Reno Divorce Correspondence -- Completed

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Reno Divorce Correspondence -- Completed
Reno, Nevada was considered the Divorce Capital of the World for six decades during the Twentieth Century. After the residency requirement was reduced to six weeks in 1931, thousands of men and women spent those weeks in boarding houses, hotels, and "divorce ranches" in Nevada. Special Collections, in the University of Nevada, Reno Libraries, hosts primary materials that document some of their experiences, including these letters to and from guest ranch proprietors, judges, and attorneys. The letters have now been transcribed, but some of them still need to be reviewed (proofread and edited). If you would like to review transcripts, contact Special Collections. For more information about Reno's divorce history, visit Illuminating Reno's Divorce Industry.

Works

91-49-5-Gwen

91-49-5-Gwen

A former guest is writing about getting her new life organized in New York and Connecticut.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
95-10-ii-2-1937-Marion

95-10-ii-2-1937-Marion

A letter written in 1937 from Marion, a former guest at the Pyramid Lake Ranch, now living in New York, to Bernice Cutlip, who managed the guest ranch with her husband, Wayne.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
95-10-ii-2-6-28-1937-Marion

95-10-ii-2-6-28-1937-Marion

An 11-page letter dated June 28, 1937, from Marion in New York City, a former guest at the Pyramid Lake Ranch to Bernice Cutlip, who managed the ranch with her husband Wayne.

11 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1055-8-19-9-1-1931-Alice

NC1055-8-19-9-1-1931-Alice

A 1931 correspondence between a woman named Alice and a lawyer named Walter Rowson about the process of obtaining a divorce.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-1-160-1924-Jane

NC1253-1-160-1924-Jane

Handwritten testimony of a woman named Jane explaining the quality of her marriage and the eventual deterioration of it, which was used for her court case. Although not a letter, it is an insight into this woman's experience as well as one of Judge Bartlett's cases that he presided over in 1925.

14 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-1-59-1941-William

NC1253-1-59-1941-William

A man named William writes to Judge Bartlett in 1941 with a question about a cross-complaint during his divorce trial.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1-16-1945-Alfred

NC1253-9-1-16-1945-Alfred

A man named Alfred Bartlett writes to Judge Bartlett in 1945 with questions about the divorce process, while also providing a summary of his situation with his estranged wife.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1-26-1945-Alfred

NC1253-9-1-26-1945-Alfred

Alfred Bartlett responds to Judge Bartlett with further questions about the divorce process in 1945.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1900-1920-Reese

NC1253-9-1900-1920-Reese

Mrs. Reese Fitzgerald writes to Judge Bartlett explaining her status as a widow and her desire to have an official divorce in order to maintain her independence.

5 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1920-1930-Gladys

NC1253-9-1920-1930-Gladys

Gladys Wentzell writes in 1924 asking Judge Bartlett for help with an alimony problem she is experiencing with her ex-husband.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
Displaying works 31 - 40 of 58 in total

Incomplete Works