Facet Browse
<< previous| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4| next >>
Title | Creator | Date Made Visible | None
Vern Miller on a motorcycle
A photograph showing Vern Miller, Sedgwick County Deputy Sheriff, seated on a motorcycle.
previewEating watermelon, Wichita, Kansas
This black and white photograph shows twin girls eating watermelon at a unidentified home in Wichita, Kansas.
previewVern Miller and family
A photograph showing Vern Miller and his family (left to right): George Miller, Wanda Nadene Miller Farmer, John Miller, Pearl Miller (their mother), Dan Miller and Vern Miller.
previewVern Miller
A photograph showing Vern Miller, Sedgwick County Marshal, looking at marijuana plants.
previewVern Miller and Pearl Miller
A photograph of Vern Miller, Sedgwick County Marshal, and his mother Pearl Miller.
previewVern Miller
A photograph showing (l to r) Charlie Lutkie; Guy Goodwin; and Vern Miller, Sedgwick County Marshal, looking at confiscated alcohol.
previewVern Miller
A photograph showing Vern Miller, Sedgwick County Marshal, holding a punching bag for Alton Lane. Shortly after he became Marshal, Miller formed the Vern Miller Boxing Team at a local Boy's Club in Wichita, Kansas. He trained with the boxers and refereed matches.
previewVern Miller and Sedgwick County traffic control officers, Wichita, Kansas
A photograph of Captain Vern Miller and Sedgwick County traffic control officers, Wichita, Kansas. Officers in the photograph are (left to right): Gene Kuhn, Joe Quick, Bob Harderode, John Adams, Hollis Nichols, Denver Bland, Dale Menefee, Ed Riordan, Ray Mitchell, Vern Miller, Raymond Dougherty, Harry Price, Al Boyle, Roy Mitchell, Larry Duffy, Bill Docekal, and James "Red" Young. The photograph was taken on the east side of the sheriff's office with Market Street in the background.
previewVern Miller's service station, Wichita, Kansas
A photograph of Vern Miller's service station, Wichita, Kansas.
previewCurtis Realious McClinton
This photograph shows Curtis Realious McClinton, 1913-2021, from Sedgwick County, Kansas. Mclinton was a real estate broker and former Kansas NAACP vice-president, he was elected in 1956 to the Kansas House of Representatives representing the Sixty-Seven District of Sedgwick. He served two terms in the house from 1957 to 1960. In 1965 he was elected as the first African-American to the Kansas Senate representing the Twenty-Six District of Sedgwick. He served two terms from 1965-1968. During his legislative career he introduced public-accommodation laws calling for "equal treatment for individuals, regardless of race, religion or national origin", that predated the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964.
preview