Ernest Hebert Finding Aid.pdf
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Ernest Hebert Papers
MS.104
Finding aid prepared by Taelour Cornett
This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit
January 24, 2022
College Archives & Special Collections / Wallace E. Mason Library / Keene State College
2019
229 Main Street
MS 3201
Keene, New Hampshire, 03435
603-358-2717
archivist@keene.edu
Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Table of Contents
Summary Information ................................................................................................................................. 3
Biographical/Historical note.......................................................................................................................... 4
Scope and Contents note............................................................................................................................... 4
Provenance..................................................................................................................................................... 6
Bibliography...................................................................................................................................................8
Collection Inventory.................................................................................................................................... 10
Correspondence...................................................................................................................................... 10
Manuscripts............................................................................................................................................ 10
Artwork.................................................................................................................................................. 14
Photographs............................................................................................................................................ 25
Notes.......................................................................................................................................................26
Events..................................................................................................................................................... 27
Associated Materials..............................................................................................................................27
Legal Documents................................................................................................................................... 28
Memorabilia........................................................................................................................................... 29
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Summary Information
Repository
College Archives & Special Collections / Wallace E. Mason Library /
Keene State College
Creator - Author
Hebert, Ernie
Title
Ernest Hebert Papers
Date
1992, 1998-2018
Extent
1.5 Linear feet 1 Record Carton
Language
English
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Biographical/Historical note
Ernest Hebert was born in Keene, New Hampshire, on May 4th, 1941. He attended Keene State College
in the late 1960s, which is where he met Medora Lavoie, whom he married on March 22, 1969. After
graduating with his bachelor's degree, Hebert was accepted into Stanford University to study creative
writing with a concentration in poetry. However, he soon found that his passion was not in poetry and
turned his focus instead toward fiction writing. Although Hebert learned a great deal during his time at
Stanford, he realized before finishing his program that graduate school wasn't for him and instead left to
return home to New Hampshire so that his wife could finish college.
Once he returned to New Hampshire, Hebert worked at a gas station for several years before being hired
as a reporter with The Keene Sentinal Newspaper. He also worked for several several other newspapers
during this time period including Business NH Magazine, the New Hampshire Times, and The Boston
Globe.
Several years later in 1979, Hebert published The Dogs of March. This novel marked the beginning of
Hebert's well known seven-book series, The Darby Series. Although the protagonist of the first book
was a man named Howard Elman, Hebert decided quickly that the focus of the series was to be more on
the fictonal town of Darby, New Hampshire, and the lives of all the people who lived there rather than a
single person. A major focal point of the novels was the differences in economic class within Darby. The
series has spanned 7 novels so far, and Hebert has said that the series will never be complete in much the
same way that towns are never complete. The most recent entry in the series is Howard Elman's Farewell,
which was published in 2014.
Hebert worked as a creative writing professor at Dartmouth College for more than 25 years before
retiring. He has also been awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Keene State College and
received the Sara Josepha Hale Award for Literary Achievement.
In addition to his other achievements, Hebert has written several stand-alone novels, the most recent of
which was in 2017 with The Contrarian Voice: And Other Poems. Currently, Ernest Hebert is the first
member of faculty at Dartmouth College to be tenured as a fiction writer.
Scope and Contents note
The Ernest Hebert Papers consists of 9 series pertaining to Ernest Hebert's career as a writer. There is
1.5 feet of archival material within the collection. The items within this collection span the most recent
years of Hebert's writing career. For those interested in accessing materials related to his earlier career,
Dartmouth College houses a collection of Hebert's older writings.
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
The first series within this collection is correspondence. The only item in this series is a letter from the
writer addressed to Tom Sleigh.
The second series is a collection of manuscripts from Hebert's most recent works. There are ten sub series,
each consisting of a different manuscript's drafts as well as critiques from editors and other writers. Sub
series 1 is comprised of two drafted versions of Darby and the Quest for Common Ground. The second
sub series consists of several drafts of One Way to Write a Novel. Sub series 3 is four versions of The
Contrarian Voice and Other Poems, each varying in length and content- several items within this sub
series consist of an almost completed version of the manuscript while others are only a single page. Also
included within this sub series is a critique of the work by Terry Pindell.
The fourth item in the series is a draft of the manuscript Recycling Reality. The fifth item within the
series is Keepers of the Flame. The sixth item in the series is a draft of The Darby Chronicles. The
seventh item within the series is The Old American, A Personal Journey. The eighth sub series within
the manuscript series is Nurse Lucy, which is comprised of four different drafts of the manuscript. Also
included in this sub series is a critique of the draft by Murray McClellan. The ninth sub series consists of
an early and second draft of Island Pond.
Sub series 10 is comprised of multiple short pieces of Hebert's work. Included within this sub series is
Angela Whiteman, Darby Chronicles and the KSC Collection, DC Slideshow, Freedom and Unity: The
Vermont Movie Notes, Historical Writing for Creatings, How Women Influenced My Career as a Writer,
WRJ, On the Road with Kerouac's Daughter, Plow Guy's Lament, Writings That Changed My Life, and
My Art, If That's What it Is. A sub series is also included within this collection entitled Sweet Sad Story
About a Typewriter. This sub series consists of two different drafted versions of Sweet Sad Story About a
Typewriter.
Series 3 consists of four folders of Hebert's artwork. The first folder includes Hebert's artwork that has
his comments included to help contextualize the pieces. The second folder of Hebert's artwork consists of
artwork that does not have any comments included. The final two folders of this series compile Hebert's
artwork that was printed on photo paper and created digitally.
The fourth series of this collection consists of Hebert's photographs in both negative and print form.
The fifth series is comprised of Hebert's notes. This series is an amalgamation of Hebert's notes for
writing ideas, manuscript notes, and personal notes. The items within this collection range from notes
printed from a computer using a word processor and notes written on legal pads. There are 6 folders in
this series, with a date range of 2015-2017.
The sixth series within this collection includes several fliers, booklets, and invitations from events that
Hebert attended relating to his writing career. There are fliers from Hebert's book tour for The Contrarian
Voice and Other Poems as well as Darby and the Magic Moment at Park Hill Meeting House. Within this
series is also an invitation from 1998 for the University of the West Indies' Presentation of Graduates. The
final item within this series is a booklet from the film Freedom and Unity: The Vermont Movie to which
Hebert contributed an essay.
The seventh series consists of materials Hebert collected pertaining to his wife, friends, colleagues,
and former students. Notable people represented include Medora Hebert, Terry Pindell, David Benioff,
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Margaret Langford, and Steve Taylor. The format of the items ranges from published editions of
magazines to short pieces of poetry printed on computer paper.
The eighth series is a collection of legal documents pertaining to Hebert's writing career.The documents
included are from the University Press of New England, Keene State College, and Dartmouth College.
The items include a deed of gift, an assignment of copyright, and an electronic publication permission
agreement.
The ninth and final series in the collection includes several items of memorabilia derived from either gifts
from friends of Hebert or personal items from Hebert himself. These consist of a greeting card, two of
Hebert's business cards, and several blank sheets of stationary from Dartmouth college.
Administrative Information
Publication Information
College Archives & Special Collections / Wallace E. Mason Library / Keene State College 2019
Provenance
I was born May 4, 1941, in Elliot Community Hospital, which at this writing has been converted to Elliot
Hall, a Keene State College building in Keene, New Hampshire. I attended Keene schools, including
Keene State College, where I graduated in 1969, and where I met my future wife of more than fifty years,
Medora Lavoie, originally of Dover, New Hampshire. When we married I was a 27-year-old senior and
she was a 19-year-old sophomore. I was a reporter for The Keene Sentinel for nine years (1972-1981),
and I worked for Keene businesses: Ideal Taxi, West Street Texaco, Markem Corp., Cheshire Landscape,
Top Gas, International Narrow Fabric Inc., Miller Brothers Newton, and New England Telephone
and Telegraph Co. I also have roots of one kind or another in surrounding towns of Keene--Dublin,
Harrisville, Nelson, Stoddard, Sullivan, Swanzey, and Westmoreland.
It was during the Sentinel years--when Medora and I were raising kids, and where I wrote a news story
for the paper that won me a UPI journalism award about a bull moose that wandered down Main Street in
Keene--that it struck me that home for me was and always would be the Monadnock Region.
Unlike many writers--perhaps even most--I was never eager to leave the place of my origins. But I did
leave. I was gone for more than two decades when I took a tenure track position in the Creative Writing
program of the English Department at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.
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It's only 67 miles from Keene to Hanover and both communities are in the same state. Even so, Hanover
was never home for me. I yearned to "go home again" to the Monadnock Region, and I did. I think it's
an interesting story, too, how I did come back that has a bearing on my decision to house some of my
papers at Keene State. After Medora and I married in March of 1969, we lived in the town of Nelson,
New Hampshire, until late August when we set out for Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, where
I was enrolled in the Master of Arts program for creative writing.
I only stayed at Stanford for two terms. Medora worked a full-time job as a telephone company operator;
I was a student by day and a gas pumper and janitor from 5 to 11 pm at Commuter Shell gas station on
Lytton Avenue. I was only at Stanford for two terms, but they were hugely valuable to me. I was accepted
as a poet by English poet Donald Davie, but in the second term I switched to fiction where I studied with
novelist Wallace Stegner. The main reason I chose fiction over poetry as my specialty was my realization
that all my poems had a narrative and that the novel form was better suited for the enterprise of storytelling than poetry. I knew the kind of writer I wanted to be and what I had to do to learn the craft--write
and read regularly--so I saw no reason to stay in school.
But there was another reason to leave Stanford. I did not like the San Francisco Bay area of California.
It was too crowded and too citified for my taste. Deep down Medora and I were terribly homesick, a fact
we didn't realize for a while. When we left Stanford, our grand plan was to move to Albuquerque, New
Mexico, where I would get a job and Medora would enroll at the University of New Mexico to finish her
undergraduate work. It was our arrival in New Mexico where homesickness hit us hard. We pretty much
raced to New Hampshire where Medora re-enrolled at Keene State and I worked for a couple years at
Top Gas, a one-man gas station. In 1972 at age 31 I started my first middle-class job, sports writer for the
Keene Sentinel. We were home, and we were going to stay.
The first place we rented upon our return was a somewhat run-down little three-room house in the Park
Hill Village of Westmoreland, NH. We fell in love with the house, the neighborhood, the town and its
people, history, and landscape: river bottom land, rugged wooded hills with outcroppings of ledge, and
just about everywhere you looked stonewalls that had their origins in centuries before the 20th.
There was a particular lot that we coveted--two wooded acres of up and down land that included an
abandoned artist studio. One night it burned. I covered that fire for the Sentinel. We had a yearning to
live on this property, but we didn't have any money and it wasn't for sale. Later we rented an apartment in
Swanzey, New Hampshire, then bought our first house on 52 Elliot Street in Keene, a block from where I
was born. When I got the job on the tenure track at Dartmouth, we bought a house in West Lebanon, NH,
only five or six miles from the English Department at Dartmouth.
I never lost touch with Westmoreland, though. Indeed, in two important ways I never left. We owned
a small wood lot where periodically I cut firewood. Sometimes I would take an afternoon for myself,
drive to my lot on Daggett Hill, build a camp fire, have a cup of coffee, and just enjoy being home. This
connection to the land went on for decades.
The other connection was literary. In the novels I was writing, the fictional town of Darby assumed
greater and greater importance in the themes of social class I was trying to get across. Indeed, I started
to think of Darby as a character; the town was a living presence in my mind. But Darby was not entirely
a product of my imagination. It was a synthesis in literary form of towns in the Monadnock Region that
I loved. A map of Darby looks very much like the real town of Westmoreland. The rural underclass
Jordan clan of Darby Depot is based on a section of the town of Sullivan, New Hampshire, where I built
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a cabin back in the 1970s. The cabin inhabited by Cooty Patterson, Darby's hermit, is a near clone to
the structure I whacked together. Cooty is roughly based on Perely Swett, a real self-described hermit
in Stoddard, New Hampshire. Upper Darby, where the old rich reside, is based on a wealthy section of
Dublin, New Hampshire, where my mother, Jeannette Vaccarest, was a nanny for a wealthy family before
she met Elphege Hebert, my future dad. These real towns--Westmoreland, Sullivan, Stoddard, Dublin--are
satellite towns circling the little city of my hometown of Keene.
Flash ahead to 2008. That was the year that Medora found the dream lot of our 1970s youthful years in
Westmoreland for sale on the Internet. We scoffed it up and built a house, moving in late in 2009. It took
us 38 years to get back to the place where we wanted to live. At this writing in March of 2019, we have
no plans to leave. Let me add that I plotted my semi-autobiographical novel Never Back Down, published
in 2012, while driving back and forth between Westmoreland and Hanover. In other words, I plotted the
book in an interstice between my work world and my home world.
On July 31, 2015, I officially retired from Dartmouth College and donated my papers with the Dartmouth
archival library where I had made yearly drops over the years. Let me add that Dartmouth archivists
Stanley Brown and Philip Cronwnwett had approached me long before I joined the faculty, offering to
house my papers on loan. I had warm relations with these two classy librarians until they left Dartmouth
and also with their successors at Rauner Library. I wanted very much for Dartmouth to accept my
donation of my papers. And they did.
Though I was retired from teaching, I was not retired from my creative life. I continued to write and took
off in another direction, a life-long desire to draw. I decided to draw images from my books. What to
do with the new material I was producing--fiction, essays, poems, digital artwork? The author Thomas
Wolfe famously said, "You can't go home again." In my case, he was wrong. I felt born-again in my home
region. With that realization I concluded any new material I produced upon leaving Dartmouth belonged
in Keene. The logical place for those papers to reside would be at my alma mater, Keene State College.
When I met Rodney Obien, the Keene State archivist, and saw that Keene had the facilities to house my
papers I decided that all my new work--material produced within my born-again creative life--needed to
be separated from the old life at Dartmouth. It needed to be in the Monadnock Region. What better locale
than Keene State College, close to the geographical center of the region I call home?
Bibliography
Darby and the Quest for Common ground
One Way to Write a Novel
The Contrarian Voice and Other Poems
Nurse Lucy
Never Back Down
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The Dogs of March
The Kinship
Whisper My Name
Live Free or Die
Mad Boys
The Old American
Origins of the Darby Series
Origins: Darby Names and My Name
How John Gardner Kicked My Ass and Saved My Soul
Spoonwood
A Little More Than Kin
The Passion of Estelle Jordan
Howard Elman's Farewell
Whisper My Name
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Correspondence
Collection Inventory
Series 1 Correspondence
Letter to Tom Sleigh from Ernest Hebert
Series 2 Manuscripts
Series 2.1 1 Darby and the Quest for Common Ground
Version 3
Version 4.3
Series 2.2 2 One Way to Write a Novel
Vision and Revision: One Way to Write a Novel
Workflowy Before Edits
Workflowy After Edits
Series 2.3 3 The Contrarian Voice and Other Poems
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8 Nurse Lucy
Draft
Critique by Terry Pindell
Hypothermia Draft
October 2015
4 Recycling Reality
5 Keepers of the Flame
6 Darby Chronicles
7 The Old American, A Personal Journey
Series 2.8 8 Nurse Lucy
The Woodpecker Unedited Draft
The Woodpecker Edited Draft
Nurse Lucy Workflowy
Nurse Lucy Critique by Murray McClellan
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
9 Island Pond
Series 2.9 9 Island Pond
Island Pond Early Draft 2017
Island Pond Second Draft
Series 2.10 10 Short Pieces
1 Angela Whiteman
Workflowy
2 Darby Chronicles and the KSC Connection
Workflowy
3 DC Slideshow
Workflowy
4 Freedom and Unity: The Vermont Movie Notes
Workflowy
5 Historical Writing for Creatives
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10 Sweet Sad Story About a Typewriter
6 How Women Influenced My Career as a Writer
Workflowy
7 WRJ
Workflowy
8 On the Road with Kerouac's Daughter
Workflowy
9 My Art, If That's What it Is
Workflowy
2.10.10 10 Sweet Sad Story About a Typewriter
2.10.1 This is a Sweet Sad Story About a Typewriter Typewritten
A Sweet Sad Story About a Typewriter Workflowy
11 Plow Guy's Lament
Draft
12 Writings That Changed My Life
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Artwork
Workflowy
Series 3 Artwork
1 Artwork with Comments
Birch Latour Desktop
Birch Latour in His Office
Path Logo
Working People
Howard Elman
Matchbox
Estelle Wall
Beech Tree in Winter
Some Drawings Never Work
Darby Bulletin Board
What's My Name
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Artwork
Curmudgeons
Cooty's Reminders
Cooty's Reminders Copy
Scrabble Tiles Done Cowreckly
Darby Sign with Motto
Cooty Patterson and Stew Pot
Darby Sign with Motto
Elman Place, Darby, NH, 1970 Something
Tess Jordan Studio
The Swing
2 Artwork without Comments
Trail Bikes and All Terrain Vehicles Prohibited
Trail Bikes and All Terrain Vehicles Prohibited Copy 1
Trail Bikes and All Terrain Vehicles Prohibited Copy 2
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Artwork
Still Life with Champagne and Wine Bottles
Warning! All Book Agents & Editors...
A Little More than Kin
A Little More than Kin Alternate Version
A Little More than Kin Alternate Version Copy
A Little More than Kin Photorealistic Version
Whisper My Name
The Passion of Estelle Jordan
The Passion of Estelle Jordan Alternate Version
Live Free or Die Copy 1
Live Free or Die Copy 2
Live Free or Die Copy 3
Live Free or Die Alternate Version
Spoonwood Copy 1
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Artwork
Spoonwood Copy 2
Spoonwood Copy 3
Howard Elman's Farewell Copy 1
Howard Elman's Farewell Copy 2
Howard Elman's Farewell Copy 3
Still Life with Champagne and Wine Large Print
Father Vac's Typewriter Source Photograph
Father Vac's Typewriter
The Dogs of March Copy 1
The Dogs of March Copy 2
The Dogs of March Copy 3
The Dogs of March Without Title Copy 1
The Dogs of March Without Title Copy 2
The Dogs of March Without Title Copy 3
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Artwork
Hick Lit
If You Post Your Land Stay the Hell off Mine
Free Super Cute! Kittens
Free Super Cute! Kittens Copy
Free Super Cute! Kittens Rough Draft
Free Super Cute! Kittens Rough Draft Copy
Augmented Reality
Darby Town Map
Darby Town Map Copy
The Dogs of March
The Dogs of March Copy
Path StudI/O
Path StudI/O Copy
Darby Chronicles: Poems in the Books
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Artwork
Wall of Quotes
Wall of Quotes
The Darby Chronicles: Life Death and Laughs in a Small Town
The Darby Chronicles: Life Death and Laughs in a Small Town Copy
The Darby Chronicles: Life Death and Laughs in a Small Town Finished Version October 2015
Guide to Darby Chronicles
Whisper My Name
Whisper My Name Copy
Save This World Before Ourselves
Save This World Before Ourselves Copy
The Woodpecker With Title
The Woodpecker Without Title
The Woodpecker Without Title Copy
Darby NH Town Hall Billboard
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Artwork
Ike's Auction Barn and Flea Market
Ike's Auction Barn and Flea Market Copy
Geek Chorus Software
Holiday Greetings from Darby
Holiday Greetings from Darby Stamped Version
Elenore's Rosary Beads Found in the Driveway
Writings that Changed My Life Copy 1
Writings that Changed My Life Copy 2
Writings that Changed My Life Copy 3
Writings that Changed My Life Copy 4
Writings that Changed My Life Copy 5
Stay Loose Copy 1
Stay Loose Copy 2
Stay Loose Copy 3
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Artwork
Darby New Hampshire Town Meeting Spirit
Branch Hanging from Wall Rough Draft
Branch Hanging from Wall
Branch Hanging from Wall Copy 1
Branch Hanging from Wall Copy 2
Branch Hanging from Wall Greyscale Painting
The Mike and Ernie Detective Agency Photograph Version
The Mike and Ernie Detective Agency Photograph Version Copy June 3, 2017
The Mike and Ernie Detective Agency Lineart Version
Flowers in Vase on Countertop
What's My Name?
Writers Beware of Literary Theory
Salmon Nature Conservancy on the Trail
Granite State Sweepstakes
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Artwork
When the Child Learns to Pump the Male Parent is No Longer Needed Original
When the Child Learns to Pump the Male Parent is No Longer Needed
Fishing Hook
Hand-Made Wooden Spoons by F. Latour
Welcome to Re In Car Nation
Cooty Pattersion TIME Person of the Year
The Passion of Estelle Jordan Version 1
The Passion of Estelle Jordan Version 2
Park Hill Meeting House Summer Lectures
Gravestone of Joseph Ernest Vaccarest Hebert Copy 1
Gravestone of Joseph Ernest Vaccarest Hebert Copy 2
Gravestone of Joseph Ernest Vaccarest Hebert Copy 3
Darby and the Magic Moment
Darby Chronicles
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Artwork
Cooty Patterson's Hatchet
Single bit "Indestructible" Fiberglass Handle
Hatchet on Wall
Bowl and Spoon on Table
C3 Door
Cooty's Buck Saw
Part 1 - Poems Inspired by a Novel I Never Wrote
Part 3 - Personal Poems
Part 4 - Darby Chronicles: Poems Inspired by the Characters
Scrabble Points
Squire on for 8 PM
Bat and Ball: Our National Pastime
Elenore's Rosary Beads Found in the Driveway
3 Artwork Printed on Photo Paper
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Artwork
Cooty's Cabin
The Woodpecker
The Woodpecker without Clock
C3 Door
4 Digital Artwork
When the Child Learns to Pump the Male Parent is No Longer Needed Original
When the Child Learns to Pump the Male Parent is No Longer Needed
When the Child Learns to Pump the Male Parent is No Longer Needed Copy
Woman Stepping over Broken Vase of Flowers
Wooden Spoon
Pen New England North Summer Symposium Version 1
Pen New England North Summer Symposium Version 2
Robert Creeley
The Darby Chronicles: Life Death and Laughs in a Small Town
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Photographs
Cabin in the Woods
Pulpit in Lavish Living Room
Child's Hand Holding Wooden Spoon
Tree Sickle
Tree Debarker
Woodworker's Bench
January 2001 Calendar
March 2001 Calendar
Painted Green Trees
MadBoys Car
Freshman Bon Fire 1992 1992
Series 4 Photographs
1 Photograph Negatives
1301
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Notes
2 Photograph Prints
Bicycle
Go with "Big Red"
Elphege Hebert
Ernest Hebert with his Father, Elphege J. Hebert, in West Lebanon, New Hampshire 1999-2000
Series 5 Notes
1 Handwritten Notes 2015
Yellow Legal Pad 2015
2 Handwritten Notes 2016
Yellow Legal Pad 2016
Handwritten Notes 2016 and 2017
3 Handwritten Notes 2017
Yellow Legal Pad 2017
4 Handwritten Notes Second Half of 2017
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Events
Yellow Legal Pad 2017
The Code Notes
Series 6 Events
Series 6.1 Book Tours
University Press of New England
Keene State College
Dartmouth College
Series 6.2 Invitations
Series 5.2.1 The University of the West Indies' Presentation of Graduates 1998
Series 6.3 Films
Series 6.3.1 Freedom and Unity: The Vermont Movie Booklet
Series 7 Associated Materials
1 Medora Hebert
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Legal Documents
Historic Harrisville Gallery Postcard
Two Rivers Print Making Studio Gallery Postcard
2 Terry Pindell
Sonnets 2011-2012 Red Spiral Notebook 2011-2012
3 David Benioff
Dartmouth Alumni Magazine May/June 2017
4 Margaret Langford
Still Life with Champagne and Wine Bottles
5 Steve Taylor
Poor Farms and County Almshouses Poster
Series 8 Legal Documents
1 University Press of New England
Assignment of Copyright
2 Keene State College
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Ernest Hebert Papers MS.104
Memorabilia
Deed of Gift
3 Dartmouth College
Electronic Publication Permission Agreement
Series 9 Memorabilia
1 Gifts to Ernest Hebert
Star of Wonder Greeting Card
Rad Dike Artwork
2 Personal Items
Christmas Card
Two Business Cards
Blank Stationary from Dartmouth College
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