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Studio portrait of Louise Knapp
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Portrait of Gerty T. Cori
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Studio portrait of Gerty Cori
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Student portrait of Valentina Suntzeff, 1911 Valentina Suntzeff’s freshman year student photograph attached to her St. Petersburg State I. P. Pavlov Medical University matriculation book
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Valentina Suntzeff’s Declaration of Intention to become a U.S. citizen, 1928 This 1928 U.S. Declaration of Intention document was signed by Dr. Valentina Suntzeff, indicating her “intention in good faith” to become a citizen of the United States and renouncing her allegiance to her native Russia. This declaration indicates Suntzeff’s date of birth as February 15, 1892. However, in her autobiography Suntzeff states her date of birth as February 28, 1891
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Alien Head Tax receipt for Valentina Suntzeff, upon entering the United States, 1923 Receipt for Alien Head Tax paid by Valentina Suntzeff upon entering the United States. The receipt is dated October 16, 1923 on the back. Suntzeff and her family had lived in Harbin, China for three years, having left their native Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution. Suntzeff and her family had traveled on the S.S. President Jackson from Kobe, Japan to Seattle, Washington. Upon arrival in the United States, the Suntzeff family first moved to San Francisco; four years later the family moved to St. Louis
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Passport application for the Suntzeff family to the United States from Harbin, China This passport application for travel to the United States from Harbin, China was issued to the Suntzeff family. Alexander and Valentina Suntzeff and their daughter Ludmilla emigrated to China after leaving Russian following the Bolshevik Revolution. In the fall of 1923 the family emigrated to the United States
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Portrait of Kirsten Utheim Toverud Studio portrait of Kirsten Utheim Toverud