Subseries 1.1, Fieldwork, contains original and transcribed field notes, Vincent's inquiries conducted with Teso people on various topics, and summaries synthesizing the data produced by her fieldwork. Most notably, the subseries contains approximately a dozen field notebooks from Vincent's PhD field research in Teso, which she called her "Red Bugondo Notebooks." These notebooks were transcribed and researchers will find portions of typed transcriptions interspersed with the original handwritten fieldnotes, along with what is believed to be a complete typed transcription of her fieldwork diaries from 1966 to 1968. Also during this time, she conducted handwritten inquiries with residents of the Teso district on a variety of topics, including their farming and/or fishing practices, family structures, and opinions on Big Men in the area. Through her surveys on familial connections, she traced relationships in the district. This subseries also includes summaries of this raw anthropological data. Vincent generated less handwritten notes on her return trips to Teso in the following years, but Subseries 1.1 does contain spare field notes and final field reports from her trips in 1988 and 1991. Common languages spoken in the Eastern region of Uganda include Ateso, Luganda, English and Swahili; the nation contains almost 70 unique spoken languages. Vincent's field notes contain an Eastern Nilotic language and processing archivists suspect the non-English is written in Ateso, the language spoken by the Teso people of Uganda, or Luganda or Lusoga, Bantu languages spoken in Eastern Uganda. Generally, her field notes written in the Eastern Nilotic languages also include translation to English, but Vincent does not specify the dialect being translated.