A set of blueprints included in the Mamie Luella Williams collection. The blueprints include drawings of the front elevation, first floor, second floor, and basement. It is possible that these blueprints are from Mamie's house on Quincy street in Topeka, Kansas, but a large portion of the first page of the blueprints are missing. Mamie was an elementary school teacher and principal in Topeka, Kansas. In 1965 she was appointed to the Kansas Commission on the Status of Women, served as a delegate to the 1971 White House Conference on Aging, and was active on the Senior Citizens Advisory Council for the Republican Party for Kansas, 1974-1976. She received the Washburn University Distinguished Service Award in 1973, and an honorary doctorate in mathematics from Washburn in 1982. Williams Science and Fine Arts Elementary Magnet School at 1301 S.E. Monroe, Topeka, Kansas, was named in honor of Ms. Williams.