[Pete Seeger, half-length portrait, singing while playing banjo] / Wor...
Public domain photograph - Portrait, United States, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description
Pete Seeger arrives at Fed. Court with his guitar over his shoulder / ...
Pete Seeger, half-length portrait, turned right with guitar case slung over his shoulder. NYWT&S staff photograph. Forms part of: New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection (Library of Congress).
Joan Baez in concert, September 10 ...
Gift; Gary Yanker; 1975-1983. Exhibited: "Hope for America : Entertainers, Politics, and Democracy" at the Bob Hope Gallery, Thomas Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., 2013 ; (Rotation 1... More
[Pete Seeger, full-length portrait, performing on stage at Yorktown He...
World Journal Tribune staff photo. New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection.
Pete Seeger at Bicentennial - Public domain image related to music prf...
Photograph shows singer Pete Seeger with guitar singing at the Bicentennial celebration of the Library of Congress on the U.S. Capitol Grounds, Washington, D.C. Title devised by Library Publishing Office staff.
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, February 20, 1941
Regrets "Back Where I Come From" is off the air; wired Nick [Ray] about getting back on the show, but the reply was "it was all off." Asks about Pete Seeger; is house-hunting, gives other odds and ends of detai... More
Letter from Alan Lomax to Woody Guthrie, February 4, 1941
Misses Guthrie on "Back Where I Come From"; asks permission to use several songs [for Ballad Hunter records]; doesn't know how he can help re. the Tom Joad business [which Guthrie wrote about ca. January 1941].... More
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, September 8, 1941
Postcard from Portland while on tour with the Almanac Singers [not mentioned specifically]. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, September 17, 1940
Account of doings and odds and ends. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, ca. August 1940
Sent from Will Geer's address in New York City; Woody and Cisco [Houston] are playing at Jimmy Sawyer's Sawdust Trail in New York; odds and ends of miscellaneous news. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, January 22, 1941
Account of trip from New York to California; miscellaneous personal news. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, ca. April 1941
Says he has been singing for various groups; tells Lomax to look up Sarah Ogan [Gunning]; encloses two songs: "Farther Along" (Guthrie parody--earliest version of "I've Got to Know"--dated 3-41) and "The Final ... More
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, ca. August 1940
Sent from Will Geer's address in New York City; Woody and Cisco [Houston] are playing at Jimmy Sawyer's Sawdust Trail in New York; odds and ends of miscellaneous news. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, September 8, 1941
Postcard from Portland while on tour with the Almanac Singers [not mentioned specifically]. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, January 22, 1941
Account of trip from New York to California; miscellaneous personal news. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Alan Lomax to Woody Guthrie, July 15, 1940
Recommends Alliance Press as publisher for Guthrie's autobiography. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, ca. late July 1940
Guthrie acknowledges receipt of July 15, 1940 letter from Lomax, and will look up the representative of Alliance Press. External display permitted by Guthrie family
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, ca. April 1941
Says he has been singing for various groups; tells Lomax to look up Sarah Ogan [Gunning]; encloses two songs: "Farther Along" (Guthrie parody--earliest version of "I've Got to Know"--dated 3-41) and "The Final ... More
Letter from Woody Guthrie to Alan Lomax, February 20, 1941
Regrets "Back Where I Come From" is off the air; wired Nick [Ray] about getting back on the show, but the reply was "it was all off." Asks about Pete Seeger; is house-hunting, gives other odds and ends of detai... More