Contents
Descriptive Summary
BIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL NOTE
SCOPE AND CONTENT OF THE RECORDS
SELECTED SEARCH TERMS DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE RECORDS
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE RECORDS
1. Correspondence, 1900-1939
2. Biographical and family papers
3. Writings: Quakerism in Holland
4. Writings: A History of Swarthmore College
5. Writings: Other books
6. Writings: Pamphlets, book reviews,
articles, 1906-1939
7. Writings: Unpublished
8. Addresses
9. Conferences and Committees
10. Reference material
11. Annotated books from the library of William I.
Hull
12. Study and Teaching Notes
13. Miscellaneous.
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An Inventory of the William Isaac Hull Papers,
1843-1939
Finding Aid Prepared by FHL staff
2006
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Creator
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William I. Hull |
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Title
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Papers |
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Dates:
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1843-1939 (bulk 1900-1939) |
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Abstract:
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William I. Hull, a Quaker pacifist, taught
history at Swarthmore College from 1892 until his death in 1939. He was the
Librarian of Friends Historical Library and also authored numerous books and
articles, particularly on the subjects of Quakers in Holland, William Penn,
peace, and international relations. The Papers contain correspondence
(1900-1939), diaries (1892-1939), published and unpublished writings, papers
relating to conferences and committees in which he participated, reference
materials, and study and teaching notes. Of particular interest are his notes
on the history of Quakerism in Holland, including files on persons and places
as well as a translation of the minutes of Friesland Monthly Meeting of Friends
(1677-1701), and a two-volume manuscript of his unpublished history of
Swarthmore College. His correspondence primarily concerns his peace activities,
particularly his efforts toward limitation of armaments and an advocacy of
international arbitration. |
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Extent:
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26 linear feet |
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Identification:
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RG 5/069 |
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Location:
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For current information on the location of
materials, please consult the Library's online catalog. |
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Location:
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William Isaac Hull (1868-1939), a Quaker and pacifist, taught history
at Swarthmore College for 47 years, from 1892 to 1939.
Born in Baltimore, Hull attended the Friends Elementary and Secondary
School in Baltimore prior to his studies at Johns Hopkins University where he
earned a A.B. in 1889 and a Ph.D. in 1892. He also studied history abroad at
the University of Berlin in 1891 and at the University of Leyden in 1907. Hull
was the youngest faculty member at Swarthmore College when he was appointed
Associate Professor of History and Economics in 1892. He served as Joseph
Wharton Professor of History and Political Science, 1894-1904, Professor of
History, 1904-1911, Isaac H. Clothier Professor of History and International
Relations, 1911-1929, Howard M. Jenkins Research Professor of Quaker History,
1929-1939, and Librarian, Friends Historical Library, 1936-1939. In 1914 Hull
went to the Netherlands Archives as Research Professor for the Carnegie
Institution .
In 1898 Hull married Hannah Hallowell Clothier, member of the Class of
1891 of Swarthmore College. Both William and Hannah Hull were dedicated to the
cause of world peace. William Hull was a pacifist, committed to world
organization, disarmament, and international arbitration. He attended the
Second International Conference at the Hague in 1907 and in 1908 published a
history of the two Hague conferences (The Two Hague Conference and Their
Contributions to International Law Boston, Ginn and Company, 1908), which was
widely used as a text and a reference book. He was United States Delegate to
the International Conference on Education at the Hague, 1914 and 1915; an
official observer in Paris during the writing of the Covenant of the League of
Nations; attended the Washington Naval Conference in 1922 and the General
Disarmament Conference at Geneva in 1932. In 1914 Andrew Carnegie appointed
Hull to be the Quaker representative on the board of the Church Peace Union,
where he served as a trustee for many years. Hull was also a Director of the
World Peace Foundation, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Arbitration and Peace
Society, and was a frequent lecturer for the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace. He was active in or frequently communicated with most of
the leading peace organizations of the period. Hull communicated extensively on
peace subjects with officials in the United States government and with members
of Congress. In 1928 his testimony opposing expansion of the Navy at a
Congressional hearing aroused great public controversy, especially from the
Daughters of the American Revolution and from various veterans organizations.
His wife, Hannah Clothier Hull (1872-1958), shared in many of his peace
activities. She was particularly active in the Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom, and her papers are preserved in the Swarthmore College Peace
Collection.
Hull published numerous books and pamphlets on peace and international
relations. Also, beginning in 1929, when he was appointed Howard M. Jenkins
Research Professor of Quaker History, Hull wrote extensively on Quaker history,
especially on Dutch Quakers and on William Penn. He planned a series of twelve
monographs on Dutch Quakers, five of which were published by Swarthmore
College. The others were not completed before his death, but his papers have
extensive notes or drafts for most of them. Also included in his papers is an
uncompleted history of Swarthmore College, other manuscripts, speeches,
pictures, material from conferences he attended, study and teaching notes, and
reference material.
Return to the Table of Contents
The Papers contain correspondence (1900-1939), diaries (1892-1939),
published and unpublished writings, papers relating to conferences and
committees in which he participated, reference materials, and study and
teaching notes. Of particular interest are his notes on the history of
Quakerism in Holland, including files on persons and places as well as a
translation of the minutes of Friesland Monthly Meeting of Friends (1677-1701),
and a two-volume manuscript of his unpublished history of Swarthmore College.
His correspondence primarily concerns his peace activities,
particularly his efforts toward limitation of armaments and an advocacy of
international arbitration. Correspondents include Jane Addams, Devere Allen,
Fannie Fern Andrews, Jacob Billikopf, Percy H. Boynton, Thomas S. Butler, Merle
Curti, Paul H. Douglas, Anna Griscom Elkinton, Edward W. Evans, Abraham
Flexner, Edwin Ginn, Sidney L. Gulick, Henry S. Haskell, J. Franklin Jameson,
George W. Kirchwey, Henry Goddard Leach, Frederick J. MacFarland, George W.
Nasmyth, Norman Penny, Elihu Root, L.S. Rowe, Joseph Swain, Benjamin Franklin
Trueblood, Oswald Garrison Villard, Thomas Raeburn White, Janet P. Whitney,
Richard R. Wood, and Stanley R. Yarnell. Organizations in which he was active
with which he communicated include the American Peace Society, Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, the Church Peace Union, Fellowship of
Reconciliation, the Women's Peace Party, and the World Peace Foundation
1. Correspondence, 1900-1939 |
2. Biographical and family papers |
3. Writings: Quakerism in Holland |
4. Writings: A History of Swarthmore College |
5. Writings: Other books |
6. Writings: Pamphlets, book reviews, articles |
7. Writings: Unpublished |
8. Addresses |
9. Conferences and Committees |
10. Reference material |
11. Annotated books from the library of William I.
Hull |
12. Study and Teaching Notes |
13. Miscellaneous |
Return to the Table of Contents
This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog
of the Friends Historical Library (TRIPOD). Researchers desiring materials
about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these
headings:
Return to the Table of Contents
1. Correspondence, 1900-1939
Correspondence primarily concerns peace activities of William I.
Hull, especially his efforts towards limitation of armaments and his advocacy
of international arbitration. Hull supported provisions for conscientious
objection to the draft during World War I, and his testimony before Congress in
1928 against a bill to expand the U.S. Navy in 1928 was the subject of much
public controversy, including opposition to him from the Daughters of the
American Revolution and veterans groups.
Hull was either active in or communicated closely with many of the
leading peace organizations of the early twentieth century, including the
American Peace Society, American School Peace League, Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, Central Organization for a Durable Peace, the Church Peace
Union, Fellowship of Reconciliation, the Pennsylvania Arbitration and Peace
Society, the Woman's Peace Party and its branches, World's Court League, and
the World Peace Foundation. Other organizations, mostly religious and
professional, with which Hull corresponded extensively, include the Chautauqua
Institution, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, World
Alliance for Promoting International Friendship Through the Churches, and the
American Academy of Political and Social Science. Among the important people
with whom Hull corresponded were Jane Addams, Devere Allen, Fannie Fern
Andrews, Henry A. Atkinson, Frank Aydelotte, Jacob Billikopf, Percy H. Boynton,
Robert C. Brooks, Thomas S. Butler, Joseph P. Choate, Sarah B. Clark, Merle
Curti, Paul H. Douglas, Eleanor B. Eaton, Anna Griscom Elkinton, Edward W.
Evans, Abraham Flexner, Edwin Ginn, Linley V. Gordon, Sidney L. Gulick, Henry
S. Haskell, Thomas B. Hull, J. Franklin Jameson, George W. Kirchwey, Henry
Goddard Leach, Frederick J. Libby, Frederick Lynch, Charles S. MacFarland,
Edwin W. Meade, George W. Nasmyth, Walton Newbold, John L. Nickalls, Norman
Penney, Elihu Root, L. S. Rowe, Joseph Swain, William E. Sweet, Benjamin
Franklin Trueblood, Walter W. Van Kirk, Oswald Garrison Villard, Thomas Raeburn
White, Janet P. Whitney, Richard R. Wood, and Stanley R. Yarnall.
Hull was an active public lecturer on peace, and the
correspondence contains much about arrangements for his lecture tours. He
corresponded extensively with Congressmen and executive officials (see
especially a letter from Woodrow Wilson, July 23, 1914). Hull communicated
frequently with Quaker leaders and Quaker organizations, mostly but not
entirely of the Hicksite branch. There is some material referring to Hull's
academic work and his efforts as a Quaker historian. There is much official
Swarthmore College correspondence, especially with Presidents Joseph Swain and
Frank Aydelotte and with members of the Board of Managers.
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Correspondence, 1900-1911
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Box
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Correspondence
1900-1907
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Correspondence
Feb-Sep 1908
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Box
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Correspondence
Oct-Dec 1908
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Box
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Correspondence
Jan-Jul 1909
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Box
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Correspondence
Sep-Dec 1909
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Box
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Correspondence
1910
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Box
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Correspondence
1911
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Correspondence, 1912-1915
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Box
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Correspondence
1912-Feb 1913
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Correspondence
Mar-Apr 1913
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Correspondence
May-Jun 1919
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Correspondence
Jul-Oct 1913
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2 |
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Correspondence
Nov-Dec 1913
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Box
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2 |
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Correspondence
Jan 1914
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2 |
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Correspondence
Feb 1-14, 1914
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2 |
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Correspondence
Feb 16-28, 1914
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2 |
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Correspondence
Mar 1-14, 1914
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Correspondence
Mar 16-31, 1914
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Correspondence
Apr 1914
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Correspondence
May 1914
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Correspondence
Jun-Sep 1914
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2 |
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Correspondence
Oct-Nov 1914
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Correspondence
Dec 1914
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3 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1914?
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3 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1914?
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3 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1914?
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Box
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3 |
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Correspondence
Jan 1915
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Box
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3 |
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Correspondence
Feb 1915
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Correspondence
March 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
Apr 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
May-Jul 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
Aug-Oct 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
Nov 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
Dec 1915
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3 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1915?
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Correspondence, 1916-1917
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Correspondence
Jan 1-20, 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Jan 21-31, 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Feb 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Mar 1916
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Correspondence
Apr 1916
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Correspondence
May 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Jun 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Jul-Sep 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Oct 1916
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4 |
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Correspondence
Nov 1916
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Correspondence
Dec 1916
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5 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1916?
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Box
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5 |
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Correspondence
Jan1917
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Box
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5 |
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Correspondence
Feb 1-14, 1917
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Box
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5 |
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Correspondence
Feb 15-29, 1917
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Box
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5 |
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Correspondence
Mar 1-14, 1917
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Correspondence
Mar 15-31, 1917
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Box
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5 |
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Correspondence
Apr 1917
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Correspondence
May 1917
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Correspondence
Jun 1917
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Correspondence
Jul-Aug 1917
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Correspondence
Sept 1917
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6 |
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Correspondence
Oct 1-22, 1917
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Correspondence
Oct 23-31, 1917
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Correspondence
Nov 1917
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Correspondence
Dec 1917
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Correspondence
n.d. 1917?
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Correspondence, 1918-1921
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Correspondence
Jan-Feb 1918
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Correspondence
Mar 1918
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Correspondence
Apr 1918
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Correspondence
May 1918
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Correspondence
Jun-Jul 1918
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Correspondence
Aug-Sep 1918
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Correspondence
Oct 1918
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Correspondence
Nov 1-18, 1918
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Correspondence
Nov 19-28, 1918
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Correspondence
Dec 1918
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7 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1918?
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Correspondence
n.d. 1918?
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Correspondence
Jan-Mar 1919
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7 |
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Correspondence
Apr-Jun 1919
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7 |
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Correspondence
Jul-Sep 1919
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7 |
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Correspondence
Oct-Dec 1919
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7 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Apr 1920
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7 |
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Correspondence
May-Oct 1920
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7 |
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Correspondence
Nov-Dec 1920
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7 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Feb 1921
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7 |
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Correspondence
Mar-Apr 1921
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7 |
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Correspondence
May-Jun 1920
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Correspondence
Jul-Oct 1921
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Correspondence
Nov 1921
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8 |
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Correspondence
Dec 1921
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Correspondence, 1922-1927
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Correspondence
Jan-Mar 1922
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8 |
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Correspondence
Apr-Jun 1922
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8 |
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Correspondence
Jul-Oct 1922
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8 |
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Correspondence
Nov-Dec 1922
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8 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1920-1922?
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8 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1920-1922?
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8 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Mar 1923
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8 |
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Correspondence
Apr-Jul 1923
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8 |
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Correspondence
Aug-Dec 1923
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9 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Apr 1924
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9 |
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Correspondence
May-Jun 1924
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9 |
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Correspondence
Jul-Dec 1924
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9 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Apr 1925
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
May-Dec 1925
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Jun 1926
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
Sep-Dec 1926
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
1927
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Correspondence, 1928-1939
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Feb 1928
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Box
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9 |
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Correspondence
Mar-Dec 1928
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9 |
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Correspondence
1929
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9 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1923-1929?
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9 |
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Correspondence
1930
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Box
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Correspondence
1931
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Box
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Correspondence
Jan-Apr 1932
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10 |
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Correspondence
May-Dec 1932
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Feb 1933
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10 |
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Correspondence
Mar-May 1933
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
Jun-Dec 1933
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10 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Mar 1934
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
Apr-Dec 1934
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
1935
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
1936
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
Jan-Apr 1937
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
May-Dec 1937
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
1938
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
1939
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Box
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10 |
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Correspondence
n.d. 1930-1939?
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2. Biographical and family papers
Box
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11 |
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Hull's peace book The two Hague
conferences and their contributions to international law and his attack
on Roosevelt
1908
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's peace book The two Hague
conferences and their contributions to international law and his related
speeches
Jan-Apr 1909
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Box
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11 |
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The Second National Peace Conference at Chicago &
planting the two descendents of Penn Treaty Elm
May-Dec 1909
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Box
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11 |
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Peace meeting at Johns Hopkins University
1910 & 1912
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Box
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11 |
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Opposition to Monroe
Doctrine, the Fourth American Peace Congress at St. Louis, & Hull's
book, The new peace movement
1913
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Box
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11 |
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Reports from speeches on peace
1914
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's book The Monroe Doctrine:
National or international, debate with Gardner on national defenses,
& other speeches
Jan-Apr 1915
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's book The Monroe Doctrine:
National or international, peace plans, & other speeches against
armament
May-Dec 1915
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Box
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11 |
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Opposition to expansion of armaments, Hull's book
Preparedness
Jan-May 1916
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Box
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11 |
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Opposition to expansion of armaments, Hull's book
Preparedness
Jun-Dec 1916
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Box
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11 |
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Various pacifist actions
Jan-Apr 1917
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Box
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11 |
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Various pacifist actions
May-Dec 1917
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Box
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11 |
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Wilson's Peace Plan, opposition of the expansion of
the U.S. Navy
1918
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Box
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11 |
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Criticism of Peace Treaty, list of pacifists,
pro-Germanism
1919
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's talk on the League of Nations, disarmament,
& racial issues
1920-1921
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Box
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11 |
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Copenhagen International Conference
1922
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Box
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11 |
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Speeches
1923-1925
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Box
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11 |
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Anti-militarism
1926-1927
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's Congressional testimony opposing the Bill on
expansion of U.S. Navy
Feb 1928
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's Congressional testimony opposing the Bill on
expansion of U.S. Navy
Feb 1928
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's Congressional testimony opposing the Bill on
expansion of U.S. Navy
Feb-Mar 1928
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's Congressional testimony opposing the Bill on
expansion of U.S. Navy
Feb-Mar 1928
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Box
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11 |
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Hull's Congressional testimony opposing the expansion
of U.S. Navy
Mar-May 1928
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Box
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11 |
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Miscellaneous
n.d.
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Box
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11 |
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Hull and Swarthmore College
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Box
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11 |
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List of headings of discarded clippings
1924-1925
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Box
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11 |
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Articles about Hull
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Box
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12 |
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Engagement books
1893-1903
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Box
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12 |
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Engagement books
1904-1908
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Box
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12 |
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Engagement books
1908-1912
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Box
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12 |
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Engagement books
1913-1917
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Box
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12 |
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Engagement books
1918-1922
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Box
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12 |
|
Engagement books
1923-1927
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Box
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12 |
|
Engagement books
1928-1932
|
Box
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12 |
|
Engagement books
1933-1937
|
Box
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12 |
|
Engagement books
1938
|
Box
|
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|
12 |
|
Autobiographical papers
Including brief resumes
|
Box
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12 |
|
Education: reports & certificates issued by Friends'
Elementary and High School, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University, &
University of Leiden
1876-1908
|
Box
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12 |
|
Speeches: programs & reports of speeches
1915-1939
|
Box
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13 |
|
Obituaries and memorials
1939-1940
|
Box
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13 |
|
Photographs: album from trip to Holland and trip to
Britain
1907, 1910
|
Box
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13 |
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Trip to Holland
1907
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Box
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13 |
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Programs of international conferences
1911
|
Box
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13 |
|
Invitations, documents, bookplates
|
Box
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13 |
|
Family business papers
1902-1939
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Box
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13 |
|
Genealogy of the Hull family
|
Box
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13 |
|
Other family papers
1843-1938
|
Box
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13 |
|
Bibliography of William I. Hull's work
|
3. Writings: Quakerism in Holland
William I. Hull began to write a history of Dutch Quakerism in
about 1907. Largely completed twenty years later, the first solicitation of
subscriptions promised a scholarly publication, "A History of Quakerism in
Holland," comprised of six volumes of approximately 500 pages each, viz. Vol.1,
General Narrative; Vols. II & III, Accounts of Quakerism in Dutch Towns and
Villages; Vols. IV & V, Biographical Sketches; and Vol. VI, a Bibliography,
including an English translation of the Minutes of Friesland Monthly Meeting.
By 1933, when Vol. I was actually published, the format had been altered as a
series of 10 monographs, as follows: Number 1: Willem Sewel of Amsterdam,
1653-1720, the First Quaker Historian of Quakerism. ; Number 2: William Penn
and the Dutch Quaker Migration to Pennsylvania. ; Number 3: Eight First
Biographies of William Penn, In Seven Languages and Seven Lands. ; Number 4:
The Rise of Quakerism in Amsterdam, 1655-1665. ; Number 5: Benjamin Furly and
Quakerism in Rotterdam; [Number 6: Dutch Quaker Leaders, 1665-1800.]; [Number
7: The Persecution of the Quakers in the Netherlands and Western Germany.];
[Number 8: The Friesland Monthly Meeting of the Society of Friends.]; [Number
9: Jean Etienne Mollet, 1768-1851, and the Aftermath of Quakerism in Holland.];
[Number 10: The History of Quakerism in Holland: A Bibliography.].
The first four monographs were published by Swarthmore College
before his death, and the fifth posthumously. The data for the monographs was
drawn from the research as it was assembled for the earlier six volume draft.
Thus, he lifted the extensive treatment of Amsterdam Quakerism from the
geographical section and published it as Monograph Number Four. Similarly, he
published the material on Krefeld and Krisheim in Monograph Number Two, and
that on Rotterdam was incorporated into Number Five.
The material in this Series includes correspondence and corrected
copies relating to the published monographs, and well as the biographical,
geographical, reference, and other materials from the earlier six volume
unpublished work, herein differentiated by its original name, "A History of
Quakerism in Holland." Researchers should note that some of the correspondence
relating to the research and publication of these volumes will be found in
Series 1.
|
|
Willem Sewel of Amsterdam
Willem Sewel of Amsterdam, 1653-1720: The
first Quaker historian of Quakerism. Swarthmore, Pa.: Swarthmore
College, 1933. (Swarthmore College Monographs on Quaker History No. 1).
|
Box
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14 |
|
Printed copy, annotated by the author
1933
|
Box
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14 |
|
Correspondence
1931-1935
|
Box
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14 |
|
Willem Sewel of Amsterdam. Reviews
1934
|
|
|
William Penn and the Dutch Quaker migration to
Pennsylvania
William Penn and the Dutch Quaker
migration to Pennsylvania. Swarthmore, Pa.: Swarthmore College, 1935.
(Swarthmore College Monographs on Quaker History No. 2).
|
Box
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14 |
|
Printed copy, annotated by the author
1935
|
Box
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15 |
|
Manuscript (unsorted) pt. 1
1934
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Box
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15 |
|
Manuscript (unsorted) pt. 2
1934
|
Box
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15 |
|
Manuscript (unsorted) pt. 3
1934
|
Box
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|
15 |
|
Manuscript (unsorted) pt. 4
1934
|
Box
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|
15 |
|
Correspondence
1933-1939
|
|
|
Eight first biographies of William Penn
Eight first biographies of William Penn,
in seven languages and seven lands. Swarthmore, Pa.: Swarthmore College,
1936. (Swarthmore College Monographs on Quaker History No. 3).
|
Box
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16 |
|
Printed copy, annotated by the author
1936
|
Box
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16 |
|
TSs, with manuscript notes
1936?
|
|
|
The rise of Quakerism in Amsterdam
The rise of Quakerism in Amsterdam,
1655-1665. Swarthmore, Pa.: Swarthmore College, 1938. (Swarthmore
College Monographs on Quaker History No. 4)
|
Box
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|
16 |
|
Printed copy, annotated by the author
1938
|
Box
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16 |
|
Correspondence
1938-1939
|
|
|
Benjamin Furly and Quakerism in Rotterdam
Benjamin Furly and Quakerism in
Rotterdam. Swarthmore, Pa.: Swarthmore College, 1941. (Swarthmore
College Monographs on Quaker History No. 5)
|
Box
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17 |
|
Correspondence with W.I. Hull
1935-1939
|
Box
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|
17 |
|
Correspondence with others
1940-1946
|
|
|
A history of Quakerism in Holland
A history of Quakerism in Holland
(unpublished TS & manuscript): Accounts of Quakerism in Dutch towns and
villages (Vol. 2-3), Biographical sketches (Vol. 4-5), Bibliography,
Appendices, General Index (Vol. 6) includes an English translation of the
Minutes of Friesland Monthly Meeting (Men's and Women's); arranged
alphabetically.
|
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18 |
|
Geography. Index & Geography pp. 1-4
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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18 |
|
Geography. Abbekerk-Amstelveen (pp. 5-29)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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|
18 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 30-80)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
18 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 81-145)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
18 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 146-199)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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|
18 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 200-225)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
19 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 226-256)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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19 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam ( pp. 257-315)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
19 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 316-375)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
19 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 376-423)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
20 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam ( pp. 424-461)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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|
20 |
|
Geography. Amsterdam (pp. 462-500)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
20 |
|
Geography. Appingedam-Edam (pp. 300-352)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
20 |
|
Geography. Emden-Friedrichstadt (pp. 353-404)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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20 |
|
Geography. Friedrichstadt-Groningen (pp. 405-463)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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21 |
|
Geography. Grouw-Hamburg (pp. 464-499)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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21 |
|
Geography. Harderwijk-Harlingen (pp. 506-554)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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21 |
|
Geography. Heerenveen-Herford (pp. 555-562)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
21 |
|
Geography. Hindeloopen-Knijpe (pp. 563-588)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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21 |
|
Geography. Krefeld-Krisheim (pp. 589-618)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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21 |
|
Geography. Landsmeer-Leeuwarden (pp. 619-660)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
22 |
|
Geography. Leiden (pp. 661-698)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
22 |
|
Geography. Leiden-Rees (pp. 699-749)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
22 |
|
Geography. Rotterdam (pp. 751-814)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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22 |
|
Geography. Rotterdam (pp. 815-855)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
23 |
|
Geography. Rotterdam (pp. 866-910)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
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|
23 |
|
Geography. Scheideam-Zwolle (pp. 911-961)
1907- 1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
23 |
|
People. Index
1907-1933
|
Box
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|
23 |
|
People. Aa-Andreas (pp. 1-35)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
23 |
|
People. Andriesz-Barclay (pp. 36-74)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
23 |
|
People. Barnard-Bockenoogen (pp. 76-132)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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23 |
|
People. Bogaarts-Buylaert (pp. 133-163)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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23 |
|
People. Caton-Claus (pp. 164-175)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
24 |
|
People. Claus-Crisp (TS pp. 176-191)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Crook-Everard (TS pp. 192-215)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Farmer-Fry (pp. 215-232)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Furly (p. 233)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Furnier-Gurney (pp. 234-252)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
24 |
|
People. Furnier-Hendricks
1907-1933 (pp. 253-276) TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Hendriks-Isacks (pp. 277-293)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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24 |
|
People. Isacks-Kendall (pp. 294-316)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
People. Klasen-Lodge (pp. 317-335)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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25 |
|
People. Longworth-Mollet (pp. 336-346)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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25 |
|
People. Mollet (p. 346)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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25 |
|
People. Moore-Puttel (pp. 347-369)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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25 |
|
People. Reyners-Senarius (pp. 370-397)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
People. Servel (p. 400)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
People. Servel-Yeardley (pp. 401-446)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
Bibliography. Title page & table of contents
1907-1933
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
Bibliography. General works (pp. 1-41)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
Bibliography. Periodical literature (pp. 42-54)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
25 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary Friends' journals (pp.
55-67)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 67-130
[569-655])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 131-169
[656-697])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 168-718
[698-718])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 191-218
[719-746])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 219-238
[747-766])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 239-270
[767-798])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Contemporary pamphlets (pp. 271-300)
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
26 |
|
Bibliography. Manuscript sources. Contents (pp.
[841-845])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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26 |
|
Bibliography. Manuscript sources (pp. [846-893])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
27 |
|
Bibliography. Manuscript sources (pp. [894-915])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
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|
27 |
|
Appendices. Prefix to the Minutes of the Friesland
Monthly Meetings (p. [916])
1907-1933 TS
|
Box
|
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|
27 |
|
Appendices. Minutes of the General (Men's) Meeting in
Amsterdam (pp. [917-920])
1677 TS
|
Box
|
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|
27 |
|
Appendices. Minutes of the Friesland Monthly Meetings
(pp. [921-1014])
1677-1701 TS
|
Box
|
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|
27 |
|
General Index (not paged)
1907-1933 TS
|
|
|
Illustrations
Illustrations for the Swarthmore College
Monographs on Quaker History (including photographs).
|
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|
28 |
|
Architecture, events, etc.
|
Box
|
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|
28 |
|
Printed frontispieces
|
Box
|
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|
28 |
|
Publication proofs
|
|
|
Research and Miscellaneous
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Drafts of circular for A history
of Quakerism in Holland & related correspondence
1930-1931
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Drafts of Table of contents for the monographs
1933-1934?
|
Box
|
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|
29 |
|
Drafts of Index to Geography
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Drafts of Monograph No. 6, Dutch
Quaker leaders
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Translations of William Sewell's letters by Dorothy
Wolf
1930-1931
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Letters from Dorothy Wolf concerning Sewell's letters
& a translation of a Latin account
1930-1931
|
Box
|
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|
29 |
|
Other translations of primary materials
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Miscellaneous research notes
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Correspondence relating to research on Dutch Quakers
1907-1939
|
Box
|
|
|
29 |
|
Posthumous correspondence concerning the Monographs
1940-1953
|
4. Writings: A History of Swarthmore College
|
|
Volume I
Volume I. Origin, founding, building and
opening, 1850-1869
|
Box
|
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|
30 |
|
Early draft pt. 1 Ms.
|
Box
|
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|
30 |
|
Early draft pt. 2 Ms.
|
Box
|
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|
31 |
|
Related papers: research notes, drafts, corres.
1869-1936
|
|
|
Volume II
Volume II. 1869-1902 (original
title: The first generation).
|
Box
|
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|
32 |
|
Manuscript Ms. (incomplete)
|
Box
|
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32 |
|
Draft & notes pt. 1 Ms.
|
Box
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32 |
|
Draft & notes pt. 2 Ms.
|
Box
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32 |
|
Index material pt. 1
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Index material pt. 2
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Research notes pt. 1
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Research notes pt. 2
|
|
|
Volume III
Volume III. Twenty-five years in the life
of Swarthmore College, 1900-1925 (original title: The second generation,
1902-1935).
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Incomplete draft TS & Ms.
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Research notes and drafts
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Research notes: documents pt. 1 TS
|
Box
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|
33 |
|
Research notes: documents pt. 2
1918-1939 TS
|
Box
|
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|
33 |
|
Research notes: miscellaneous publications
1907-1939
|
Box
|
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|
34 |
|
Research notes: The Garnet
Letter
1935-1939
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Research notes: clippings from Friends' Intelligencer
1927
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Research notes: newspaper clippings
1909-1939
Unsorted
|
Box
|
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|
34 |
|
Research notes: photographs, eclipse filter, cards,
etc.
|
|
|
Research and miscellaneous
|
Box
|
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|
34 |
|
Correspondence regarding publication: work progress
etc.
1933-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Correspondence regarding publication: financing etc.
1933-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Correspondence regarding research work
1930-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Correspondence regarding illustrations
1931-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Correspondence regarding Vol. III
1924-1926
|
Box
|
|
|
34 |
|
Illustrations of Vol. I-II: lists, notes, photographs
|
5. Writings: Other books
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
The new peace movement.
Letter from President William H. Taft accepting dedication of book
1912
The new peace movement. Boston:
World Peace Foundation, 1912.
|
|
|
The Monroe
Doctrine
The Monroe Doctrine: National or
international: The problem and its solution. New York and London: G.P.
Putnam's Sons, 1915.
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Correspondence with publisher
1914-1921
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Accounts with publisher
1915-1921
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Preparedness.
Correspondence with publisher
1916-1918
Preparedness: The American versus the
military programme. New York: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1916.
|
|
|
The War-method and the
Peace-method
The War-method and the Peace-method: A
historical contrast. New York: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1929.
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Typescript pp. 1-113
1928?
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Typescript pp. 114-240
1928?
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Typescript pp. 241-341
1928?
|
|
|
India's political
crisis
India's political crisis.
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press; London: H. Milford, Oxford University
Press, 1930.
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Typescript with manuscript preface
1929
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Reviews and correspondence
1930
|
|
|
William Penn: A topical
biography
William Penn: A topical biography.
London, New York, & Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1937.
|
Box
|
|
|
35 |
|
Printed copy, annotated by the author
1937
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Typescript pt. 1
1936?
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Typescript pt. 2
1936?
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Manuscript of early chapters & related materials
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Correspondence regarding Wilhelm Abraham Teller's
Lebensbeschreibung des Beruhmten Wilhelm I
(Berlin, 1779)
1932-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Correspondence and accounts with publisher
1936-1939
|
Box
|
|
|
36 |
|
Correspondence with readers
1936-1937
|
6. Writings: Pamphlets, book reviews,
articles, 1906-1939
Arranged chronologically, undated items at the end.
Box
|
|
|
37 |
|
Pamphlets
1908-1914
Includes: The two Hague conferences and
their contributions to international law (Boston: Ginn & Company,
1908) - 2 c.; Arbitration, but not armaments
(Boston: American Peace Society, 1909); The new peace
movement: A series of addresses delivered in 1908-1909 Swarthmore
College Bulletin VII (1): 1909 - 2 c.; How far has the
world progressed toward peace? (Philadelphia: Sunday School Times Co.,
1911); The Monroe Doctrine and the International
Court (Washington, D.C.: The American Peace Society, 1913, reprinted
from the Proceedings of the American Society for Judicial Settlement of
International Disputes, 1913, pp. 75-96) - 2 c.; The
Monroe Doctrine: National or international? (Washington, D.C.: Press of
Byron S. Adams, 1914).
|
Box
|
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|
37 |
|
Pamphlets
1915-1926
Includes: By what progress can compliance
with the award of an international tribunal be endured? (reprinted from
the Proceedings of the American Society for Judicial Settlement of
International Disputes, Washington, D.C., 1915); The
development of the Hague conference and its work (The Hague: Martinus
Nijhoff, 1916); Preparedness: The military and the
American programmes (Philadelphia: Peace Section of Committee on
Philanthropic Labor of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, 1916; New York:
The Church Peace Union, 1916) - 2 c.; Six sanctions of
the International Court. Baltimore: American Society for Judicial
Settlement of International Disputes, 1916; International
organisation (reprinted from The Bookman, 1917); The American plan for the settlement of our disputes with
Germany and Great Britain (Swarthmore, Pa., 1917); Why the apparently helpless Supreme Court succeeds. The
World Court, New York, 1917; Why not war? (Swarthmore, Pa., 1917);
William Penn's plan for a League of Nations
(Philadelphia: The American Friends' Service Committee, 1919); The United States and international government
(reprinted from The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social
Science, Philadelphia, 1921); The Washington Conference,
1921-1922 (Philadelphia: Representative Committee of Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting of Friends, 1922); Military training in American
high schools and colleges: The case for and against (New York: World
Alliance for International Friendship Through the Churches, 1926) - 2 c.
|
Box
|
|
|
37 |
|
Pamphlets
1927-1939
Includes: American experiments in
disarmament and the Geneva Conference of 1927 (Philadelphia: Committee
on Peace and Service of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, 1927;
Swarthmore, Pa., 1927) - 2 c.; America's international
experiment (New York: World Alliance for International Friendship
Through the Churches, 1927); American experiments in
disarmament and the London Conference of 1930 (Philadelphia: Committee
on Peace and Service of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, 1929) - 2 c.;
India's political crisis (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
Press, 1930); The League of Nations' tenth
birthday (reprinted from Friends' Intelligencer, 1930);
American experiments in disarmament and the Disarmament
Conference of 1932 (Philadelphia: Committee on Peace and Service of
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends, 1931) - 2 c.; Quaker reasons for total disarmament (Philadelphia:
Committee on Peace and Service of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends,
1932); International law in the college curriculum
(reprinted from the Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of Teachers of
International Law and Related Subjects, Washington, D.C., 1933);
Total disarmament (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania
Committee for Total Disarmament, 1935); The munitions
problem and its solution (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Committee for Total
Disarmament, 1935); Sanctions: International
sanctions (New York: Church Peace Union, 1935);
The world's most tragic delusion (Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Committee
for Total Disarmament, 1936); Imperialism, armaments,
war, and our American solution (New York: World Alliance for
International Friendship Through the Churches, 1938); The
third Hague Conference: Reasons why it should be held now (New York:
Church Peace Union and World Alliance for International Friendship Through the
Churches, 1938); The morality of method in social
reform (reprinted from Friends Intelligencer, 1939) - 2 c.
|
Box
|
|
|
37 |
|
Pamphlets
n.d.
Includes: International sanctions
(Philadelphia: Committee on Peace and Service of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of
Friends) - 2 c.; International peace and international
war (New York: Church Peace Union); What kind of a
world court? (reprinted from The World Tomorrow, New York).
|
Box
|
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37 |
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Book reviews: Typescript
1910-1937
|
Box
|
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37 |
|
Book reviews: Printed
1920-1939
|
Box
|
|
|
37 |
|
Articles. Published. A-F
1904-1939
Arranged alphabetically by title. Includes:
The abolition of trial by battle. The Editorial
Review, 1911; Adequate armaments. The Advocate of
Peace 76 (10), 1914; America and the coercion of
sovereign states, The World Outlook, 1927; American precedents for a non-military League of
Nations. Maryland Women's News 10(2), 1921; The
American program for permanent peace. Friends' Intelligencer, 1918;
Armistice day and disarmament. Friends'
Intelligencer 91(45), 1934; Can the Society of Friends
become all anti-war? Friends' Intelligencer, 1927; China at The Hague. The Chinese Students' Monthly 12(4),
1917; Christianity, not non-resistance. Friends'
Intelligencer 72(6), 1915; The Church Peace Union.
Friends' Intelligencer, 1914; The civil war as an
excuse. Friends' Intelligencer, 1917; Conference
echoes: The peace question. Friends' Intelligencer 67(40), 1910;
The department of the army. The Christian Science
Monitor [n.d.]; Disarmament and the Churches.
Friends' Intelligencer, 1928; A discussion of a
referendum on war. Friends' Intelligencer, 1928; Dutch Quaker peace-makers. Bulletin of Friends'
Historical Association [n.d.]; Ethiopia's savior: God or
Mars? Friends' Intelligencer 92(42), 1935; The
first step in the American program for permanent peace: Ground arms!
|
Box
|
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|
37 |
|
Articles. Published. G-I
1904-1939
Arranged alphabetically by title. Includes:
A Geneva Armaments Conference-I. Friends'
Intelligencer 84(28), 1927; George Fox's Quakerism - A
burlesque. Friends' Intelligencer, 1914; The Hague
tribunal; Its present meaning and its future promise. The American
Citizen, 1913; If China had not resisted. The
Christian Century, 1933; The impending crisis and our
peace testimony. Friends' Intelligencer, 1934; The
influence of peace power upon history. The Advocate of Peace, 1909;
Friends' Intelligencer, 1909; The International Grand
Jury. The Banker and Investor Magazine 11(8), 1910;
The international Humanitarian Commission on war
time. The Survey, 1917; International
interpretation of United States history. The History Teacher's Magazine
5(5), 1914; International sanctions on the ladder of
coercion. The Messenger of Peace Supplement to the American Friend,
1932; Invoking the verdict of history. The
Messenger of Peace Supplement to the American Friend 55, 1930
|
Box
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37 |
|
Articles. Published. J-R
1904-1939
Arranged alphabetically by title. Includes:
Japan and the Shantung question. The Friend
62(10), 1922; The League of Nations: Shall the United
States enter it The World Tomorrow, 1922; The
League of Nations protocol of 1924. Supplement to the American Friend
81(50), 1924; The League of Nation' tenth
birthday. Supplement to the American Friend, 1930; The Mennonites and the Quakers of Holland; Mere opposition to
war. Friends' Intelligencer, 1935; The Monroe
Doctrine and the League of Nations; The morality
of method. Friends' Intelligencer 74(21), 1917; The morality of method in social reform. Friends'
Intelligencer 96(25), 1939; The movement for
disarmament. Friends' Intelligencer, 1921; A motto
for Swarthmore College. Friends' Intelligencer 67(5), 1910;
The neutrality of the United States. The Christian
Century, 1933; Nothing to arbitrate. Friends'
Intelligencer 84(6), 1927; One peril to the new peace
movement. The Advocate of Peace, 1911; One program
for peace. Friends' Intelligencer 80(45), 1923; Our debt to William Penn. The Epworth Herald, 1926;
Our peace-work: What's next?Friends' Intelligencer
79(44), 1922; Our personal appeal. The Advocate of
Peace, 1914; The outlook for minorities. The
Friend, 1929; Quaker apostles of international
peace. Friends' Intelligencer 73(4), 1916; Peace
at any price. The Christian Work, 1915; A peace
day in Washington. Friends' Intelligencer, 1922; The peace programme of Rhode Island Friends, 1675.
Friends' Intelligencer 74(44), 1917; A plan for American
cooperation in achieving an preserving world peace. Friends'
Intelligencer, 1924; A positive peace programme.
Friends' Intelligencer 80(8), 1923; The present crisis in
the League of Nations. Friends' Intelligencer 81(38), 1924;
The President's message and the American pacifist.
The Friend, 1918; The proposed League of Nations: Seven
fundamental amendments. Advocate of Peace, 1919; Prussian militarism. Friends' Intelligencer, 1917;
The Quaker in French drama. Friends'
Intelligencer, 1930; Real guarantees of peace.
Friends' Intelligencer 74(6), 1917; Russia's disarmament
proposal. Friends' Intelligencer 84(51), 1917.
|
|
|
Articles. Published. S-Z
1904-1939
Arranged alphabetically by title. Includes:
Shall we have real disarmament? Friends'
Intelligencer, 1926; Some searching questions. The
American Friend 15(41), 1927; A Third Hague Conference. New York Times, 1939;
Three plans for a durable peace. The Annals of the
Academy of Political and Social Science, 1916; Twenty-five years in the life of Swarthmore College '
1900-1925. Friends' Intelligencer, 1927; The
United States and international government. The Annals of the American
Academy of Political and Social Sciences, 1921; War
debts. The World Outlook, 1928; War or the better
way. Friends' Intelligencer 74(15), 1917; What if
China had not resisted? The Messenger of Peace Supplement to The
American Friend, 1933; What kind of a World Court?
The World Tomorrow, 1924; Moral Welfare 17(4),
1925; William Penn and international sanctions.
Friends' Intelligencer, 1933; William Penn : A satire or
a eulogy? Friends' Intelligencer 61(16), 1904.
|
Box
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|
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38 |
|
Articles. The new peace
movement. Swarthmore College Bulletin 7(1)
1909
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Articles. A positive programme for
the peace movement. Swarthmore College Bulletin, The New Peace
Movement
1909
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Articles. The family of nations in
conference at The Hague. Swarthmore College Bulletin, "The New Peace
Movement"
1909
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Articles. By what process can
compliance with the award of an international tribunal be ensured?
1915
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Articles published in the Friends' Intelligencer and
related correspondence
1916-1919
|
|
|
Egbert van Heemskerk's "Quaker
meeting". Bulletin of Friends' Historical Association
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Page proofs, manuscripts, research notes
1938
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Illustrations - pictures received from John Nickalls
1938
|
Box
|
|
|
38 |
|
Related correspondence
1938
|
7. Writings: Unpublished
The majority of these manuscripts are unpublished but some
published works may also be listed.
Box
|
|
|
39 |
|
Short writings. A-D
1915-1932 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: Jane Addams's press interview 1932; Adequate
armaments; America's international experiment [n.d.]; The American alternative
to the Paris League of Nations 1920; The American experiment at Geneva (letter
to the Editor of The New York Times) 1932; American experiments in cooperation
(Pan-Americanism) n.d.; American experiments in disarmament 1927; The American
precedent for a pacifist League of Nations 1921; The American solution of the
international problem 1936; Armaments: An outline [n.d.]; Armies and navies in
the Twentieth Century' [n.d.]; Arms and debts [n.d.]; The army and navy as
insurance (Letter to the Editor of The New York Times) 1922; An attempt to
square Christianity with war [1917']; The attitude of Friends towards sanctions
[n.d.]; Benjamin West in the National Portrait Gallery in London n.d.; A better
way than war (The Survey) 1917; But I'm not a pacifist (to the Editor of The
New York Times); China at the Hague 1917; The Christian Church and armaments
(World Alliance for International Friendship Through the Churches) 1924; The
Christian in war-time (chapter contributed to Dr. Frederick Lynch's book, The
Christian in War-Time, F.H. Revell Co., NYC, 1917) 1916; The Church and
international government 1916; Country versus city life [n.d.]; Development of
international law since 1899 (lecture) 1915; Disarmament [n.d.]; Disarmaments
must come! Armaments must go! [n.d.]; A discriminating patriotism (The Women's
Press) 1924; Do armaments pay Who pays for them' 1924; A draft treaty of
disarmament (proposed by Hull on Armistice Day, 1926, for endorsement by the
11th Annual Conference of the World Alliance for International Friendship
through the Churches, Pittsburgh, PA) 1926; The duty of the Western powers
toward the nations of the East [n.d.].
|
Box
|
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39 |
|
Short writings. E-F
1921-1938 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Edward Hicks Magill (1825-1907) (Dictionary of American
Biography) 1930; An efficient State Peace Society (Proceedings of the 4th
National Peace Congress) [n.d.]; Egbert van Heemskerk's Quaker Meeting [n.d.];
Ethiopia's savior: God or Mars? (Friends' Intelligencer) 1935; The fear of
invasion (statement submitted to a sub-committee of the U.S. Senate's Committee
on the Judiciary at the hearing on "The Frazier Amendment to the Constitution)
1934; The fetish of the flag [n.d.]; Founder's hall, or Old Main? (The Phoenix)
1921; [Untitled] (To the Editor of The Friend, 1932.); Friends and disarmament
[n.d.]; Friends and the Far East crisis 1932; Friends and the Sino-Japanese
crisis (for A.F.S.C.) 1932; Friends in colonial Maryland [n.d.]; The Dutch
Quaker founders of Germantown (Bulletin of Friend's Historical Association
27(2) pp 83-90) 1938.
|
Box
|
|
|
39 |
|
Short writings. Typescript & manuscript.
G-L
1916-1934 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: The Geneva Disarmament Conference (for the AFSC) 1932;
George Fox's solutions of social problems [n.d.]; A German estimate of
Quakerism eighty years ago [n.d.]; Grass for the cow, hay for the horse, and
gas for the auto (to the Editor of the Intelligencer) 1934; A hearing against
the Spy Bill [n.d.]; How can America contribute best toward international
peace? (for the Peace Symposium of The Inter-Church, Clinton, S.C.) 1913; How
to stop the war [n.d.]; The impending crisis and our peace testimony (Friend's
Intelligencer) 1934; Imperialism, armaments, war and our American solution
1937; The implication of the testimony in national life and international
relations. C. Interstate Organization. [n.d.]; The inadequacy of our peace
efforts: Fourteen points and a pointed question [n.d.]; [Untitled] (For The
Independent, 1916); An international commission in war-time [n.d.];
International peace and international war (for Church Peace Union) 1924; An
international police force (The Friend, London) 1934; International sanctions
1932; International sanctions (study outline) [n.d.]; The international
significance of child-feeding 1924; Is compromise of Quaker pacifism practical
politics? (Friends Intelligencer) 1936; The Joint Committee on the Reduction of
Armaments etc. (minute) 1938; The League of Nations: Its present and future
1920; The League of Nations tenth birthday 1930; A liberal education (The
Phoenix) 1921; The limitation of armaments [n.d.]; Lincoln & peace
[n.d.].
|
Box
|
|
|
39 |
|
Short writings. Typescript & manuscript.
I-N
1915-1937 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: Md. Quakers before George Fox's visit [n.d.]; The
meaning of sanctions [n.d.]; Mere opposition to war (Friends Intelligencer)
1935; Merion meeting-house should be restored (Friends Intelligencer) 1937; The
message of George Fox [n.d.]; The Mexican problem: An honorable solution 1921;
Military training in American high schools and colleges: The War Department's
Programme [n.d.]; The Monroe Doctrine as applied to Mexico (for the Annual
Meeting of the American Historical Association) 1915; Mr. Hearst's attack on
the President (unsent letter to the Editor of The New York Times) 1936; The
munitions industry [n.d.]; A naval holiday between the British Empire and the
United States of America 1928; The Neutrality Act, 1935 1935; Draft report on
neutrality and embargo policy for the United States [n.d.]; Neutrality plus
versus international sanctions [n.d.]; A notable conversion (The World
Tomorrow) 1924.
|
Box
|
|
|
39 |
|
Short writings. Typescript & manuscript.
O-P
1910-1936 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: Obligatory arbitration and business (Mohonk Bulletin)
1910; Obligatory arbitration and the Hague conferences (American Journal of
International Law) [n.d.]; One program for peace (Friends Intelligencer) 1923;
Our peace-work: What next (Friends Intelligencer) 1922; To the Editor of The
Outlook 1911; Pacifism [n.d.]; The palace of peace at The Hague [n.d.]; The
Panama Canal Question (The Century) 1913; The Paris treaty: Its good and its
bad points [n.d.]; Patriotism and pacifists [n.d.]; A peace-day in Washington
(Friends Intelligencer, The Friend) 1922; The peace programme of the Rhode
Island Friends, 1675 [n.d.]; Pennsylvania A holy experiment [n.d.]; The
platform of the Church Peace Union [1914?]; The poor voter on Election Day
(Friends Intelligencer) 1936; A positive peace programme [n.d.]; Practical work
for peace [n.d.]; The present crisis in the League of Nations (Friends'
Intelligencer) 1924; The President's failure on the Monroe Doctrine 1919; The
President's international ideal (for Dr. Frederick Lynch's book, President
Wilson and the moral aims of the war, F.H. Revell Co., NYC, 1918) 1918; The
President's message and the American pacifist (Friends' Intelligencer) 1917;
The proposed League of Nations: Seven fundamental amendments (for the Committee
on Peace and Emergency Service of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends)
[1920?]; Put up thy sword (Friends' Intelligencer) 1914.
|
Box
|
|
|
39 |
|
Short writings. Typescript & manuscript.
Q-S
1916-1936 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: The Quaker in French drama (Friends' Intelligencer)
1930; Quaker pacifism as a realizable ideal (Friends' Intelligencer) 1936; A
quarter millennium of peace and war (Friends' Intelligencer & The Friend)
1931; The real Mexican problem 1916; Russia's disarmament proposal [n.d.]; Les
sanctions internationales de la Societe des Nations (review for The American
Journal of International Law) 1923; Shall the United States enter the League of
Nations (for the W.S.C., Geneva) 1923; The simultaneous and cooperative
disarmament of the Atlantic [n.d.]; Some alleged pacifist dilemmas [n.d.]; Some
neglected factors in temperance reform [n.d.]; Some proposals for leadership
(presented to the Trustees of the Church Peace Union in 1920) 1919; Special
mediation (fragment) [n.d.]; A statement for the Society of Friends [n.d.].
|
Box
|
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|
39 |
|
Short writings. Typescript & manuscript.
T-Z
1910-1935 & n.d. TS & Ms.
Includes: Ten types of peace people [n.d.]; Terms of peace
[n.d.]; The Third Hague Conference: Reasons why it should now be held [n.d.];
To the Editor of The Times (written to The London Times) 1928; To all who love
the Prince of Peace: An appeal from the Society of Friends [n.d.]; Total
disarmament (Friends' Intelligencer) 1930; Total disarmament [n.d.]; Total
disarmament: The only effective cure for the Armaments system (protest against
the proposed huge armaments appropriation before the House of Representatives'
Committee on Naval Appropriations) 1936; Total disarmament by international
agreement (for the Annual Report of the Peace and Service Committee of
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting) 1931; Total disarmament now [n.d.]; Traveler's
notes 1929; Two aspects of our foreign policy (Friends' Intelligencer) 1934;
Undermining the peace testimony of Friends (Friends' Intelligencer) 1918; The
United States Navy and public opinion (Headway, London) 1928; A visit to the
President (Friends' Intelligencer) 1917; War and peace and Christianity [n.d.];
The way to win the war and the peace (to the Editor of the New York Times)
1939; What can patriotic Americans do now to help end the war? (Friends'
Intelligencer) 1918; What is needed most in Quaker literature today? (The
Friend) 1935; What the youth of today can learn from William Penn: The pioneer
of democracy, religious liberty, and international government [n.d.]; Why not
war? [1917?]; William Penn and the peace palace at The Hague 1910; William Penn
and an unarmed state (The Friend &Friends'Intelligencer) 1932; William
Penn's complete works (Friends' Intelligencer) 1910; William Williams Speakman
[n.d.]; The World Alliance of the Churches for International Friendship 1923;
The World Court (The Phoenix &Friends' Intelligencer) 1925; World-wide
cooperation (The League of Nations) [n.d.].
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
American cooperation in achieving
and preserving world peace
1923
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The American Union and the League
of Nations
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The dawn of world
justice
n.d.
Written with George Parisian
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The delusion of military
preparedness
n.d.
A chapter written for Richard D. Dodge's Christian Internationalism
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The discovery of America
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The Dutch Quaker migration from
Krefeld to Germantown, Pennsylvania, 1683-84
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
Dutch Quaker peacemakers
n.d.
Folder also includes note cards
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
The fellowship and international
reconciliation
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
Intervention in Mexico
[annual messages etc.]
1824-1844
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
Massachusetts historians and
Pennsylvania Indians - Indian policy in the English colonies
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
Quakers in North Carolina
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
40 |
|
Venice, the Queen of the
Adriatic
n.d.
|
|
|
International
organization
Corrected version and draft. Returned by publisher in 1917
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Preface & Table of contents
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 1. International organization
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 2. Four plans for international organization
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 3. The development of the Hague Conference and
its work
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 4. The Hague tribunal
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 5. The United States Supreme Court as the
exemplar of the World Court
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 6. Obligatory arbitration at the Hague Conference
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 7. Sanctions of the international court
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 8. The sources of international obligations
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 9. An international commission in war time
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 10. International organization and the small
nationalities
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 11. International organization and terms of peace
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Appendix. President Wilson's address, 1917
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Research notes: resources (Hull's previous writings)
1917 TS
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
The Monroe Doctrine and the
League of Nations
1919 TS & Ms. (partial)
The Monroe Doctrine and the League of Nations [2nd &
enlarged ed. of The Monroe Doctrine: National or international? - The problem
and its solution]
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Title page & table of contents of War-time peace
essays, Quaker peace essays in war-time," and "The American ideal of a League
of Nations"
1921
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Essays on a League of Nations
Collection of previous works, reference material pt. 1
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Essays on a League of Nations
Collection of previous works, reference material pt. 2
|
|
|
International
conferences
International conferences, 1899-1934: typescript - corrected
version and drafts; manuscript. Returned by publisher in 1933.
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Table of contents & Preface
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
41 |
|
Chpt 1. The First Hague Conference, 1899
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 2. The Second Hague Conference, 1907
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 3. The Paris Conference, 1919
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 3. The Paris Conference, 1919
1933 TS drafts.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 3. The Paris Conference, 1919
1933 Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 4. The Washington Conference, 1921-1922
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
International conferences. uscript)
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 6. The London Naval Conference, 1930
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
42 |
|
Chpt 7. Reparation and Economic Conferences, 1920-1933
1933 corrected, draft, Ms.
|
Box
|
|
|
43 |
|
Research notes, drafts
1933
|
Box
|
|
|
43 |
|
The chroniclers' history of
England, notes for
|
Box
|
|
|
43 |
|
The battle of Rome. Manuscript pt. 1
|
Box
|
|
|
43 |
|
The battle of Rome. Manuscript pt. 2
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
Minutes of the Friesland Monthly Meeting
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
Unpublished manuscripts. Correspondence
1917-1934
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
The abolition of trial by
battle
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
George Junior
Republic
Settlement camp for boys
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
International
sanctions
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
The League of Nations
|
Box
|
|
|
44 |
|
Note cards for Sanctions
|
8. Addresses
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
Peace talks, notes for
|
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
The Church and Armaments
(Buffalo, Nov. 1924), notes for
1924
|
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
Speeches on Quakerism, war and peace; notes for
|
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
Speeches: phrases etc. (notes)
|
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
Invitations and program sheets for Hull's speeches
1909-1933
|
Box
|
|
|
45 |
|
Newspaper clippings on war & international politics
1937-1939
|
9. Conferences and Committees
|
|
Conference of American Teachers of International Law,
1914-1933
Proceedings: publications of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, Division of International Law (except for the 1st volume,
which is published under the auspices of The American Society of International
Law).
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Conference Proceedings
1914
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Second Conference Proceedings
1926
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Third Conference Proceedings
1928
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Fourth Conference Proceedings
1929
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Fifth Conference Proceedings
1933
|
Box
|
|
|
46 |
|
Second Pan American Scientific Congress, 1916
1916
Recommendations on international law and official commentary
thereon
|
|
|
London Friends' Peace Conference, 1920
Also known as London Conference of All Friends
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Clippings & correspondence
1917
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Correspondence & other papers
1917-1919
|
|
|
Washington Naval Conference, 1921-1922
The Washington Naval Conference for Limitation of Armaments,
1921-1922. Hull attended the Conference as a Special Representative appointed
by the Representative Committee of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the
Religious Society of Friends.
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Correspondence
1921-1922
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Weekly reports from Hull to Friends' Intelligencer,
The Friend, & The American Friend; and other articles
1921-1922
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Weekly reports and special bulletins from
Hull
1921-1922 TS complete set
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Weekly reports and special bulletins from Hull
1921-1922 TS duplicates
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
A Summary of the treaties, resolutions and
declarations
1922
Pamphlets by Hull
|
|
|
Friends' World Conference, 1937
Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Correspondence & related papers
1936-1937
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Methods of achieving international justice (report
from sub-commission IIIc)
1937
|
|
|
Central Organization for a Durable Peace
Organisation centrale pour une Paix durable. Publication: volume
II and IV.
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Publication: II. The problem of
nationalities.
1918
A summary of discussions and a report by Hull.
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Publication: IV. The Hague
Conference. A summary of discussions TS corrected
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Publication: IV. The Hague
Conference. A summary of discussions TS incomplete with notes
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Publication: IV. The Hague
Conference. A report by Hull page proofs
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Papers related to its establishment and Andrew
Carnegie
1914-1915
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Minutes, reports etc. of the Executive Committee and
Board of Trustees
1914-1918
|
Box
|
|
|
57 |
|
Report of Secretary to Trustees of CPU
1916
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Miscellaneous
1914-1928
|
|
|
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting (Race St.) Committees and
Subcommittees
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Emergency Peace Committee. Subcommittee on
Governmental Relations. Report
1917
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Joint Committee on Peace Appeal to the Christian
Churches. Minutes, correspondence, appeal, clippings, etc.
1921-1923
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Representative Committee. Memos for
1935
|
|
|
World Alliance for Promoting International Friendship
through the Churches
|
Box
|
|
|
57 |
|
Copenhagen International Conference, 1922. Reports,
memorandums
1922
|
Box
|
|
|
57 |
|
Prague World Conference, 1928. Correspondence,
pamphlets, reports, memorandums, articles
1924-1928
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Publications, pamphlets, clippings etc
1915-1917
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Social workers' peace statement, NYC, initiated by Jane
Addams & Lillian D. Wald. Minutes of the meetings and correspondence
1914-1915
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Hamilton Holt's conferences on the League of Peace.
Correspondence & related papers
1915
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Philadelphia Peace Council Subcommittee opposing the
building up of the United States Navy. Correspondence
1930-1931
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Correspondence with
1932-1933
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Joint Committee on Reduction of Armaments of Church
Peace Union & World Alliance. Statements, resolutions
1934-1938
|
Box
|
|
|
48 |
|
Miscellaneous papers of various conferences
1890-1937
Includes: Conference of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. Address by
Isaac H. Clothier, 1890; Friends' General Conference. Ocean Grove Resolution,
1910; Conference on International Sanctions. Address of G. Lowes Dickinson,
1916; Private Conference called by Central Organization for a Durable Peace,
The American Peace Society, & The Church Peace Union. Papers, 1916; New
York Conference of The American Peace Society. Report of Committee on Emergency
Measures, 1917; Friends' Disarmament Council. Correspondence, 1921; American
Society of International Law. Committee of the Advancement of International
Law. Subcommittee No 2. "Useful and desirable" Additions, 1921; Disarmament
Conference, 1932-37. "American experiments in disarmament and the Disarmament
Conference of 1932" - pamphlet by Hull, 1931; Private meeting with Jane Addams
at Hull's home. Minute, 1933; Annual Meetings of the American Society of
International Law at Washington. Program, 1935 & 1937.
|
10. Reference material
|
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920, and the League of
Nations, 1920-1946.
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920
Jan-Mar 1919
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920
Apr 1919
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920
May-Jun 1919
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920.
1919
Memorandums concerning the claims of the delegation of
Yugoslavia (Kingdom of the Serbians, Croatians and Slovenes.
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
League of Nations, 1920-1946
1921
|
Box
|
|
|
49 |
|
League of Nations, 1920-1946
1922
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
League of Nations, 1920-1946
1923-1927
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Draft treaty of disarmament and security
1924
|
|
|
Quakerism in
Holland
Copies of original reference material related to.
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Extracts from Portfolio 16 and A.R. Barclay
Manuscripts
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Extracts from A.R. Barclay Manuscripts
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Letters from the Colchester Mss pt. 1
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Letters from the Colchester Mss pt. 2
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Material on John Bowne
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Material on George Joyce's The
Rotterdam Quakers Excommunication and Dawning
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Extracts from Meeting for Sufferings minutes
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Photostats from Friends House, London
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Transcript of Friesland Monthly Meeting Minute book,
1677-1701
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Extract from Dublin Men's Meeting minutes, 1695
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Extracts from Swarthmore manuscripts
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Miscellaneous mss in Dutch pt. 1
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Miscellaneous mss in Dutch pt. 2
|
Box
|
|
|
50 |
|
Unpaged miscellaneous
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Pamphlets by the Federal Council of the Churches of
Christ in America
1916-1917
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Pamphlets by the National Committee on the Churches
and the Moral Aims of the War
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Pamphlets by the People's Council for Democracy and
Peace
1917
|
Box
|
|
|
47 |
|
Pamphlets by World Alliance for Promoting
International Friendship through the Churches (see Series 9)
1915-1917
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Peace platform of the Massachusetts Federation of
Churches
1915
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Publications
Includes: Gulick, Sydney L. A comprehensive immigration policy
and program;MacDonald, Arthur. Peace, war, humanity ; Patterson, Caleb P.
(1936). The Supreme Court and the Constitution ; Tingfang, Wu. Extract from
America through the spectacles of an oriental diplomat; Committee on the
Judiciary (1930). Constitutional amendment making war legally impossible ;
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Observation on the question of
guilt, article by F. Siegmund-Schultze
n.d.
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Second Hague Peace Conference, 1907. Pictures of
participants etc. for slides
1907-1909
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Notes on the Geneva Protocol
1925
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Clippings on international questions
1919-1921
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Material relevant to armaments
1910-1936
|
Box
|
|
|
51 |
|
Visual teaching aid lists etc.
|
11. Annotated books from the library of William I.
Hull
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Dunbar, Charles F. Chapters on the theory and history
of banking. New York & London: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1895.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Ely, Richard T. An introduction to political economy.
New Work: Chautauqua Press, 1889.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Ely, Richard T. Outlines of economics. New York: Hunt
& Eaton; Cincinnati: Cranston & Curts, 1893.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Gide, Charles. Principles of political economy.
Boston: D.C. Heath & Co., 1892.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Jenks, Jeremiah W. The trust problem. New York:
McClure, Phillips & Co., 1900.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Mill, John S. Principles of political economy. London:
Longsman, Green, & Co.; New York: 15 East 16th St., 1888.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Walker, Francis A. Political economy. 3rd ed. New
York: Henry Holt & Co., 1888.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Walker, Francis A. International bimetallism. New
York: Henry Holt & Co., 1896.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Weeks, Lyman H. The other side. New York: National
Publishing Co., 1900.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Hart, Albert B. Epochs of American history - Formation
of the Union, 1750-1829. New York and London: Longsman, Green, & Co., 1893.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Johnston, Alexander. The United States: Its history
and Constitution. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1889.
|
Box
|
|
|
52 |
|
Riis, Jacob A. A ten years' war: An account of the
battle with the slum in New York. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin &
Co; Cambridge: The Riverside Press, 1900.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Ellwood, Charles A. Sociology and modern social
problems. New York, Cincinnati [etc.]: American Book Company, 1924.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Giddings, Franklin H. The elements of sociology: A
textbook for colleges and schools. New York: The Macmillan Company; London:
Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1898.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Kidd, Benjamin. Social Evolution . New York; London:
Macmillan & Co., 1894.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Bradfield, B. The little book of Geneva. Geneva:
Librairie Kundig.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Fosdick, Harry E. A pilgrimage to Palestine. New York:
The Macmillan Company, 1927.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Gobril, Rizkallah Z. Itineraires Rizkallah. Imp.
Cozma, 1928-1929.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Innes, Rennie M. Notes for travellers by road and rail
in Palestine and Syria. London: H.B. Skinner & Co., General Printers.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Matson, Olaf G. The American Colony guide-book to
Jerusalem and environs. 2nd ed. Jerusalem, Palestine: Vester & Co., The
American Colony Stores, 1925.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Pesson, Charles. Petite histoire illustree de Geneve.
Geneve: Edition ATAR, 1920.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Reshid, Mehmed. Tourist's practical guide to
Constantinople and environs fully illustrated. Constantinople, 1925.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Reyes, Cornelio de los. Year book of the Philippine
Islands for 1927-28. Manila: Reyco Press, 1927.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Marburg, Theodore. In the hills. New York &
London: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1924.
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Jenkins, T. Atkinson. Scolarship and public spirit.
Reprinted from the Publications of the Modern Language Association of America,
XXIX, 1 (1914).
|
Box
|
|
|
53 |
|
Milholland, John E. The war to make Germans free.
Reprinted from the North American December 27, 1914.
|
12. Study and Teaching Notes
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Chemistry [Minor course, 1885]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
English literature (notes, books and authors)
[1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
French exercises - Whitney's Grammar [1886]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Greek history; Roman history; Physical geography in
its relation to history; The Stone Ages, Egypt and
Mesopotamia [1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Livy - Books XXIII and XXIV; Tacitus - Germania,
Annales (Books II and III); Herodotus and Thucydides [1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Wentworth's Geometry; Caesar's Gallic War; Notes on the Bible [1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Church history (Vol. I) [Major course, 1887-88]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Church history (Vol. II) [Major course, 1887-88]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
French, English, & European history [Major course,
1887-88]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Political economy notes [Minor course, 1887-88]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Translation of Dante's Divine
Comedy (Three cantos of the Purgatory) [1887-88]; Manuscript translation
of German poems
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Constitutional history of the United States [Major
course, 1888-89]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
The English constitution [Major course, 1888-89]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
History of international relations [1888-89]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Lectures on Logic; Synopsis of Fowler's Ethics [Major
course, 1888-89]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
History of the English Law of Real Property, Vol. I.
[Second subordinate, 1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
History of the English Common and Statute Law of hand,
Vol. II. [1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
History of the United States [Principal subject,
1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Germanic history and institutions. Vol. I. [Principal
subject, 1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Germanic history and institutions. Vol. II. [Principal
subject, 1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Money and Bi-metallism; Banking [First subordinate,
1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Miscellaneous lectures: Books and libraries; Municipal
government; Science of administration [1889-90]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Miscellaneous lectures: Seminary papers [1889-90];
American historical geography; 6 lectures on charity [1889-90-91]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Early history of institutions and Greek politics
[1890-91]
|
Box
|
|
|
54 |
|
Historical and comparative jurisprudence [1890-91]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
The history of English ethics [1890-91]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
English constitutional law and history [1890-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Mediterranean region [1890]; History of political
economy, Vol. II [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Roman institutional history, Vol. I. [1891-82]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Roman institutional history, Vol. II; French
absolution (Part I.); Exercises in Knapp's Spanish grammar [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
History of Roman Law, Vol. III [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Sources of history [1890-91]; French absolutism. Vol.
II [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
History of political economy. Vol. I. [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Composition book [1883-84]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Chemistry, Vol. II [1886]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Quotations from the dramas of William Shakespeare
[1885-86]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Meissner's German grammar: Prose composition (Vol. I)
[1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Meissner's German grammar: Prose composition (Vol. II)
[1886-87]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
History of the XIX. Century, Vol. I. [1891-92]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Diplomatic history of the U.S. [1892]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Zeitalter der Revolution (1789-1814) Vol. I. [n.d.]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
History of the Hohenstaufens [n.d.]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
French & Dutch notebooks (2) [n.d.]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
History 96 A [1917-18]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
The Protestant revolution; The Puritan revolution;
International government; The history of Quakerism [1930-31]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Classes [1931-32; half-year's leave of absence due to
Geneva Disarmament Conference]; A class in Roman history [1935]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
International relations [1932-33]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
International relations [1933-1943]; Quakerism - 7
lectures [1935]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
International law (Hist 97 A) by H.E. Darlington and
E. Stabler [n.d.]
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Readings for honors - English group, 1923-24
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Teaching notes. Study outlines concerning armaments,
preparedness, international sanctions etc
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Teaching notes. Notes pertinent to Quakerism
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Teaching notes. Outlines for history courses
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Teaching notes. Evaluations of College Entrance
Examination questions in History created by Hull
1903-1905
|
Box
|
|
|
55 |
|
Teaching notes. History exams
|
13. Miscellaneous.
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Account of a visit to Friends in Holland [extract from
Elliot Papers, pp 512 (1-11)]
1770
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Quaker solutions of social problems. Essay topics and
references
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Typescript pages from an unidentified text
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Manuscript pages from an unidentified text
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Questionnaires on post-war problems
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Book list for the Memorial Room
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Miscellaneous notes
|
Box
|
|
|
56 |
|
Coat of arms designed by Hannah C. Hull
1922
|
|