1780+ American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics


National Progressive Republican League, Records of, 1911-12



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National Progressive Republican League, Records of, 1911-12.

States file, 1911-12, arranged alphabetically by state, mainly letters received by Walter Houser* (110 boxes); general office file, 1911-12, mainly routine staff correspondence; special letters, 1912, arranged alphabetically by state (2 boxes); financial papers, 1911-12 (4 boxes); address file and partial index to states file (22 boxes of cards).




Harriot Stanton Blatch* (1856-1940), Papers of, 1907-15 (17/17).
“Suffragist; founder of the Equality League of Self-Supporting Women, later the Women's Political Union.”
“Scrapbooks containing correspondence, questionnaires, annual reports of the Women's Political Union, other reports, pamphlets, clippings, photographs, memorabilia, and additional material documenting the struggle for women's suffrage in New York State, that culminated with the passage of the suffrage amendment in the state legislature in 1915. Also includes material marking the centennial celebration of the birth of Blatch's mother, Elizabeth Cady Stanton.”
Scrapbooks, chronological, 1908-15 (12 v.).


Washington Irving Chambers* (1856-1954), Papers of, 1871-1943 (40/48).
U.S. Navy, 1872-1913; Captain, 1910: co-founder of and first officer assigned full-time to naval aviation, arranged a flight by Glenn Curtiss’s airplane from a special platform on U.S.S. Birmingham; never an admiral because of his open preference of aircraft carriers over battleships.
“Correspondence, subject files, logbooks, memoranda, blueprints, photographs, printed matter, and other papers relating to Chambers's service aboard the Pensacola and the Portsmouth, with the A. W. Greely relief expedition, 1884, to the Arctic, with the Nicaragua Canal survey expedition, 1884-1885, at the Newport torpedo station, the New York navy-yard, and in various administrative offices of the Navy Department. The post-1910 material relates chiefly to Chambers's assignment, 1910, to report on the development and application of aviation to naval forces and to dirigibles, helicopters, balloons, parachutes, and flight science and procedures.
Correspondents include Thomas S. Baldwin, W. Starling Burgess, Glenn Hammond Curtiss, Theodore Gordon Ellyson, Eugene Ely, Louis Godard, Roy Knabenshue, Grover Cleveland Loening, Glenn L. Martin, James Means, Holden Chester Richardson, John Rodgers, and John H. Towers.”
“Letters, 1896-1910 (3 boxes), 1911-19 (18 boxes); subject files, 1884-1917 (12 boxes); aircraft logbooks , 1911-17 (4 boxes).


Miscellaneous Papers in the Sigmund Freud Collection, 1866-1983, bulk: 1908-1957.
Sigmund Freud* (1856-1939): Physician, pioneer in psychology and mental health; founder of psychoanalysis.
“Correspondence, writings, biographical material, organizational records, printed material, photograph, and other papers pertaining principally to psychoanalytic organizations and to writings by various individuals on psychoanalytic theory, the history of psychoanalysis, and the work of individual psychoanalysts.

Individuals represented include Josef Breuer, Isador H. Coriat, Paul Federn, Alexander Freud, Harry Freud, Sigmund Freud, Josef Gicklhorn, Otto Gross, Eduard Hitschmann, René Laforgue, Josine Müller, Emil Oberholzer, Lili E. Peller, and Oskar Pfister. Organizations represented include the Association des Psychanalystes de Belgique, Deutsche Psychoanalytische Gesellschaft, Psychological Center, Paris, France, and Wiener Psychoanalytische Vereinigung.”




Cooper Curtice* (1856-1939), Papers of, 1822-1953.
Cooper Curtis*: Scientist, 1893-1931, U.S. Department of Agriculture; identified with others, 1893, parasite that causes Texas cattle fever.
“Correspondence, diary, writings, speeches, notes, Curtice (Curtis) family papers, biographical and genealogical material, scrapbook, clippings, printed material, and other papers relating chiefly to Curtice's research into animal diseases. Topics include babesiosis in cattle, also known as Texas fever; eradication of its carrier, the cattle tick; and diseases in sheep and turkeys.
Correspondents include Alpheus Hyatt, Veranus Alva Moore, Theobald Smith, and Charles D. Walcott.”


A. K. Fisher* (1856-1948), Papers of, 1827-1957, bulk: 1867-1948.
Albert Kenrick Fisher*: Columbia University, M.D., 1879, practiced medicine, Sing Sing NY; founded, 1883, American Ornithologist’s Union; helped establish, 1885, and directed economic studies, 1889-1929, Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy, which became, 1905, Bureau of Biological Survey, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington DC.

“Correspondence, letter books, diaries, articles and speeches, family papers, field notes and records, memoranda, reports, drawings, bibliographic cards on birds, plants, and animals, maps, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, printed matter, and photographs, relating chiefly to Fisher's activities as an ornithologist and vertebrate zoologist, including an expedition, 1891, to Death Valley, biological surveys, 1892-1898, in California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and other western areas, the Harriman expedition to Alaska, 1899, Pinchot South Sea expedition, 1929, . . . the Washington Biologists' Field Club, and Fisher's fight for game laws and conservation.


Family papers include those of Fisher's son, Walter Kenrick Fisher* (1878-1953), naturalist and artist, and his wife, Anne Benson* (b. 1898), author, Live with a Man and Love It! The Gentle Art of Staying Happily Married (1937), and others.
Correspondents include Frank Chapman, Louis Agassiz Fuertes, Ben V. Lilly, Edgar A. Mearns, C. Hart Merriam, Gifford Pinchot, Robert Ridgway, Witmer Stone, and Alexander Wetmore.”
Letters, 1896-1920: family (3 boxes), general (12 boxes); bird notes (5 boxes).


James Hay* (1856-1931), Papers of, 1909-1930, 18 items.
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Washington and Lee University Law, Virginia Bar, and commenced practice, 1877; state offices and legislature, 1883-87; U.S. Congress, 1897-1916, Democrat, Virginia; Judge, 1916-27, U.S. Court of Claims.
Letters received from Woodrow Wilson, 1915-16; typescript MS., “Woodrow Wilson and Preparedness” (26 pp.).


Frederic Eugene Ives and Herbert Eugene Ives, Papers of, 1869-1957.
Frederic Eugene Ives* (1856-1937):
Printer’s apprentice; manager, from 1874, photographic laboratory, Cornell University; experimented with and patented: method of halftone photogravure, binocular microscope, and an instrument for separating and recombining three colors, a step in color reproduction; father of:
Herbert Eugene Ives* (1869-1957):
University of Pennsylvania, 1905, Johns Hopkins University, Ph. D., 1908; aerial photography, U.S. Army Signal Corps, World War I; Bell Labs, A.T. & T., from 1919; directed early experimentation with and subsequent development of: transmission of images, including a short distance by telephone wire in black and white, 1924, and in color, 1929, as well as long distance, Washington to New York, 1927; a two-way video telephone, 1930; and night-vision devices for military use in World War II.
Correspondence, journals, speeches, articles, scrapbooks, patents, clippings, and other papers relating to the inventions of Frederic and Herbert Ives, including such improved photographic methods and equipment, as aerial and color photography, telephoto techniques, and other devices and techniques which were precursors of commercial television.
Correspondents include George Eastman, Albert Einstein, Gen. Courtney H. Hodges, and Harry S. Truman.”
Diaries, 1870-1930 (1 box); letters (1 box).


George Frederick Kunz* (1856-1932), Papers of, 1783-1928.
Largely self-educated at Cooper Union, recipient of honorary degrees and citations; parlayed a youthful consuming fascination with minerals and gem stones found in excavations for New York City’s buildings, bridges, and tunnels into a career as a dealer and “gem expert” for Tiffany & Co.; traveled the world in search of specimens to satisfy the collecting interests of the wealthy, most of whom ultimately donated their valuable caches to museums; author: Gem Collection of the U.S. National Museum (1886), Gems and Precious Stones of North America: A Popular Description of Their Occurrence, Value, History, Archæology, and of the Collections in Which They Exist (1890), and others.
“Correspondence, notes, clippings, typescripts of articles, illuminated Russian land papers, and other material such as certificates, broadsides, and membership announcements relating to Kunz's career as a gemologist. Pertains primarily to his trip to Russia (1892-1893) and is chiefly concerned with mineralogy. Other items, including ca. 50 letters, concern an article Kunz wrote on the geography, tunnels, and bridges of the Hudson River.
Correspondents include Robert Grier Cooke, James F. Fielder, McDougall Hawkes, Henry B. Kummel, William G. McAdoo, Arthur J. O'Keefe, and William Sulzer.”


James R. Mann* (1856-1922), Papers of, 1887-1922 (34/39).
James Robert Mann*: Illinois University, 1876, Union College Law, Chicago, and Illinois Bar, 1881; practiced, Chicago; Chicago City Council, 1892-96; U.S. Congress, 1897-1922, Republican, Illinois.
“Mounted newspaper clippings, correspondence, telegrams, invitations, memorabilia, and miscellaneous printed matter relating to Mann's career in Chicago politics and Congress. Subjects covered include Chicago River improvement, interstate commerce legislation, the Pure Food and Drug Act, 1906, the Mann act, 1910, wood-pulp investigation, 1908-10, Republican congressional party leadership, and Mann's successful political campaigns.”
Scrapbooks of clippings, letters, memorabilia, 1896-1920 (34 v.).


Clarence Darrow* (1857-1938), Papers of, 1894-1974, bulk: 1910-1930 (25/36).
Clarence Seward Darrow*: Allegheny College, Meadville PA, University of Michigan Law; Ohio Bar, 1878; relocated practice to Chicago IL, 1887, corporation general counsel, 1888-1893, Chicago and Northwestern Railway; thereafter, mainly labor law: defended Eugene V. Debs, 1894, Bill Haywood and Western Federation of Miners, 1907, and others; partner, 1903-11, of attorney, poet Edgar Lee Masters; helped form, 1905, Intercollegiate Socialist Society; acquitted, 1912, of attempting to bribe a juror during the McNamara brothers trial; defended: members of the Communist Labor Party, 1920, murderers Nathan Leopold, Jr. and Richard Loeb, 1924, and John T. Scopes for teaching evolution, 1925; author of pamphlets, "The Open Shop" (1909) and “Why I Am an Agnostic” (1932); Crime: Its Cause and Treatment (1922).
“Correspondence; legal papers; drafts, mss., and printed copies of Darrow's articles and speeches; typescript of his autobiography; notes and correspondence of Irving Stone concerning his biography of Darrow; and printed material. The bulk of the papers were collected by Stone and relate primarily to Darrow's Chicago law practice and to his interest in such topics as prohibition, religion, capital punishment, evolution, and labor litigation, as well as other professional interests and activities.
Correspondents include Lillian Gish, Bolton Hall, Frank Harris, John Haynes Holmes, Nathan Leopold, Richard Loeb, J. B. McNamara, W. Somerset Maugham, Donald Richberg, Charles Edward Russell, Walter White, and Brand Whitlock.”
Letters, 1905-20 (1 box); subject files, 1902-34 (3 boxes); speech, article, book file (7 boxes); clippings (11 boxes); printed matter, Darrow, 1894-1920 (2 boxes).


Francis Dunlap Gamewell* (1857-1950), Papers of, 1900-1937 (1/1).
Missionary, 1900, during the Boxer Rebellion, Peking, China; Secretary, 1901-08, Board of Foreign Missions, Methodist Episcopal Church, New York City.
“Scrapbook, 1900-1906, 1937, of letters, photos, clippings, and memorabilia mainly concerning Gamewell's work” in China. (1 v.).


Julius Goebel* (1857-1931), Papers of, 1873-1930 (5/7).
Immigrated, 1881, from Germany; Professor of German Philology and Literature: Stanford University, 1892-1905, Harvard University, 1905-08, and University of Illinois, 1908-26; editor, 1909-26, Journal of English and Germanic Philology; editor, Deutsch-Amerikanische Geschichtsblätter (German-American Historical Review).
Letters, clippings, MSS., 1881-1920 (5 boxes).


Richard Achilles Ballinger* (1858-1922), Papers of, 1907-11, microfilm (13 reels).
Mayor, Seattle WA, 1904-06; Commissioner of U.S. General Land Office, 1907-09; U.S. Secretary of the Interior, 1909-11.
Originals held by University of Washington Library.
“Papers relating chiefly to Ballinger's term as U.S. Secretary of the Interior. Also includes materials pertaining . . . to the General Land Office and documents relating to the Ballinger-Gifford Pinchot controversy which resulted in a congressional investigation of the Interior Department and the Forestry Service in 1910.”


Theo. A. Bingham* (1858-1934), Papers of, 1897-1903 (26/26).
Theodore Alfred Bingham*: Colonel, Engineer Corps, Brig. General, U.S. Army; assigned duty, 1897-1903: Commissioner of Public Buildings and Grounds, Washington DC; genealogist of Bingham family.
Letters, newspaper clippings, MSS. Summaries, announcements, menus, and other material concerning the White House, 1897-1903: physical construction, staffing policy, social events, assassination of President William McKinley and changes introduced by President Theodore Roosevelt (26 boxes).


George William Burton* (1858-1941), Papers of, 1908-30 (2/3).
Banker, LaCrosse WI.
Letters, 1908-20 (140 items), exchanged with William Howard Taft, “programs, invitations, souvenirs, and other memorabilia, relating to Wisconsin and national politics, Robert M. La Follette, Taft's visits to Wisconsin, and other matters. Some of the letters are from Wendell W. Mischler, Taft's secretary” (2 boxes).


Howard Francis Cline* (1915-1971), Papers of, 1608-1972.
Harvard, B.A., Ph. D., History; anthropologist; “Benjamin Orange Flower and the Arena, 1889-1909,” Journalism Quarterly 17 (June 1940), 139-50.
About 150 letters, 1938-39, mainly replies from persons who knew editor B.O. Flower*, Benjamin Orange Flower* (1858-1918), in connection with Cline’s research for his article.
Otherwise, “Material relating chiefly to the study of the Indians of Mexico and Central America. Includes material concerning the Handbook of Middle American Indians. Persons represented include John B. Glass.”


Thomas Dunn* (d. 1916), Papers of, 1858-1918 (1/2).
Businessman, Boston MA and Foochow, China.
“Correspondence, business records, and receipts from Olyphant & Company for duties received from the Superintendent of Customs in Fu-chou shih, Fukien Province, China (Foochow). Includes letters from S. Wells Williams, U.S. Legation, Macao and Shanghai, relating to the Treaty of Tientsin (1858), customs, and the Chinese empire; and letters, documents, real estate papers, and other business papers, 1909-1918, prepared by John C. Oswald, Dunn's agent, concerning Dunn's property and the settlement of his estate in Fu-Chou Shih.”
Letters, 1900-18 (1 box).


Worthington Chauncey Ford* (1858-1941), Papers of, n.d.
Edited The Writings of George Washington (14 v., 1889–93) and biographer of Washington (1899); Chief, 1902-09, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress; editor, 1909-29, Massachusetts Historical Society; President, 1917, American Historical Association.
“Consists of notes” and reports, arranged alphabetically by subject “on China, Cuba, Netherlands East Indies, France, Germany, Greece, Russia, etc. Also index of items of Jefferson, Hamilton, and others.”


Albert Gleaves* (1858-1937), Papers of, 1803-1946 (13/21).
U.S. Naval Academy, 1877; Cuba, 1898; Rear Admiral, 1915; commander Destroyer Force, 1916-17, and Cruiser and Transport Force, 1917-18, Atlantic Fleet; Admiral and commander, 1919-22, Asiatic Fleet; author: James Lawrence: Captain, United States Navy, Commander of the "Chesapeake" (1904); A History of the Transport Service (1921); The Admiral: The Memoirs of Albert Gleaves, USN (1985).
“Correspondence, diaries, journals, speeches, articles, books, scrapbooks, reports of the Asiatic Fleet, notebooks, photos, newspaper clippings, biographical material, poetry file, printed matter, and miscellaneous papers relating to Gleaves' naval career, torpedo ordnance, his publications, naval history, and his command of the Asiatic Fleet during which he showed a talent for diplomacy in dealing with the representatives of the Soviet, Chinese, and Japanese governments. Ships represented include the Alabama, Cushing, Dolphin, and Mayflower.
Correspondents include H. A. Baldridge, W. E. Beard, William Shepherd Benson, Edward G. Blakeslee, J. C. Breckinridge, Josephus Daniels, Charles E. Fox, Hilary P. Jones, Dudley Wright Knox, Frank L. Polk, George Haven Putnam, Raymond P. Rodgers, David F. Sellers, Joshua Slocum, Clifford H. West, and Spencer S. Wood.”
Diaries, 1901-20 (3 boxes); letters, 1896-1920 (2 boxes); Asiatic Fleet, 1919-22 (1 box); scrapbooks, 1903-19 (3 boxes).


George W. Goethals* (1858-1928, Papers of, circa 1890-1929 (44/51).
George Washington Goethals*: U.S. Military Academy, 1880 and Instructor, Civil and Military Engineering; Lieutenant Colonel, 1898, Chief of Engineers, Volunteer Army; managed inland waterways projects on Tennessee River; Chair and Chief Engineer, 1907-14, Isthmian Canal Commission, during construction of Panama Canal; Governor, 1914-17, Panama Canal Zone; during World War I, 1917-18: General Manager, U.S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation; Chief, Division of Purchase, Storage, and Traffic, U.S. War Department; formed, 1919, George W. Goethals and Company: Advisor and Consulting Engineer, Port Authority of New York.
Diaries, correspondence, 1890-1929, reports, memoranda, photographs, clippings, and scrapbooks relating chiefly” to his work in Panama and other professional responsibilities.
Desk diaries, 1918-19 (2 boxes); family letters, 1890-1927 (2 boxes); general letters, 1904-20 (34 boxes); general letters index, 1907-17 (1 box); subject files, 1908-20 (2 boxes).


Edwin Milton Hood* (1858-1923), Papers of, 1868-1963 (2/2).
Journalist, 1883-1923, Washington DC, Associated Press.
“Business and family correspondence, diary, Hood family history and genealogy, photographs, clippings, recollections by colleagues, letters of condolence, obituary notices, and other papers relating to Hood and his career as an Associated Press correspondent covering the State Department. Includes correspondence relating to the Paris Peace Conference, 1918-1919, and the Zimmermann note, March 1, 1917, concerning foreign policy in Germany prior to World War I.
Correspondents include James Bryce, John Hay, John D. Long, John Bassett Moore, Theodore Roosevelt, Melville Stone, and William H. Taft.”
Typescript diary (1896-1920: 13 pp., single-spaced); letters, 1896-1920 (1 box).


Charles Carlton Marsh* (1858-1933), Papers of, 1898-1917 (1/1).
Naval Attache, 1901-05, Tokyo, Japan; in command, 1908, when training ship, U.S.S. Yankee, during fog ran aground off Westport MA;
“Scrapbook with photographs pertaining to the Spanish-American War and with clippings and photographs pertaining to World War I.”


George Patrick Ahern* (1859-1942), Papers of, 1911-32, 35 items.
U.S. Military Academy, 1882; Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army; forest conservationist before Gifford Pinchot; Director, Philippine Bureau of Forestry.
“Primarily letters exchanged between Ngan Han, chief forester of China, and Ahern, concerning the Philippine Forest School, Los Baños, the establishment of a forest school in China, and education and military training in China. Includes article entitled Restoring China's Forests, by Thomas H. Simpson (Review of Reviews, March l9l6) concerning Ahern's travels in China, his forestry career, and the reforestation movement.”


Henry Tureman Allen* (1859-1930), Papers of, 1806-1933 (35/73).
U.S. Military Academy, 1882; exploring party, Alaska, 1885-86; organizer and Chief, Philippine Constabulary, 1901-10; Mexican Punitive Expedition, 1916-17; commanded 90th Division, U.S Army corps, AEF, France, 1917-19 and U.S. forces on Rhine in Germany, 1919-23; Major General, U.S. Army.
“Correspondents include Newton Diehl Baker, Tasker Howard Bliss, Ellis Loring Dresel, James G. Harbord, Myron T. Herrick, James H. Hyde, Arthur MacArthur, Douglas MacArthur, Peyton Conway March, John J. Pershing, Theodore Roosevelt, Paul M. Tirard, Hugh G. Wallace, John W. Weeks, and Leonard Wood.”
Diaries, 1897-98, 1904-06, 1911, 1913-14, 1917-20 (2 boxes); general letters, 1896-1920 (10 boxes); military material: Philippines, Mexican Punitive Expedition (1 box), World War I (2 boxes), occupation of Germany (1 box); book MSS, “My Rhineland Journal” (3 boxes); clippings, 1912-30 (2 boxes); reports: “American Military Government of Occupied Germany, 1918-20” (4 boxes), “American Representation in Occupied Germany, 1920-21” (3 boxes); scrapbooks, 1905, 1917-18 (3 boxes); family papers.


Philippe Bunau-Varilla* (1859-1940), Papers of, 1877-1955 (32/41).
Panamanian diplomat; engineer.
“Correspondence, typescripts of speeches, articles, and books, legal papers, and newspaper clippings concerning Bunau-Varilla's activities in the United States, 1900-1907, his efforts to gain support for completion of the Panama Canal, and his role in the Panamanian revolution and as minister plenipotentiary for the new government. Includes documents selected and annotated by Bunau-Varilla, relating to the revolution and to the Hay-Bunau-Varilla treaty, and the note sent to all members of the U.S. Congress in June, 1902, with a postal stamp of the Republic of Nicaragua witnessing the volcanic activity there. Correspondents include Manuel Amador Guerrero, John Bigelow, Theodore E. Burton, Gustave Eiffel, William Crawford Gorgas, Mark Alonzo Hanna, John Hay, J. J. Jusserand, Ferdinand de Lesseps, Henry Cabot Lodge, and Theodore Roosevelt.”
Letters, 1900-07 (12 boxes); clippings, 1901-14 (15 boxes).


Carrie Chapman Catt* (1859-1947), 1848-1950, bulk: 1890-1920.
Carrie Lane Chapman Catt*: President: National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1900-04, 1915-20, and International Woman Suffrage Alliance, 1904-23; founder, 1919, National League of Women Voters.
“Correspondence, diaries, drafts of speeches and articles, subject files, biographical papers, newspaper clippings, printed material, and other papers, relating primarily to Catt's efforts on behalf of the women's suffrage movement, feminism, and international peace. . . .
Correspondents include Grace Abbott, Jane Addams, Viscountess Nancy Witcher Langhorne Astor, Newton Diehl Baker, Alice Stone Blackwell, Josephus Daniels, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Ida Husted Harper, Mary Garrett Hay, Clara Hyde, Fiorello H. La Guardia, Julia Clifford Lathrop, Rosette Suzanne Manus, Katherine Dexter McCormick, Maud Wood Park, Mary Gray Peck, Helen Rogers Reid, Rose Schneiderman, Rosika Schwimmer, Edna Lamprey Stantial, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, William H. Taft, Joseph P. Tumulty, William Allen White, and Justina Leavitt Wilson.”
Travel diaries, 1911-12: Europe, Africa, Middle East, Asia (2 boxes); letters, arranged alphabetically, 1890-1947 (6 boxes); biographical papers (2 boxes); photographs (1 box).

Frank Heino Damrosch* (1859-1937), Papers of, 1856-1969.
Supervisor of Music, 1897-1905, New York City Public Schools; conducted choral groups in Philadelphia, 1897-1905 and New York, 1897-1905; conductor, 1893-1920, New York Musical Art Society; founder, dean, 1905-33, Institute of Musical Art; established, conducted (1898- ), Symphony Concerts for Young People. Brother of Walter Johannes Damrosch (1862-1950).
Music Division:
Letters, arranged alphabetically, 1856-1969 (3 boxes); programs, 1867-1937, (1 box); clippings (1 box); photographs.


Gilbert M. Hitchcock* (1859-1934), Papers of, 1910-1935 (2/3).
Gilbert Monell Hitchcock*: University of Michigan Law, 1881; Nebraska Bar, 1882 and practice, Omaha, 1882-85; published, 1885-1903, Omaha Morning and Evening World Herald; U.S. Congress, 1903-05, 1907-011, and Senate, 1911-23, Democrat, Nebraska; newspaper work, 1923-33, Omaha.
“Correspondence, memorandum, reports, and printed material pertaining to Hitchcock's years in the Senate; papers, 1917-20, shed light on the relations between President Woodrow Wilson and Congress, especially during the treaty fight in the Senate, 1919-1920.
Includes Hitchcock's correspondence with the President and with Edith Bolling Galt Wilson on behalf of her husband. Other correspondents include Newton Diehl Baker, Robert Lansing, and William H. Taft.”


A.E. Housman* (1859-1936), Papers of, 1906-1939.
Alfred Edward Housman*: Poet: A Shropshire Lad (1896), and others.
“Chiefly notebooks containing manuscript drafts, fair copies, and fragments of Housman's poetry, in addition to a few letters and miscellaneous items. Also includes an analysis by John W. Carter of some of Housman’s poems.”


J. Franklin Jameson* (1859-1937), Papers of, 1604-1994, bulk: 1900-1930.
John Franklin Jameson*: Harvard, Amherst, 1879, Johns Hopkins University, Ph.D., History, 1882; taught history: Johns Hopkins, Brown Universities; Chair, History Department, 1901-05; University of Chicago; Director, 1905-28, Department of Historical Research, Carnegie Institution, Washington DC; Chief, 1928-37, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress; author: The History of Historical Writing in America (1891), The American Revolution Considered as a Social Movement (1926), and others.
“Correspondence, diaries, MSS. of writings, lecture notes, autobiographical memoranda, family papers, photographs, printed materials and other papers relating primarily to historical research and writing,” as well as Jameson’s roles in the founding and early history of the: American Historical Association and American Historical Review, the movement for the establishment of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration; guides to and copying of material pertaining to American history in foreign repositories; and the Dictionary of American Biography. Includes Jameson's files at the Carnegie Institution; papers pertaining to his activities as a member of the American Council of Learned Societies; and files kept by Leo F. Stock* for his compilation, Proceedings and Debates of the British Parliaments Respecting North America (1924) and his joint editorship with Elizabeth Donnan* of An Historian's World: Selections from the Correspondence of John Franklin Jameson (1956).
Correspondents include prominent American and European historians of the period, librarians, and others: Henry Adams, James Bryce, Abel Doysié, Max Farrand, Worthington Chauncey Ford, James Gibbons, Daniel Coit Gilman, Albert Bushnell Hart, Roscoe R. Hill, J. J. Jusserand, Waldo G. Leland, Andrew C. McLaughlin, Herbert Putnam, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Elihu Root, and Woodrow Wilson.”
Diaries and family letters, 1896-1920 (3 boxes); office files, Carnegie Institution, arranged alphabetically (120 boxes).

Adelaide Johnson* (1859-1955), Papers of, 1873-1947.
Born Sarah Adeline Johnson*: Studied art, St. Louis MO School of Design, Chicago IL, Germany, and Rome, Italy; thereafter lived and sculpted at various times in Rome, Chicago, New York City, and Washington DC; major sculpture: "The Woman Movement."
Correspondence, diaries, speeches, articles, notes, and other papers concerning Johnson's life and activities as sculptor and feminist. Documents her work on the monument to Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia Mott, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, now located in the crypt of the U.S. Capitol. Also includes records kept of sittings by Anthony, John Burroughs, Ella Wheeler Wilcox and others of whom she created portrait busts.”
Includes correspondence between Johnson and her husband, Alexander Frederick Jenkins*, a businessman from England who upon their marriage, 1896, took her surname, Alexander Frederick Johnson* (divorced 1908); and other members of the Jenkins and Johnson families.
Other correspondents include Susan B. Anthony, Lily Biedler, Arthur Brisbane, T. Campbell-Copeland, Edith M. Ferris, Helen H. Gardener, Agnes Hall, Gena R. Harding, Ida Husted Harper, Elizabeth Hale Falkner Murphy, Emmeline Pankhurst, Alice Paul, Cora L. V. Richmond, May Robson, Henry Rogers, May Wright Sewall, Helen L. Sumner, Emma Cecilia Thursby, Sara Carr Upton, and Henry G. Whitney.”
Diaries, 1895-1922 (5 boxes) and loose sheets, 1875-1922 (2 boxes); letters, 1893-1921 (24 boxes); notes on sittings, sculptures (18 boxes); biographical and financial papers (4 boxes).


John Calvin Leonard* (1859-1937), Papers of, 1887-1920 (1/1).
U.S. Navy, 1882-1914, and 1917-19.
“Twelve diaries relating to Leonard's naval career during the Spanish-American War and World War I and family matters; testimonial, 1913; and newspaper clippings, 1898-1899.”


Jacques Loeb* (1859-1924), Papers of, 1889-1924.
Leipzig, Ph. D., Physiology, 1909; Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, 1910-24; author: Physiology of the Brain (1899), Forced Movements, Tropisms, and Animal Conduct (1918), Proteins and the Theory of Colloidal Behavior (1922), Regeneration From a Physico-chemical Viewpoint (1924)
“General and professional correspondence, family correspondence, biographical data, speeches, awards, photographs, and other material. Loeb's scientific writings include drafts of his books; laboratory notebooks relating principally to his research on bryophytes, gelatin, and frogs, which led to his development of the tropism theory; and scientific articles in English and German on such topics as colloid chemistry, genetics, osmosis, and proteins.
Correspondents include Svante Arrhenius, Bernhard Berenson, James B. Conant, Paul De Kruif, Paul Ehrlich, Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Julian Huxley, Ivan Pavlov, and Harlow Shapley.”
Letters, 1890-1924, arranged alphabetically (16 boxes); family letters (5 boxes); experimental notebooks, arranged alphabetically (6 boxes) and chronologically, 1896-1920 (5 boxes).


1860+

Mabel Thorp Boardman* (1860-1946), Papers of, 1853-1945, bulk: 1894-1929 (9/13).
Recruited nurses, 1898, Spanish-American War; Executive Committee, 1903, and successor to Clara Barton, 1904, American Red Cross; confidante of William Howard Taft and active in Republican Party.
“Correspondence, letterbooks, diaries, drafts, genealogical material, newspaper clippings, printed material, and other papers relating chiefly to Boardman's career in the American National Red Cross, known in its early years as the American Association of the Red Cross.” The collection “traces the Red Cross's growing ties to the federal government and its emergence as the leading voluntary organization providing disaster and war relief and promoting public health and safety,” and Boardman’s leadership, especially through America’s entry in World War I.
Also includes material about her personal life, role as a “commissioner of the District of Columbia,” and interest in “domestic and foreign policy issues of presidential administrations from William McKinley to Franklin D. Roosevelt.”
Letters, 1896-1920 (7 boxes) including William Howard Taft (2 boxes); diaries, 1882-1902 (1/2 box).


William Jennings Bryan* (1860-1925), papers, 1877-1940, bulk: 1896-1925 (37/66).
Candidate for President, 1896, 1900, 1908, Democratic Party; U.S. Secretary of State, 1913-15; lecturer, 1897-1925, Chautauqua; founder, 1901, The Commoner.
“Correspondence (1879-1931), military papers and other documents, editorials, speeches, articles, reports, scrapbooks, photograph album, and other material chiefly relating to the presidential campaign of 1896 and to Bryan's efforts to preserve world peace, his career as a lecturer . . . , and his interest in prohibition, political and monetary reform, and religious issues. Includes an unpublished biography prepared by his daughter, Grace Bryan Hargreaves.
Correspondents include Newton Diehl Baker, Bernard M. Baruch, Johann Heinrich von Bernstorff, Edward William Bok, Evangeline Cory Booth, William Edgar Borah, Charles Walter Bryan, Albert Sidney Burleson, Andrew Carnegie, Calvin Coolidge, Josephus Daniels, Paul Fuller, Martin Henry Glynn, Gilbert M. Hitchcock, Cordell Hull, Ollie M. Jones, David Starr Jordan, Frank B. Kellogg, George W. Kirchwey, Claude Kitchin, Robert M. La Follette, Sr., Robert Lansing, John Lind, David Lloyd George, Boaz Walton Long, William Gibbs McAdoo, Vance Criswell McCormick, Aimee Semple McPherson, John Raleigh Mott, George William Norris, Lee S. Overman, George Foster Peabody, Raymond Robins, James Brown Scott, Charles Monroe Sheldon, Morris Sheppard, Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, Billy Sunday, Huston Thompson, William Allen White, and Woodrow Wilson.”
General letters, 1896-1920 (29 boxes); State Department letters, 1913-15 (1 box); Bryan-Woodrow Wilson letters, 1913-15 (1 box).


James McKeen Cattell* (1860-1944), Papers of, 1835-1948, bulk: 1896-1948.
Professor of Psychology, 1891-1917, Columbia University; co-founded, 1894, Psychological Review; founded, 1890, Popular Science Monthly.
“Correspondence, diaries, speeches, lectures, articles, notes, financial papers, biographical and genealogical material, family papers, clippings, printed matter, and other papers relating primarily to Cattell's professional affiliations with the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Psychological Corporation, American Association of University Professors, Century Club, and Columbia University; and his writings and editorial work for Science, Popular Science Monthly, School and Society, American Naturalist, Science Press, and American Men of Science. Correspondents include James R. Angell, Charles E. Bessey, Franz Boas, Edwin G. Boring, Nicholas Murray Butler, Otis W. Caldwell, John Dewey, Asaph Hall, William J. Humphreys, Ellsworth Huntington, William James, Joseph Jastrow, David Starr Jordan, Vernon Kellogg, Burton E. Livingston, Jacques Loeb, Arthur O. Lovejoy, Thomas Hunt Morgan, Raymond Pearl, Charles Sanders Peirce, Carl E. Seashore, Edward L. Thorndike, Edward Titchener, and John B. Watson.”
Letters, arranged alphabetically, 1896-1920 (90 boxes).


George S. Duncan* (1860-1946), Correspondence of, 1891-1943, bulk: 1910-1930 (132 items).
George Stewart Duncan*: Minister; archeologist, Johns Hopkins University; author: Outline Introduction to the New Testament (1921), Introduction to Biblical Archeology: A Textbook for School and Home (1928), etc.
“Correspondence, chiefly 1910-1930, relating to requests for Duncan's monographs, speaking engagements, Biblical archaeology, Egyptian and East Asian archaeology, and religion.
Correspondents include W. F. Albright, Edgar J. Banks, A. T. Clay, Aaron Ember, W. Max Müller, Henry Fairfield Osborn, and George Sarton.”


John Lowndes McLaurin* (1860-1934), Scrapbooks of, 1888-1935 (1/3).
Swarthmore College, PA, Carolina Military Institute; Virginia University Law; South Carolina Bar and practiced from 1883; South Carolina legislature, 1890-91, and 1914-15; U.S. Congress, 1892-97, and U.S. Senate, 1897-1903, Democrat, South Carolina; State Warehouse Commissioner, 1914-17.
Biographical material, political campaigns, speeches, and newspaper clippings (4 v.).


Charles C. Marshall* (1860-1938), Papers of, 1886-1968, bulk: 1927-1937.
Charles Clinton Marshall*: Constitutional lawyer, Episcopal layman; author: “An Open Letter to the Honorable Alfred E. Smith,” Atlantic Monthly (April 1927); Governor Smith's American Catholicism (1928).
“Correspondence, notes, scrapbooks, book MSS., reprints, and newspaper clippings relating primarily to Marshall's controversy with Alfred E. Smith over the qualifications of a Roman Catholic for the presidency of the United States. Other topics include church-state questions and the Calvert controversy in 17th century Maryland. Correspondence relates to his book on the Catholic Church and the state, and his controversy with Smith.
Correspondents include E. Boyd Barrett, Frederic R. Coudert, Frank Dodd, James M. Gillis, C.S.P., Leo Lehmann, Walter Lippmann, Bishop Arthur Lloyd, Wilfrid Parsons, S.J., and Michael Williams.”
Letters, 1886-1927 (2 boxes).


Robert Lee Bullard* (1861-1947), Papers of, 1899-1955.
U.S. Military Academy, 1885; served: Philippines, 1898-1904, Cuba, 1906-09, Mexican Border, 1915-16; commanded, 1918-19, AEF, France: First Division, Third Army Corps and as Lieutenant General, Second Army; retired 1925.
“Correspondence, diaries, notebooks, articles, speeches, scrapbooks, MSS. of books, photos, printed matter, maps, memorabilia, and legal papers. Diaries, with some gaps, record the main events in Bullard's military career . . . and his subsequent activities as president of the National Security League. Includes MSS. of a published work, Fighting Generals, and of an unpublished Moro language dictionary and autobiography.
Includes letters of John J. Pershing.
Diaries, 1899-1922 (2 boxes); notebook, 1907-20 (1 box).


Oscar Terry Crosby* (1861-1947), Papers of, 1878-1947, bulk: 1900-1938.
U.S. Military Academy, 1882; resigned, 1887, First Lieutenant, U.S. Army Engineers; electrical engineer, law degree; superintendent, general manager, and president, 1890s: local electric railways and utilities; explorer and photographer, 1900s; Director, 1915, Commission for Relief in Belgium; U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1917; president, 1917-19, Inter-Ally Council on War Purchases and Finance; author, including, The Electric Railway in Theory and Practice (New York: W.J. Johnston, 1892); Strikes: When to Strike, How to Strike; a Book of Suggestion for the Buyers and Sellers of Labour (New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1910) and International War: Its Causes and Its Cure (London: Macmillan, 1919).
“Correspondence, diaries, speeches and writings, subject files, clippings, printed material and other papers relating to Crosby's” public service. “Also documents his travels in Africa, East Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. Subjects include international finance, post-World War I German reparations and Allied debts, world peace, and the establishment of an international peace tribunal.
Correspondents include Austen Chamberlain, Herbert Hoover, Edward Mandell House, John Maynard Keynes, Philander C. Knox, Robert Lansing, Andrew Bonar Law, Russell C. Leffingwell, William Gibbs McAdoo, Manuel Luis Quezon, André Tardieu, and Woodrow Wilson.”
Letters, 1896-1920 (1 box).


Charles B. Elliott* (1861-1937), Papers of, 1910-1912.
Charles Burke Elliott*: University of Iowa Law, 1881; University of Minnesota, Ph. D., 1888, and lecturer, Head, International Law Department, 1889-1900; Judge, 1890-1904, Minneapolis Municipal and District Courts; Associate Justice, 1904, Minnesota Supreme Court and 1909, Supreme Court of the Philippines; Member, Philippine Commission (Secretary of Commerce and Police); President, American Branch, International Law Association.
“Diaries, letterbooks, newspaper clippings, and English translations of articles in Spanish and Filipino papers.”
Diaries, 1910-12 (2 boxes); letterbook, 1910-12 (1 v.).


Thomas Watt Gregory* (1861-1933), Papers of, 1914-1933.
Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville TN, 1883; University of Virginia; University of Texas Law, 1885, and practice in Austin TX, 1885-1913, Washington DC, 1919-24, and thereafter, Houston TX; supported, 1912, with fellow Texan Edwin M. House, Woodrow Wilson’s candidacy; U.S. Attorney General, 1914-1919; Member, 1919-20, Second Industrial Commission.
“Chiefly legal materials and correspondence from the period of Gregory's law practice in Washington, D.C. Includes several Woodrow Wilson letters among the small number of papers dated 1914 to 1921. Correspondence reflects Gregory's interest in the University of Texas, the Wilson administration, and the presidential campaign of 1932.
Correspondents include Albert S. Burleson, William Hitz, Edward M. House, Louis McHenry Howe, William G. McAdoo, G. Carroll Todd, and Thomas J. Walsh.”
General letters, 1914-20 (2 boxes); legal files, 1917-20 (2 boxes).


Louise Imogen Guiney* (1861-1920), Papers of, 1884-1916 (2/5).
Poet, essayist, journalist, and editor, who in Boston MA not only became well known in the Irish community, but also joined the traditional literary circle of Oliver Wendell Holmes.
“Chiefly letters from Guiney to Frederick Holland Day* (1864-1933),” a publisher, 1893-99, and artist-photographer before World War I.”

“Also includes poems, transcripts of letters to Louise Chandler Moulton, and letters to Guiney from Alice Brown, Lewis Day, Frederick H. Evans, Trois Felice, Annie Fields, Helena de Kay Gilder, Edmund Gosse, Lionel Johnson, Alice M. Jordan, F. Eva Lewis, Robert Loveman, Annie Nathan Meyer, Louise Chandler Moulton, Albert Bigelow Paine, Horace E. Scudder, Dora and Clement Shorter, John Brisben Walker, and Louise Collier Willcox.”


Letters, 1896-1915, mainly to Day and about her literary work (2 boxes).


Charles S. Hamlin* (1861-1938), Papers of, 1869-1968, bulk: 1880-1938.
Charles Sumner Hamlin*: Harvard, 1883 and Law, 1886; practiced Boston MA, 1886-93 and 1898-1913; U.S. Treasury Assistant Secretary, 1893-97; U.S. Special Commissioner, 1897, Convention of Japan, Russia, and United States to Negotiate Fur-seal Fishery Controversy and Chair, Seal Conference Among Great Britain, Canada, and United States; Director, 1901, Boston Merchants Association; Lecturer on United States government, 1902-03, Harvard University; President, 1903, Massachusetts Reform Club and Member, United States Assay Commission to Examine United States Mint, Philadelphia PA; delegate, 1904, Democratic National Convention; Member, 1906, Japanese Famine Relief Commission of Massachusetts; Member, 1906-15, Committee on Government, Harvard University; arbiter, 1907-12, in several industrial disputes; actively supported, 1908, William Jennings Bryan’s candidacy and Member, United States Commission on Limitation of Armaments; Chair of the Assembly, 1911, Boston Chamber of Commerce; Actively campaigned, 1912, for Woodrow Wilson; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1913-14; Governor, 1914-36, Federal Reserve Board, and Special Counsel, 1936-38, Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System, Washington DC.
“Correspondence, diaries, MSS. of writings and speeches, biographical notes, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, printed material, and other papers relating chiefly to Hamlin's government service; Hamlin's civic affairs; and his family's social life in Washington DC, 1893-1945. Topics include leaders and policies of the Democratic Party especially during the Grover Cleveland, Woodrow Wilson, and Franklin D. Roosevelt administrations and Hamlin's law practice.
Includes copies of his wife’s (Huybertie Lansing Pruyn Hamlin, married 1898) MSS. pertaining to the Hamlin, Pruyn, and Roosevelt families . . .; diaries and scrapbooks of the Hamlin's daughter, Anna (d. 1925); and genealogical information concerning the Hamlin family. . . .
Correspondents include Newton Diehl Baker, John H. Clarke, Frances Folsom Cleveland, Grover Cleveland, Josephus Daniels, Edith Benham Helm, Herbert Hoover, Cordell Hull, Robert Lansing, Henry Cabot Lodge, William Gibbs McAdoo, William McKinley, Levi P. Morton, Richard Olney, George Foster Peabody, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, William H. Taft, and Woodrow Wilson.”
Bound diaries, 1887-1922, arranged chronologically (5 boxes) and typescript bound index-digest to diaries, 1886-1936, arranged alphabetically (25 boxes); scrapbooks, 1893-1921, arranged chronologically (118 boxes) plus indexes: Woodrow Wilson index, 1912-25 (1 box), 1912-22 (3 boxes), 1912-27 (6 boxes); personal letters, 1900-21 (8 folders); general letters, 1869-1926 (2 boxes).

Herbert Putnam* (1861-1955), Papers of, 1783-1958, bulk: 1899-1939.
Director, Boston Public Library; Librarian of Congress, 1899-1939
“Family and general correspondence, family diaries and journals, speeches, articles, scrapbooks, legal papers, genealogical material, autograph collection, and printed matter. The papers relate largely to Putnam's family and personal life and include diaries and letters of many members of the Putnam and allied O'Hara, Pinkey, and Mason families. Also included are papers relating to Putnam's interests and activities in the field of librarianship, the latter including information on the Library's purchase of the Vollbehr Collection and the establishment of the Trust Fund Board.
Family members represented prominently in the papers include his father, publisher George Palmer Putnam, his sister, historian Ruth Putnam, his daughter, sculptor Brenda Putnam, and his wife, Charlotte Elizabeth Munroe Putnam.
Correspondents include James T. Adams, Charles W. Eliot, Luther Evans, Worthington C. Ford, Waldo G. Leland, Archibald MacLeish, Agnes Meyer, Charles Moore, Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., Theodore Roosevelt, Ainsworth R. Spofford, and Egerton Swartwout.”

Herbert Putnam Archives, Records, 1899-1939.
Central Services Division:
Official papers, arranged alphabetically in four series: general letters; Congressional file, Senate and House separately; division file, by department; and government officials file, by agency. Indexes: names, geographical entries, and cultural institutes.


Charles Martin Tornov Loeffler* (1861-1935), Papers of, 1882-1935 (6/8).
Concertmaster, 1882-1903, Boston Symphony Orchestra; composer and teacher, 1903-35, Boston MA.
Music Division:
Letters received, 1882-1935, from American and foreign composers and performers relating to his compositions and teaching (6 boxes); sketches and sketchbooks of his literary and musical works.


Evelyn Briggs Baldwin* (1862-1933), Papers of, 16549-1933, bulk: 1898-1902.
Meteorologist, Arctic explorer.
“Correspondence, reports, journals, scrapbooks, financial records, printed material, newspaper clippings, and genealogical materials relating primarily to Baldwin's polar explorations. . . . Other topics relate to Baldwin's interest in aeronautics, and to genealogical studies of the Alden, Baldwin, Ford, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Woodruff families.
Correspondents include Archibald A. C. Dickson, Ernest De Koven Leffingwell, Christopher Thuesson, and Walter Wellman.”
Journals and records of the Wellman Polar Expedition, 1898-99 and scientific studies made in Franz Josef Land, 1899.
Albert Jeremiah Beveridge* (1862-1927), Papers of, 1890-1927.
U.S. Senate, Republican, Indiana, 1899-1911; Progressive Party, 1912-16; war correspondent, Germany, 1914-15.
“The papers document Beveridge's career from his early law practice through his two terms in the senate, his espousal of the Progressive Party, his experience as a war correspondent in Europe, and his later work as historian and biographer. Included are addresses and articles, notes, MS. and typed drafts, printed texts, diary notes, a few pictures, records of interviews with such figures as George Bernard Shaw, Sir Edward Grey, Sir Gilbert Parker, the Emperor of Germany, Alfred von Tirpitz, Gabriel Hanotaux, and Henri Bergson, on many of which appear autograph comments by the subject. The bulk of the collection is correspondence, which includes substantial groups of correspondence with, among others, Theodore Roosevelt, George W. Perkins, David Graham Phillips, George H. Lorimer, John C. Shaffer, Albert Shaw, and Gifford Pinchot. Also includes source material used by Beveridge in writing his biography of Abraham Lincoln.”
Patronage files, 1900-12 (110 boxes); general correspondence, 1896-1920 (108 boxes); special correspondence (15 boxes); World War I, 1914-15 (9 boxes).


Charles Henry Brent* (1862-1929), Papers of, 1860-1991, bulk: 1901-1929.
Minister, 1891-1901, Boston; missionary/Bishop, 1901-18, Protestant Episcopal Church, Philippines; attended/led, 1903-04, 1908-09, 1911-12, opium conferences; Bishop, 1919-29, Western New York; Chief, 1918-19, Chaplain Service, AEF; Chair, 1920, Geneva meeting to plan the World Conference on Faith and Order.
“Correspondence, diaries, sermon notes, speeches and articles, reports, memoranda, family and personal correspondence, obituaries, Bibles, printed matter, memorabilia, scrapbooks. and photographs. . . . Includes correspondence, 1931-1949, of Brent's sister, Helen C. C. Brent, as well as his correspondence with her and other family members. Also includes materials gathered by Remsen B. Ogilby for an unpublished biography of Brent, “The Impatient Crusader.”
Correspondents include Lyman Abbott, James Bryce, Nicholas Murray Butler, Austen Chamberlain, Calvin Coolidge, Randall Davidson, Samuel S. Drury, W. Cameron Forbes, Herbert Hoover, Philander Chase Knox, Cosmo Gordon Lang, J. Pierpont Morgan, John R. Mott, Alfred C. W. H. Northcliffe, Walter Hines Page, Francis G. Peabody, George Wharton Pepper, John J. Pershing, Whitelaw Reid, Theodore Roosevelt, Elihu Root, William Howard Taft, Reginald N. Willcox, and Leonard Wood.”
Diaries, 1901-17 (2 boxes), 1918-19, 1921, 1923-26, 1929 (1 box); letters, 1886-1900 (1 box), 1901 (1 box), 1902-07 (1 box), 1908 (1 box), 1909-11 (2 boxes), 1912-14 (1 box), 1915-16 (2 boxes), 1917-18 (3 boxes), 1918-25 (1 box); sermon notes, 1890-1929 plus undated (12 boxes), including: 1890-97, 6 v.(1 box), 1893-98, 7 v. (1 box), 1896-1909, 34 v. (3 boxes), 1910-17, 4 v. (1 box), 1918-29, plus undated/unbound (2 boxes); opium conferences, 1909-12 (1 box); scrapbooks, 1896-1901, 2 v. (1 box), 1901-28, 3 v. (1 box); clippings (1 box); printed matter (2 boxes). Biographer’s papers: holograph Brent letters, 1890-1903 (1 box), 1904-15 (2 boxes), 1916-29 (1 box); draft of unpublished biography (1 box); biographer’s letters, alphabetical (9 boxes).


George B. Cortelyou* (1862-1940), Papers of, 1871-1948, bulk: 1897-1908.
George Bruce Cortelyou*: Secretary to Presidents William McKinley, 1896-1901, and Theodore Roosevelt, 1901-03; Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1903-04; Postmaster General, 1905-07; Secretary of the Treasury, 1907-09.
“Correspondence, letter books, diaries, memoranda, subject files, printed matter, and miscellany relating to Cortelyou's official duties . . . and his work as Chair of the Republican National Committee during the election of 1904; other topics include the Spanish-American War and the 1901 Pan-American Exposition.

Correspondents include Alvey A. Adee, Robert Bacon, Albert J. Beveridge, Cornelius N. Bliss, Edward Bok, Charles J. Bonaparte, Nicholas M. Butler, Joseph G. Cannon, Andrew Carnegie, James S. Clarkson, Charles G. Dawes, William R. Day, Elmer Dover, Charles W. Fairbanks, John H. Finley, Moreton Frewen, Richard W. Gilder, Mark Hanna, John Hay, Frank H. Hitchcock, Henry Cabot Lodge, William Loeb, Ida S. McKinley, James C. McReynolds, Victor H. Metcalf, William H. Moody, Harry S. New, Henry C. Payne, Thomas C. Platt, Jacob Riis, Elihu Root, Nathan B. Scott, Leslie M. Shaw, John Sherman, Charles E. Smith, Oscar S. Straus, and William H. Taft.”


Letterbooks, 1899-1903 (3 boxes); general letters, 1899-1909 (20 boxes); political letters, 1904 (10 boxes); Executive Office files, 1901-09 (4 boxes).


Damrosch-Blaine Family Papers, 1825-1950.
Walter Johannes Damrosch* (1862-1950): Conductor, 1885-1927, New York Symphony Society and, 1885-98, New York Oratorio Society; husband of Margaret B. Damrosch*.
Margaret Blaine Damrosch*, daughter of James Gillespie Blaine (1830-1893), U.S. Senator, Republican, Maine.
Music Division:
Letters, mainly received by Walter Damrosch*, 1896-1920 (200 items); Red Cross, World War I, material; clippings.


Josephus Daniels* (1862-1948), 1806-1948, bulk: 1913-1921.
Founder, editor, Raleigh NC News and Observer; U.S. Navy Secretary, 1913-21; U.S. Ambassador, Mexico, 1933-41.
“Correspondence, diaries, MSS. of speeches, articles and books, papers of the Daniels, Bagley, Seabrook, and Worth families, and other material, including patronage letters, local politics. The bulk of the collection relates to events and policy decisions during Daniels's service as Navy Secretary . . . as editor . . . before and after his government service, his work with the Democratic Party, . . . and his interest in such topics as democracy, prohibition, public health and welfare, naval aviation, and radio communication.
Correspondents include members of his family and Charles Johnston Badger, Newton Diehl Baker, George Ernest Barnett, William Shepherd Benson, Victor Blue, Claude Gernade Bowers, William Jennings Bryan, Albert Sidney Burleson, Homer S. Cummings, Thomas F. Dixon, Jr., William Edward Dodd, Frank Friday Fletcher, Albert Gleaves, Cordell Hull, John Archer Lejeune, William Gibbs McAdoo, Samuel McGowan, Henry T. Mayo, Albert P. Niblack, Hugh Rodman, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Archibald Henderson Scales, William Sowden Sims, Joseph P. Tumulty, Thomas Washington, Sumner Welles, Woodrow Wilson, and Albert G. Winterhalter.”
Diaries, 1913-21 (5 boxes); letters, Woodrow Wilson, 1911-23 (3 boxes); letters, 1894-1913 (11 boxes) and 1913-21 (285 boxes); subject files, 1913-21 (77 boxes); autograph letter collection that includes: Captain Robert E. Lee, U.S. Army; Captain Douglas McArthur, U.S. Army; Madame Ernestine Schumann-Heink, and others.


Walter L. Fisher* (1862-1935), Papers of, 1879-1936, bulk: 1909-1919.
Walter Lowrie Fisher*: Hanover College IN, 1883; admitted, 1888, Bar and practiced law, Chicago IL; President, 1906, Municipal Voters League, Chicago IL; President, National Conservation League; Vice-President, 1909, National Conservation Association; member, 1910-11, U.S. Railroad Securities Commission; U.S. Secretary of the Interior, 1911-13.
“Correspondence, MSS. of speeches and articles, memoranda, receipts, genealogical tables, memorabilia, including scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, printed matter, and photographs, chiefly relating to Fisher's interest in Chicago municipal affairs, 1889-1935, and to his service” in the federal government. “Includes material relating to conservation, the American National Live Stock Association, the League to Enforce Peace, Oklahoma Indians, and Sigma Chi fraternity.”
Correspondents include “Bernard Kate, Louis D. Bandeis, James R. Garfield, William Kent, Robert Marion La Follette 1855-1925), Franklin K. Lane, Franklin Mac Veagh, Frank B. Noyes, Gifford Pinchot, Julius Rosenwald, Harry Slattery, William Howard Taft, Ida M. Tarbell, Henry C. Wallace, George W. Wickersham, Clinton Rogers Woodruff.”


Charles Evans Hughes* (1862-1948), Papers of, 1836-1950, bulk: 1905-1940.
Columbia Law and New York Bar, 1884; counsel, New York legislative committees investigating gas companies, 1905, and life insurance companies, 1905-06; Governor, 1907-10, New York; Associate Justice, 1910-16, and Chief Justice, 1930-41, U.S. Supreme Court; Chair, 1917-18, Draft Appeals Board, New York City; U.S. Secretary of State, 1921-1925.
“Correspondence, family papers, speeches, autobiographical and biographical writings, subject files, notes, scrapbooks, clippings, printed material, and other papers relating principally to Hughes's service in Albany NY and Washington DC, and as a member of various international bodies and commissions. Includes papers of Hughes's father David Charles Hughes* (1832-1909) and biographers’ material of Merlo John Pusey and Henry C. Beerits.
Topics include New York state politics, his presidential campaign in the election of 1916, World War I reparations, the Washington Conference on Limitation of Armament, 1921-1922, International American Conference in Havana, 1928, Japanese immigration, smuggling of alcohol, relations with Latin America, dispute between Peru and Chile over the provinces of Tacna and Arica, the boundary dispute between Honduras and Guatemala, the International Court of Justice, and the Permanent Court of Arbitration.
Correspondents include Nicholas Murray Butler, Calvin Coolidge, Charles Gates Dawes, Felix Frankfurter, Warren G. Harding, George Brinton McClellan Harvey, Herbert Hoover, Alanson Bigelow Houghton, William E. Jillson, J. J. Jusserand, Frank B. Kellogg, Henry Cabot Lodge, John Van Antwerp MacMurray, John Bassett Moore, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt (1887-1944), Elihu Root, C. Bascom Slemp, Harlan Fiske Stone, William H. Taft, Willis Van Devanter, and Woodrow Wilson.”
Letters, 1896-20, (4 boxes); subject files, governorship (2 boxes) and 1910-21 (1 box); scrapbooks, 1905-08 (27 boxes).
Humphrey* (1862-1954), Papers of,


William H. Hunt*, Family papers of, 1870-1924, microfilm (2 reels).
Originals in private hands.
William Henry Hunt* (1823-1883): Confederate Army; Louisiana Attorney General, 1876; Judge, 1878, U.S. Court of Claims; U.S. Navy Secretary, 1881-82; U.S. Minister, Russia, 1882-83.
Gaillard Hunt* (1862-1924): editorial work and Chief, Publications Division, 1887-1909, 1917-24, U.S. Department of State; Chief, 1909-17, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress; author and editor: The Life of James Madison (1902), The Writings of James Madison (9 v., 1900-10), and others.
Some letters and a sketch of Gaillard’s life; Charles M. Andrews’ comment on Woodrow Wilson; material regarding Gaillard’s daughter’s trip to Russia.


Mannes-Damrosch Families, Papers of, 1872-1964.
Walter Johannes Damrosch* (1862-1950): Conductor, 1885-1927, New York Symphony Society and 1885-98, New York Oratorio Society; brother of:



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