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

NC1253-9-1934-1939-Alice

NC1253-9-1934-1939-Alice

Alice Baker writes to Judge Bartlett in 1939, reminding him that they used to know each other and asking for help in attaining a divorce.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1941-Jean

NC1253-9-1941-Jean

A four-page letter to Judge Bartlett from his daughter Jean, announcing the news of her pregnancy in 1941.

4 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1941-John

NC1253-9-1941-John

A man named John responds to Judge Bartlett with news of his father's passing in 1941.

1 page: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1941-Margaret

NC1253-9-1941-Margaret

Judge Bartlett's daughter Margaret writes to him in 1941 to defend her choices in life and to assert her independence in making her own decisions.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1943-Ann

NC1253-9-1943-Ann

A woman, Ann Slaught, writes to Judge Bartlett in 1943 about her husband, who is in jail, and about the advice Bartlett gave him about a divorce.

4 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1943-Marge

NC1253-9-1943-Marge

Marge, the girlfriend of Francis Slaught, writes to Judge Bartlett about his prison sentence and the consequences that followed it.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1944-Bonnie

NC1253-9-1944-Bonnie

Bonnie Abbott writes to Judge Bartlett about her struggles being independent after her divorce and thanks him for his emotional support.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1945-1949-Bonnie

NC1253-9-1945-1949-Bonnie

Bonnie Trulson writes to Judge Bartlett in 1948 asking for his help in an expedient divorce.

3 pages: 66% complete (100% transcribed, 33% needs review)
NC1253-9-1945-1949-Helen

NC1253-9-1945-1949-Helen

Helen McGibbeny writes in 1944 explaining to Judge Bartlett that she is in the U.S. Coast Guard and desires a quick divorce from her husband.

2 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
NC1253-9-1947-1948-George

NC1253-9-1947-1948-George

A 1947 letter written by George Johnson, a man asking Bartlett for information regarding the process of a divorce and extending praise for Bartlett's book.

3 pages: 100% complete (100% transcribed)
Displaying works 41 - 50 of 58 in total

Incomplete Works