribute, April 16, 1994
15Bryant College, Providence, RI, Honorary Doctor of Law Degree, 1953
16Cancer Assistance League
17Citizen's Committee for the Hoover Report - Award of Merit, 1952
18Colorado Women's College, Doctor of Literature, 1947
19Columbia University, Middlebury College, Doctor of Laws, Collegii Westernensis, Ohio Wesleyan University, Bryant College, 1954;1954;1953;1953;1953
20Distinguished Service Medal, December 30, 1944
21Eisenhower Exchange Fellowship; Public Broadcasting, General Foods Co.; Kiwanis, Commonwealth of Texas, Oveta Culp Hobby Memorial Library; National Conference of Christians and Jews; Mary Hardin Baylor Medal; "We pay our Respects to…," 1968;1958;1966;1942
22Fairleigh Dickinson College Award of Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws, February 4, 1956
23Good Citizenship Award - Houston Chapter of SAR
24Hall of Honor, George C. Marshall Foundation, May 3, 1995
25Headliners Club of Austin, Texas Publisher of the Year, 1959
26Oveta Culp Hobby Education Center, Ft. Hood, TX, December 5, 1995
27City of Houston [TX] Appreciation, May 1968
28Houston, Texas - Honorary Citizen
29Illinois Department of Aeronautics, Certificate of Commemoration for "Round the World Trip", 1947
30Jack Yates, Sr., H.S. Journalism Dept., Lady of the Press Distinguished Service Award, October 18, 1963
31Killeen Area Heritage Association Sesquicentennial Calendar, 1986
32City of Killeen, TX, Proclamation, December 6, 1985
33Killeen, TX, Celebration and Dedication of Mrs. Hobby's Early Home, January 19, 1986
34Killeen, TX, Dedication of Culp Swimming Pool, February 1993
35Long Island University, Doctor of Letters, 1962
36March of Dimes - Carousel of Life Ball, n.d.
37George Catlett Marshall Award, 1978
BoxFolder
21The George Catlett Marshall Medal, 1978
2National Association for Mental Health - Outstanding Service Citation, May 10, 1963
3National Conference of Christians and Jews, Honorary Dinner, 1951
4National Federation of Press Women, Inc. Citation, June 26, 1939
5National Institute of Social Sciences Award, November 20, 1953
6National Retired Teachers Association and the American Association for Retired Persons, Citation for Service, September 11, 1963
7National Women's Hall of Fame, 1996
8Outstanding Women in Business, Anchor Corp. Award, 1970
9People to People Program
10Oveta Culp Hobby Army ROTC Battalion, Texas Women's University, April 14, 1983
11Radio Free Europe Distinguished Service
12Republic of the Philippines Award of Military Merit Medal, June 23, 1947
13Rice Alumni Association Gold Medal for Distinguished Service, November 11, 1978
14Rotary Distinguished Citizen Award, April 26, 1976
15St. Edward's University Coronat Medalon, October 18, 1963
16Smith College, Doctor of Laws, 1954
17Society for the Rehabilitation of the Facially Disfigured, Inc. - Resolution, November 16, 1976
18South's Hall of Fame for the Living, 1951
19Southwestern Business University, 1951
20State Teachers Colleges of Texas, 1943
21Texas A&M University Dedication of Oveta Culp Hobby Hall, October 25, 1980
22Texas Award, 1955
23Texas Business Hall of Fame, May 1984
24Texas Centennial of Statehood Commission, Appointment, December 29, 1945
25Texas Colleges, Doctor of Humanities, 1983
26Texas House of Representatives Resolution, September 19, 1941
27Texas Senate Concurrent Resolution, January 27, 1953
28Texas Senate Resolution, February 1, 1955
29Texas Women's Hall of Fame, September 13, 1984
30Texas Senate Proclamation, 1995
31Tribute to Oveta Culp Hobby, November 10, 1996
32United Daughters of the Confederacy World War II Cross of Military Service, 1946
33US Army/ Executive Flight Detachments - Marine Corps Flight Certificate, August 11, 1968
34University of Houston, University Park, 1984
35University of Missouri School of Journalism, 1958
36University of Pennsylvania, Doctor of Laws, 1954
37University of Texas Significant Services Citation, December 1958
38Women in Business, 1970
39Women in Texas Award, September 1984
40Women of Military Service, 1987
41Women's Army Corps Tribute, September 14, 1945
Box
3-4Subseries C: Books, 1936-1941
BoxFolder
31"How and When in Parliamentary Law," 1936-1939
2Mr. Chairman, Draft
3Mr. Chairman, Draft
4-8Mr. Chairman Chapter Drafts
4"Committees"
5"Debate"
6"Details of Meetings"
7"History of Constitutional Government…"
8"Voting"
9-10Mr. Chairman correspondence 1936-1937
11Mr. Chairman correspondence 1938-1939
BoxFolder
41Correspondence with McClure Newspaper Syndicate regarding Mr. Chairman, 1939
2Mr. Chairman correspondence 1941
3Miscellaneous publications
4Subseries D: Candidate for Legislature, 1930
4Oveta Culp - Candidate for Legislature, 1930
Box
4-5Subseries E: Clippings, 1930-1982
BoxFolder
45WAC, 1940-1982
6Mutual of New York Trustee, 1956
7Photographs- "These are Favorites of Mrs. Hobby's", 1927-1955
8Wedding, 1931
9 and 1930s1940s
10 1938, 1940s, n.d.
11 1944-1972
12 1945, 1947-1948
13 1953-1954
BoxFolder
51 1953-1955
2 1960s
3 and 1970s1980s
4-7 Undated
8Subseries F: Correspondence, n.d.
8Correspondence regarding biographical stories
Box
5-6Subseries G: Entertaining, 1965-1975
BoxFolder
59Dinner party - No. 2 Remington Lane July 29, 1965,
10Cocktail buffet honoring The Honorable and Mrs. John Connally, February 13, 1969
11Dinner party for Steve and Susie Oaks, Bayou Club, November 2, 1977
12Luncheon for Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Warwick Hotel, November 24, 1969
BoxFolder
61Party - General Foods Corp., December 3, 1968
2Archives of American Art, Philadelphia Tour, 1973
3Party file, dinner list 1974
4March of Dimes International Detente Ball, 1975
5Invitation lists, 1970
6Party plans, permanent files, 1974
7Party plans, 1970, n.d.
Box
6-7Subseries H: Family, 1926-1986
BoxFolder
68Governor Hobby Manuscript - typed copy
9The Tactful Texan- List of schools receiving book
10-11The Tactful Texan thank-you's - High Schools, 1959
BoxFolder
71The Tactful Texan thank-you's - Colleges and Libraries, 1958
2Family clippings, 1933, 1938, 1983
3-10Correspondence
3Ike Culp to Oveta Culp Hobby on 21st birthday, 1926
4Letter from W.P. Hobby to Oveta Culp Hobby, 1929
5Letter from disappointed suitor to Oveta Culp Hobby, 1931
6W.P. Hobby letter, 1956
7Laura Hobby, n.d.
8Jessica Hobby - newspaper articles
9Oveta Culp Hobby to William P. Hobby, Jr.
10Letters to Bill Hobby from non-family
11Subseries I: Financial Papers, 1937-1941
11Financial papers, 1937, 1938, 1941, n.d.
Box
7-8Subseries J: Gifts, 1962-1993
BoxFolder
712Museum of Fine Arts, Houston - paintings, 1968, 1970, 1984-1985
13Museum of Fine Arts, Houston - Marino Marini's Pilgrim, 1988
14Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1991
15Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 1992, 1993
16Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and Rice University - Butler & Binion, 1968, 1984-1985, 1989-1990
BoxFolder
81Rice University - Books, 1985, n.d.
2Rice University - Land, 1962, 1976, 1984-1985
3Personal Papers - Health, Education and Welfare Papers to Eisenhower Library, 1969
4Personal Papers - Women's Army Corps Papers to Library of Congress, 1969
5-8Subseries K: House & Art, 1952-1961
5Book replacement - Hobby House, #2 Remington Lane, 1958
6Packing/ clothing inventories
7Personal art - 1952, 1960
8Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, art loans, 1960, 1961
Box
8-10Subseries L: Memberships, 1941-1992
BoxFolder
89Advisory Boards
10Committees, general
11Organizations, 1953-1955
BoxFolder
91Committee of 75 - University of Texas
2George C. Marshall Foundation, - board memberships 1961
3Marshall, George C. Research Foundation, 1975
4Board memberships - Hall of Fame
5International Women's Media Conference, Washington, D.C., November 1986
6[Robert E.] Lee's Home Committee, 1941
7Board of Trustees, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX, 1992
8Corporation for Public Broadcasting, booklets, 1968
9-11Corporation for Public Broadcasting, correspondence, 1968
12Corporation for Public Broadcasting, expenses, 1968
BoxFolder
101Corporation for Public Broadcasting, minutes, 1968-1969
2Corporation for Public Broadcasting, welcome letters, 1968
3Southern Newspaper Publisher's Association, 1943
4Texas State Teachers Colleges, 1941
5Service - refused or ignored, 1967-1968
6Subseries M: Recipes, n.d.
6Recipes
Box
10-12Subseries N: Death, 1995
BoxFolder
107Obituaries
8Funeral service, 1995
Box
10-12Correspondence
BoxFolder
109Cards with flowers
BoxFolder
111City of Killeen, 1995
2Sympathy notes from Jack Yates High School students, 1995
3-6Sympathy letters, 1995
BoxFolder
121Sympathy letters, 1995

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Box
12-27Series II. Correspondence, 1925-1996.
Extent 77 inches (15 document boxes).
Series II : Correspondence, 1925-1995
The Correspondence series include letters to and from Hobby. Hobby usually filed items under a subject, but because many letters were received by the Woodson Research Center, without a subject heading, they were filed chronologically. Where there was a subject arrangement, this was kept. In the early chronological files, there are messages from Houston Post employees, and letters discussing possible articles for publishing. The bulk of the correspondence is made up of requests for donations, household business letters, and invitations for Hobby to speak at an event and the accompanying letters of arrangements. The correspondence from Hobby's final years is mostly thank you notes, letters about friends, sympathy notes, and Christmas messages.
Hobby had relationships with many presidential figures. The third sub-series of the Correspondence comprises the correspondence she had with many presidents and some of their wives. There are letters from Eleanor Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover and John F. Kennedy, and invitations to Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan and George Bush's inaugurations. There is extensive correspondence, invitations and photographs with Lyndon B. Johnson and Dwight D. Eisenhower, and less with Richard M. Nixon. Hobby worked with their election campaigns, held a cabinet post during Eisenhower's term of office and because of her past political and military roles, was asked to serve on committees or give advice on an issue. Also, in her role as a media publisher, she asked for information about issues and gave unsolicited advice on several topics. Finally, there is also more personal notes and invitations between Hobby and Lady Bird Johnson, and between Hobby and Mamie Eisenhower.
Arranged in 3 sub-series:
  • A;,Chronological, 1925-1996
  • B: Subject, 1939-1970
  • C: Presidential
Box
12-18Subseries A: Chronological, 1995-1996
The chronological sub- series includes letters to and from Hobby about personal or household business, invitations to speak, letters about friends, and in the earlier years, messages from Houston Post employees or about articles to be published.
BoxFolder
122 1925-1930
3 1933
4 1934
5 1935
6 1936-1937
7 1938
8 1939-1940
9 1941-1942
10 1943
11 1944
12 1945
13 1946
14 1947
15 1948
16 1950-1951
17 1952
18 1953-1955
19 1956-1957
BoxFolder
131 1958
2 1959
3 1960
4 1961
5 1962, 1964-1969
6 1971, 1974-1976
7 1977
8 1978
BoxFolder
141 January - June 1979
2 June - December 1979
3 1980-1981
4 January - June 1981
5 June - December 1981
6 January - June 1982
7 June - December 1982
BoxFolder
151Christmas 1982
2 January - June 1983
3 June - December 1983
4-5 January - June 1984
6 July - December 1984
BoxFolder
161 January - June 1985
2 July - October 1985
3 November - December 1985
4 January - March 1986
5 April - June 1986
6 July - September 1986
7 September - December 1986
8 January - March 1987
9 March - August 1987
10 September - December 1987
BoxFolder
171 January - June 1988
2 July - December 1988
3Personal Thank-You's 1991
4 December 1991, January 1992
5 1994
6-7Letters Written 1995
BoxFolder
181 1996
2 No dates
3Sample letters
Box
18-21Subseries B: Subject, 1939-1970
BoxFolder
184Better Business Bureaus International 1968
5Development of Braeswood
6Churchill, Winston Memorial Fund 1967-1968
7Cleburne National Bank
8Federal Security Administration
9Foundations 1963
10Foundations 1967
11Freedom of Information 1948
12Highway Commission 1939
13Hobby Airport Memorial 1967, 1970
14Hobby Park, Moscow, TX 1967, 1970
15K miscellaneous
16Kempner family 1966
BoxFolder
191Killeen College 1967
2Legislature 1939, 1941
3Letters from distinguished people 1949-1958
4Letters from distinguished people 1952-1961
5Letters from distinguished people 1956-1961
6Letters from prominent people 1961-1969
BoxFolder
201McCollum, Mr. and Mrs. L.F. 1966
2-3Oil venture 1946, 1947-1957
4Wright Patman - Congressional Record, Charitable Foundation 1962
5Congressman Patman, 1962-1964
BoxFolder
211Congressman Patman, 1963
2Congressman Patman, 1962, 1964, 1967
3Repeal of Prohibition
4Nelson Rockefeller
5Social Work Publicity Council
6Tidelands
7United Fund of Houston and Harris County
8Willkie Club
9Mr. and Mrs. Robert Woodruff, 1966, 1968
Box
21-27Subseries C: Presidential, 1932-1995
The presidential correspondence is arranged chronologically by presidential term and includes presidents from Herbert Hoover to George Bush.
BoxFolder
2110Herbert Hoover 1948, 1956
11Eleanor Roosevelt 1932, 1936, 1943, 1944
12Eleanor Roosevelt 1943, n.d.
Box
22-25Dwight D. Eisenhower
BoxFolder
221Correspondence, 1951-1954
2Correspondence, 1955-1956
3Correspondence, 1957-1964
4Correspondence, 1965-1966
5Correspondence, 1967
6Correspondence, 1968-1969
7Mamie Doud Eisenhower, 1970-1971
8The President - personal (confidential) 1953-1955, n.d.
9White House correspondence 1954-1955
10White House invitations 1953
BoxFolder
231White House invitations, January - September 1954
2White House invitations, October - December 1954
3White House invitations 1955
4Eisenhower visit to Houston and Rice Convocation, October 24-25, 1960
5Eisenhower photographs
6Oveta Culp Hobby at party with Eisenhowers, n.d.
7Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign Plan, July 1956
8Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign - revised program plan for the TV hour on election eve September 28, 1956
9Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign literature: Campaign Facts, 1956
10Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign literature from the women's division
11Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign literature: campaign issues of 1956
12Citizens for Eisenhower Campaign literature: miscellaneous, 1956
13Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, 1955- February 1956
14Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, March - June 1956
15Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, July - September 1956
BoxFolder
241Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, October 1956
2Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, November - December 1956
3Citizens for Eisenhower, correspondence, 1957-1958
4Citizens for Eisenhower, financial reports, September 28, 1955 - December 31, 1956
5Citizens for Eisenhower, financial reports, contributions of $100, 1956
6Citizens for Eisenhower, financial reports, official report filed with Clerk, House of Representatives, Washington, DC, March 6, 1956; September 6, 1956; March 4, 1957; December 31, 1957
7Citizens for Eisenhower, Eisenhower - Nixon Summary Report 1956
8Citizens for Eisenhower, newsletters, September and November 1956
9Citizens for Eisenhower, women's division reports, 1956
10-11Inauguration of Eisenhower, 1953
BoxFolder
251President's Committee on Employment of the Physically Handicapped, 1956-1957
2President's Committee on Employment of the Physically Handicapped, 1957-1959
3John F. Kennedy, 1961-1962
Box
25-26Lyndon B. Johnson
BoxFolder
254Correspondence, 1950, 1953-1957, n.d.
5Correspondence, 1958-1960
6Correspondence, 1963
7Correspondence, 1964
8Correspondence, 1965
9Correspondence, 1966
10Correspondence, 1967
11Correspondence, 1968
12Correspondence, 1969-1970, 1972
BoxFolder
261Lady Bird Johnson correspondence, 1952-1955, 1964-1966
2Lady Bird Johnson correspondence, 1967, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1985, n.d.
3Inauguration of Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965
4Lyndon B. Johnson photographs, 1964, n.d.
5Lyndon B. Johnson family photographs, including Lady Bird, 1966-1968, n.d.
6Lyndon B. Johnson Library, 1971
7Early radio speech by Lyndon B. Johnson, November 13, 1931
8"The Nation Speaks Out for the President," 1964
9"The President Speaks to the People," September, 1964
10Clippings, 1964
11Oral history interview of Oveta Culp Hobby, July 11, 1969
12Lyndon B. Johnson oral history project, 1970-1979
Box
26-27Richard M. Nixon
BoxFolder
2613National volunteers for Nixon-Lodge, correspondence, 1960
14Vice President, 1960-1961
15Campaign song, 1960
16Campaign literature, Texans for Nixon radio talks, 1960
BoxFolder
271Campaign literature, excerpts from "The Real Nixon," 1960
2Correspondence, 1963
3Correspondence, 1968
4Correspondence, 1969
5Correspondence, 1970-1972
6Gerald Ford, inaugural invitation, 1976
7Ronald Reagan, inaugural invitations, 1981, 1985
8George Bush, correspondence, 1968-1969, 1995, n.d.

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Box
27-35Series III. Health, Education and Welfare, 1952-1976.
Extent 34 inches (8 1/2 document boxes).
This series is comprised of letters about Hobby's appointment as the first Secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. There are clippings and photographs that document Hobby's days with the Department, as well as a limited amount of reports and office files. Except for the handwritten notes, these files for the most part duplicate, but do not encompass the scope of the materials at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library. The Office Files include materials on her Education Program, the Salk Vaccine, Segregation and Social Security. There are also several speeches she gave and statements issued by the Department. Finally there is a history of the department, Health Education and Welfare, by Brian Spinks.
Arranged in three sub-series:
  • Subseries A: Biographical, 1953-1976;
  • Subseries B: Office Files, 1952-1976
  • Subseries C: Book, n.d.
BoxFolder
279-15Subseries A: Biographical, 1953-1976
The Biographical files include materials about her appointment as the First Secretary of the department.
9Speeches, honors, citation, etc. 1953-1955
10Biographical statements, 1955, n.d.
11Clippings, 1953
12Clippings, 1976
13Nomination of Oveta Culp Hobby as Secretary of HEW; Senate confirmation 4/3/53
14Oveta Culp Hobby steps down from HEW
15Farewell party, July 28, 1955
Box
27-31Subseries B: Office Files, 1952-1976
The Office Files, arranged alphabetically, cover a range of topics and include some hand written notes.
BoxFolder
271683rd Congress pictorial directory
17Annual reports (Federal Security Agency) 1952, 1953
18Oveta Culp Hobby Award, 1962
19Children's Bureau, 1953-1955
20Correspondence with May Del Flagg, 1944
21Correspondence, 1953-1956
22Correspondence, 1953-1955, 1959-1960, 1963
23Correspondence, 1976
BoxFolder
281The Economic Club, 1952-1953
2Executive Branch Liaison Office, facts 1953-1956
3Education Program 1954-1955
4Ephemera - desk plate
5Executive Branch Liaison Office, quotes, 1954-1956
6Reports, 1953-1955
7Interdepartmental activities 1953-1955
8International activities 1955
9Juvenile delinquency 1953-1955
BoxFolder
291Legislation, 1954
2Notes-on book
3Notes-Joan Braden
4Notes-enactments, 1954
5Notes- "Facts on File," 1954
6Notes-Indians
7Notes-Charles Lawrence
8Notes-Rufus Miles
9Notes-Mintener
10Notes-miscellaneous, 1953-1956
11Notes-news releases, 1953-1955
12Notes-on agency memos, 1953
13Notes-Perkins
14Notes-press conferences, 1953-1954
15Notes-program lists, 1953-1955
16Notes-Rockefeller
17Notes-segregation
18Notes-speeches, 1953-1955
19Notes-for story about Juvenile Delinquency, 1954
20Notes-testimony, 1953
21Office memo, 1953
22Official seal, 1953
23Organization and administration, 1954-1955
24Photograph - Hobby and Leonard A. Sheele, 1953
25Swearing-in ceremony
26Photographs, 1953-1954
27Photographs, official functions and events
28Photographs, tour - Toledo Museum of Art, 1955
29PHS-Salk Vaccine - Release of technical report
BoxFolder
301PHS-Salk Vaccine - Secretary's Report to the President
2Party platforms, 1952-1953
3Reinsurance/Health
4Resolutions - Senate no.7, H.S.R. no.55
5Scrapbook, 1955
6Segregation, 1953-1954
7Senate Appropriations, 1954
8"Social Security," by Brian Spinks, 1955
BoxFolder
311Social Security amendments, 1954
2Special institutions, 1955
3Speeches, and list of speeches; 1953-19551953-1955
4Speeches, 1954-1955
5Statements, 1951, n.d.
6Statements made by Oveta Culp Hobby, 1953
7Statements made by Oveta Culp Hobby, 1954
8Summary material 1953-1955
Box
32-35Subseries C: Book, n.d.
The Book sub-series contains several drafts of a history of the department, by Brian Spinks.
Box
321st draft, Part 1
Box
331st draft, Part 2
Box
341st draft typed
Box
35Final draft

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Box
36-38Series IV. Houston Post, 1817-1978.
Extent 13 inches (2 1/2 document boxes).
Materials in the Houston Post series are arranged alphabetically by subject and include photographs, architectural drawings, cartoons, reports and legal papers. These materials are not the archives of the Post, they are only Hobby's personal files. They do include notes and retirement wishes to some employees from Hobby, a copy of the Augusta Herald dated August 1, 1817, reports from management consultants and law firms, and certificates and awards the Post received.
BoxFolder
361Advertising, 1940, 1976
2Architectural drawings
3Augusta Herald August 1, 1817
4Business office improvement plan, 1960
5Capital expenditures, 1976
6Cartoons
7Certificates and awards for the Houston Post
8Contributions - Steve Farish portrait, 1975
9Consultant - Charles T. Main, Inc., 1967
10Consultants - Booz, Allan & Hamilton - Management Consultants, 1960-1961
11Correspondence - Hoover Commission reports, 1949
12Correspondence - miscellaneous, 1933, 1938, 1940
13Distribution, 1976
14Executive, 1976
15Executive - personal employee correspondence, 1972
16Executive - personal employee correspondence, 1973
BoxFolder
371General Manager - Mr. Womack, 1976
2"History of the Houston Post" prepared by Edward W. Kilman, 1941
3Houston Post histories
4Helon Johnson, 1978
5Johnson-Merritt, 1940, 1942
6Johnson-Merritt, 1943
7Johnson-Merritt, 1945
8Karsh photographs, 1969
9Katz Agency, 1943
10Legal - Butler, Binion, Rice & Cook, 1952-1962
11Legal - Butler, Binion, Rice, Cook & Knapp, 1970
12Legal Papers - "The Item" 1950
13Legal - General Counsel, Mr. Crowther, 1976
14Legal - Houston Printing Corporation
15Houston Post Legal Papers 1938, 1939, 1945
16Legal - 1960, 1961, 1969, 1970
BoxFolder
381Miscellaneous, 1975
2Museum of Fine Arts, bulletins, notices, minutes, 1975
3Hobby ownership of Houston Post, 1942-1943, 1954
4Photographs - Oveta Culp Hobby office
5Photographs - Houston Post Building
6Photographs - Houston Post parties, 1949, 1970's
7Prohibition, 1957
8Retirement card
9Russian Economist presentation
10Speaking Engagements, 1959
11Speech, birthday of "MC," n.d.
12Stock purchase
13Tax
14Dr. Edward Teller
15Type, 1950

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Box
38-39Series V. KPRC, 1912-1969.
Extent 7 inches (1 1/2 document boxes).
This KPRC series is not the business archives of the radio-television station; but rather Hobby's personal KPRC office files. Materials range from early architectural drawings to licenses to instructions on how to run the switchboard. Also included are files from FCC hearings from 1955 to 1959, and a history.
Materials are arranged in one series alphabetically.
BoxFolder
3816Architectural drawings
17Audience response studies
18Beaumont, 1957-1959
19Birmingham, 1960
20Budget objective, 1969
BoxFolder
391FCC hearing - Beaumont, 1955-1957
2FCC hearing - Beaumont, 1958
3FCC hearing - Beaumont, 1959
4Educational television, 1968
5Jack Harris, 1950-1958
6History
7Interoffice - KPRC - Houston Post, 1962
8License for KPRC Radio, 1912
9Miscellaneous, 1960
10Miscellaneous, 1968. 1982
11Purchase of "KLEE-TV," 1950
12NBC election coverage, 1968
13Switchboard instructions

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Box
40-42Series VI. Photographs, 1909-1980's.
Extent 22 inches (5 1/2 document boxes).
This series begins with photographs of Hobby as a child and continues with portraits and snapshots that capture most stages of her life, especially her roles as a businesswoman, military leader, and political leader. There are some images of family, more of friends and many of colleagues. A scrapbook of her "Round the World" trip on Pan-American Airlines is in this series. Photographs are not exclusive to this section. When appropriate, images have been filed with the event or person they capture. There are portrait and event photographs in the Women's Army Corps and Health, Education, and Welfare series, and photographs in the Presidential sub-series of Correspondence.
Arranged in five sub-series:
  • Subseries A: Portraits, 1909- circa 1990, n.d.
  • Subseries B: Official Functions, ca. 1940-1960
  • Subseries C: Family, n.d.
  • Subseries D: Friends, n.d.
  • Subseries E: Unidentified/Miscellaneous, n.d.
BoxFolder
401-9Subseries A: Portraits, 1909-1990, n.d.
1Oveta Culp Hobby, 1909, n.d.
2Oveta Culp Hobby as a young woman at a party
3Oveta Culp Hobby - early years
4Oveta Culp Hobby - middle years
5Oveta Culp Hobby - older years
6Portraits - color
7Business Week Magazine
8Life Magazine
8Casual photographs of Oveta Culp Hobby
9Oveta Culp Hobby in khakis
Box
40-41