000 03934cpcaa2200421Ia 4500
001 luwmarc_1419688
005 20120308085822.0
008 100105i18102006ilu eng d
035 |a(OCoLC)ocn495864591
040 |aIAL|cIAL|edacs
043 |an-us-il
099 9|aWLA2003.28
049 |aIALA
100 1 |aHoy, Suellen M.
245 10|aSuellen Hoy, Ph.D., papers,|f1810-2006.
300 |a24|flinear feet.
351 |aSeries 1: Publications, 1994-2004. Series 2: Irish Immigration, 1810-2003, n.d. Series 3: Schools, 1837-2004, n.d. Series 4: Social Changes, 1892-2006, n.d. Series 5: Women Religious Orders, 1843-2005, n.d. Series 6: Photographs, 1850-2004, n.d. Series 7: Audiovisual Media, 1872-2002, n.d. Series 8: Restricted Material.|bDivided by subject and arranged alphabetically within series.
545 |aBorn August 14, 1942, Chicago, Illinois. Historian, professor. Suellen Hoy was born in Chicago, Illinois, on August 14, 1942. She earned her B.A. from St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, Indiana, in 1965. She earned her M.A. and Ph.D. in 1971 and 1975 respectively at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. Dr. Hoy began her career as a history teacher at Marian Central High School in Woodstock, Illinois, and Highland Senior High School in Highland, Indiana, where she taught until 1968. In 1974, she taught as an assistant professor in the history department at the State University of New York until she was appointed director of the Public Works Historical Society in Chicago in 1975. In 1981, Dr. Hoy took a position as deputy director of the North Carolina Division of Archives and History in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she remained until 1987. Dr. Hoy became a visiting associate professor in the History Department at the University of Notre Dame where she continued to research and write prolifically about the history of cleanliness, public health, Catholic women religious, and Chicago history.
520 2 |aThe Suellen Hoy, Ph.D., Papers consist of research files pertaining to Dr. Hoy's publications on women religious orders. Most of the materials in this collection are copies of original documents located at other archival repositories and as a result the copyright for the materials resides with the original repository. Generally, the repository has marked the documents obtained from their archives by Dr. Hoy. Dr. Hoy's research includes files on individual religious orders, Catholic schools and churches in Chicago, charitable organizations, immigration of Irish nuns, and social activism. Most of the materials are copies of newspaper articles and records held in other archives, but the collection also includes a selection of photographs, audio tapes, compact discs, slides, and videocassettes.
506 |aSome restrictions may apply.
546 |aIn English.
555 0 |aFinding aid available in repository;|cfolder level.
544 |nSee Also the Suellen Hoy Papers held at Indiana University Archives.
500 |aConsult repository for information on possible additions to this collection that are not covered by this description.
599 |aCRRA|b2011-09-16
600 10|aHoy, Suellen M.|vArchives.
650 0|aWomen historians|zUnited States.
650 0|aNuns|zIllinois|zChicago|xHistory.
650 0|aWomen immigrants|zIllinois|zChicago|xHistory.
651 0|aIreland|xEmigration and immigration|y19th century.
610 20|aIllinois Technical School for Colored Girls.
610 20|aLoretto Academy (Chicago, Ill.)
610 20|aHouse of the Good Shepherd (Chicago, Ill.)
610 20|aOur Lady of the Angels School (Chicago, Ill.)|xFire, 1958.
650 0|aAfrican Americans|xCivil rights|zIllinois|zChicago|y20th century.
710 2 |aLoyola University of Chicago.|bWomen and Leadership Archives.
852 |aLoyola University of Chicago.|bWomen and Leadership Archives.|eChicago, Illinois.
994 |aC0|bIAL