-
A letter from J. N. Crooms to "Miss Homer", including an itemized expense account for the tools to create a bookcase in the Crooms Academy arts department. Also included is a statement of account from the Hill Lumber and Supply Yard, Inc., supplementing the expense account.
-
A letter from William G. Nunn, managing editor of the Pittsburgh Courier, to J. N. Crooms, inviting the Crooms Academy high school band to participate in the "Festival of Flowers", a band contest held before the Flower Bowl Classic game, in 1942 held in Jacksonville.
-
A letter from H. Power Weymann, vice president of the Weymann Company, to J. N. Crooms, concerning financial matters.
-
A letter from J. N. Crooms to the W. M. Welch Manufacturing Company in which Crooms gives a list of the candidates for graduation from the Eighth Grade in Crooms Academy, as well as the candidates for graduation from the Senior High School Department.
-
A letter from H. A. Seese, District Credit Manager of the Standard Historical Society, to J. N. Crooms in which Seese discussing payments.
-
A letter and accompanying envelope from R. S. Wood of the Lester Piano Company to J. N. Crooms, in which Wood discusses a discrepancy in a bill.
-
A letter from a person identified only as "Joel" to J. N. Crooms, on Selma University stationary. In the letter, Joel on personal matters. Also included is a receipt from the Selma National Bank of a payment of $75 to J. N. Crooms from C. J. Hurston. It is unconfirmed if this person is the "Joel" who wrote the letter.
-
A letter from W. W. Andrews, president of the Florida Sentinel Publishing Co., to J. N. Crooms, discussing the publication of copies of the minutes of the State Teachers Association.
-
A letter from J. W. Mickens, notary public and "Dealer in Fine Shoes", that does not identify the recipient, but is addressed to "my dear prof.", thus possibly to Crooms, but this is unconfirmed. In the letter, Mickens discusses travel/hotel arrangements.
-
A letter from L. H. Lightner, the Supreme Clerk of the Supreme Camp of the American Woodmen, to J. N. Crooms, concerning receipts and travel arrangements. On the back of the letter are handwritten financial calculations, presumably by Crooms himself.