01570ctcaa2200277z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245005400142300001000196545039200206520018200598524009300780555007900873600003400952650002500986651003601011651003601047651004101083541005501124561004801179506004201227852002301269000601909-920110114104626.0860502i18881889mau eng d0 aocn612367407 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGoldsbury, James,d1860-1893.10aJames Goldbury letters to his family,f1888-1889. a1 box aGoldsbury was an American doctor who was paid by the Hoyt family to travel in Europe and the Middle East with their son Frank, a young man suffering from "melancholia." Their first visit, Nov.-Dec. 1888, was spent mainly in France; in their second, Jan.-May, 1889, they ventured as far as Turkey. Upon returning, Goldsbury married and went with his wife to China as a medical missionary. aConsists of typescripts of Goldsbury's letters to his family in Minneapolis, Minn. The letters form a diary of his travels across the Atlantic and in Europe and the Middle East. aJames Goldbury Letters to His Family (MS Am 1893). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *78M-34.10aGoldsbury, James,d1860-1893. 0aVoyages and travels. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aFrancexDescription and travel. 0aMiddle EastxDescription and travel.0 cGiftaJohn Goldsbury;d1979;e78M-34.5hou3Papers1 aGift of his son, John Goldsbury, 1979.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 198301299ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003000107245003800137300001000175520013200185520013300317520019000450520013400640500004500774561003100819524005700850650003900907740001800946740001400964740003000978852002501008008744274-420020606104010.5011003q19091916xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm83317145 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aAdditional papers,fca.1909-1916. a1 box aItem (1): Typescript of Index to Henry James material; [London?, 191-?], 5 leaves. Annotated: Typescript unbound 1. (*44M-454). aItem (2): Typescript of The turning-point of my life; [London?, undated], 4 leaves. Annotated: typescript unbound 1. (*44M-455). aItem (3): Autograph manuscript and typescript of [Mrs. Max, preliminary statement; Note for the K.B. case]; [London?, ca.1909], 106 leaves. Annotated: Typescript unbound II. (*44M-461). aItem (4): Typescript of The middle years; [London?, 191-?], 109 leaves. Annotated: Typescript unbound 14, 15, 16, 17. (*44M-466). aFormerly titled: Miscellaneous material. aGift of Henry James, 1944. abMS Am 1237.9. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.| aMiddle years.| aMrs. Max.| aTurning-point of my life.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.902711ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110004100108245006100149300001000210545040400220500003300624520027400657520030200931524011101233500004901344546003001393650003301423610004101456610005801497600003901555655002801594655001801622700003901640710005801679740002501737541012301762561007801885506004201963506012302005852002402128541009902152561006202251010378662-720121214113454.0020710i18791954mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612793678 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aArchaeological Institute of America.10aArchaeological Institute of America records,f1879-1954. a1 box aThe AIA is an organization originally founded in Cambridge, Massachusetts by Harvard University professor Charles Eliot Norton and his friends and colleagues. The first meeting was in 1879 to form a society "for furthering and directing archaeological and artistic investigation and research." Norton was elected the first president. The first local society of the AIA was founded in Boston in 1884. aTwo manuscript record books. aVol I: A. I. of A. Records of General Meetings of the Institute, 1879-1926 (autograph manuscript in various hands) including records and minutes of meetings of AIA and the Boston chapter. Volume also includes printed items relating to the society and financial records. aVol II: Meetings of the Archaeological Club, Vol. II, 1935-1954, fortieth to fifty-ninth meetings (typescript with manuscript annotations) of local Boston chapter meetings. This volume was originally in a three-ring binder; pages were removed from binder and are now housed in a folder in the box. aArchaeological Institute of America Records, 1879-1954 (MS Am 2537). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee curatorial file for deposit information. aMaterials are in English. 0aArchaeologyxSocieties, etc.20aArchaeological Institute of America.20aArchaeological Institute of America.bBoston Society.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aRecords.2aat1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.2 aArchaeological Institute of America.bBoston Society.02aArchaeological Club.0 cDeposit;aArchaeological Institute of America;bAndover Hall, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1947 October 2;e47M-68.5hou1 aVolume I deposited by the Archaeological Institute of America, 1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 2537 cDeposit;aSterling Dow;bCambridge, Massachusetts;d1957 August 23;eno accession number.5hou aVolume II deposited by Professor Sterling Dow, 1957.5hou01533ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245014500138300001000283500006700293520017900360500014300539524005400682600003300736600004400769655003800813700004000851541012400891561007201015506015601087852002401243011322034-020080919093521.0071130suuuu ||||||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612800830 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTownsend, Annette,d1884-14aThe letter-book of a diplomat.bIncluding the biography of Elbridge Gerry signer of the Declaration of Independence :ktypescript,fundated. a1 box aManuscript version of biography of Elbridge Gerry (1744-1814). aTitle page marked: "Revisions and corrections by the honorable Claude G. Bowers, former American Ambassador to Spain." Includes photograhic copies of documents and portraits. aAlso with a printed leaflet describing contents of manuscript and mentioning that it is available at Houghton Library for use of scholars. aMS Am 2571. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGerry, Elbridge,d1744-1814.10aGerry, Elbridge,d1744-1814xPortraits. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aBowers, Claude Gernade,d1879-1958.0 cDeposit;aAnnette Townsend (Mrs. Townshend Phillips);bWhiteholme, Newport, Rhode Island;d1952 June 10;e51M-240.5hou1 aDeposited by Annette Townsend (Mrs. Townshend Phillips), 1952.5hou aCollection is open for research. This collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 257101799npcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106245004300127300001000170545039700180520015000577520013700727520014100864524009301005546001601098650001801114651003201132655002201164655001701186700003701203700004801240710002501288541008801313561006101401852002301462013402656-X20121102083739.0r|||||||||||||||||121102i18751921mau|||| ||||||||||a|eng d0 aocn816833294 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aWashington Elm collection,f1875-1921. a1 box aThe Washington Elm was a tree in Cambridge Common in Cambridge, Massachusetts which lived approximately 210 years and died in 1923. Beginning as early as the 1830s, it became popular legend that "under this tree Washington first took command of the American Army", supposedly words of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. In 1925, the legend was openly discredited by the Cambridge Historical Society. aA piece of the Washington Elm of about 1875, authenticated by the Cambridge, Massachusetts City Forester, George Washington White, 8 x 30 x 5 cm.8 aWith exhibition label stating that this piece was: loaned by Milton J. Stone, Esq., but verso text cites City of Cambridge as donor.8 aAlso includes: clipping concerning elm from Boston Globe, August 2, 1926; manuscript label; and 2 photographs of the elm, 1875 and 1921. aWashington Elm Collection, 1875-1921 (MS Am 2861). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aAmerican elm. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xHistory. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aRealia.2aat1 aStone, Milton J.,eformer owner.1 aWhite, George Washington,eassociated name.2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cGift;aCity of Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1891 March 14;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of the City of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1891.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Am 286101061nkcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005200110300002800162351001700190500013900207546003600346655002200382541027200404561011400676506004200790852002300832013080846-620120202160824.0120130nuuuuuuuumau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn775085564 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aMiscellaneous photographic portraits of actors. a1 box (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 36 items, some signed, including cartes-de-visite (card photographs), cabinet photographs, postcards, and one engraving. aIn English and other languages. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 561 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 79601834ctcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245006700140300002700207351008400234545026900318520012300587546001600710555008700726524011700813600003200930650003000962650003000992650001601022650004801038650004801086650002201134700005001156506003701206541014501243561008501388852002301473012745213-320110613104940.0110418i18961910mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn731351362 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aWilliam James letters to George Van Ness Dearborn,f1896-1910. a1 box (.04 linear ft.) aOrganized alphabetically, then chronologically with undated letters at the end. aWilliam James (January 11, 1842-August 26, 1910) was an American psychologist and philosopher who trained as a physician. George Van Ness Dearborn (1869-1938) was his student at least in Philosophy 20b at Harvard University with whom James maintained a friendship. aLetters and postcards from James to Dearborn, with one examination paper by Dearborn commented on and graded by James. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02169 aWilliam James Letters to George Van Ness Dearborn, 1896-1910 (MS Am 2721). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJames, William,d1842-1910. 0aPhilosophyy19th century. 0aPhilosophyy20th century. 0aPhysiology. 0aPsychologistszUnited Statesy19th century. 0aPsychologistszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aPsychophysiology.1 aDearborn, George Van Ness,d1869-erecipient.1 aCollection is open for research.0 cPurchase;aMatthew Lieb;b50 Vones Lane, Raritan, NJ 08869;d2011 April 19;e2010M-90;h$3600 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou aPurchased with funds from the Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 272101412ntcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002700122245006100149300002800210545016000238520015000398555008700548524011300635600005100748600002700799650002400826650004000850700002900890700003400919561003800953852002500991541010601016009550604-720080130143944.0050211i19671975mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn122386441 aMAHV05A28 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWright, Brooks,d1922-00kCorrespondencebconcerning Arthur B. Davies,f1967-1975. a1 boxa(.06 linear ft.) aBrooks Wright is a professor of English and the biographer of Sir Edwin Arnold and Arthur B. Davies. Wright's biography of Davies was published in 1978. aReplies from artists, including May Sarton and Edward Steichen, to Wright's request for their reminiscences about the artist Arthur B. Davies.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01745 aBrooks Wright Correspondence Concerning Arthur B. Davies (MS Am 2370). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDavies, Arthur B.q(Arthur Bowen),d1862-1928.10aWright, Brooks,d1922- 0aArtistsvBiography. 0aPainterszUnited StatesxBiography.1 aSarton, May,d1912-1995.1 aSteichen, Edward,d1879-1973. aGift of Brooks Wright, 2000.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 2370 cGift;aMr. Brooks Wright;b65 N. Parsonage Street, Rhinebeck, NY 12572;d2000 June 28;e*99M-63.5hou01916ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003700122245003600159300002800195520024200223524008100465545040700546555008700953555010301040600003701143650003801180655001601218700005401234700004401288700003201332700003701364700002701401561003801428852002401466541010001490009534138-220050201085030.0020710i18611950mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn122386420 aMAHV05A12 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aArnold, Edwin,cSir,d1832-1904.00kPapers,f1861-1950 and undated. a1 boxa(.06 linear ft.) aIncludes two poems, lyrics to accompany music by B. J. F. Varenhorst, and notes; letters to his son, Julian Biddulph Arnold, to Augustin Daly, and to Barnett Smith; and correspondence between his son and his biographer, Brooks Wright. aSir Edwin Arnold Papers (MS Eng 1479). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSir Edwin Arnold was an English author and translator of Asian literature. He was principal of the British government college in Pune, India, then joined the staff of the London Daily Telegraph in 1861, becoming chief editor in 1873. His epic poem, The light of Asia (1879), recounts the life and teachings of Gautama Buddha. His other writings include poetry and travel books. He was knighted in 1888.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records,1999-2000, under *99M-60.10aArnold, Edwin,cSir,d1832-1904. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aPoems.2aat1 aArnold, Julian Biddulph,d1863- ,ecorrespondent.1 aDaly, Augustin,d1838-1899,erecipient.1 aSmith, Barnett,erecipient.1 aVarenhorst, B. J. F.,ecomposer.1 aWright, Brooks,d1922- aGift of Brooks Wright, 2000.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1479 cGift;aBrooks Wright;b65 North Parsonage St., Rhinebeck, NY 12572;d2000 May 25;e99M-60.5hou01770ckcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003400110245006100144300002900205351004900234545044100283520019400724555008700918524011601005546001601121600003401137610003701171650004201208655002501250655003501275656002801310506003701338541002501375561003301400852002301433012545128-820100816103125.0100806i18701875mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn659793902 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aThompson, Alfred,d1831-1895.10aAlfred Thompson costume designs,f1870-1875 and undated. a1 boxa(.08 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by production title. aAlfred Thompson was both a writer of and a designer for dramatic works. The Gaiety Theatre was built in 1864 as the Strand Musick Hall at a time when many new theatres were being built in London. This theater was demolished, rebuilt in 1868 by John Hollingshead as the Gaiety Theatre. The theatre was a venue primarily for burlesque, variety, continental operetta and light comedy under the management of Hollingshead from 1868 to 1886. aCostume designs by Alfred Thompson in watercolor and ink for shows mounted at the Gaiety Theatre (London, England) ca. 1870-1875, some with contemporary and/or later manuscript annotations. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02082 aAlfred Thompson Costume Designs (MS Thr 583). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aThompson, Alfred,d1831-1895.20aGaiety Theatre (London, England) 0aTheaterzGreat Britainy19th century. 7aCostume design.2aat 7aDrawingsy19th century.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2aat0 aCollection is open for research.0 cSource unknown.5the1 aFrom an unknown source.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 58304149ctcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100005100121245006100172300002700233351004000260545128000300545078201580520015602362520016902518546002702687524008802714555007702802600003902879610005102918655003802969700003203007700003403039700004803073700003203121700004103153700003503194506003703229541016803266541020903434561008503643852002303728012530737-320100802135913.0100720i18851931mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn659325715 aMH-HedacscMH-H aengafre1 aWoods, James Haughton,d1864-1935,erecipient.10aLetters to James Haughton Woods,f1885-1931 and undated. a1 box (.08 linear ft.) aOrganized alphabetically by author.0 aJames Haughton Woods (1864-1935), a scholar of Greek and Indic philosophy, graduated from Harvard University in 1887 with an A.B. degree in Philosophy and English composition. He spent most of the next two decades at various institutions in England, continental Europe, and India. He studied theology and ecclesiastical history at Oxford and Cambridge, followed by ancient and medieval history and philology at the Universities of Strassburg and Berlin. After completing his Ph.D. studies in Germany, he returned to Harvard and spent two years teaching as an Instructor of Anthropology and Philosophy. He developed an interest in Indic philosophy, which led him back to Europe to study under Paul Deussen (1845-1919), one of the founders of Indic studies in Europe. After further study in India at Benares and in Kashmir, he returned to Harvard in 1903 and was appointed to the Department of Philosophy, first as Instructor, and then Professor of the Philosophical Systems of India. He remained in the department until his retirement in 1934. During this time, he served as the Chair of the Division and Department of Philosophy from 1915-18, 1920-27, and 1930-33. He published numerous translations of Pali and Sanskrit scriptures, as well as works of secondary scholarship. aWoods's interest in Buddhism led him into the study of East Asia, and he made several extended trips to Japan during his years on the Harvard faculty. He actively promoted the development of academic positions dedicated to the study of East Asia. He also worked to establish a permanent chair in Chinese, which was first filled by Chao Yuen Ren in 1922. His greatest success, however, came from working in tandem with Wallace Donham and others to secure funding from the estate of Charles Hall for the founding of the Harvard-Yenching Institute, for which he served as a trustee. Although Woods passed away before the Department of Far Eastern Languages was established, he helped to provide the institutional and intellectual backing that became the framework for its success. aLetters and a document sent to James Haughton Woods, professor of philosophy at Harvard University, with a few letters between others collected by him. aIncludes T. S. Eliot's application for Ph.D. candidacy and letters from Henri Bergson, Phillips Brooks, William James, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and George Santayana. aIn English and French. aLetters to James Haughton Woods (MS Am 2693). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aElectronic finding aiduhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0207710aWoods, James Haughton,d1864-1935.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of Philosophy. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aBergson, Henri,d1859-1941.1 aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.1 aSaint-Gaudens, Augustus,d1848-1907.1 aSantayana, George,d1863-1952.1 aCollection is open for research.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b7 West 18th St, New York, NY 10011;d2010 July 20;e2010M-5;h$12500.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b7 West 18th St, New York, NY 10011;d2010 July 21;e2010M-5;h$6000.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).3T.S. Eliot's Doctor of Philosophy degree5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund, 2010.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 269301125ctcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002400091245004700115300002700162351001700189500004600206500010400252500008500356546001600441600002400457655002100481700005400502700004700556700004800603506004300651541013900694852002600833012545582-820100812161908.0100809i19681972mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLambourne, David L.10aDavid L. Lambourne papers,fca. 1968-1972. a1 box (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aPapers relating to interviews including correspondence, notes, and annotated interview transcripts. aInterviewees include Anthony Powell, Stephen Spender, and Christopher Isherwood. aIn English.10aLambourne, David L. 7aInterviews.2aat1 aIsherwood, Christopher,d1904-1986,einterviewee.1 aPowell, Anthony,d1905-2000,einterviewee.1 aSpender, Stephen,d1909-1995,einterviewee.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aDavid J. Holmes Autographs;bP.O. Box 90, Hamilton, NY 13346;d2010 August 9;e2010M-11;h$7500.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 165400778ntcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070041001300091100003900104245005900143300002700202351001700229500004600246546002800292600001700320600003900337506004300376541006400419852002300483561004200506012845169-620110803130233.0110803i19982004mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengaita1 aStoddard, Roger E.q(Roger Eliot).10aResearch file for Primo Levi bibliography,f1998-2004. a1 box (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English and Italian.10aLevi, Primo.10aStoddard, Roger E.q(Roger Eliot).1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aRoger E. Stoddard;d2006 November 3;e2011M-16.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 27481 aGift of Roger E. Stoddard, 2006.5hou01156nacaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006300093300002700156351001700183500008700200546001600287655004100303651004500344651004500389655004100434541027200475561011400747506004200861852002300903013087398-520120202142138.0120202i18701929mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aIllustrated London (England) theater programs,f1870-1929. a1 box (.1 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 50 programs for various London theaters, illustrated, many in color. aIn English. 7aTheater programsy19th century.2aat 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery20th century. 7aTheater programsy20th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 271 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 80500935ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245004400093300002700137351001700164500019200181500004600373546001600419600004100435655002200476506004600498541016100544852002400705012945963-120111021163039.0111018i18901987mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aTheatrical Lincolniana,fca. 1890-1987. a1 box (.1 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aPrinted theater programs, playbills, a typescript script, photographs chiefly from the D. W. Griffiths production "Abraham Lincoln" (1930), and other ephemera (including one framed item). aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865xDrama. 7aFilm stills.2aat1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aThe Rail Splitter;bP.O. Box 275, Roosevelt Island, New York, NY 10044;d2011 October 18;e2011MT-5;h$2850.00 (Francis W. Hatch Book Fund).5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 72101148npcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002300093245005600116300002700172351001700199545009500216520032700311546001600638600002300654600003200677655002700709655002200736506002300758541010200781852002300883013175021-620120503143505.0120503i18951969mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCannell, Kathleen.10aKathleen Cannell additional papers,fca. 1895-1969. a1 box (.1 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aKathleen Biggar Eaton Cannell (1891-1974) was an American dance critic and fashion editor. aCollection incudes photographs of Kathleen Cannell, her siblings, and her mother, Mary Camilla Wilson Eaton; medals awarded to Mary Camilla Wilson Eaton as an ambulance driver for the Croix-Rouge Française; Kathleen Cannell's memoir, Jam yesterday (published 1945); and letters to her sister-in-law, Mary Broughton Eaton. aIn English.10aCannell, Kathleen.10aEaton, Mary Camilla Wilson. 7aMedals.y20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aMary Anne Heim;b321 Hackamore Trail, Martinez, GA 30907;d2012 April 13;e2011MT-38.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 84900889nkcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007000093300002700163351001700190500010300207500017300310546001600483610003400499650003600533655002200569541003400591506002300625852002300648013403008-720121102145600.0121102s1983 mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCopy prints of scenes from the 1908 Boston theater season,f1983. a1 box (.1 linear feet) aUnprocessed. a15 copy photographs mounted on Fome-Cor (TM) for display at Filene’s (Department Store) in 1983. aPlays or venues include: The sign of the cross; The old homestead; Julia Marlowe in Much ado; The merry widow; Romance; Prince Humbug; E. H. Sothern; Hollis St. Theatre aIn English.20aFilene’s (Department Store) 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBoston. 7aCopy prints.2aat0 cGift?d1983;e2012MT-20.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 93001892ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001400070040002300084041001300107100003400120245004000154300002700194351003900221546002700260545010500287520048500392555008700877524010700964600003401071651003501105655003201140655002201172700004301194740003001237740003001267852002301297506004201320541013101362561006101493010132941-520061129080753.0061020i19671975mau |||||||eng|d1 aMHAT06B14 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafre1 aBaker, Josephine,d1906-1975.10aJosephine Baker papers,f1967-1975. a1 box (.1 linear foot) bArranged alphabetically by author. aIn English and French. aJosephine Baker was an American singer, dancer, and actress, who became a citizen of France in 1937. aConsists mostly of letters written by Josephine Baker to artist Robert Brady, who became her husband in 1973. The letters discuss American race relations and politics, in addition to personal matters. The collection also includes six other letters, and three typescript works by Baker which were sent to Brady : an untitled essay on Black Power, 1970 Oct. 7; and two childrens' stories titled "The Fairy Tale of Wisdom," 1973 Sept. 20, and "The End of a Perfect Day," 1974 Mar. 7.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01942 aJosephine Baker Papers (MS Thr 497). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBaker, Josephine,d1906-1975. 0aUnited StatesxRace relations. 7aChildren's literature.2aat 7aFairy tales.2aat1 aBrady, Robert,d1928-1986,erecipient.42aThe end of a perfect day.42aThe fairy tale of wisdom.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 497 aCollection is open for research.5the cPurchase;aGotham Book Mart;b41 West 47th St., New York NY 10036;d1995 Feb. 20;e2006MT-72r.h$8,500 (Rothschild fund).5the aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 1995.5the01620ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001900122245004600141300002700187351002900214545005400243520032300297555008700620555010900707524008800816600001900904600003400923600004700957650003301004700004401037700005101081541005601132561003801188506004201226852002601268009059804-020110114094946.0030205i19551965mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm839489931 aMAHV03-A36 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aPeck, Louis F.10aLouis F. Peck correspondence,f1955-1965. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aPeck (1904-1966) was an English literary scholar. aConsists of an exchange of letters between Louis Peck and Herbert Fuller Cahoon concerning a manuscript of George Watson Taylor's satirical poem on Matthew G. "Monk" Lewis, and multiple exchanges of letters between Louis Peck and Karl Guthke concerning their respective works on Lewis. 561 Gift of Louis F. Peck, 1966.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-102. aLouis F. Peck Correspondence (MS Eng 1260.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPeck, Louis F.10aWatson-Taylor, Georged-1841.10aLewis, M.G.q(Matthew Gregory).d1775-1818 0aEnglish poetryy19th century1 aCahoon, Herbert,d1918-ecorrespondent.1 aGuthke, Karl Siegfried,d1933-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aLouis F. Peck;d1966 July 28;e75M-102.5HOU1 aGift of Louis F. Peck, 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1260.101719ckcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100003800126245006600164300002700230545016100257520009300418555008700511555010800598524015800706650003500864600003800899650004200937655005000979656002901029700003801058700004201096700002901138541012201167561008001289852002401369009097869-220090616104611.0030325s1965 mau||| | || k|eng |0 aocm805242631 aMHAT03-A48 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aDu Bois, Raoul Pène,d1914-1985.00kCostume designsbfor Billy Rose's production of Jumbo,f1965. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aDuBois (1914-1985) was a costumer and set designer. Jumbo was a Rogers and Hart musical staged by producer Billy Rose at the Hippodrome Theater in New York. aIncludes DuBois' signed watercolor costume designs for Billy Rose's production of Jumbo.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005568 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-58. aRaoul Pène DuBois Costume Designs for Billy Rose's production of Jumbo (pfMS Thr 333). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aCostume designzUnited States.10aDu Bois, Raoul Pène,d1914-1985. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aCostume design drawingsy20th century.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2lcsh1 aHart, Lorenz,d1895-1943.tJumbo.1 aRodgers, Richard,d1902-1979.tJumbo.1 aRose, Billy,d1899-1966. cPurchase (3 of 6)from and gift of;aRaoul Pène DuBois;b9 W. 75th St. New York NY 10023;d1978 Jan. 9;e77M-58.5the aPurchased with Billy Rose fund (3 of 6) from Raoul Pène DuBois, 1978.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 33301971ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101110002700124245005700151300002700208351003000235545010900265520021000374555008700584555010800671524012600779546001600905610002700921650004500948655002800993656004601021700002901067700002801096700003101124700004601155700003501201700003001236700002801266541016001294561005101454506004201505852002601547009097876-520110209082918.0030318i18091811mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813287281 aMHAT03-A21 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aCovent Garden Theatre.10aCovent Garden Theatre financial records,f1809-1811. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aThe Covent Garden Theatre was built in London in 1732 by John Rich. Also known as the Royal Opera House. aIncludes manuscript documents of grants of annuity signed by the theater's producers Ann Martindale, Henry Harris, Thomas Harris, William Harvard, John Philip Kemble, William John Madden, and George White.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-89. aCovent Garden Theatre Financial Records (MS Thr 149.3). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aCovent Garden Theatre. 0aTheaterszEnglandzLondony19th century. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aTheatrical producers and directors.2lcsh1 aHarris, Thomas,esigner.1 aHarris, Henry,esigner.1 aHarvard, William,esigner.1 aKemble, John Philip,d1757-1823,esigner.1 aMadden, William John,esigner.1 aMartindale, Ann,esigner.1 aWhite, George,esigner.0 cPurchase;aHofmann & Freeman, Antiquarian Booksellers;b1278 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge MA;d1971 Apr. 19;e70M-89;h$100 with the Duplicates fund.5the1 aPurchased with the Duplicates fund, 1971.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 149.300801ntc a2200205 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245005400108300002700162500003100189520008500220524010300305651002100408655004500429541006200474561003700536852002200573009878414-520130910123331.0060227i17621790mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612802298 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aDocuments concerning Sherborn, Mass.,f1762-1790. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. a21 deeds and other documents relating to persons and property in Sherborn, Mass. aDocuments Concerning Sherborn, Mass., 1762-1790 (MS Am 821). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aSherborn (Mass.) 7aDeedszUnited Statesy18th century.2aat0 cGift;aElijah Clark;d22 July 1844;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Elijah Clark, 1844.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 82101164ntcaa2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005100108245007800159300002700237500001700264520015400281524013000435655005500565700003000620700006100650541013100711561006700842852002500909009876026-220130910122014.0060223i18051857mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612801407 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTaylor, Charles Henry,d1867-1941,ecollector.10aCharles Henry Taylor collection of miscellaneous manuscripts,f1805-1857. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aContains letters, legal documents, and other materials, chiefly from Massachusetts. The letters are addressed to Abraham Fox, Isaac Reed, and others. aCharles Henry Taylor Collection of Miscellaneous Manuscripts, 1805-1857 (MS Am 800.19). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aLegal documentszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aFox, Abraham,erecipient.1 aReed, Isaac G.q(Isaac Gardner),d1783-1847,erecipient.0 cGift;aCharles Henry Taylor ";d13 Feb. 1929, and other dates (information from Old Widener shelf list);eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Charles Henry Taylor (A. B. 1889), various dates.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.1900441ntcaa22001575a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070245003700091300002700128351001700155546001600172500004600188852002300234541002600257009932581-020060428092931.0060426nuuuuuuuumau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Heappm00aMiscellaneous English documents. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English. aRetrieval requires permission of Curator.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 565 cSources unknown.5hou02224ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003700121245007300158300002600231545042500257520041500682555008701097524011101184600003701295600002101332600004301353600004901396610002901445655004501474655002001519656003301539700005601572700007201628710004501700541006501745561004101810852002301851009967313-420130910130006.0060711i18241851mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm846723641 aMAHV06B48 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGould, Hannah Flagg,d1789-1865.10aHannah Flagg Gould poems and correspondence,f1824-1851 and undated. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aGould was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts, and moved with her family to Newburyport in 1808. She started writing poetry in her 30s. Her first book of poetry was published in 1832; her second and third volumes appeared in 1836 and 1841. Some of her poems commemorate her father Benjamin Gould, who led the Massachusetts militia at the battle of Lexington. Her brother was Benjamin A. Gould, a Boston educator and author. aAutograph manuscript poems by the poet Hannah Flagg Gould (1789-1865), who wrote mostly on subjects of domestic life and memorials of soldiers, especially her father, Benjamin Gould. Also includes correspondence with her brother Benjamin A. Gould, the publishers George W. Childs and D. Appleton & Co., and friends. Two portrait engravings of Park Benjamin and L. Gaylord Clark are included with their letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01850 aHannah Flagg Gould Poems and Correspondence, 1824-1851 (MS Am 1025). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGould, Hannah Flagg,d1789-1865.10aGould, Benjamin.10aBenjamin, Park,d1809-1864vPortraits.10aClark, Lewis Gaylord,d1808-1873vPortraits.20aMassachusetts.bMilitia. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aWomen poets, American.2lcsh1 aChilds, George William,d1829-1894,ecorrespondent.1 aGould, Benjamin A.q(Benjamin Apthorp),d1787-1859,ecorrespondent.2 aD. Appleton and Company,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aAlbert Thorndike;d2 Feb. 1932;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Albert Thorndike, 1932.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 102501590cpcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100002600121245006000147300002700207351007600234545010900310520007700419500006300496546002800559555008700587524011000674600002600784600003000810655002500840655002100865700003000886541014600916541009701062561004201159506002801201852002301229012109619-X20120614105311.0020710i19581986mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn795832185 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengaspa1 aFein, John M.,d1922-10aJohn M. Fein papers concerning Octavio Paz,f1958-1986. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in two series: I. Interview material; and II. Correspondence. aOctavio Paz was a Mexican writer, poet, and diplomat. John M. Fein is an American author and translator. aInterviews with and correspondence between John M. Fein and Octavio Paz. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: audiocassettes. aIn English and Spanish. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02319 aJohn M. Fein Papers Concerning Octavio Paz, 1958-1986 (MS Am 2802). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aFein, John M.,d1922-10aPaz, Octavio,d1914-1998. 7aAudiocassettes.2aat 7aInterviews.2aat1 aPaz, Octavio,d1914-1998.0 cGift;aJohn M. Fein;b3 Alice Street, Portland, ME 04103;d2005 February 11 (1 folder); 2006 February 10 (2 audiocassettes);e2004M-102.5hou0 cGift;aJohn M. Fein;b13 Whitburn Place, Durham, NC 27705;d2010 January 10;e2009M-63.5hou1 aGift of John M. Fein, 2005-2010.5hou0 aOpen for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 280202060ctcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004800108245007200156300002600228351005300254545029300307520032400600546001600924524012200940544008901062555008701151600004801238700004001286700003201326700004201358506009401400541016701494561007401661852002301735012741893-820121214080729.0110413i19331947mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn719630628 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot letters to Martin Shaw concerning The rock,f1933-1947. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author, then by date. aT. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot (1888-1965) was an American-British poet, dramatist, and critic, a director at the British publishing firm of Faber and Faber, and editor of The criterion. Martin Shaw (1875-1958) was an English composer who worked in the theater and also on Anglican hymnody. aChiefly typescript letters from T. S. Eliot to the British composer Martin Shaw relating to their collaboration on and production rights to the pageant, The rock, but also concerning other collaborations; with correspondence between Eliot and Joan Shaw (Mrs. Martin Shaw) and one letter to Eliot from Phyllis M. Potter. aIn English. aT. S. Eliot Letters to Martin Shaw Concerning The Rock, 1933-1947 (MS Am 2720). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional T. S. Eliot papers held by the Houghton Library.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0215610aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aPotter, Phyllis M.,ecorrespondent.1 aShaw, Joan,ecorrespondent.1 aShaw, Martin,d1875-1958,erecipient.1 aLetters by T. S. Eliot require permission of the T. S. Eliot Estate to be published.5hou0 cPurchase;aBernard Quaritch Ltd;b40 South Audley St, London W1K 2PR England;d2011 April 13;e2010M-88;h$16800.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou1 aPurchased with the Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 272000743ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070041001300091100004200104245009400146300002600240351001700266500004600283546002900329600004200358650002300400506004300423541003600466852002300502012826096-320110715111946.0110714i18811909mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengasan1 aLanman, Charles Rockwell,d1850-1941.10aCharles Rockwell Lanman papers concerning Sanskrit books and manuscripts,fca. 1881-1909. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English and Sanskrit.10aLanman, Charles Rockwell,d1850-1941. 0aSanskrit language.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cSource unknown;e2011M-5r.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 273503084ctcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006100108300002600169351015300195545069100348545040801039520025801447546001601705555008701721524011001808600004401918600001801962600004201980600003802022600003002060610005502090610005502145655003002200700003602230700004402266700002302310700002202333700002102355700004702376506002302423541013602446561006902582852002302651012832448-120120423152025.0110720i19561958mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn792758137 aMH-HedacscMH-H00aPapers concerning the Broadway play Eugenia,f1956-1958. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in four series: I. Agreements and financial records; II. Investors' correspondence; III. Press and publicity; and IV. Scripts (documents). aEugenia was a Broadway play written by Randolph Carter based on Henry James's The Europeans. The play was directed by Herbert Machiz; produced by John C. Wilson in association with Donald H. Coleman and the Theatre Corporation of American (of which Coleman was president); with costumes by Miles White; lighting by Peggy Clark; production design by Oliver Smith; and C. Edwin Knill was general manager. With Tallulah Bankhead starring, the play opened in Philadelphia at the Forrest Theatre (Organization : Philadelphia, Pa.), then in New York on January 30, 1957, at the Ambassador Theatre (Organization : New York, N.Y.), where 12 performances were staged before it closed February 9. aThe short run of the play, according to John C. Wilson's account sent to investors, was due in part to Tallulah Bankhead's suffering a number of injuries and illnesses before and during the play's run and in part to its mixed reviews. In 1958, Donald H. Coleman was indicted for forgery and grand larceny in connection with co-producing another Theatre Corporation of America Broadway show, Oh, Captain. aCollection includes correspondence (some concerning contracts and agreements), financial records, correspondence with potential and recruited investors, clippings chiefly of reviews of the play, programs, and two copies of the script by Randolph Carter. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02305 aPapers Concerning the Broadway Play Eugenia, 1956-1958 (MS Am 2796). Houghton Library, Harvard University10aCarter, Randolph,d1908-1998.tEugenia.10aClark, Peggy.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.tEuropeans.10aSmith, Oliver Lemuel,d1918-1994.10aWhite, Miles,d1914-2000.20aAmbassador Theatre (Organization : New York, N.Y.)20aForrest Theatre (Organization : Philadelphia, Pa.) 7aScripts (documents).2aat1 aBankhead, Tallulah,d1902-1968.1 aCarter, Randolph,d1908-1998,eadapter.1 aColeman, Donald H.1 aKnill, C. Edward.1 aMachiz, Herbert.1 aWilson, John C.,dapproximately 1899-1961.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aWilliam Reese Co.;b409 Temple St, New Haven, CT 06511;d2011 July 20;e2011M-8;h$850.00 (Jacob Blanck Book Fund).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Jacob Blanck Book Fund, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 279601958ctcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002000108245006000128300002600188351008000214545054500294545011000839520013100949546001601080555008701096524011001183600002001293600002901313650003101342506003701373541010801410852010101518561004901619012871869-220130227115420.0110822i19581987mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn828922923 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDeGruson, Gene.10aGene DeGruson papers concerning Amy Lowell,f1958-1987. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions and notes. aEugene Henry DeGruson (1932-1997) was a poet, historian, archivist, and collector born in Girard (Kan.). He joined the Pittsburg State University (Kansas) faculty in 1960 as an instructor in the English department. In 1967 he was asked to establish a southeast Kansas collection there, becoming curator of special collections and archivist. He became known nationally as a specialist in the history of Kansas and for publishing The Lost First Edition of Upton Sinclair's the Jungle in 1988. DeGruson died June 18, 1997, of a brain aneurism. aAmy Lawrence Lowell (1874-1925) was an American poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts. aLetters to DeGruson from rare book and manuscript dealers, with notes and composition fragments concerning Amy Lowell's works. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02406 aGene DeGruson Papers Concerning Amy Lowell, 1958-1987 (MS Am 2751). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDeGruson, Gene.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925. 0aCollectors and collecting.0 aCollection is open for research.0 cGift;aJames Cummins Bookseller;b699 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10065;d2011 August;e2011M-26.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2751zshelved together: MS Am 2742, MS Am 2743, MS Am 2746, MS Am 2751, MS Am 2850 aGift of James Cummins Bookseller, 2011.5hou03301ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245007000138300002600208351007700234545049900311545046300810520068301273546001601956555008701972524012002059600003002179650001802209650005302227650005402280650005602334650005102390655003202441655005302473700002002526700003902546506002302585541018302608561011302791852002302904012945970-420130205093041.0111018i18871890mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn827083883 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPrang, Louis,d1824-1909.10aRecords concerning Louis Prang's gold mining venture,f1887-1890. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Documents and notes. aLouis Prang (1824-1909) was a lithographer, wood engraver, and educator from Breslau (Germany) and Boston (Mass.). With Julius Meyer, he founded the lithographic business of Prang & Meyer in 1856 which later became L. Prang & Co. Prang reproduced paintings by noted 19th century artists and introduced the Christmas card in the 1870s. He is considered the founder of the greeting card business in the U.S. Prang retired from business in 1899 and died ten years later in a California sanitarium. aThe reasons for Prang's interest in gold mining and its processes are uncertain; it was certainly a business and investment opportunity. Prang may also have been interested in the gold for its use in ink; one of his partners in the venture, Henry B. Davis, was an officer of the Dando Printing Company of Philadelphia, a printer of elaborate stock certificates. The venture may have been called Monitor Concentrator and Amalgamator, as evidenced by receipts. aThe collection is comprised of correspondence (including telegrams), receipts, patent documents, and notes concerning Prang's investment and scientific interest in a gold separation process utilizing mining tailings. The correspondence includes detailed reports on gold mines in California and Nova Scotia, discussions of gold concentrators, chlorination, transport of ore to the eastern United States, and business arrangements; correspondents include geographer and geologist William Morris Davis. Documents include receipts and invoices for supplies and services connected with expeditions in 1888 to California. Also included is a receipt for Prang's patent for a separator. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02399 aRecords Concerning Louis Prang's Gold Mining Venture, 1887-1890 (MS Am 2768). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPrang, Louis,d1824-1909. 0aChlorination. 0aGold mines and miningzCaliforniay19th century. 0aGold mines and miningzNova Scotiay19th century. 0aLithographerszMassachusettszBostony19th century. 0aPrinterszMassachusettszBostony19th century. 7aPatentsy19th century.2aat 7aReceipts (financial records)y19th century.2aat1 aDavis, Henry B.1 aDavis, William Morris,d1850-1934.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aThe Rail Splitter;bP.O. Box 275, New York, NY 10044;d2011 October 18;e2011M-48;h$6800.00 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for Early American Literature and History).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for Early American Literature and History, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 276803019cpcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245005300147300002600200351013100226545043900357545060800796520021601404546001601620524010301636555008701739650004701826650006401873650003901937655003001976655004502006655002002051600003902071506002302110541032402133561020102457852002302658012936751-620130207105800.0111011i18541904mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn827083882 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTrain, George Francis,d1829-1904.00aGeorge Francis Train collection,fca. 1854-1904. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in three series: I. Correspondence and manuscript ephemera; II. Photographs and passport; and III. Printed material. aGeorge Francis Train (1829-1904) was a Civil War reporter; made his fortune in shipping, railroads, and real estate; ran for president of the U.S. as an independent candidate in 1872; was instrumental in creation of the Union Pacific Railroad, the first European tramway, and Credit Mobilier of America; was an anti-aristocracy and anti-Confederacy orator; circumnavigated the globe four times; and was a writer and popular eccentric. aBorn in Boston in 1829, Train moved with his family to New Orleans shortly thereafter. When he was four, his immediate family died of yellow fever, and he was returned to his grandmother in New England. He became a successful merchant and shipping magnate and opened his own business in Australia. He helped finance clipper ships to California in 1849 and introduced street railways into London and other European capitals. In 1872 he ran as an independent candidate for president against Republican Ulysses S. Grant and Democrat Horace Greeley, making numerous campaign speeches throughout the country. aIncludes cartes-de-visite (card photographs) and cabinet photographs, almost all of Train; cards autographed by Train, many with epigrams; correspondence; Train's passport; and miscellaneous print and clippings. aIn English. aGeorge Francis Train collection, ca. 1854-1904 (MS Am 2763). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02401 0aPresidentszUnited StatesxElectiony1872. 0aEccentrics and eccentricitieszUnited Statesy19th century. 0aStreet-railroadszEnglandzLondon. 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs)2aat 7aPassports.2aat10aTrain, George Francis,d1829-1904.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aThe Rail Splitter;bP.O. Box 275, Roosevelt Island, New York, NY 10044;d2011 October 11;e2011M-46;h$40000.00 ($20000.00 - Margaret F. Cowett Book Fund ; $10000.00 - Bayard Livingston Kilgour and Kate Gray Kilgour Fund ; $10000.00 - Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for Early American Literature and History).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Margaret F. Cowett Book Fund, Bayard Livingston Kilgour and Kate Gray Kilgour Fund, and Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for Early American Literature and History, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 276300844ntm a2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006800093300002600161351001700187500002600204546001600230500004600246650002000292506004600312541026900358852002300627013000384-020111213104038.0111213s1900 xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs14aThe beginnings of the Spanish theater :kmanuscript,fca. 1900. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aBy an unknown author. aIn English. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. 0aTheaterzSpain.1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aMosher Books;bP.O. Box 542, Ephrata, PA 17522-0542;d2011 December 6;e2011MT-11;h$13500.00 total ($7000.00 - Jane W. Stedman Memorial Fund ; $6500.00 - Helen Delano Willard Memorial Fund for the Harvard Theatre Collection).nbought with 2011MT-95the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 74502788ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007100110300002700181545082200208545027701030520039501307520010101702524014901803546001601952610003301968610003802001650003902039655001802078710003302096710003802129541007002167561004802237506004202285506012302327852002402450012999257-720111215092820.0020710q1909 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn768583372 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aLion Theatre and Vaudeville Saloon records 1836-1840,fafter 1909. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aThe Lion Theatre was a vaudeville saloon in Boston, Massachusetts. In 18th century Boston, two taverns stood side by side on Washington Street, the Lamb Tavern adjoined the south side of the Lion Tavern. By 1835, the Lion Tavern was gone, and its site became the first within the block to be used for theatrical purposes. (The Lamb Tavern, then kept by Laban Adams, was replaced by a hotel, the Adams House, by the end of the 1850’s). The orchestra or pit of the Lion Theatre was a ring for equestrian performances extending under three shallow tiers of boxes. During the summer of 1836 the wooden front building was replaced by a brick building with first-floor stores, its upper rooms later absorbed in the Adams house. The Lion Theatre was refitted in 1839 as the Mechanics Institute, a lecture and concert hall. aIn 1840, The Vaudeville Saloon (formerly Boylston Hall) advertised for a variety program, called vaudeville, which is thought to be the first use of the word vaudeville in the United States. This hall was located on the southwest corner of Boylston and Washington Streets. aAll items are in unidentified manuscript hand probably written (or copied) after 1909. Includes 3 items: (1) Opening of the Lion Theatre (January 11, 1836) [history]; (2) Lion Theatre (Washington Street.) A complete record of all plays, farces, operas, ... from opening night January 11, 1836 to (close) April 1837; (3) Dramatic records of the Lion Theatre 1836, Vaudeville Saloon ... 1840.8 aItem (3) has hard-board inserts in paper cover, taken from Boston Public Library and dated 1909. aLion Theatre and Vaudeville Saloon Records 1836-1840, after 1909 (MS Thr 739). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aLion Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aVaudeville Saloon (Boston, Mass.) 0aVaudevillezMassachusettszBoston. 7aRecords.2aat2 aLion Theatre (Boston, Mass.)2 aVaudeville Saloon (Boston, Mass.)0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno accession number.5the1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 73901442nrcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245003700093300002700130520022000157520012200377524010600499650001800605655001700623655001700640710009800657541024000755561015200995506004201147852002301189013075618-020120830101856.0020710nuuuuuuuumau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aTheatrical clay masks,fundated. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) a2 clay theatrical masks, 3 x 3 cm. (each): 1 Greek, excavated at Sicily, dated ca. 5th century B.C.E.; 1 Roman, excavated at Veio, Italy, dated ca. 2nd century B.C.E. 1 mask is solid, 1 has open eye and mouth holes.8 aIncludes paper label with text used for identification. It is assumed that these are copies of original larger masks. aTheatrical Clay Masks (MS Thr 784). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aMaskszItaly. 7aMasks2gmgpc 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 78401501nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007000110300002700180520029400207524005400501546001500555611006700570655002000637655002100657710009800678541024000776561015201016506004201168852004901210013066904-020120830101600.0020710s1900 mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn773709794 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCollection of "carte-lettres" from the Exposition de 1900,f1900. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) a49 folded blank sheets of stationery illustrated with images of buildings and names of countries from the Exposition universelle internationale de 1900 (Paris, France) (World's Fair) held in Paris, France from April-November, 1900. Sheets meant to be folded, sealed, and sent as postcards. aMS Thr 774. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French.20aExposition universelle internationale de 1900c(Paris, France) 7aPostcards.2aat 7aStationery.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 774zShelved with bMS Thr 77300880ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003600091245010500127300002600232351001700258546001600275600002300291700003200314700003500346506005500381541011200436561009100548852002300639013134422-620120320103804.0120320i18861912mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLoeser, Charles A.,erecipient.10aLetters from William James and George Santayana to Charles Alexander Loeser,f1886-1912 and undated. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English.10aLoeser, Charles A.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.1 aSantayana, George,d1863-1952.1 aOpen for research, but handle with care (fragile).0 cGift;aPhilippa Calnan;b1424 North Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210;d2012 March 5;e2011M-102.5hou1 aGiven in memory of Charles A. Loeser by his granddaughter, Philippa Calnan, 2012.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 279501285ctcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041002300110245005200133300002700185351003400212520022200246544004100468546004500509524011900554555008700673650002800760655003500788506003700823541004200860561005700902852002300959852002500982013172447-920130305142046.0101007i17701981mau |||||||fre|d0 aocn793214970 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafreagerarus10aTheater autograph file: additional,f1770-1981. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aArranged by accession number. aThe Theater Autograph File: Additional is a collection of items received singly or in small groups from various sources at various times; it describes material received after the closing of the Theater Autograph File.1 aSee also the Theater Autograph File. aIn English, French, German, and Russian. aTheater Autograph File: Additional (MS Thr 837). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02309 0aAutographsxCollection. 7aAutographs (manuscripts).2aat0 aCollection is open for research.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates.5the1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 8378 bTHEcPFDhMS Thr 83703310ctcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245005200146300002600198351003900224545014900263545115400412545017701566520034001743544011502083546001602198524010202214555008702316600003802403610003302441650002902474650001302503650001202516650003102528650001302559650003302572650001302605650001602618506002302634541015802657561007402815852002302889013226727-620130219101745.0120606i18401852mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn828257431 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBond, William Cranch,d1789-1859.10aWilliam Cranch Bond correspondence,f1840-1852. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aWilliam Cranch Bond (1789-1859) was an American astronomer born in Falmouth (Me.); he was the first director of the Harvard College Observatory. aTrained by his clockmaker father, Bond built his first clock when he was fifteen years old and eventually took over his father’s business. Inspired by a solar eclipse in 1806, Bond soon thereafter became an avid amateur astronomer; he rebuilt the parlor of his first house as an observatory. Bond traveled to Europe in 1815, commissioned by Harvard University to gather information on European observatories. In 1839, Bond was allowed to move his personal astronomical equipment to Harvard and serve as its (unpaid) "Astronomical Observer to the University." By 1843, a sun-grazing comet having aroused public interest in astronomy, Harvard was able to raise money for the construction of a state-of-the-art observatory. Bond designed the building and the observing chair, and Harvard bought a fifteen-inch German-built refracting telescope, equal in size to the largest in the world at the time. The telescope was first used in 1847 when it was pointed to the moon. Bond and his son, George Phillips Bond, discovered Saturn's moon Hyperion, were the first to observe the then innermost ring of Saturn in 1850, and helped pioneer astrophotography. aBond married his first cousin, Selina Cranch, in 1819; they had four sons and two daughters. After Selina's death in 1831, Bond married her older sister, Mary Roope Cranch. aScience-related correspondence of William Cranch Bond concerning various astronomical, meteorological, and technological issues, often involving sharing of data between observatories and individual scientists. Includes a few letters written between others and printed items. All letters are autograph manuscript unless otherwise noted. aBond family papers and records of the Harvard College Observatory are held by the Harvard University Archives. aIn English. aWilliam Cranch Bond Correspondence, 1840-1852 (MS Am 2805). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0240210aBond, William Cranch,d1789-1859.20aHarvard College Observatory. 0aAstronomyy19th century. 0aAuroras. 0aComets. 0aMeteorologyy19th century. 0aMeteors. 0aObservatoriesy19th century. 0aPlanets. 0aTelescopes.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aMichael Brown Rare Books, LLC;b4421 Osage Av, Philadelphia, PA 19104;d2012 June 6;e2011M-133;h$6500.00 (Hermon Dunlap Smith Bequest).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Hermon Dunlap Smith Bequest, 2012.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 280500675nkm a2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006700093300002600160351001700186500009700203546001600300600005100316655002200367541004600389506002300435852002300458013379642-620121016141554.0121016i18501865xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aQueen Victoria's children :kphotograph album,fca. 1850-1865. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. a217 photographs by various photographers, some of unknown persons, lace, statues, and busts. aIn English.10aVictoria,cQueen of Great Britain,d1819-1901. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;e2012MT-9.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91000898ntm a2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245011100093300002600204351001700230500012300247546001600370600001800386600002100404600002300425650004300448655002100491541006100512561003700573506002300610852002300633013379730-920121016152946.0121016i19221966xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aScrapbook concerning the careers of dancers Ethel and Florence Breen and Elaine St. Clair,fca. 1922-1966. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes photographs, clippings, programs, receipts, and records of dance teaching in the greater Boston (Mass.) area. aIn English.10aBreen, Ethel.10aBreen, Florence.10aSt. Clair, Elaine. 0aDancezMassachusettszBostonxHistory. 7aScrapbooks.2aat0 cGift;aArthur Leeth;d1989 February 15;e2012MT-11.5the1 aGift of Arthur Leeth, 1989.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91300956nkcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245010400093300002600197351001700223500017400240500004600414546001600460600003200476650005200508655002800560541010400588506002300692852002300715013369209-420121017103636.0121004i18981927mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotograph album of Hollywood and New York (N.Y.) actors and actresses,fca. 1898-1927 and undated. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aAlbum containing about 125 portrait photographs and reproductions of Hollywood and New York actors and actresses from the 1920s, 14 of which are inscribed to Jack Mayer. aItemized list available in internal file. aIn English.10aMayer, Jack,eformer owner. 0aActorszUnited Statesy20th centuryxPortraits. 7aPhotograph albums.2aat0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b825 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10021;d1982 November 4;e2012MT-12.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91501197ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100001800090245004700108300002600155351001700181545027400198520012100472546001600593600001800609650001300627710004700640506002300687541009000710561005500800561006500855852002300920013344323-X20120910110250.0120907i19701978mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHayes, Billy.10aMidnight express archives,fca. 1970-1978. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aWilliam "Billy" Hayes (born 1947) is an American writer, actor, director, and convicted drug smuggler. He is best known for his autobiographical book Midnight Express, about his experiences in and escape from a Turkish prison after being convicted of smuggling hashish. aChiefly Hayes's letters to family, friends, and officials from prison; with a few photographs and letters of others. aIn English.10aHayes, Billy. 0aHashish.2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-44.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 282801164npcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002900091245006700120300002600187351001700213545018000230520019300410546001600603600002900619610008000648651002000728655002200748506002300770541010600793852002300899013363572-420120927155642.0120927i19131941mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSewall, Carolyn Titcomb.10aCarolyn Titcomb Sewall photographs and letter,fca. 1913-1941. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aThe Rev. Carolyn Titcomb Sewall (1889-1946) was a missionary to Tientsen (Tianjin), China with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) from 1913-1941. aIncludes photographs by and of Sewall, most with annotation on the verso, from the field as well as a letter to her mother (lacking page 1) announcing her intention to become a missionary. aIn English.10aSewall, Carolyn Titcomb.20aAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.bNorth China Mission. 0aTianjin (China) 7aPhotographs.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aAnne Tilley;b2404 Oakview Drive, New Bern, NC 28562-8586;d2012 September 27;e2012M-62.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 284001167ntm a2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070110005500093245007700148300002600225351001700251545020500268500006200473546001600535610004700551610005400598610004600652650003900698655002100737700002100758541007600779506002300855852002300878013380457-720121017172733.0121017i18911950xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aCambridge Social Dramatic Club (Cambridge, Mass.).10aCambridge Social Dramatic Club (Cambridge, Mass.) scrapbook,f1891-1950. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aThe Cambridge Social Dramatic Club was founded in 1891 by members of the defunct Cambridge Dramatic Club (est. 1876-1885). They gave perfomances at Brattle Hall operated by the Cambridge Social Union. aWith a typescript history of the club by Richard W. Hall. aIn English.20aCambridge Dramatic Club (Cambridge, Mass.)20aCambridge Social Dramatic Club (Cambridge, Mass.)20aCambridge Social Union (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aTheaterzMassachusettszCambridge. 7aScrapbooks.2aat1 aHall, Richard W.0 cGift;aMr. and Mrs. Richard W. Hall;d1961 January 11;e2012MT-15.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91800778ctcaa2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100002000090245006200110300002600172351001700198500012600215546001600341600002000357506002300377541016100400852002300561013514513-920130102161716.0121214i19791980mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCorso, Gregory.10aGregory Corso compositions :kmanuscript,fca. 1979-1980. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes two poetry notebooks with many drawings, and a prose composition (first line, "The monopolists of Beat '72..."). aIn English.10aCorso, Gregory.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aJames S. Jaffe Rare Books;b790 Madison Avenue, (Suite 605), New York, NY 10065;d2012 December 7;e2012M-102;h$8500.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 289701393nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100005300091245008700144300002600231351001700257545034000274546001600614555009600630600004100726650001900767655002200786506002300808506011800831541017800949852002401127013527991-720130130161500.0130102i18991968mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBoring, Edwin Garrigues,d1886-1968,ecollector.10aEdwin Garrigues Boring collection of photographs of psychologists,fca. 1899-1968. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aEdwin Garrigues “Gary” Boring was an experimental psychologist and historian of psychology. He joined the Harvard faculty as an associate professor in 1922, was full professor by 1928, and served as Director of the Psychological Laboratory from 1924 to 1949. In 1956 he retired as the Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology Emeritus. aIn English. aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0239610aBoring, Edwin Garrigues,d1886-1968. 0aPsychologists. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 aOpen for research.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.0 cPurchase;aJohn LeBow Bookseller;bP.O. Box 258, 117 Langford Road, Candia, NH 03034;d2012 November 23;e2012M-103;h$2500.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 289800958nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069245006000090300002600150351001700176500012300193546001600316651003900332651002000371655002200391710004700413506002300460541009000483561005500573561006500628852002300693013362767-520120926163812.0120926i19631967mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPhotographs of New York (N.Y.) street life,f1963-1967. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aThe work of an unknown professional photographer portraying demonstrations, concerts, Greenwich Village at night, etc. aIn English. 0aGreenwich Village (New York, N.Y.) 0aNew York (N.Y.) 7aPhotographs.2aat2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-60.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 283901498ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002400087100004200111245006700153300002700220351002200247520026100269524013300530546001600663500008300679600004200762650002500804655004900829600002300878700003500901700004100936541011600977561004401093563003401137852002501171013716758-X20130701105356.0130627i19251927xx 000|i eng d0 aocn852399203 aMH-HTcMH-HTeMH-HT1 aCampbell, Patrick,d1865-1940.cMrs.,00aMrs. Patrick Campbell letters to Frederick Witney,f1925-1927. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aArranged by date. aContains 44 autograph and typescript letters, signed, addressed to Frederick Witney. Letters concern Mrs. Campbell's current theatrical tours, particularly the production of Witney's comedy "The adventurous age." Includes typed transcripts of some letters. aMrs. Patrick Campbell letters to Frederick Witney(MS Thr 190). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. a44 letters on 62 leaves, measuring between 20 and 28 cm, in a cloth tray case.10aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940. 0aAmerican literature. 7aLetters (correspondence)2aaty20th century.10aWitney, Frederick.1 aWitney, Frederick,erecipient.1 aWitney, Frederick.tAdventurous age.0 cPurchase;aHodgson & Co. Auction through Winfred A. Myers Ltd.;d1967 April 25;e66M-150;hDuplicate Fund.5the1 aPurchased with the Duplicate Fund.5the aFoldered; in cloth case.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 19001758ctcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003900090245007300129300002700202351001700229545021900246520016100465520013800626546001600764600002800780651005700808651003600865655002200901700003800923700003300961700002700994700003601021700004601057506002301103541029501126852002301421013724270-020130717140541.0130710i19291951mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSantesson, Hans Stefan,ecompiler.10aHans Stefan Santesson collection on Indian independence,f1929-1951. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aHans Stefan Santesson (1914-1975) was an American writer and editor, particularly of science fiction and fantasy, who took up the cause of Indian independence while attending Columbia University in New York (N.Y.). aIncludes correspondence, photographs, and ephemera relating to the fight for Indian independence and naturalization for Indians living in the United States. aCorrespondents include Subhas Chandra Bose, Manilal Gandhi, Sailendra Nath Ghose, Clare Boothe Luce, and Vithalbhai Jhaverbhai Patel. aIn English.10aSantesson, Hans Stefan. 0aIndiaxHistoryxAutonomy and independence movements. 0aIndiaxPolitics and government. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBose, Subhas Chandra,d1897-1945.1 aGandhi, Manilal,d1892-1956.1 aGhose, Sailendra Nath.1 aLuce, Clare Boothe,d1903-1987.1 aPatel, Vithalbhai Jhaverbhai,d1873-1933.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aBetween the Covers;b112 Nicholson Rd., Gloucester City, NJ 08030;d2013 July 1;e2013M-1;h$27500.00 ($14000.00 - Sidney J. Watts Fund; $1000.00 - Andrew Peter Vance Book Fund for Rare Books and Manuscripts; $5500.00 - Thomas W. Streeter Fund; $7000.00 - Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 292400736ctm a2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002300069110005100092245003700143300002600180351001700206546001600223610005100239655001900290506002300309541018700332852002300519013765221-620130827150554.0130826s1932 xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aShubert Theatre (Organization : Newark, N.J.).10aShubert Theatre accounts,f1932. a1 box (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English.20aShubert Theatre (Organization : Newark, N.J.). 7aAccounts.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aLa Scala Autographs, Inc.;b301 N. Harrison St., Box 900, Princeton, NJ 08540;d2013 August 24;e2013MT-7;h$250.00 (George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 98601806ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006200093300002700155351001700182546001600199520023800215545044300453545032700896600001701223600002001240610002801260610004901288655001901337655002201356655002201378541008101400506002301481852002401504012579641-220131018105436.0020710i19201974mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aRuth Casey and Dolphe Martin memorabilia,fca. 1920-1974. a1 boxa(.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English. aComprised of Martin's 1920 Harvard Medical School diploma; a photograph of "Youth on Parade"; sheet music with a few manuscript pages; Martin's 1974 publication, "Poetry is Good Medicine"; and a Metropolitan Symphonic Band scrapbook. aRuth Casey (1928-2012) was a pioneer television producer and teenage singing sensation in the 1950s-60s. Dolphe Martin was her manager. In 1941, Casey and Martin created and produced the television show “Youth on Parade”, New England’s first and longest-running amateur talent show for CBS on WEEI-AM in Boston; Casey's sister, Eileen, also worked on the show. Casey later went on to become a casting director and voice-over artist. aDolphe Martin (1891-1974) was an orchestra leader and composer who had trained as a medical doctor. Under contract to CBS, he conducted various radio orchestras and produced/directed “Youth on Parade”; he also invented the "voice orchestra". Martin opened the West Roxbury Academy of performing arts in Boston (Mass.).10aCasey, Ruth.10aMartin, Dolphe.20aHarvard Medical School.20aMetropolitan Symphonic Band (Boston, Mass.). 7aDiplomas.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSheet music.2aat0 cGift;aEstate of Ruth Casey;bBoston, MA;d2013 October 17;e2013MT-14.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 99401338ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003800090245007700128300002900205351001700234500023800251500008400489545012700573546001600700600003800716655002800754506002300782541018100805561008600986852002401072013861449-020131204164226.0131204i18901904mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHoar, George Frisbie,d1826-1904.10aGeorge Frisbie Hoar photograph album and other papers,fcirca 1890-1904. a1 boxa(.15 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aAlbum of photographs of Hoar's house in Worcester (Mass.); Redemption Rock (near Princeton, Mass.) with a deed giving the land to his great nephew, John Hoar, and a manuscript family tree; Harvard College sites; Boston; and Scotland. aWith correspondence, mostly to John Bellows, some from Hoar or relating to him. aHoar was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, then Senator, for Massachusetts from 1869 until his death in 1904. aIn English.10aHoar, George Frisbie,d1826-1904. 7aPhotograph albums.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aPickering and Chatto Ltd.;b144-146 New Bond Street, London, W1S 2TR ENGLAND;d2013 November 12;e2013M-41;h$3034.00 (Stanley Marcus Endowment for Rare Books).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Stanley Marcus Endowment for Rare Books, 2013.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 294502145ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100002700121245007100148300002800219351004600247545025100293520025600544524012100800555008700921546001601008600002701024600003801051650003901089650001701128655002101145655002201166655003801188700005401226700003801280700004301318700005401361700003701415541016001452561007001612506004201682852002301724000601971-420130415141347.0860520i19101918mau ||| | eng d0 aocn1223864171 aMAHV05A1 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHatch, Leonard,d1882-10aLeonard Hatch correspondence with Warren Barton Blake,f1910-1918. a1 boxa(.15 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aHatch was an American magazinist and editorial writer. Warren Barton Blake was an American journalist. He worked on the editorial staffs of The Nation, The Independent, and Collier's Weekly. Hatch and Blake were college classmates (Harvard 1905). aIncludes one letter from William Rose Benét to Hatch; one letter from Warren Barton Blake to George I. Steguer; an enclosed letter from Marjorie Conant to Blake; 2 letters from Dorothy Warrin Hatch; photographs; and a printed memorial of Blake. aLeonard Hatch Correspondence with Warren Barton Blake, 1910-1918 (MS Am 2003). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01752 aIn English.10aHatch, Leonard,d1882-10aBlake, Warren Barton,d1883-1918. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aJournalists. 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aBenét, William Rose,d1886-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aConant, Marjorie,ecorrespondent.1 aHatch, Dorothy Warrin,ecorrespondent.1 aBlake, Warren Barton,d1883-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aSteuguer, George I.,erecipient.0 cGift;aChristopher Hatch;b250 West 94th Street, apt. 8-H, NY, NY 10025;d1983 Apr.; 1997 Dec. 18; 1999 Aug.; 2002 Jan. 10; 2003 Feb.e82M-56; 97M-30;5hou1 aGift of Christopher Hatch, 1983, 1997, 1999, 2002, and 2003.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 200300866npc a2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100001900106245007400125300002700199351001700226500006700243546002700310500004600337600001900383655002200402700003200424506004300456541010200499852002300601012515541-720100813165925.0100625i19702006mau|||||||||||||||||fre|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafre1 aStarr, Cecile.10aCecile Starr collection on Claire Parker,fca. 1970-2006 and undated. a1 box (.15 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes correspondence, a journal of dreams, and photographs. aIn English and French. aRetrieval requires permission of curator.10aStarr, Cecile. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aParker, Claire,d1906-1981.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aCecile Starr;b70 La Salle Street, 18-D, New York, NY 10027;d2010 May 7;e2009MT-90.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 59001182ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069110002500090245008000115300002800195351001700223545011300240545012700353500015700480546001600637610002500653700003400678700001800712506002300730541016400753852002300917013708119-720131015135149.0130614i19561997mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aVictor Gollancz Ltd.10aVictor Gollancz Ltd. correspondence with and about John Updike,f1956-1997. a1 boxa(.15 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aJohn Updike (1932-2009) was an American novelist, critic, short story writer, poet, essayist, and dramatist. aVictor Gollancz Ltd was a major British book publishing house of the twentieth century founded in 1927 by Victor Gollancz. aComprises early correspondence with John Updike about publishing his works and later records concerning Updike's Poorhouse fair and Hoping for a hoopoe. aIn English.20aVictor Gollancz Ltd.1 aGollancz, Victor,d1893-1967.1 aUpdike, John.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b7 West 18th Street (6th floor), New York, NY 10019;d2013 June 10;e2012M-173;h$65000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 292101051ntcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100002500090245003700115300002700152351001700179545013500196520016300331546001600494600002500510600003200535650002300567655001800590506002300608541015400631852002400785013462538-220121119170944.0121114i19511953mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aClark, James,d1923-10aJames Clark diaries,f1951-1953. a1 box (.17 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aJames Royston Clark (1923- ), son of Dorothy Eckersley, was second-in-command to Nazi collaborator William Joyce ("Lord Haw-Haw"). aFive diaries or commonplace books written in 1951 and 1953, the early ones chiefly concerning art and architecture; in volume 4 a wartime reminiscence begins. aIn English.10aClark, James,d1923-10aJoyce, William,d1906-1946. 0aCollaborationists. 7aDiaries.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aRichard M. Ford, LTD;b70 Chaucer Road, London, W3 6DP United Kingdom;d2012 October 18;e2012M-85;h$2940.70 (Sidney J. Watts Fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 171701918ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245004900153300002800202351011900230545013900349520017000488555008700658555012700745524010100872600003300973600003101006610003301037610003401070655002401104655001801128655003501146655002001181655002201201655001901223655003601242700003301278541009301311561004901404506004201453852002501495008836307-420131202080042.0020918i18871888mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm785853051 aMAHV02-A71 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aButterworth, Alfred Potts.10aAlfred Potts Butterworth papers,f1887-1888. a1 boxa(.2 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Alfred Potts Butterworth to his family; and II. Other papers. aButterworth and Babbitt both graduated from Harvard College with the Class of 1889. Babbitt later taught French literature at Harvard. aMaterials concern a European trip that Butterworth took with Irving Babbitt in 1887-1888. Includes letters, sketches, photographs, diary, passport, and account book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006658 aUnpublished printed finding aids available in the Houghton Accession Records, 1941-1942, under *41-1884-1887 and *41-3393. aAlfred Potts Butterworth Papers, 1887-1888 (MS Am 800.53). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBabbitt, Irving,d1865-1933.10aButterworth, Alfred Potts.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 7aAccount books.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLetters (correspondence).2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSketches.2aat 7aHarvard students' notes.2local1 aBabbitt, Irving,d1865-1933.0 cGift;aAlfred Potts Butterworth;d1941;e41-1884, 41-1885, 41-1886 (1-46), 41-3393.5HOU1 aGift of Alfred Potts Butterworth, 1941.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.5301404nacaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005300093300002700146351001700173520012100190520012000311546001600431650005400447651005400501655002700555541027700582561011400859506004200973506012301015852002401138013087533-320120202135445.0120202i18381887mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aLondon (England) theatrical posters,f1838-1887. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aTen very large and decorative posters for London theaters, some fragile, the largest of which measures 113 x 242 cm. aIncludes posters from the Adelphi Theatre, Aquarium Theatre, Lyceum Theatre, Haymarket Theatre, and Surrey Theatre. aIn English. 0aTheaterzLondon (England)y19th centuryvPosters. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th centuryvPosters. 7aPostersxTheater.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lots 36, 451 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80801450nacaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245009200093300002700185351001700212500019000229546001600419651004500435651004500480651004500525655002000570655002600590541027700616561011400893506004201007506012301049852002401172013087425-620120202160209.0120202i17891950mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBritish Isles playbills and programs for first performances and debuts,fca. 1789-1950. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 100 playbills, many headed "Never Acted" or "First Time", mainly for London theaters; with approximately 25 playbills and programs documenting actors' debuts on the stage. aIn English. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery18th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery20th century. 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aTheater programs2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lots 17, 531 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80601382nacaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041002300093245008200116300002700198351001700225500016100242546004400403655002900447655002000476655002700496655002700523541028000550561011400830506004200944506011800986852002401104013087519-820120202125834.0120202i18011905mau |||||||fre|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs afreageraitaapol00aEuropean theater handbills, playbills, posters, and programs,fca. 1801-1905. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIncludes approximately 25 French posters and programs; 54 German language playbills and posters; four Italian handbills and posters; and one Polish program. aIn French, German, Italian, and Polish. 7aHandbillsxTheater.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPostersxTheater.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lots 21-23, 291 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80702079ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004400110245009600154300002800250545049300278520017900771555008700950524014701037546003001184600004401214600003201258650003901290650003201329650005601361650004001417700004401457541014401501561005501645506004201700852002301742011438637-420080418102627.0020710i17971804mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612814546 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aRichard Brinsley Sheridan letters to Hester Jane Ogle Sheridan,fca. 1797-1804 and undated. a1 boxa(.2 linear feet) aRichard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816) was born in Dublin, Ireland and raised in London. He became the manager and part-owner of the Drury Lane Theatre in 1776. He wrote several plays, including the comedies The Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1780). He also served as a Minister of Parliament from 1780 to 1812. Sheridan's second wife was Hester Jane Ogle (born ca. 1775 - died 1817) whom he called "Hecca," the daughter of the dean of Winchester. They married on 1795 April 27. aIncludes eight autograph manuscript letters from Richard Sheridan to Hester Sheridan. Some letters include typescript transcripts; the origin of the transcripts is not known.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01961 aRichard Brinsley Sheridan Letters to Hester Jane Ogle Sheridan (MS Thr 526). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aSheridan, Hester Jane Ogle. 0aDramatists, Englishy18th century. 0aLegislatorszGreat Britain. 0aStatesmen's spouseszGreat BritainvCorrespondence. 0aTheatrical managerszGreat Britain.1 aSheridan, Hester Jane Ogle,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aBernard Quaritch, Ltd;b11 Grafton Street, London W.1, England;d1956 January 31;e55M-130;hFrank E. Chase fund ($176.40).5the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase fund, 1956.5the aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 52600769nkcaa2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002900093245012100122300002700243351001700270500004600287546001600333600002900349655002500378541014900403852002300552012552898-120101001134506.0100818s1902 mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aAnderson, Percy,d-1928.10aPercy Anderson costume designs for Joan of Arc, The merchant of Venice, and The eternal city,fca. 1902 and undated. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aAnderson, Percy,d-1928. 7aCostume design.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93.3lots 11, 13, 155the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 59602293cacaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004500110245008300155300002700238351007600265545051300341520021100854546001601065555008701081524016101168600004501329650004001374650004001414655003401454655003401488541026201522506003701784506012301821852004701944012791504-420120202160301.0110603i17831825mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn730056543 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aJordan, Dorothy,d1761-1816,eperformer.10aTheatrical music, playbills, and portraits related to Mrs. Jordan,f1783-1825. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aOrganized in three series: I. Music; II. Playbills; and III. Portraits. aBorn Dorothea (sometimes called Dorothy or Dora) Bland near Waterford, Ireland, Dorothy Jordan was the daughter of Francis Bland (d. 1778) and his mistress, Grace Phillips. She was an Irish actress, courtesan, and the mistress and companion of the future King William IV of the United Kingdom for 20 years while he was Duke of Clarence. She took the stage name "Mrs. Jordan" as it was slightly more respectable for a married woman to be on the stage. There was no Mr. Jordan and Dorothea Bland never married. aCollection is comprised of music for songs performed by Mrs. Jordan in various productions; playbills for productions in which she appeared; and printed portraits of her chiefly in various theatrical roles. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02162 aTheatrical Music, Playbills, and Portraits Related to Mrs. Jordan, 1783-1825 (MS Thr 682). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJordan, Dorothy,d1761-1816,eperformer. 0aActressesy18th centuryvPortraits. 0aActressesy19th centuryvPortraits. 7aPlaybillsy18th century.2aat 7aPlaybillsy19th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 for all lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History)3lot 305the0 aCollection is open for research.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 682zBox is porfolio sized00973ntcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002200093245004500115300002700160351001700187545003100204500020800235500004600443546001600489600002200505655004600527655002000573506004300593541007200636852002300708012838151-520110726164039.0110726i18591901mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aMaffitt, James S.10aJames S. Maffitt papers,fca. 1859-1901. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aMaffitt was a stage actor. aIncludes: an album of clippings titled "Newspaper Notices"; a manuscript play titled "Cape Cod Folks"; an album of cartes-de-visite photographs titled "Old Friends"; loose photographs; and an invitation. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aMaffitt, James S. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aClippings.2aat aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aMr. and Mrs. James S. Maffitt;d1998 May 4;e2011MT-2r.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 70200981ntcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100001700093245006700110300002700177351001700204520039300221546001600614600001700630650004600647506002300693541003600716852002300752013329656-320120816122515.0120816i19571959mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aStone, P. M.10aP. M. Stone essays on Boston (Mass.) theaters,fca. 1957-1959. a1 box (.2 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aContents: Boston dramatic stock or repertory companies.--Boston theatres / brief historical sketches.--Boston's theatre district south of Boylston Street.--Old Music Hall.--An outline history of the Castle Square Theatre, Boston, 1894-1932.--[Notes and essay on Colonial Theatre.]--[Notes and essay on Hollis Street Theatre.]--[Notes and essay on Shubert Theatre.]--[Clippings and notes.] aIn English.10aStone, P. M. 0aTheaterszMassachusettszBostonxHistory.0 aOpen for research.0 cUnknown source;e2012MT-1.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 88701433ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101245006200122300002700184351003900211545003600250520014300286555008700429524011400516546001600630600003100646600004200677650003900719655001700758655003800775655002200813700005600835541009200891561005700983506004201040852002501082009233718-X20130204140647.0031022i19291948mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm816393961 aMAHV03A358 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMiscellaneous papers concerning Thomas Wolfe,f1929-1948. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aWolfe was an American novelist. aVarious materials about Thomas Wolfe, including two essay manuscripts, a photograph of Wolfe, and a letter written by Julia Westall Wolfe.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01367 aMiscellaneous Papers Concerning Thomas Wolfe, 1929-1948 (MS Am 1883.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938.10aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aEssays.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aWolfe, Julia Elizabeth,d1860-1945,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;e50M-575, 52M-155, 86M-22, 78M-60, 84M-31.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883.401548ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003100121245005700152300002700209545014300236520013800379555008700517555010800604524010100712610003200813600003100845650004300876650004600919655003800965655001601003655002701019740002701046541004901073561004201122852005801164009502772-620120307090228.0041208s1956 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390045 aMAHV04A85 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.00kPapersbconcerning Mr. Arcularis,f1956 and undated. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) aAiken was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. His Mr. Arcularis: A play was published by Harvard University Press in 1957. aIncludes mimeograph printer's copy, drafts of the introduction, and the front matter and layout prepared by Harvard University Press.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-58. aConrad Aiken Papers Concerning Mr. Arcularis (MS Am 2352). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHarvard University.bPress.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited States. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPrinters' proofs.2aat02aMr. Arcularis: A play. cDeposit;aConrad Aiken;d1958;e58M-58.5hou aDeposited by Conrad Aiken, 1958.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2352zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2351-235201205nacaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006500093300002600158351001700184500009900201546001600300650003200316650003200348655002000380541027200400561011400672506004200786506012300828852002400951013087068-420120202160333.0120201i17801880mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPlaybills and portraits concerning young actors,f1780-1880. a1 box (.2 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 120 playbills plus 15 portraits of juvenile actors from mainly English theaters. aIn English. 0aYoung actorsy18th century. 0aYoung actorsy19th century. 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 311 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80401527ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245008100121300002700202520017300229546002700402555008700429524010800516650004200624650003900666650002800705650003200733650004100765650004500806651003200851651003100883655002400914655002800938506003700966541009901003561006401102852002301166009784858-120100713105150.0020710i18031863mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612773034 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre00aMiscellaneous documents concerning American slavery,f1803-1863 and undated. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) aPrimarily manuscript bills of sale for slaves in Charleston (S.C.) and New Orleans (La.), with a few printed and other documents pertaining to slavery in North America. aIn English and French. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02075 aMiscellaneous Documents Concerning American Slavery (MS Am 1278). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAfrican AmericansxSocial conditions. 0aSlaveryzSouthern StatesxHistory. 0aSlaveryzUnited States. 0aSlave tradezUnited States. 0aSlave tradezLouisianazNew Orleans. 0aSlave tradezSouth CarolinazCharleston. 0aCharleston (S.C.)xHistory. 0aNew Orleans (La.)xHistory 7aBills of sale.2aat 0aFinancial records.2aat0 aCollection is open for research. cGift and purchase;avarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accessions;hvarious funds.5hou aGift and purchase from various sources, various dates.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 127800845ntcaa2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245003100138300002600169500001700195520011200212524008400324600003000408600005000438541006500488561004800553852002600601009919072-920130910124146.0060411s18uu xxu|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612817788 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRiker, James,d1822-1889.10aJames Riker papers,f18--. a1 box (.2 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aContains notes and correspondence concerning Riker's History of Harlem (New York, 1881) and other subjects. aJames Riker Papers, 18-- (MS Am 889.278). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRiker, James,d1822-1889.10aRiker, James,d1822-1889.tHistory of Harlem.0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno acc. number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 889.27802680ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110004700108245006700155300002700222351005400249545082500303520015901128555008701287524011701374546001601491544007001507581016601577610004701743610003901790610003701829650004501866655005301911655003401964655003901998541011102037561004002148561006502188506004202253852002302295010074760-420120813075229.0060807i18471851mau|||| |||| 000|m eng d0 aocn612842843 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aBoston Religious Union of Associationists.10aBoston Religious Union of Associationists records,f1847-1851. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. aThe American Union of Associationists (founded May 1846), was devoted to the propagation of Fourierism, a philosophy developed by François Marie Charles Fourier (1772–1837), a French utopian socialist and philosopher. An affiliate group, The Boston Religious Union of Associationists, was organized in January of 1847, lasting until June of 1850, for the purpose of reconciling the Christian Church and social reform. Important persons in the group were: John Allen, William Henry Channing, John S. Dwight, George Ripley, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, James T. Fisher and many others. Many members of this organization were also participants in their sister society, the Boston Union of Associationists, as well as the Brook Farm Community, which was a transcendentalist Utopian experiment in West Roxbury, Massachusetts. aIncludes: manuscript account books recording subscriptions and other funds and expenses, lists of subscribers, receipts; and printed informational fliers.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02171 aBoston Religious Union of Associationists Records, 1847-1851 (MS Am 2731). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also bMS Am 2730 for Boston Union of Associationists Records. aSterling F. Delano. A calendar of meetings of the 'Boston Religious Union of Associationists,' 1847-1850. Studies in the American Renaissance. 1985, pp. 187-267.20aBoston Religious Union of Associationists.20aAmerican Union of Associationists.20aBoston Union of Associationists. 0aFourier, Charles,d1772-1837xInfluence. 7aAccount books2aatzUnited Statesy19th century. 7aFliers (printed matter).2aat 7aReceipts (financial records).2aat0 cPurchase;d1933 May 17;eno accession number; recataloged from Soc 859.275*;hFriends of the Library;5hou1 aRecataloged from Soc 859.275*.5hou1 aPurchased with funds from Friends of the Library, 1933.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 273102034cpcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029035001600069035001300085040002100098245006200119300002700181545056600208520028500774555008701059524011501146546001601261600003401277600004501311650004901356651004001405655001901445655002501464655003201489710003401521541005301555561003201608506004201640852002601682010083897-920130712114419.0060817i19711971mau|||||||||||||||||eng|0 aocm84670147 aMAHV06A7 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aEmily Dickinson commemorative stamps and ephemera,f1971. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) aEmily Dickinson was an American poet. The Emily Dickinson stamp was the second in a series dedicated to American poets. It was designed by Bernard Fuchs of Wesport, Connecticut from the daguerreotype made of ED in 1847 while she was attending Mount Holyoke Female Seminary. The daguerreotype, in the possession of Amherst College, is the only photographic portrait taken during the poet's lifetime. Leonard C. Buckley modeled the stamp. Arthur W. Dintamen designed the vignette and Albert Saavedra engraved the letters. The stamp was printed on the Giori press. aIncludes a pane of 50 Emily Dickinson postage stamps and ephemera concerning the celebrations for the issuing of the stamp, including: newspaper article, invitation, leaflet, program, bookmark, tickets, and other materials. Most of the events took place in Amherst, Massachusetts.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01931 aEmily Dickinson Commemorative Stamps and Ephemera, 1971 (MS Am 1118.19). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886vPortraits. 0aCommemorative postage stampszUnited States. 0aAmherst (Mass.)xIntellectual life. 7aEphemera.2aat 7aPostage stamps.2aat 7aPane (stamp grouping).2aat2 aUnited States Postal Service.0 cGift;d1971;eno accession number;hgratis.5hou1 aGratis; received 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.1902988ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245008800131300002600219351007800245546001600323545060700339520025200946520024901198555008701447524012701534544019801661600002301859600004901882600006501931655002201996700006702018700004402085700005602129700005402185700002102239700004902260700006702309700005802376852002302434541009202457561004102549010296095-X20100201232308.0070430i19641966mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612791120 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aEccles, Mary Hyde.10aMary Hyde Eccles papers concerning the Charlotte Lennox correspondence,f1964-1966. a1 box (.2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions. aIn English. aMary Hyde Eccles was one of the world's leading collectors of books and manuscripts from the 1940s until her death in 2003. She was also a distinguished literary scholar, and an important benefactor to numerous libraries and cultural institutions. This collection relates to her essay "Not in Chapman," a catalog of unpublished Samuel Johnson letters. As this project neared completion in 1964, a new cache of letters from Samuel Johnson to Charlotte Lennox was discovered in the vault of the British Linen Bank, which triggered a series of negotiations before the essay could be revised and published. aIncludes correspondence between Mary Hyde Eccles, James Lowry Clifford, Dan Davin at the Clarendon Press, Michael Francis Gilbert, Arthur Amory Houghton, Donald Frizell Hyde, Mary Lascelles, Robert F. Metzdorf, Lawrence Fitzroy Powell, and others. aAlso includes photocopies of page proofs of Mary Hyde Eccles's "Not in Chapman," and a typescript of "Unpublished letters by Samuel Johnson and his contemporaries : a collection of letters addressed to Mrs. Charlotte Lennox" by Duncan E. Isles.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01875 aMary Hyde Eccles Papers Concerning the Charlotte Lennox Correspondence (MS Am 2539). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe Lennox correspondence was soon afterward purchased by Arthur Amory Houghton, who donated it to the Houghton Library in 1968 as MS Eng 1269. See also the Mary Hyde Eccles Papers, MS Hyde 98.10aEccles, Mary Hyde.10aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784xCorrespondence.10aLennox, Charlotte,dapproximately 1729-1804xCorrespondence. 7aPage proofs.2aat1 aClifford, James L.q(James Lowry),d1901-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aDavin, Dan,d1913-1990,ecorrespondent.1 aHoughton, Arthur Amory,d1906-1990,ecorrespondent.1 aHyde, Donald Frizell,d1909-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aIsles, Duncan E.1 aLascelles, Mary,d1900-1995,ecorrespondent.1 aMetzdorf, Robert F.q(Robert Frederic),d1912-ecorrespondent.1 aPowell, Lawrence Fitzroy,d1881-1975,ecorrespondent.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2539 cOld gift;asource unknown;d2007 April 27 (found in BAL Room cabinets);e2006M-65.5hou aDonor and date of gift unknown.5hou02236ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100003100121245003700152300002700189351010400216545038200320520034000702555008701042524007601129546002701205544007001232600003101302650003901333650003701372655002001409700003201429700003101461700003501492700003801527700003701565541013501602561005601737506004601793852002301839011392318-X20101022125225.0080222i19441989mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn671537409 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aMiller, Henry,d1891-1980.10aHenry Miller papers,f1944-1989. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other materials. aHenry Miller (1891-1980) was an American writer noted for his candid treatment of sex. His Tropic of Cancer (1934) and Tropic of Capricorn (1939) were banned as obscene in the United States until 1961. Popular throughout Europe and the United States, Miller was influential on the "Beat Generation" of writers. Miller was also an artist well-known for his watercolor paintings. aIncludes correspondence between Miller and his literary agents, Reece Halsey, Dorris Halsey and Scott Meredith and publisher Robert MacGregor; 3 compositions by Miller; as well as clippings, contracts and 1 photograph. Also includes a letter and 1 composition by Joyce Howard, editor of a book of letters from Miller to his fifth wife.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02111 aHenry Miller Papers (MS Am 2703). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and French. aSee also: Henry Miller When I reach for my revolver (MS Am 2704).10aMiller, Henry,d1891-1980. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 7aContracts.2aat1 aHalsey, Dorris,erecipient.1 aHalsey, Reece,erecipient.1 aHoward, Joyce,ecorrespondent.1 aMacGregor, Robert M.,erecipient.1 aMeredith, Scott,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aBrian Cassidy;bP.O. Box 8636, Monterey, CA 93943;d2008 February 13;e2007M-49;h$8510.00 (Edward Hyde Cox Fund).5hou1 aPurchased with the Edward Hyde Cox fund, 2008.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 270301164ntcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070041001800091100003000109245010000139300002600239351001700265500027800282500004600560546005600606600003000662655003500692700002500727506004300752541010400795852002300899012573992-320100922161916.0100922i19121928mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HedacscMH-H aengafrealat1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918.10aChansons de Geste, translation of Chanson de Willame, and other papers,f1912-1928 and undated. a1 box (.2 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes Adams's manuscript and notes for his Chanson de Geste (unfinished); his manuscript translation of Chanson de Willame; Ward Thoron's manuscript translation of Chanson de Willame; and a list of books relating to or belonging to Henry Adams with some notes by Thoron. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English, with some material in Latin and French.10aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918. 7aTranslations (documents).2aat1 aThoron, Ward,d1867-1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aRobert H. Knapp Jr.;b3811 Pifer Road, Olympia WA 98501;d2010 September 17;e2010M-21.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 269901535nkcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003900110245005300149300002700202520022700229524013100456546001600587600003900603655002200642655002000664710009800684700003000782541024000812561015201052506004201204852002301246013081772-420120830105019.0020710nuuuuuuuumau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn775085793 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBaxter, William Giles,d1856-1888.10aWilliam Giles Baxter caricature cards,fundated. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) a12 portrait caricature printed cards. Printed by Alfred Gray, London. Depicts comic images of various theatrical personalities in character, such as: Henry Irving, Edgar Bruce, Lionel Brough, Kyrle Bellen, and many others. aWilliam Giles Baxter Caricature Cards, undated (MS Thr 797). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBaxter, William Giles,d1856-1888. 7aCaricatures.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aGray, Alfred,epublisher.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 79701922nrcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005400093300002700147351003800174545014500212520027600357555008700633524013200720546001600852600003800868655002300906655003200929710009800961700005801059700005801117541024001175561015201415506004201567852002301609013075466-820120830101837.0020710nuuuuuuuumau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aShakespeare seal impression collection,fundated. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aSeal impressions are sealing wax embossed with impressions made with a seal, chiefly used to certify a signature or authenticate a document. aSeal wax impressions with relationship to English author William Shakespeare. Each seal impression has a paper label retained with seal. Names associated with these seals include: F. W. Lincoln, George Cressall Ellis, E. W. Lockhart, Douglas Jerrold, and Israel Gollancz.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02267 aShakespeare Seal Impression Collection, undated (MS Thr 783). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616. 7aSeals, wax.2local 7aSeals (impressions).2gmgpc2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aEllis, George Cressall,d1809-1875,eassociated name.1 aGollancz, Israel,cSir,d1864-1930,eassociated name.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 78301920nkcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110002700110245006400137300002700201520015300228520017400381520022300555524014300778546001600921610002700937650003900964655002601003710009801029700004601127541024001173561015201413506004201565852002301607013080474-620120830105118.0020710i19151917mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn775085280 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aBuckingham Cigarettes.10aBuckingham Cigarettes bathing beauty cards,fca. 1915-1917? a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) a42 cigarette cards with black and white photographic images of bathing beauties. Photographs taken by Mack Sennett, some probably silent film stars.8 aEach card sized 6.5 x 4 cm., with text on verso: ... a series of 120 picturess ... an album to hold htis series will be sent ... Jno. [John] J. Bagley & Co. ... Detroit.8 aSet is not complete, includes card numbers: 3, 18, 20, 34, 36, 37, 42, 43, 50, 56, 57, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 66, 67, 68, 70, 71, 74, 75, 81, 82, 83, 86, 87, 88, 90, 91, 93, 99, 102, 103, 106,110, 113, 114, 116, 118, 119, aBuckingham Cigarettes Bathing Beauty Cards, ca. 1915-1917? (MS Thr 795). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aBuckingham Cigarettes. 0aSilent filmszCaliforniaxHistory. 7aCigarette cards.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aSennett, Mack,d1880-1960,ephotographer.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcFhMS Thr 79502761ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003500110245008300145300002700228351009100255545073500346520023501081555008701316524016101403546001601564544007601580600003501656600005801691600004401749610002401793650004501817700007001862700005601932700006001988541013702048561002502185506004202210506012302252852002402375013123976-720120406192004.0020710i18111815mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn779706094 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aWhitbread, Samuel,d1764-1815.10aSamuel Whitbread correspondence concerning the Drury Lane Theatre,f1811-1815. a1 boxa(.2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Whitbread; and II. Other letters. aSamuel Whitbread (1764-1815) was a British politician. He was the only son and third child of Samuel Whitbread (1720-1796), brewer and politician, and his first wife, Harriet, daughter of William Hayton, attorney, of Ivinghoe, Buckinghamshire. When the Drury Lane Theatre burned down in 1809, theater owner Richard Brinsley Sheridan was financially ruined. Sheridan turned to his old friend Samuel Whitbread to head a committee that would manage the company, deal with the theater's complex debts, and oversee the rebuilding. Whitbread asked Sheridan to withdraw from management himself, which he did entirely by 1811. Thomas Shaw (ca. 1760-ca. 1830) was one of the many claimants against the management of the Drury Lane Theatre. aAutograph manuscript letters related to Thomas Shaw's dispute with the management of the Drury Lane Theatre. Includes letters from Samuel Whitbread to Shaw; Richard Brinsley Sheridan to Whitbread; and Sheridan to Charles Sheridan.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02287 aSmauel Whitbread Correspondence Concerning the Drury Lane Theatre, 1811-1815 (MS Thr 829). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also MS Thr 527 and MS Thr 816 for additional papers on this topic.10aWhitbread, Samuel,d1764-1815.10aShaw, Thomas,dapproximately 1760-approximately 1830.10aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th centuryxHistory.1 aShaw, Thomas,dapproximately 1760-approximately 1830,erecipient.1 aSheridan, Charles Brinsley,d1796-1843,erecipient.1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aIfan Kyrle Fletcher;b12 Lansdowne Road, Wimbledon, London SW20, England;d1955 May 31;eno accession number;h£27.5the1 aPurchase, 1955.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 82900918nkcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069245006200090300002600152351001700178500012300195546001600318651002300334655002800357710004700385506002300432541009000455561005500545561006500600852002300665013365562-820121001132228.0121001s1970 mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aMemory of South Viet-Nam :kphotograph albums,fca. 1970. a1 box (.2 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aTwo spiral-bound photograph albums compiled by an unknown American soldier serving in the U.S. Arm in the Vietnam War. aIn English. 0aVietnam (Republic) 7aPhotograph albums.2aat2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-64.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 284201275nacaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093245003300106300002800139351001700167500018600184546002700370650002100397655002900418740003300447541025000480561011400730506004200844506012300886852002401009013081907-720120202160748.0120131nuuuuuuuumau |||||||fre|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs afreaeng00aFrench theatrical portraits. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 190 portraits and caricatures, most colored and in costume, including many from famous published series. Includes most of the 1870 publication, Le théâtre illustré. aIn French and English. 0aTheaterzFrance. 7aPortraitsxTheater.2aat3 aLe théâtre illustré.5the0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 685the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80102870ntc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100006300127245005000190300002900240351004800269545039300317500033700710520044701047555008701494524010001581546001601681600006301697650006601760655004201826610003501868650002801903650004101931650002501972690002101997655004902018700002902067700004102096700004802137740001802185541011602203561006402319506004202383852002302425010174033-620131204134056.0knnn| ||||| |||in061212i19281961mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612880230 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFuller, R. Buckminsterq(Richard Buckminster),d1895-1983.10aR. Buckminster Fuller collection,f1928-1961. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by author or title. aRichard Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983) was an American architect, systems theorist, author, designer, inventor, and futurist. Fuller was the son of Richard Buckminster Fuller and Caroline Wolcott Andrews. He attended, but was expelled from Harvard College. Buckminster Fuller was a descendant of transcendentalist Margaret Fuller and also of Unitarian clergyman Arthur Buckminster Fuller. aDorothy Morse Howe (Mrs. Carleton G. Howe) was a friend of Fuller's, who assembled these materials and donated them to Houghton. Fuller requested they come to Houghton due to the other Fuller family collections held here [see item (11) below for correspondence between donor Dorothy Howe and McGeorge Bundy of Harvard University. ]. aIncludes: a mimeograph copy of Fuller's 4D Time Lock, with an autograph inscription, signed to Dot Morse [Dorothy Morse Howe] and Dick Morse, with designs and explanations for his Dymaxion house; also contains correspondence, clippings about Fuller, blueprints, and printed ephemera concerning Fuller and his 4D Company inventions, and Dymaxion architecture projects. Includes a letter from Fuller to Eleanor Roosevelt, and letters to others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02479 aR. Buckminster Fuller Collection, 1928-1961 (MS Am 1627). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFuller, R. Buckminsterq(Richard Buckminster),d1895-1983. 0aArchitecturezUnited Statesy20th centuryxDesigns and plans. 7aBlueprints (reprographic copies)2aat20a4D Company (Bridgeport, Conn.) 0aArchitecture, Domestic. 0aArchitectural designzUnited States. 0aExperimental houses. 9aDymaxion houses. 7aClippingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aMorse, Dick,erecipient.1 aHowe, Dorothy Morse,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Eleanor,d1884-1962,erecipient.02a4D time lock.0 cGift;aDorothy Morse Howe [Mrs. Carleton Howe];bRupert Kennels, Pawlet, Vermont;d1961 January;e60M-122.5hou1 aGift of Dorothy Morse Howe [Mrs. Carleton Howe], 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 162701872ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245006700142300002900209351002900238545039000267520020700657555008700864524009400951546003001045600003401075655004901109655004601158730004601204740001501250740002101265541004101286561003001327506004201357506012301399852002401522011523691-020080728102452.0020710i18541889mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612828223 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.10aJulia Ward Howe proofs and miscellany,f1854-1889 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically. aJulia Ward Howe authored the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" and participated in women's suffrage as a club leader and lecturer. In Feb. 1862, the Atlantic Monthly published her poem "Battle Hymn of the Republic," which she wrote in 1861 during a visit to an army camp near Washington, D.C. Her husband Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe was director of the Perkins Institute for the Blind, Boston. aIncludes proofs of some poems in her volume Passion-flowers and for the poem Christmas published in the Christian Register, as well as clippings by and about Julia Ward Howe, and other printed ephemera.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01986 aJulia Ward Howe Proofs and Miscellany (MS Am 2616). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910. 7aClippingszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aProofszMassachusettsy19th century.2aat02aChristian register (Boston, Mass. : 1843)02aChristmas.02aPassion-flowers.0 cDonor unknown;d1948?e52M-317.5hou1 aDonor unknown, 1948?5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 261601906ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245004800145300002900193351003800222545020800260520020800468555008700676524008700763546003000850544011100880600003700991650004201028655002201070740003501092740002201127740002101149740003601170541014301206561004801349506004201397506009401439852002301533012114738-X20091110105929.0020710i19521974mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612253520 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams typescripts,f1952-1974. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by title. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aIncludes: typescript carbons of scripts for: Summer and smoke, and Three players of a summer game; and typescript mimeographs of: Moise and the world of reason, and Notes on costumes for The rose tattoo.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02045 aTennessee Williams Typescripts (MS Thr 551). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aTypescripts.2aat02aMoise and the world of reason.02aSummer and smoke.42aThe rose tattoo.02aThree players of a summer game.0 cPurchase;aBlack Sun Books;b157 East 57th St., New York, New York 10022;d1996 May 10;e2003MT-280; 95-96.107;hSheldon fund ($850).5the1 aPurchased with the Sheldon fund, 1996.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 55101744ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245008000145300002900225351003900254545020800293520026300501524014700764546003000911544011100941600003701052655002001089700003601109700003201145541006401177561004201241506004201283506009401325852002301419012114687-120100104083854.0020710i19431978mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612253444 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams letters to Andrew Lyndon and other material,f1943-1978. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by author. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aIncludes: (1) 26 letters from TW to Lyndon, 1943-1978; (2) 1 letter from TW to Mrs. Lyndon, undated; (3) Gerald Brenan letter to Andrew Lyndon, 1959; and (4) 2 clippings (1970-1971) concerning TW and 1 polaroid photograph (photo missing as of 2009 November). aTennessee Williams Letters to Andrew Lyndon and Other Material (MS Thr 369). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 7aClippings.2aat1 aBrenan, Gerald,ecorrespondent.1 aLyndon, Andrew,erecipient.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;d1984 February 21;e*83M-19.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1984.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 36902398nkcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003800110245008200148300002900230351003800259545074100297520028801038555008701326524011701413546003001530600004701560600002301607600004001630650002301670655004501693655002601738655002001764541006201784561002501846506012301871506004201994852002402036012545665-420100811103309.0020710i18901930mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn659795099 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aChickering, Elmer,ephotographer.10aElmer Chickering photographs of "Chiquita" Espiridiona Cenda,fca. 1890-1920. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by title. aAlize Espiridiona Cenda del Castillo was a 26 inch-tall dwarf, who was born in 1869 either in Cuba or Mexico, and died in 1928, 1939 or 1945 (sources disagree). She was a vaudeville artist who traveled in side or freak shows across the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. She was also known as "Chiquita", "The living doll", "The Cuban atom," "Mrs. Anthony C. Woeckner," and "Alice Zenda." She first came to the United States with Frank Charles Bostock (1866-1912), the animal trainer and menagerie proprietor. Cenda sang, danced, and acted, and was known for riding a bicycle. She spoke and sang in Italian, Spanish and English. Chiquita is a 2008 novel by Antonio Orlando Rodriguez based on the life of Cenda. aPortraits and group portraits of the dwarf entertainer, Chiquita. Includes 40 cabinet photographs and 1 photomechanical print. All cabinet card photographs are by Elmer Chickering Photographic Studio, Boston. Images of Chiquita with others include her manager, Frank Charles Bostock.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02083 aElmer Chickering Photographs of "Chiquita" Espiridiona Cenda (MS Thr 584). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aCenda, Espiridiona,d1869-1945vPortraits.10aChickering, Elmer.10aBostock, Frank Charles,d1866-1912. 0aDwarfsvPortraits. 7aCabinet photographszUnited States.2aat 7aGroup portraits.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58402495npcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245004300123300002900166351022700195545018300422520033400605555008700939524008201026546004101108611003501149600003001184610004101214610003801255610007001293610004601363650003301409650004101442650002101483655002001504655001901524710004101543710003801584711003501622710007001657710004601727541006201773506012301835561002501958506004201983852002402025012546883-020100915191535.0020710i18761932mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn659809760 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager10aWild west show collection,f1876-1932. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aOrganized into the following four series: I. Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show; II. Miller Bros. & Arlington 101 Ranch Real Wild West (Organization); III. Pawnee Bill’s Historic Wild West Show; and IV. Other wild west shows. aWild west shows were traveling vaudeville performances in the United States and Europe. These shows introduced a romanticized version fo the American Old West to a wide audience. aIncludes programs, playbills, a few newspapers, and clippings for American wild west shows. Includes one program in German. Companies include: Buffalo Bill s Wild West Show, Miller Bros. & Arlington 101 Ranch Real Wild West (Organization), Pawnee Bill’s Historic Wild West Show, Adam Forepaugh & Sells Bros. Circus, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02085 aWild West Show Collection (MS Thr 586). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English and German.20aBuffalo Bill's Wild West Show.00aBuffalo Bill,d1846-1917.20aAdam Forepaugh & Sells Bros. Circus.20aBuffalo Bill's Wild West Company.20aMiller Bros. & Arlington 1001 Ranch Real Wild West (organization)20aPawnee Bill's Historical Wild West (Show) 0aEntertainerszUnited States. 0aShooters of firearmszUnited States. 0aWild west shows. 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat2 aAdam Forepaugh & Sells Bros. Circus.2 aBuffalo Bill's Wild West Company.2 aBuffalo Bill's Wild West Show.2 aMiller Bros. & Arlington 1001 Ranch Real Wild West (organization)2 aPawnee Bill's Historical Wild West (Show)0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58602552npcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106245005400129300002900183351004000212545074100252520024900993555008701242524007701329546003001406650003101436650002301467650005201490651001801542651005001560655005101610655004901661655004801710710003601758710002901794710002601823710002901849541006201878561002501940506004201965506012302007852002402130012546727-320100811103240.0k|||||||||||||||||020710i19101916mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn659808849 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aTent show collection,fca. 1910-1916 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by company. aTent shows, a form of traveling theater, were popular in the rural areas of the United States during the first half of the twentieth century, particularly in the Southwest, South, and Midwest. There were as many as four hundred tent companies touring when the practice peaked around 1920. Typically, these shows featured a three-act comedy or drama interspersed with "polite" vaudeville. Great emphasis was placed upon presenting inoffensive family entertainment; the master of ceremonies frequently boasted that "nothing would be seen or heard that might offend the taste of the most fastidious." Tent shows often offered a repertoire of from three to twelve plays. They reached their peak activity shortly before the Great Depression. aIncludes: photographs, playbills, and programs. Most of this material describes shows in Dallas, Texas. Includes the companies: Century Theatre (under canvass); Demorest Comedy Company; Denham Stock Company; Lightfoot Stock Company; and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02084 aTent Show Collection (MS Thr 585). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aTent showszUnited States. 0aTheater, Open-air. 0aTraveling theaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aDallas (Tex.) 0aTexasxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPlaybillszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aProgramszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat2 aCentury Theatre (under canvass)2 aDemorest Comedy Company.2 aDenham Stock Company.2 aLightfoot Stock Company.0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58503041nkcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005700110300002900167351018800196545039400384520041700778520047601195555008701671524009601758546003001854544014401884600004702028600004202075610002602117655003002143655004602173655002202219655001902241656001702260700003102277700005902308541007402367561002502441506004202466506012302508852002402631012569709-020130930115315.0020710i18621911mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn664677172 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh,f1862-1911. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Portraits as a girl; II. Portraits as a woman; III. Portraits in costume with the Felix Morris Company; and IV. Photographs of scenes on stage. aHarriet Rogers Otis Dellenbaugh (1855-1930) was an actress and a dramatic reader. She was born in Brooklyn, New York and in 1885 married Frederick S. Dellenbaugh (1853-1935) an explorer, artist, and author. The Dellenbaugh's lived in New York City and summered in Cragsmoor, a small town near Ellenville, New York, where they were active with a local theater group called the Barnstormers. aIncludes photographs, tintypes, cartes-de-visites, and cabinet photographs. Photographers include: Byron (New York), Falk (New York), Foley (New York), Frank C. Bangs (New York), Otto Sarony Co., Pope Brothers (Newburgh, New York), Rawson Gallery ( Brooklyn, New York), White (New York), and others. Many photographs have manuscript annotations on verso signed by "F.S.D.", her husband, Frederick S. Dellenbaugh.8 aPhotographs include portraits and group portraits of Dellenbaugh and others, some taken at Cragmore with the Felix Morris Company. Includes some stage scenes and sets of the plays: The boomerang, Don, The girl with the green eyes, The man of the hour, The rose, The secret, The secret of Polichinelle, Sister Beatrice, Vanity fair, Walls of Jerrico, and others. Also includes images of Clara Bloodgood, Douglas Fairbanks, Edith Wynne Matthison, Annie Russell, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02102 aPhotographs of Harriet Otis Dellenbaugh (MS Thr 608). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aAdditional papers concerning Harriet Dellenbaugh are at the New York Public Library, Humanities and Social Sciences Library in Mss Col 763.10aFairbanks, Douglas,d1883-1939vPortraits.10aDellenbaugh, Harriet OtisvPortraits.20aFelix Morris Company. 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTintypes.2aat 7aActors.2aat1 aDellenbaugh, Harriet Otis.1 aDellenbaugh, Frederick Samuel,d1853-1935,eannotator.0 cPurchase;aXerxes Books;d1990 May 9;e89-90.192;hFund unknown.5the1 aPurchase, 1990.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60801830ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245008400110300002900194351005700223520033800280555008700618524011100705546003000816650003100846655001900877655001900896710004600915710003600961710005300997710004801050710003801098710004501136710004501181541004001226561002501266506004201291506012301333852002401456012570952-820130116142356.0020710i18861893mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn665230832 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographer's catalogs and lists of theatrical images,f1886-1893 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by photographic studio name. aPrinted leaflets, catalogs, and typescript lists of theatrical photographs produced by American and British photographic studios. Includes: Charles D. Fredricks & Co. (New York), Falk (New York), Halls Portrait Studio (New York), J. Landy (Cincinnati, Ohio), Sarony (New York), W. & H. S. Warr (London), and W. M. Morrison (Chicago).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02105 aPhotographer's Catalogs and Lists of Theatrical Images (MS Thr 610). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aPhotographyy19th century. 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aLeaflets.2aat2 aCharles D. Fredricks & Co,ephotographer.2 aFalk (New York),ephotographer.2 aHalls Portrait Studio (New York),ephotographer.2 aJ. Landy (Cincinnati, Ohio),ephotographer.2 aSarony (New York),ephotographer.2 aW. & H. S. Warr (London),ephotographer.2 aW. M. Morrison (Chicago),ephotographer.0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 61001581nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041002300110245005900133300002900192351002300221545028400244520009900528555008700627524011000714546005900824650002400883650002700907650002700934655002100961655002800982541004201010561002601052506012301078506004201201852002401243012557632-320100914091141.0020710i17001972mau||| |||||||fre|d0 aocn660366520 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengagerafreaita00aCommedia dell'arte images,fca. 1700-1972 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged by title. aCommedia dell'arte was a type of theatrical comedy that developed first in Italy in the mid-16th century. It spread and evolved throughout Europe in the following centuries. This theatrical form produced its own iconography, some of which is represented in this small collection. aCollection includes engravings and picture postcard images relating to the Commedia dell'arte.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02096 aCommedia Dell'arte Images (MS Thr 602). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in French, German, English, and Italian. 0aCommedia dell'arte. 0aImprovisation (Acting) 0aItalian drama (Comedy) 7aEngravings.2aat 7aPicture postcards.2aat0 cVarious sources;dVarious dates.5the1 aVarious sources.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60203002nkcaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007800110300002900188351004500217520048600262520008700748520034800835555008701183524013301270546003001403610003001433610003401463610003501497610002801532610005101560610005401611610004001665610003401705610003401739610003901773610004201812610002201854610004501876610003701921610003301958610003601991610003902027610003602066650003702102655002002139655002002159655002202179541006902201561002502270506004202295506012302337852002402460012563067-020101110102624.0020710i17971886mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn663999489 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBoston theater watercolors and printed materials,f1797-1886 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by theater name. aWatercolors of Boston theatres, drawn by an unknown artist. Size of drawings vary; all are matted on 28 x 36 cm. paper board. Titles taken from manuscript annotations on mats. Some include clippings and playbills pasted on versos. Many of these images are actually copies of originals and probably were to be used for a book. Some, but not all, of the text and images can be found in the drama section of Justin Winsor's History of Boston... Many of these theaters no longer exist.8 aAlso includes black and white photomechanical prints of most of these watercolors.8 aIncludes the following Boston theaters: Bijou Theatre, Bland's Lyceum, Boston Adelphi Theatre, Boston Museum, Boston Theatre, Continental Theatre, Globe Theatre, Hay-Maket Theatre, Hollis Street Theatre, Howard Athenaeum, Leonard's National Theatre, National Theatre, Park Theatre, Tremont Theatre, Washington Theatre, and the Windsor Theatre.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02099 aBoston Theater Watercolors and Printed Materials (MS Thr 606). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.20aBoston Museum (1847-1903)20aBijou Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aBland's Lyceum (Boston, Mass.)20aBoston Adelphi Theatre.20aBoston Theatre (Federal Street, Boston, Mass.)20aBoston Theatre (Washington Street, Boston, Mass.)20aContinental Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aEagle Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aGlobe Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aHay-Market Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aHollis Street Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aHoward Athenaeum.20aLeonard National Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aNational Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aPark Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aTremont Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aWashington Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aWindsor Theatre (Boston, Mass.) 0aTheaterszMassachusettszBoston. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat0 cGift;aSource unknown;dDate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60601153ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106245004200127300002900169351006600198520015800264555008700422524008100509546003000590650001400620655001900634655001900653655002000672541006200692561005500754506004200809852002400851012570849-120101105103256.0k|||||||||||||||||020710i18951974mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn665230823 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aTheater seating diagrams,f1895-1974. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by title of guide or name of theater. aPrinted pamphlets, fliers and leaflets which primarily include seating plans of east coast American theaters, a few are engravings of images of theaters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02103 aTheater Seating Diagrams (MS Thr 609). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aTheaters. 7aEphemera.2aat 7aLeaflets.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aNo accession number. Source and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60900996nacaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245003900093300002800132351001700160500010900177500004600286546001600332650003600348650003600384655002000420506004300440541027100483852002400754012592322-820120202160318.0101019i17801880mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBenefit playbills,fca. 1780-1880. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aPlaybills from benefit nights for various beneficiaries held at theaters in London and provincial towns. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English. 0aTheaterzEnglandy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 7aPlaybills.2aat1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 55the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 61901199ntcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100003800106245004800144300002800192351005300220520029200273500004600565546002700611600003800638655002800676700002000704506004600724541016400770852002300934012803133-620110623152223.0110613i19501994mau |||||||dan|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengadan1 aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966.10aEdward Gordon Craig papers,fca. 1950-1994. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed; for more detail, see internal file. aIncludes 25 letters, cards, and postcards from Craig to Gorki Schultz and his wife Birte; 8 original woodcuts inscribed to Schultz for his 1950 wedding; a biography and a memoir of Craig by Schultz (in Danish); clippings (in Danish); photographs of Craig; and miscellaneous other papers. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English and Danish.10aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966. 7aWoodcuts (prints).2aat1 aSchultz, Gorki.1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aGolden Legend, Inc.;b449 South Beverly Dr, Suite 205, Beverly Hills, CA 90212;d2011 June 13;e2010MT-20;h$10000.00 (Frank E. Chase Bequest).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 69401015nkcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003100093245004500124300002800169351001700197500014700214500004600361546001600407600003100423600004400454655002500498506004600523541019300569852002300762012828705-520110715130013.0110715s1899 mau||| |||||||ita|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aEdel, Alfredo,d1856-1912.10aAlfredo Edel costume designs,fca. 1899. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed. a63 original watercolor designs on card stock for a performance of Massenet's ballet Le carillon staged by Giorgio Saracco at La Scala in 1899. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn Italian.10aEdel, Alfredo,d1856-1912.10aMassenet, Jules,d1842-1912.tCarillon. 7aCostume design.2aat1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aJ & J Lubrano;b351 West Neck Rd, Lloyd Harbor, NY 11743;d2011 July 15;e2011MT-1;h$8500.00 (Beatrice, Benjamin and Richard Bader Fund in the Visual Arts of the Theatre).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 70001291ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100003100106245006400137300002800201351001700229545022200246520017000468500004600638546002700684600003100711655002100742655002200763700003300785506004300818541007400861561005500935852002300990013045826-020120112123003.0120111i18731934mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager1 aPrice, Lucien,d1883-1964.10aLucien Price scrapbooks and correspondence,fca. 1873-1934. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aJunius Lucien Price was an American writer of books and for publications including the Boston Evening Transcript and the Atlantic Monthly. At the time of his death at age 81, he was still writing for the Boston Globe. aComprised of three scrapbooks, one of which may have belonged to Price's mother; and correspondence, including photographs and printed programs, with Julius Pölzer. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English and German.10aPrice, Lucien,d1883-1964. 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aPölzer, Julius,d1901-1972.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aEstate of Caldwell Titcomb;d2011 November 4;e2011MT-24.5the1 aGift of the Estate of Caldwell Titcomb, 2011.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 76900950ntcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003700093245006500130300002800195351005500223500004600278546001600324600003700340600002900377506004600406541026900452852002300721013000627-020111213132936.0111213i18301871mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aKean, Charles John,d1811?-1868.10aCharles John Kean and Ellen Kean correspondence,f1830-1871. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed; see itemized list in curatorial file. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aKean, Charles John,d1811?-1868.10aKean, Ellen,d1805-1880.1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aMosher Books;bP.O. Box 542, Ephrata, PA 17522-0542;d2011 December 6;e2011MT-12;h$13500.00 total ($7000.00 - Jane W. Stedman Memorial Fund ; $6500.00 - Helen Delano Willard Memorial Fund for the Harvard Theatre Collection).nbought with 2011MT-95the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 74701269ntcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007600093300002800169351001700197546001600214610002700230651004500257651004500302655004900347655004900396541027900445561011400724506004200838506012300880852002401003013014706-020120202160646.0111222i17541870mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBritish Isles theater playbills: Covent Garden Theatre,fca. 1754-1870. a1 box (.25 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIn English.20aCovent Garden Theatre. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery18th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th century. 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy18th century.2aat 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy19th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 38 (part)1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 75501851ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002300069100003300092245005500125300002900180351003000209545019000239520037900429555008700808524013400895546001601029600001801045600003301063650004301096650004201139655002501181700003001206541018201236561006501418506004201483852002401525013800422-620131121120426.0131011i19221924mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHerbert, Victor,d1859-1924.10aVictor Herbert letters to Marie Duval,f1922-1924. a1 boxa(.25 linear feet) bArranged chronologically. aVictor Herbert (1859-1924) was an Irish-born, German-raised American composer, cellist and conductor. Marie Duval was an aspiring singer working as a chorus girl in Baltimore, Maryland. a28 autograph manuscript letters (signed) from Herbert to Duval in which he counsels her about her voice, grammar and future prospects in his or other shows in New York. He also discusses his own career. Letters begin in December of 1922 and end in April of 1924. Herbert died on 1924 May 26. It appears unlikely that Miss Duval made her debut as part of Herbert's entourage.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01060 aVictor Herbert Letters to Marie Duval, 1922-1924 (MS Thr 1002). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDuval, Marie.10aHerbert, Victor,d1859-1924. 0aMusicalszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat1 aDuval, Marie,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aSchubertiade Music & Arts LLC, Gabriel Boyers;b270 Linwood Ave., Newton, MA 02460-1438;d2013 October 3;e2013MT-18;h$2800.00 (Richard C. Marcus Theatre Fund).5the1 aPurchase with the Richard C. Marcus Theatre Fund, 2013.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 100204321ctcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005000122245009000172300002800262351020100290545060100491545101101092520054002103520036902643555008703012524010603099546001603205544010803221600005003329600003603379650003903415655004603454650003503500655004503535700003603580541006503616561006503681506004203746506012303788852002403911000601727-420130930114842.0851206i18571867mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn6123648871 aMAHV85A16 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWillson, Elizabeth Conwell Smith,d1842-1864.10aElizabeth Conwell Smith Willson and Forceythe Willson papers,f1857-1867 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions written by Elizabeth Conwell Smith Willson; II. Compositions written by Forceythe Willson; III. Unidentified compositions; and IV. Photographs. aElizabeth Conwell Smith Willson was an American poet. She was born in Laurel, Indiana in 1842 and attended Depauw Academy in New Albany, Indiana. In 1863 Willson married the poet Byron Forceythe Willson (1837-1867), the brother of Kentucky governor Augustus E. Willson. After their marriage, the couple moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts so Forceythe could oversee the education of his brother Augustus while at Harvard College (AB 1869). The couple had a son "Little Dolfi", who died after birth on June 1, 1864. Elizabeth, always in poor health, died shortly later at age 22 on October 13, 1864. aByron Forceythe Willson was born in 1837 in Little Genessee, New York, and lived in Maysville and Covington, Kentucky and New Albany, Indiana. Forceythe attended Antioch College in Ohio, and Harvard University, but did not received degrees from either. He became an editorial writer for the Louisville Journal where he often defended the Union cause in the Civil War. He published some of his early poetry in the Louisville Journal, including his most famous work, The old Sergeant. This was reprinted privately in 1866 and then by Ticknor and Fields in Boston in 1867 as The old sergeant and other poems. Forceythe believed the living could communicate with the dead and that he was a medium through which this could be accomplished; many persons later observed him supposedly having conversations with the spirit of his dead wife. On February 2, 1867, at age 29, Forceythe died of a hemorrhage of the lung from tuberculosis. Both Elizabeth and Forceythe are buried in Conwell Cemetery in Laurel, Indiana. aWhen these papers were purchased in 1949, it was thought that they were only the papers of Elizabeth Conwell Smith Willson. However, upon more detailed examination during full cataloging in 2012, it has been discovered that the texts of some of the poems were published as the work of Forceythe Willson in his 1867 book The old sergeant and other poems. Consequently the repository has only assigned an author to an item, if it is signed by the maker, or if the title appeared in the 1867 volume. Further study by readers is suggested.8 aThe collection includes autograph manuscripts of Elizabeth Willson's poems and essays and manuscripts of Forceythe Willson's poems. Includes what appears to be the printers' copy for The Crown of Love, which is marked as "privately printed in 1867." Also includes a portrait carte-de-visite photograph each of Elizabeth Conwell Smith Willson and Forceythe Willson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02382 aElizabeth Conwell Smith Willson Papers, 1857-1867 (MS Am 1168). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aThe Bryon Forceythe Willson Collection is held by the Smith Library of Regional History (Oxford, Ohio).10aWillson, Elizabeth Conwell Smith,d1842-1864.10aWillson, Forceythe,d1837-1867. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aWillson, Forceythe,d1837-1867.0 cPurchase;aMary E. Combs;d1949;e49M-142;hWells fund.5hou1 aPurchased from Mary E. Combs with the Wells fund, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 116802351ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041002800108100004100136245005000177300002800227351005400255545043700309520046500746555008701211524010001298546008501398600004101483650004501524650002201569650002601591650001901617650001601636655001801652655003801670655002001708656002401728541008501752561007101837506004601908852002301954000601852-120121116122327.0860409i18781886mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn612366845 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengagerafrealatagre1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.10aGeorge Lyman Kittredge notebooks,f1878-1886. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically, in volume number order. aGeorge Lyman Kittredge (1860-1941; Harvard AB 1882) was a medievalist, author, editor, and professor of English literature at Harvard University (1888-1936). One of his areas of study was medieval superstitions, particularly witchcraft. He was also of great importance in American folklore studies, and was instrumental in encouraging American folk song and folklore collecting among all ethnic groups in all regions of the country. aIncludes four notebooks kept by Kittredge while an undergraduate at Harvard, and in the years following his graduation of 1882, prior to beginning his graduate studies at Harvard in 1888. Volumes contain: transcripts of poems by various poets, mostly English before 1700 and notes; tales, legends, myths, and romances reflecting various European customs and superstitions; and miscellaneous notes, ballad texts, and quotes. Volume covers are in poor condition.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02379 aGeorge Lyman Kittredge Notebooks, 1878-1886 (MS Am 1914). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe material transcribed is in German, French, Latin, Greek, as well as English.10aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941. 0aEnglish poetryyEarly modern, 1500-1700. 0aFolklorezEurope. 0aSuperstitionzEurope. 0aTaleszEurope. 0aWitchcraft. 7aBallads.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aMedievalists.2lcsh0 cGift;aBartlett J. Whiting from the Kittredge estate;d1975 May 1;e74M-58.5hou1 aGift of Bartlett J. Whiting, from the Kittredge estate, 1975.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 191401883ntc a22003017u 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100004100107245006500148300002800213520059300241555008700834524011500921546001601036600003501052651005201087700003801139700002301177700004301200700002001243700006401263541013101327561005701458506004201515852002401557007810545-520121005185425.0980610i17841902xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm83799934 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGraff, Robert D.,d1919-ecollector.10aRobert D. Graff collection concerning St. Croix,f1784-1902. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aDocuments concerning the history of trade in the Virgin Islands, especially St. Croix. Includes autograph manuscript letters from Isaac Gouverneur (1784) and from John Wilcocks (1790), both to Nicholas Low; from G. W. Harcourt to John Simon Harcourt (1810); from Eugene Murray-Aaron to William P. Frye (1902); and from Mrs. Wiliam McKinley to Eugene Murray-Aaron (1902). Also includes manuscript documents concerning trade and property in St. Croix, including an insurance policy, receipts for rum and sugar, import license; and a manuscript notebook listing fruits and fish in St. Croix.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02359 aRobert D. Graff Collection Concerning St. Croix, 1784-1902 (MS Am 2075). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMcKinley, William,d1843-1901. 0aUnited States Virgin IslandsxHistoryxSources.1 aMurray-Aaron, Eugene,d1852-1941.1 aGouverneur, Isaac.1 aLow, Nicholas,d1739-1826,erecipient.1 aWilcocks, John.1 aFrye, William P.q(William Pierce),d1831-1911,erecipient.0 cGift;aRobert D. Graff '41; Mrs. Graff;bHigh Time Farm, PO Box 217, Far Hills, New Jersey 07931;d1989 June 19;e88M-84.5hou1 aGift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Graff '41, 1989.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 207502439nkcaa2200385 u 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100003600087245010200123300002800225351005000253545017100303520034000474520045500814555008701269524016901356546001601525600002301541650002101564650002301585650001201608650001201620650001501632650001601647650002001663650002101683655002801704655003601732700004001768541012101808561005901929506004201988852002302030008542256-820110217140342.0010110i19101915mau||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn7029219371 aElliott, Walter S.,ecollector.10aWalter S. Elliott collection of hand-decorated album leaves of theatrical performers,f1910-1915. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by name of performer. aElliott (1868-1924) was a music hall and variety performer. He performed widely throughout the United States for 17 years with Frank B. Morton, as Morton and Elliott. a93 pages, in ink, watercolor and photographs. Items were made and collected by Walter Elliott. Each leaf contains a photograph of an American or European performer or manager, surrounded by hand-drawn illustrations (perhaps by Mrs. Walter S. Elliott), and an autograph manuscript inscription to Mr. and Mrs. Elliott from the performer.8 aSome pages reflect characteristics of the specialty act or the show in which the subject appeared, others reflect nationality or are primarily decorative. Each page is signed and typically includes inscriptions from performers who specialized in a variety of types of popular entertainment including: circus performers, strong men, ventriloquists, animal trainers, wild west acts, clowns, minstrel entertainers, singers, instrumentalists, and actors.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02122 aWalter S. Elliott Collection of Hand-decorated Album Leaves of Theatrical Performers (MS Thr 633). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aElliott, Walter S. 0aAnimal trainers. 0aCircus performers. 0aClowns. 0aActors. 0aMinstrels. 0aStrong men. 0aVentriloquists. 0aWild west shows. 7aDrawingsy20th century. 7aPhotographsy20th century.2aat1 aElliott, Walter S.,cMrs.,eartist.0 cPurchase;aLa Scala Autographs, Inc.;d2000 October 16;e2003MT-56;hEdward Sheldon Book fund; invoice # 19029.5the1 aPurchase with the Edward Sheldon Book fund, 2000.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 63301618ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245005500154300002800209351003800237545004800275520013200323555008700455555010800542524009600650600003200746650003900778650003900817650003900856650004700895655002400942655003800966655001601004655002301020656002201043541005801065561005301123506004201176852002601218009023918-020110114094704.0020624i19251927mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm802565521 aMAHV02-A42 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aWitter Bynner additional compositions,f1925-1927. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aBynner was an American poet and translator. aIncludes poems and translations of Chinese poetry, as well as a typescript, an autograph manuscript, and galley proofs of Cake.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-61. aWitter Bynner Additional Compositons (MS Am 1891.30). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aChinese poetryxTranslations into English. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aTranslators.2aat0 cGift;aWitter Bynner Foundation;d1976;e75M-61.5HOU1 aGift of the Witter Bynner Foundation, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1891.3001551ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002900123245004400152300002800196545006900224520015900293555008700452555010900539524009600648546001600744600002900760650004800789651005100837655002700888700002200915541009900937561004201036506013401078852002501212009071523-320120425094406.0021213s1568 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm840433941 aMAHV02-A293 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPakington, Thomas,cSir.10aSir Thoms Pakington manor rolls,f1568. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aPakington was an English knight and Lord of Aylesbury (d. 1751). aManuscript manor rolls in an unidentified hand concerning the land dispute between Sir Thomas Pakington and William Hawtrey of Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-190. aSir Thomas Pakington Manor Rolls, 1568 (MS Eng 1248). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPakington, Thomas,cSir. 0aManorial extentszEnglandzBuckinghamshire. 0aGreat BritainxHistoryy18th centuryxSources. 7aManorial records.2aat1 aHawtrey, William.0 cGift;aHamill and Barker;b230 N. Michigan Av., Chicago IL 60601;d1966 May 26;e65M-190.5HOU1 aGift of Hamill and Barker, 1966.5HOU0 aMicrofilm available in the Houghton Reading Room (reel 87 no. 8). Access to the original requires permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 124802382ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100006400123245010700187300002800294545022500322520036700547555008700914555010801001524013901109544001601248650004301264600004401307600005301351600003301404655002001437655004701457655002201504655002201526655001701548656002301565700004801588700004901636740004801685541012801733561005001861506003701911852002401948009087655-520090708191726.0030307s1874 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127638661 aMAHV03-A75 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLester, C. Edwardq(Charles Edward),d1815-1890,ecompiler.10aCharles Edward Lester papers concerning Life and public services of Charles Sumner,f1874 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aSumner was a United States senator from Massachusetts (1851-1874), noted abolitionist, and graduate of Harvard Law School (1833); Lester was his biographer; Edwin Hubbell Chapin was a minister in the Universalist Church. aIncludes a scrapbook compiled by Lester with revised proof sheets, draft fragments, and a history of his Life and services of Charles Sumner (1874), clippings and memorabilia of Sumner, and a letter to Lester from Edwin Hubbell Chapin. There are also photographs, an engraved portrait, and clippings concerning Sumner, as well as two autograph letters by Sumner.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-52. aCharles Edward Lester Papers Concerning Life and Public Services of Charles Sumner (MS Am 2009). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aLegislatorszUnited StatesvBiography.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874xPortraits.10aLester, C. Edwardq(Charles Edward),d1815-1890.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 7aClippings.2aat 7aEngravings, Americany19th century.2gmgpc 7aMemorabilia.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aProofs.2aat 7aLegislators.2lcsh1 aChapin, E. H.q(Edwin Hubbell),d1814-1880.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,ecorrespondent.0 aLife and public services of Charles Sumner.0 cPurchase;aRoger Butterfield, Inc.;bWhite House, Hartwick, NY 13348;d1973;e79M-52;h$85.00 with the H.S. Howe fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the H.S. Howe fund, 1973.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 200902240ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006900159300002800228351003000256545007600286520022500362555008700587555016300674524016200837530006200999500017201061546001601233600003701249600006901286600006101355610004701416610005101463655001901514655002801533655001901561730005801580541006501638561005901703506004201762852003801804009132857-820130311135140.0020819i18821957mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807099581 aMAHV02-A62 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt addresses and articles (unbound),f1882-1957. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aIncludes drafts of addresses and other documents, notably from Roosevelt's terms in the New York State Legislative Assembly, 1881-1884, Dakota ranching years, 1883-1886, the Spanish-American War, 1898, and World War One.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-891. aTheodore Roosevelt Addresses and Articles (Unbound), 1882-1957 (MS Am 1541 (305)-(334)). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xHomes and hauntszNorth Dakota.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xViews on World War One.10aNew York (State).bLegislature.bAssembly.10aUnited States.bArmy.bVolunteer Cavalry, 1st. 7aArticles.2aat 7aDrafts (Documents)2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aTheodore Roosevelt Association;d1943;e43M-891.5hou1 aGift of the Theodore Roosevelt Association, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1541 (305)-(334)01811ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006100159300002800220545007600248520006100324530006200385555008700447555016700534524014500701500017200846524001601018600005801034655002001092730005801112541006501170541006001235561005601295506004201351852002901393561005101422009132866-720130311112201.0020618i18681906mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm824458961 aMAHV02-A36 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt childhood correspondence,f1868-1906. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aLetters to family members, written chiefly in childhood. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, *60M-222, *60M-223. aTheodore Roosevelt Childhood Correspondence, 1868-1906 (MS Am 1454.48). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xChildhood and youth. 7aJuvenilia.2aat0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cDeposit;aCorinne Roosevelt Robinson;d193-?;e60M-223.5hou0 cDeposit;aEthel Roosevelt Derby;d1933?;e60M-222.5hou1 aDeposited by Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, 193-?5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.481 aDeposited by Ethel Roosevelt Derby, 1933?5hou01506ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245006900155300002800224351004600252545008200298520012100380555008700501555010800588524011100696546001600807600003200823650003900855650003900894650003500933700002400968541008000992561004501072506003701117852002601154008966224-520110114091007.0020624i19481961mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127394331 aMAHV02-A43 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aWitter Bynner correspondence with Dorothy Chauvenet,f1948-1961. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aBynner was an American poet and translator. Chauvenet was Bynner's secretary. aChiefly letters from Witter Bynner to Dorothy Chauvenet. Also includes some correspondence of Chauvenet with others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-29. aWitter Bynner Correspondence with Dorothy Chauvenet (MS Am 1891.31). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aChauvenet, Dorothy.0 cGift;aDorothy M. Chauvenet;bChama, New Mexico 87520;d1976;e76M-29.5hou1 aGift of Dorothy M. Chauvenet, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1891.3101876ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245010100159300002800260351003900288545007600327520009100403530006200494555008700556555016200643524015600805500017200961546001601133600005801149700004701207730005801254541008701312561008001399506004201479852002901521009132860-820130311134206.0020801i18691902mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm830607161 aMAHV02-A56 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt additional childhood correspondence,f1869-1902 (inclusive)g1869-1877 (bulk) a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aLetters chiefly exchanged with Roosevelt's future wife Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000238 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-16. aTheodore Roosevelt Additional Childhood Correspondence, 1869-1902 (MS Am 1454.52). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xChildhood and youth.1 aRoosevelt, Edith Kermit Carow,d1861-1948.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cDeposit;aEdith Derby Williams and Sarah Alden Derby Gannett;d1986;e86M-16.5hou1 aDeposited by Edith Derby Williams and Sarah Alden Derby Gannett, 1986.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.5201892ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006000159300002800219351003000247545007900277520016900356530006200525555008700587555017100674524014400845500017200989546001601161600005801177655002001235700003901255730005801294541007201352561005901424506004201483852002901525009132867-520130311111600.0020618i18671909mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm818187511 aMAHV02-A35 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt letters to Dora Watkins,f1867-1909. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aDora Watkins was childhood nurse to American president Theodore Roosevelt. aLetters written chiefly from Roosevelt's childhood summer home in Barrytown, New York; with additional family letters and associated materials assembled by Watkins. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-97, *51M-98. aTheodore Roosevelt Letters to Dora Watkins, 1867-1909 (MS Am 1454.47). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see; Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xChildhood and youth. 7aJuvenilia.2aat1 aWatkins, Dora,d-1909,erecipient.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aTheodore Roosevelt Association;d1951;e51M-97; 51M-98.5hou1 aGift of the Theodore Roosevelt Association, 1951.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.4701331ntc a22002655a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087100002400112245004800136300002800184351003000212545020900242520021200451656002500663600002400688655002300712655001900735700003700754541010000791561003900891506011000930852002501040009223571-920131015114657.0031027i19571965mau ||||||eng|d0 aocn612789154 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aBalanchine, George.00kLettersbto Tanaquil Le Clercq,f1957-1965. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aGeorge Balanchine (1904-1983) was a Russian-born American choreographer. Tanaquil Le Clercq (1929-2000) was a principal dancer at The New York City Ballet, and was married to Balanchine from 1952 to 1969. aPersonal letters from Balanchine to his wife mostly written while he was away on tour in the United States and abroad. Some letters contain drawings of cats and mice, based on their nicknames for each other. 7aChoreographers.2aat10aBalanchine, George. 7aLove letters.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat1 aLe Clercq, Tanaquil,erecipient.0 cGift;aBarbara Horgan;bGeorge Balanchine Trust, New York, NY;dOct. 2002;e2003MT-198(b).5the1 aGift of Barbara Horgan, 2002.5the1 aCollection restricted by donor. Please consult Harvard Theatre Collection for information on access.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 411.101797ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002300099041000800122100004200130245005800172300002800230351004600258545013200304546002700436520025000463524013600713555008700849555008600936600003001022600003401052610002001086650002101106656002501127700003401152700004101186541013701227561006001364852002301424009390062-720071114152733.0040616i19311986mau ||||i|fre|d0 aocm79489759 aMHAT06B0 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm0 afre1 aLifar, Serge,d1905-1986,erecipient.00kLettersbfrom Igor Markevitch and others,f1931-1986. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aSerge Lifar (1905-1986) was a French dancer and choreographer. Igor Markevitch (1912-1983) was a French composer and conductor. aLetters are in French. aLetters to Serge Lifar from Igor Markevitch concerning working with Lifar on various ballets, reporting on the scores, and later recalling his memories of Ballets Russes. Also includes letters from Markevitch's son Dimitry Markevitch and others. aSerge Lifar Letters from Igor Markevitch and Others (MS Thr 489). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017948 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room.10aLifar, Serge,d1905-1986.10aMarkevitch, Igor,d1912-1983.20aBallets russes. 0aBalletsvScores. 7aChoreographers.2aat1 aMarkevitch, Igor,d1912-1983.1 aMarkevitch, Dimitry,ecorrespondent. cPurchase;aSotheby's;bLondon, through Lisa Cox (music sale, 2004 May 21);d2004 June 7;e2003MT-336;h$1,209 (Rothschild fd.).5the aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 20045the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 48901837ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100006500123245007900188300002800267351003000295545008400325520015600409555008700565555010900652524012000761546001600881600005300897651002900950651005500979656002101034656002301055700005301078541015601131561014501287506004201432852002501474009258927-820100329100239.0031204i18321834mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127965411 aMAHV03A389 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPickens, F. W.q(Francis Wilkinson),d1805-1869,erecipient.10aFrancis Wilkinson Pickens letters from various correspondents,f1832-1834. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aPickens was a congressman from South Carolina and later governor of that state. aLetters and documents to congressman Pickens, all concerning militia affairs in South Carolina. The bulk is from South Carolina governor, Robert Hayne.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-105. aFrancis Wilkinson Pickens Letters From Various Correspondents (MS Am 1621.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPickens, F. W.q(Francis Wilkinson),d1805-1869. 0aSouth CarolinaxMilitia. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1815-1861. 7aGovernors.2lcsh 7aLegislators.2lcsh1 aHayne, Robert Young,d1791-1839,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aEstate of Senator George Frisbie Hoar presented by Mrs. Frances Foster, courtesy of Dr. Clifford K. Shipton (HU Archives);d1961;e60M-105.5hou1 aManuscripts from the estate of Senator George Frisbie Hoar presented by Mrs. Frances Foster, courtesy of Dr. Clifford K. Shipton, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1621.101999ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004000110245004600150300002800196351011000224545025500334520027500589524011300864555008700977555008601064600003701150600004001187600004001227610005001267650003201317655001501349700005301364700005601417541011701473561006001590852002301650009491495-820100213110750.0041029i19581980mau ||||||eng|d0 aocn612840092 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm1 aWeissberger, L. Arnold,d1907-1981.10aL. Arnold Weissberger papers,f1958-1980. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Papers concerning Alexandra Danilova; II. Papers concerning Alicia Markova. aL. Arnold Weissberger was an American theatrical lawyer; he was attorney and agent for Danilova and Markova. Alexandra Danilova (1907-1997) was a Russian-American ballerina and teacher. Alicia Markova (1910-2004) was an English ballerina and teacher. aPapers of attorney L. Arnold Weissberger concerning Alexandra Danilova and Alicia Markova. Includes letters to him from both ballerinas and their contracts with various institutions. Documents especially the two dancers' work for the Metropolitan Opera (New York, N.Y.). aL. Arnold Weissberger Papers (MS Thr 488). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017998 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room.10aDanilova, Alexandra,d1907-1997.10aMarkova, Alicia,cDame,d1910-2004.10aWeissberger, L. Arnold,d1907-1981.20aMetropolitan Opera (New York, N.Y.).bBallet. 0aBallet dancersxEmployment. 0aContracts.1 aDanilova, Alexandra,d1907-1997,ecorrespondent.1 aMarkova, Alicia,cDame,d1910-2004,ecorrespondent.0 aGolden Legend, Inc.;cPurchase;bBeverly Hills, CA;d2004 October 21;e2004MT-58;h$3,500 (Rothschild fd.).5the1 aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 20045the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 48801867ckcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002300104100003100127245004200158300002800200351004600228545007600274520014900350555008700499555009900586524012000685546001600805600003100821600004900852600004900901600004200950600006600992650005001058650004501108655002201153541020801175561005701383506004201440852002301482009545465-920131126124333.0050512q19431952mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm794646241 aMHAT05-F10011 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBeaton, Cecil,d1904-1980.10aCecil Beaton photographs,f1943-1952. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of play. aBeaton (1904-1980) was a British photographer famous for his portraits. aSilver prints of scenes from This happy breed, Present laughter, and Quadrille by Noel Coward and from The second Mrs. Tanquery by A. W. Pinero.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015778 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under 2003MT-134. aCecil Beaton Photographs, 1943-1952 (MS Thr 456). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBeaton, Cecil,d1904-1980.10aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973.tThis happy breed.10aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973.tPresent laughter.10aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973.tQuadrille.10aPinero, Arthur Wing,cSir,d1855-1934.tSecond Mrs. Tanquery. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and sceneryzEngland. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch, purchased through Christopher Wood at Sotheby's Belgravia, London, 12 Mar. 1982, lot 498. £ 466. (Converted at £ = $1.7765 to $827.85);d1983 December 21;e2003MT-134.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch (A.B. 1955), 1983.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 45601527ckcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002500104100001600129245007100145300002800216351004800244520021200292555008700504555010000591524013600691600001600827610003800843610002700881610002400908650005400932655004400986655004701030541004501077561006601122852002501188009618742-520050503095830.0050503i18641873mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm793923381 aMHAT05-F10005 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aBoycott, A.00kDrawingsbof interiors of London theaters,f1864-1873 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of theater. aDrawings in pencil, ink, and watercolor wash of the interiors of nineteenth-century London theaters, including the Adelphi Theatre, Covent Garden Theatre, and Drury Lane Theater, among others, to A. Boycott.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-132. aA. Boycott Drawings of Interiors of London Theaters (MS Thr 434). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBoycott, A.20aAdelphi Theatre (London, England)20aCovent Garden Theatre.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 0aTheaterszEnglandzLondonxHistoryy19th century. 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc cPurchase;e2003MT-132;hChase fund.5the aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest fund, 1941.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 43404008ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245003600138300002800174351012900202545115800331520124301489555008702732524008702819546001602906600003002922610004302952610003902995651007103034650003103105610005603136651003203192655002803224655001603252655002603268655001903294655003903313710005603352541008503408561005103493506004203544852002403586009875111-520130327072712.0060222i18631869mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612801248 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aStone, Henry,d1830-1896.10aHenry Stone papers,f1863-1869. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence, 1866-1867; II. Documents, 1863-1869; and III. Miscellany, 1866-1867. aHenry Stone (1830-1896) received an AB from Bowdoin College in 1852 and became employed at the State of Maine, a Portland newspaper. In 1857 he moved to New York City and worked for the American Railway Journal and the New York Evening Post. In 1861 he moved to Wisconsin, and shortly after was commissioned 2nd lieutenant in the 1st Wisconsin Volunteers. In April 1863 he was appointed assistant adjutant general in the United States Volunteers, with a rank of captain, and was assigned to duty in Washington D.C. In February of 1864, he was placed on the staff of General George H. Thomas and took part in all the battles of the Atlanta campaign, as well as that at Nashville. In January 1865, he received a commission as lieutenant colonel of the 100th Regiment of the United States Colored Infantry. At the end of the war Stone settled in Nashville, Tennessee and became a member of the Radical Republican Party, known as "Radicals." In August of 1866, Stone was appointed Superintending Commissioner of the Nashville Tennessee Metropolitan Police. He held this position until November of 1869. [See finding aid for additional biographical details]. aThe widely varied materials in this collection all pertain to Henry Stone's involvement in the Reconstruction period in Nashville, Tennessee. The Correspondence series (1866-1867) is primarily letters to Henry Stone concerning military matters, police concerns, and Stone's investment problems. The Documents series (1863-1869) is a varied group of materials including printed and manuscript items: miscellaneous discharge documents from the United States Army in which Colonel Henry Stone was somehow involved; special orders; abstract of articles received from citizens in the field; application for bounty money; a promissory note; and various other documents related to the military from the Union side of the American Civil War. There are additional materials including: manuscript receipts relating to a business venture (in which Henry Stone was involved) entitled Butler's Landing Oil & Mining Company; receipts issued by the State Central Committee of the Repulbican Pary of Tennessee, for funds for campaigns expended by Henry Stone, treasurer; and draft payroll records for the Metropolitan Police, District of Tennessee from 1867 October- 1869 November. Also includes printed menus for events in Nashville Tennesee, 1866-1867.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02409 aHenry Stone Papers, 1863-1869 (MS Am 800.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aStone, Henry,d1830-1896.20aButler's Landing Oil & Mining Company.20aRepublican Party (Tenn.)xHistory. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 0aReconstructionzTennessee.10aNashville (Tenn.).bMetropolitan Police Department. 0aNashville (Tenn.)xHistory. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aMenus.2aat 7aPayroll records.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aMunicipal government records.2aat10aNashville (Tenn.).bMetropolitan Police Department.0 cGift;aMrs. Charles F. Batchelder;d1930 November 18;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Charles F. Batchelder, 1930.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.701066ntc a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245004500138300002800183500003100211520010500242524009700347600003000444600001700474650003500491651003000526655005500556655005500611541006700666561004200733852002500775009875414-920130910122530.0060222i17691855mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612801332 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBall, Josiah,d1742-1835?10aJosiah Ball legal documents,f1769-1855. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aLegal documents, chiefly deeds of Josiah Ball and his family, for lands in and around Milford, Mass. aJosiah Ball Legal Documents, 1769-1855 (MS Am 800.11). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBall, Josiah,d1742-1835?30aBall family. 0aDeedszMassachusettszMilford. 0aMilford (Mass.)xHistory. 7aLegal documentszUnited Statesy18th century.2aat 7aLegal documentszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cGift;aCharles H. Taylor;d27 Mar. 1928;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor, 1928.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.1102627ntc a2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245008000141300002800221545016800249520022700417520053900644520023201183524005301415600003201468600004001500610004701540610003601587650003901623650003101662700005601693700007201749700005201821700006501873740002501938541005101963561005102014506004202065506012302107852002302230009896018-020080724134111.0060321s1921 mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612810067 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aElliott, Howard,d1860-1928.10aHoward Elliott correspondence with Charles Eliot,f1921 July 15-October 18. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aCharles Eliot was Harvard University president, 1869-1909. Howard Elliott graduated from Harvard in 1881 and was chairman of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. aTypescript copies of letters between Elliott and Eliot, with printed publications. Also includes a letter from Elliott to William C. Lane, Librarian of Harvard College, 1921 November 16, forwarding this packet of material. aLetters concern the alleged propagation of socialism and "radicalism" in American universities, with mention of events at Harvard University, and whether university authorities should hinder such movements. Howard Elliott attaches a number of documents with his letters, such as excerpts congratulating him on his "Harvard train, 1881" speech which calls for university authorities to control the radicalism among their faculty; a list of "certain Red and Pink organizations"; and anti-socialist publications. 2 copies of each letter. aContains copies of the following publications: Elliott's Harvard train, 1881 (1 copy); Henry Campbell Black's Socialism in American colleges (2 copies); and Woodworth Clum's Making socialists out of college students (2 copies). aMS Am 881. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aElliott, Howard, 1860-1928.10aEliot, Charles William,d1834-1926.20aHarvard UniversityxHistoryy20th century.20aHarvard UniversityxPresidents. 0aSocialismzUnited StatesvSources. 0aPropagandazUnited States.1 aEliot, Charles William,d1834-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aBlack, Henry Campbell,d1860-1927.tSocialism in American colleges.1 aLane, William Coolidge,d1859-1931,erecipient.1 aClum, Woodworth.tMaking socialists out of college students.02aHarvard train, 1881.0 cGift;aHoward Elliott;d1921 November 23.5hou1 aGift of Howard Elliott (A.B. 1881), 1921.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 88102903ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245014300151300002800294351015100322545056600473520044801039555008701487524019201574546001601766544016001782600002901942600005401971600005802025610003002083650005702113650001802170650001902188650006002207700004502267710004602312541006902358561003802427506004202465852002202507009893551-820130815090406.0060317i19091910mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612809250 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRand, Benjamin,d1856-1934,ecompiler.10aBenjamin Rand and Houghton Mifflin, Company correspondence concerning The classical moralists and The classical psychologists,f1909-1910. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence concerning The classical moralists; and II. Letters concerning The classical psychologists. aBenjamin Rand (1856-1934) graduated from Harvard with an AB in 1879, an AM in 1880, and a PhD in 1885. He taught philosophy as an instructor at Harvard and served as the first dedicated librarian of the Robbins Philosophical Library at Harvard from 1906 to 1934. Rand wrote and edited a number of works of philosophy, including the Locke/Clarke correspondence and the works of Shaftesbury. He was also involved with the creation of the B Class (Philosophy, Psychology, and Religion) of the Library of Congress Classification system, which is still in use today. aLetters from philosophy and psychology professors at several American universities to Houghton Mifflin, Company and to Benjamin Rand, concerning Rand's proposal for his The classical moralists (Boston, 1909) and The classical psychologists (Boston, 1912), both published by Houghton Mifflin, Company. The letters concerning The classical moralists have replies from Houghton Mifflin. Collection includes a letter from John Dewey, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02451 aBenjamin Rand and Houghton Mifflin, Company Correspondence Concerning The Classical Moralists and The Classical Psychologists, 1909-1910 (MS Am 876). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also: Unprocessed Benjamin Rand Papers at Houghton Library under bMS Am 1082. There are also additional Rand papers at the Harvard University Archives.10aDewey, John,d1859-1952.10aRand, Benjamin,d1856-1934.tClassical moralists.10aRand, Benjamin,d1856-1934.tClassical psychologists.20aHoughton Mifflin Company. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aPhilosophers. 0aPsychologists. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited Statesy20th century.1 aDewey, John,d1859-1952,ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton Mifflin Company,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aBenjamin Rand;d1921 March 11;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Benjamin Rand, 1921.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 87602100ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245009600146300002800242351010700270545035900377520018600736555008700922524014501009546001601154600004201170650002601212655002001238600003801258600003801296655002201334700003801356700005801394541006301452561004701515506004201562506012301604852002301727009862926-320121116104637.0020710i19131939mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612795163 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aOsborne, Thomas Mott,d1859-1926.10aThomas Mott Osborne and Paul Revere Frothingham letters to Victor Folke Nelson,f1913-1939. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged in the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions, photographs, and clippings. aOsborne (1859-1926; Harvard AB 1884) was an American prison reformer, author, and warden of Sing Sing Prison. Paul Revere Frothinham (1864-1926; Harvard AB 1886) was a Unitarian clergyman and author. Victor Folke Nelson (1898-1939) was an inmate at Charlestown State Prison (Boston) and Auburn prison (New York) and the author of a book on prison reform. aIncludes correspondence, clippings, photographs, and autograph manuscripts related to the relationship between Thomas Mott Osborne, Paul Revere Frothingham, and Victor Folke Nelson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02377 aThomas Mott Osborne and Paul Revere Frothingham Letters to Victor Folke Nelson, 1913-1939 (MS Am 219). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFrothingham, Paul Revere,d1864-1926. 0aPrisonersxAttitudes. 7aClippings.2aat10aNelson, Victor Folke,d1898-1939.10aOsborne, Thomas Mott,d1859-1926. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aNelson, Victor Folke,d1898-1939.1 aFrothingham, Paul Revere,d1864-1926,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;d1939;eno accession number;hJackson Fund.5hou1 aPurchase with the Jackson Fund, 1939.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 21901847ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099041001300120100005200133245004100185300002800226545009400254520022800348520026800576524009100844555008700935546003701022600005201059650003401111655004101145655003901186655002201225740002501247740002501272541009901297561003601396506004201432852002301474009961034-520130912082135.0060511i19231924mau|||||||||||||||||ger|d0 aocm85213497 aMAHV06B9 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 ageraeng1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aErik H. Erikson journal,f1923-1924. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aErik Erikson (1902-1994) was a German-born, American psychoanalyst, educator, and author. aAutograph manuscript notes made August 1923 through August 1924 while wandering in Europe as a young man. Fly leaf inscribed "Manuscript von Erik." Includes his thoughts on life and philosophy, and includes original poetry. aAlso with: typescript carbon volume (with autograph revisions), "Hoch steht auf tief: eine gedankenreihe. Erik Homburger," a reworking of the autograph journal text, including some transcription; a "Writer's forward" in English; and "Geplantes Vorwort" in German. aErik H. Erikson Journal, 1923-1924 (MS Am 2405). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01546 aMaterials in German and English.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994. 0aPsychologistszUnited States. 7aDiarieszGermanyy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszGermanyy20th century.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat0 aManuscript von Erik.0 aHoch steht auf tief.0 cGift;aMr. Kai Erikson;b53 Quarry Dock Rd, Branford, CT 06405;d2002 Oct. 18;e2002M-32.5hou1 aGift of Kai Erikson, 2002.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 240502199ntc a2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245003700138300002800175351005000203545045700253520048200710555008701192524008701279546001601366600003001382655003601412700005201448700004601500700005101546700004901597700003201646541008701678561004301765506004201808852002301850009964442-820130913102307.0060516i18711897mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612828227 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolmes, John,d1812-1899.10aJohn Holmes letters,f1871-1897. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of recipient. aJohn Holmes (1812-1899) was born in 1812 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the son of Reverend Abiel Holmes (pastor of the First Congregational Church of Cambridge) and Sarah Wendell Holmes. He received an AB from Harvard College in 1832 and, for a time, studied at Harvard Law School. He never married and lived with his mother in Cambridge. His brother was Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (1809-1894) who was an American physician, poet, and Harvard professor. aAll letters are autograph manuscript and signed by John Holmes; most, but not all, are written from Cambridge, Massachusetts; some letters include envelopes. Letters are chatty and recount news of family and friends. Recipients of letters include: Ann Storrow Higginson, Waldo Higginson, James Bradley Thayer, Charles Eliot Ware, and Mary Lee Ware. This collection also includes a humorous series of letters from Holmes to Miss Mary Lee Ware that are labeled the "Fish series".0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02456 aJohn Holmes Letters, 1871-1897 (MS Am 1014). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHolmes, John,d1812-1899. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2aat1 aHigginson, Ann Storrow,d1809-1892,erecipient.1 aHigginson, Waldo,d1814-1894,erecipient.1 aThayer, James Bradley,d1831-1902,erecipient.1 aWare, Charles Eliot,d1814-1887,erecipient.1 aWare, Mary Lee,erecipient.0 cGift;aMary Lee Ware;d1933 May 10 and 1934 February 3;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Mary Lee Ware, 1933-1934.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 101402259ntcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245005000140300002800190351003800218545088100256520016701137555008701304524008801391546001601479600003201495650004201527650003101569541013601600561013001736506004201866852002301908561003801931010022940-920130228075303.0060719i18391859mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612840644 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBuffum, Arnold,d1782-1859.10aArnold Buffum papers,f1839-1859 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aArnold Buffum (1782-1859) was a Rhode Island abolitionist. He began his career as a entrepreneur manufacturing and selling hats in Providence, Rhode Island and also patented some inventions concerning this trade. He married Rebecca Gould Buffum and they had seven children. Buffum was a Quaker, which greatly influenced his views on slavery. He joined with William Lloyd Garrison and others to establish the New England Anti-Slavery Society in 1832. He was the new organization's president and the first roving lecturer. By the late 1830s he broke with Garrison, and with James G. Birney founded the Liberty Party in 1840. Buffum was also an advocate of temperance, and his daughter, Elizabeth Buffum Chace, also went on to become a prominent abolitionist and a leader in the movements of women's rights and prison reform. [source: Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame website]. aIncludes autograph manuscript drafts of essays and lectures on temperance, slavery, and the Bible. Also includes autograph manuscript drafts of letters and notes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02407 aArnold Buffum Papers, 1839-1859 (MS Am 1069). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBuffum, Arnold,d1782-1859. 0aAntislavery movementszUnited States. 0aTemperancezUnited States.0 cTransfer;aHarvard Business School Library (originally a gift from Charles H. Taylor);d9 April 1931;erecat. from MS Am 5008.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor to Harvard Business School; transferred from the Harvard Business School Library to HCL, 1931.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 10691 aRecataloged from MS Am 5008.5hou02328ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003600108245006600144300002800210351004800238545050000286520059300786524010501379555008701484546003001571600003601601650003001637650003901667650004201706655003801748655004501786541007601831561004201907506004201949852002301991010168691-920100104084550.0061206i19081909mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612878607 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPerrow, Eber Carle,d1880-1968.10aEber Carle Perrow collection of Southern ballads,f1908-1909. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author or title. aEber Carle Perrow (1880-1968) received an BA from Trinity College (North Carolina) in 1903, an MA in 1905, and in 1908 received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in English Philology. His thesis at Harvard was: The last will and testament as a form of literature. Perrow was married to Bertha Perrow, was for a time an Assistant Professor at the University of Mississippi, and became a University of Louisville English professor. He was a lover of folk songs, and died in 1968 in Pickens, Georgia. aCollection consists primarily of texts of lyrics of Southern African-American ballad folk songs, collected by Perrow, some pages apparently signed and in the hand of the local persons who related the text, but most in hand of Harvard students who wrote compositions for English A in 1909. Manuscripts are often only fragments, written in multiple hands, some are typed transcripts of lyrics, and there is one sheet of manuscript music of a ballad. There is also a 1908 letter from an unidentified person at Louisiana State University written to Perrow concerning text of Southern ballads. aEber Carle Perrow Collection of Southern Ballads (MS Am 1576). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02050 aMaterials are in English.10aPerrow, Eber Carle,d1880-1968. 0aAfrican AmericansvMusic. 0aBallads, EnglishzSouthern States. 0aFolk songs, EnglishzSouthern States. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aSongszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aEber Carle Perrow;bTalking Rock, Georgia;d1958;e57M-247.5hou1 aGift of Eber Carle Perrow, 1958.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 157603935ntc a2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006100108300002800169500003100197520173400228500016201962524009902124600005102223600002002274600002002294610005102314610005102365610003502416610002502451650005302476650004302529650004002572650003302612650003802645650003802683651004802721651006102769651004002830651005502870651004002925651005502965700002003020700004403040700003303084700003903117700001903156700002203175710002503197710004303222541007803265561005003343852002403393010144442-720130327124343.0061103i18381917mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612870898 aMH-HeappmcMH-H00aMiscellaneous Western Americana manuscripts,f1838-1917. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aArticles of agreement between Thomas McShane & Co. and the Little Miami Railroad Company to adapt and prepare for the reception of railways part of the line owned by Little Miami Railroad; L. W. Wakeley's summary, dated 19 Apr. 1916, of the geographical development of the Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy Railroad in the territory between Lake Michigan and the Rocky Mountains, with reference to the character of its traffic, its influence and service as a transportation system within the territory, and a comparison of its gross earnings for the years 1854, 1901, and 1915; agreement, dated 3 Aug. 1849, among Capt. Lot Wheelwright, Henry Leland, and others for forming a company to obtain gold in California; George H. Gale's memoir, dated at Detroit, Mich., 1 Jan. 1903, concerning his birth in Vermont, traveling to Michigan in 1836, then to California in 1849, and his work as a miner during the gold rush; typescript transcription of William Richardson's diary of a trip from Boston to New Orleans, 17 Feb. 1815-11 Apr. 1815; typescript transcription of a letter from Mrs. William Hooper to "Edith," dated at Lincoln, Neb., 11 July 1917, concerning Charles Elliott Perkins and his connection to the First National Bank of Lincoln; a biographical sketch, dated 1908, of I. S. P. Weeks, chief engineer of the Burlington Railroad, for the lines west of the Missouri River; a transcript typescript of a letter to Ezekiel Whitman, of Portland, Me., on the Whitman family in america and economic conditions in the middle West, dated Rochester, Racine County, Wisc. Ter., Octr. 28, 1838, appended with a typescript genealogical chart showing A.H. Whitman's ancestry and his connnection with Martin Cole Whitman; and other material. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aMiscellaneous Western Americana Manuscripts (MS AmW 18). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPerkins, C. E.q(Charles Elliott),d1840-1907.10aWeeks, I. S. P.30aWhitman family.20aChicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company.20aFirst National Bank of Lincoln (Lincoln, Neb.)20aLittle Miami Railroad Company.20aThomas McShane & Co. 0aGold mines and miningzCaliforniay19th century. 0aGold minerszCaliforniay19th century. 0aRailroadsxDesign and construction. 0aRailroadsxFinancexHistory. 0aRailroadsxHistoryy19th century. 0aRailroadsxHistoryy20th century. 0aCaliforniaxGold discoveriesy19th century. 0aNew Orleans (La.)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aWest (U.S.)xHistoryy19th century. 0aWest (U.S.)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aMiddle WestxHistoryy19th century. 0aMiddle WestxDescription and travely19th century.1 aGale, George H.1 aHooper, William,cMrs.,ecorrespondent.1 aLeland, Henry,dactive 1849.1 aRichardson, William,dactive 1815.1 aWakeley, L. W.1 aWheelwright, Lot.2 aThomas McShane & Co.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aPerkins Memorial Collection;dvarious dates;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of the Perkins Memorial Collection.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 1803414ntc a2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001900108245006200127300002800189351003900217545080900256520051401065555008701579524011201666546001601778500016201794544014201956600001902098650002802117600002702145600002402172600001902196600003502215610005502250650006402305650005902369650004502428651004202473700005002515700004302565700004002608700004702648700003502695710004302730541007302773561003102846506004202877852002502919010154395-620130327123957.0061117i18421847mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612874609 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBeaman, Jenks.10aJenks Beaman correspondence and other papers,f1842-1847. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aJenks Beaman (1821-1848) was born in Poultney, Vermont, the son of Joel Beaman (1782-1846) and Lydia Brown Beaman (1790-1867). His father Joel ran a hotel and a general store. Jenks was a cadet at West Point from July 1838 to July 1842 when he graduated and was promoted in the U. S. Army as a Bvt. Second Lieutenant with the 8th Infantry Regiment. In December of 1842 he served as a Second Lieutenant with the U. S. 4th Infantry Regiment at Ft. Shannon Florida and later moved to Jefferson Barracks, Missouri (1843-1844). From 1844-1845 he served frontier duty at Natchitoches, Louisiana (Camp Salubrity) and from 1845-1846 was part of the military occupation of Texas. He participated in the War with Mexico from 1846-1848. On his return from the Mexican War, he died and was buried in Tampico, Mexico. aPrimarily includes correspondence with family, chiefly with Beaman's brothers John Brown Beaman and George Hudson Beaman, and with West Point and other military friends such as Benjamin Alvord, Henry Prince, and Sidney Smith. Topics concern the U.S. Army, military life, the Mexican War, and personal matters. Also contains a clipping concerning the death of one of Beaman's fellow officers and a manuscript record of the 1843 court martial case of Lieutenant Don Carlos Buell at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02417 aJenks Beaman Correspondence and Other Papers, 1842-1847 (MS AmW 102). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aSee also papers relating to Jenks' father: Joel Beaman and Son Collection. Baker Library Historical Collections, Harvard Business School.10aBeaman, Jenks. 0aMexican War, 1846-1848.10aBeaman, George Hudson.10aBeaman, John Brown.30aBeaman family.10aBuell, Don Carlos,d1818-1898.10aUnited States.bArmyxMilitary lifey19th century. 0aCourts-martial and courts of inquiryzUnited StatesxCases. 0aMexican War, 1846-1848vPersonal narratives, American. 0aSoldierszUnited StatesvCorrespondence. 0aJefferson Barracks (Saint Louis, Mo.)1 aAlvord, Benjamin,d1813-1884,ecorrespondent.1 aBeaman, George Hudson,ecorrespondent.1 aBeaman, John Brown,ecorrespondent.1 aPrince, Henry,d1811-1892,ecorrespondent.1 aSmith, Sidney,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aanonymous donor;d1916 October 30;eno accession number.5hou1 aAnonymous gift, 1916.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 10204424ntc a2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106041001300127100005000140245003600190300002800226351008200254545144900336520061401785555008702399524008502486546005702571500016202628544005802790544011402848544010702962600005003069650003603119655004803155650002603203650002103229655003803250655001503288655001603303655002203319710004303341700005703384700007003441700007003511700004703581710007603628710004303704541006903747561003603816506004203852852002403894010148847-520130502074555.0knnn| ||||| |||cn061109i18721892mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612872511 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aForce, M. F.q(Manning Ferguson),d1824-1899.10aM. F. Force papers,f1875-1892. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other papers. aManning Ferguson Force (1824-1899) was born in Washington D. C. in 1824, the 4th of 10 children, son of Peter Force (the city's mayor, editor, and collector of rare materials) and Hannah Evans Force. He received an AB from Harvard College in 1845 and an L.LB. in 1848 from Harvard Law School. He moved to Cincinnati, Ohio to begin his law practice with the law partnership of Walker, Kebler & Force. While a young lawyer in Cincinnati, Force became one of the closest friends of future president, Rutherford B. Hayes. Both men were members of the Literary Club of Cincinnati. Manning Force's wife was Frances Dabney Horton Force and they had one child, Horton Caumont Force (b. 1878; AB Harvard 1901). During the Civil War, Force became a major of the 20th Ohio Volunteer Infantry serving with General James B. McPherson's 17th Corps and rose to the rank of Brevet Major-General by the end of the war. He later received the Medal of Honor for his service. After the war he returned to Cincinnati to continue the practice of law and later became a justice of the Superior Court of Cincinnati and wrote several law books. He also served as a professor at the Cincinnati law School. Force also had a passionate interest in historical matters, writing on subjects such as the Indian mound builders of Ohio. Later in life he was appointed as commandant of the Ohio Soldiers' Home in Sandusky, Ohio, where, many years later, he died at the age of 74. aCollection includes: Force's autograph manuscript notes (and some by his brother William Quereau Force (1820-1880)); prints of Native American drawings issued by the Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences; manuscript maps of early Illinois; and M. F. Force's correspondence with various scholars at the Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology such as Cyrus Thomas, Frank Hamilton Cushing, and Albert Samuel Gatschet, and letters with his brother William Quereau Force, and others. Concerns Native Americans, particularly the Ohio Indians such as the Shawnee, exploration, and Native American burial mounds.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02420 aM. F. Force Papers, 1875-1892 (MS AmW 77). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English, some in French. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aSee also: M. F. Force Additional Papers (MS Am 1862). aSee also the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center for additional papers of Manning Ferguson Force (GA-75). aSee also the Special Collections of the University of Washington for additional papers of M. F. Force.10aForce, M. F.q(Manning Ferguson),d1824-1899. 0aIndians of North AmericazOhio. 7aPrints2gmgpczUnited Statesy19th century. 0aMound-builderszOhio. 0aShawnee Indians. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aMaps.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPictographs.2aat2 aDavenport Academy of Natural Sciences.1 aCushing, Frank Hamilton,d1857-1900,ecorrespondent.1 aForce, William Q.q(William Quereau),d1820-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aGatschet, Albert S.q(Albert Samuel),d1832-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aThomas, Cyrus,d1825-1910,ecorrespondent.2 aSmithsonian Institution.bBureau of American Ethnology,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aH. H. Force;d1921 February 1;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of H. H. Force, 1921.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 7703682ntc a2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245009900131300002800230351005600258545114000314520072801454555008702182524014802269546001602417500016202433600002302595650005402618610003802672650006102710650002302771650003002794650002502824650002302849655003802872710005702910710005802967710005703025710004303082541006003125561002103185506004203206852002403248010148082-220130327124022.0061108i19131916vp |||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612872169 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aStaples, Harold E.10aHarold E. Staples papers concerning U. S. and Canadian emigration and immigration,f1913-1916. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of author or title. aHarold Elmer Staples was born June 9, 1892 in Brattleboro, Vermont. He was awarded the A.B. in 1914 and the LL.B. in 1917, both from Harvard. While an undergraduate in Professor Frederick J. Turner's course entitled "History of the West," he began a study of the migration of Americans to Canada and the reverse migration from Canada to the United States. In 1915 he received a small grant to allow continuation of the study. During this time, he visited state immigration bureaus in Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, and Wisconsin as well as Dominion and Provincial and Canadian Pacific Railway immigration offices in Canada. After receiving his law degree, Staples moved to Providence, Rhode Island where he joined the law firm of Tillinghast, Collins, and Tanner. In 1925 he was appointed Fourth Assistant Attorney General of the State of Rhode Island. He later returned to Tillinghast, Collins, and Tanner, becoming a partner in 1926. He was active in many civic organizations, including the American Council for Nationalities Service where he was a director. The Council was interested in all aspects of immigration and resettlement. aIncludes typescript letters to Harold E. Staples responding to his inquiries concerning emigration and immigration. Letters are from the U.S. Dept. of Labor, the Minnesota State Board of Immigration, Canada Dept. of the Interior, and the Alberta Dept. of Agriculture. The collection also contains papers assembled by Staples for his research, including typescript tables and charts, autograph manuscript notes, clippings, and other papers. Papers chiefly concern emigration and immigration between the U.S. and Canada, 1890-1915; and the acquisition of farm land by Americans in Canada and by Canadians in the United States, notably in Alberta and Minnesota; also contains a history of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02416 aHarold E. Staples Papers Concerning U. S. and Canadian Emigration and Immigration, 1913-1916 (MS AmW 72). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History.10aStaples, Harold E. 0aEmigration and immigrationzCanaday20th century.20aCanadian Pacific Railway Company. 0aEmigration and immigrationzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aAmericanszCanada. 0aCanadianszUnited States. 0aLand usezMinnesota. 0aLand usezAlberta. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aCanada.bDepartment of the Interior,ecorrespondent.2 aMinnesota State Board of Immigration,ecorrespondent.1 aUnited States.bDepartment of Labor,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aGratis;d1917 July 5;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift, 1917.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 7202104ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041002300108100003000131245004700161300002800208351003000236545035500266520035900621555008700980524008601067546005901153600003001212610003801242655005201280700003701332740002401369541012601393561007001519506004201589506012301631852002401754011318002-020071126112942.0020710i19071929mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612800460 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengagerafreaita1 aHowe, Lucien,d1848-1928.10aLucien Howe additional papers,f1907-1929. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aHowe, an ophthalmologist, was founder of the Buffalo Eye and Ear Infirmary (1876), author of the New York State Howe Law that first made prophylaxis of the eyes of the newborn compulsory, author of a standard text on ocular muscles, and donor-in-chief and first director of the Howe Laboratory of Ophthalmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. aIncludes transcript and printed reviews of Lucien Howe's 1907 book, Muscles of the eye. Also includes obituaries on Howe, clippings on his 1926 donation to found the Howe Laboratory of Ophthalmology at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, biographical information on Howe, and a 1929 letter and autograph notes from his wife, Elizabeth Mehaffey Howe.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01896 aLucien Howe Additional Papers (MS Am 2564). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English, German, Italian, and French.10aHowe, Lucien,d1848-1928.20aHowe Laboratory of Ophthalmology. 7aBook reviewszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aHowe, Elizabeth Mehaffey,d1860-02aMuscles of the eye.0 cDeposit;aLucien Howe Library of Ophthalmology of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary;bBoston;d1940;e51M-307.5hou1 aDeposited by the Lucien Howe Library of Ophthalmology, 1940.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 256401536ntcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245008300142300002800225545009600253520024000349520013200589524005400721546003000775650002300805650002100828700003900849700004200888541008700930561004701017506004201064506011601106852002401222011318305-420071217194254.0020710i19221934mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612800479 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aJohnson, Lewis Jerome,d1867-10aSecurity for our social order: an engineer's report :kmanuscript,f1922-1934. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aJohnson (1867-1952) graduated from Harvard in 1888 and taught civil engineering at Harvard. aTypescript carbon with autograph manuscript revisions and annotations in the hand of Jerome Allen Johnson (LJJ's son). Unsigned by author. Marked and signed by JAJ: "One copy in my hands! - Jerome A. Johnson Feb. 4 1952 Danby Vermont." aManuscript is marked: "Unpublished." Includes note from Keyes D. Metcalf of 1952 February 4 remarking on receipt of manuscript. aMS Am 2565. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aInternal security. 0aSocial conflict.1 aMetcalf, Keyes DeWitt,d1889-1983.1 aJohnson, Jerome Allen,d1896-edonor.0 cDeposit;aMr. Jerome A. Johnson;bDanby, Vermont;d1952 February 4;e51M-287.5hou1 aDeposited by Jerome A. Johnson, 1952.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis material is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 256502472ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002000110245003800130300002800168351010400196545106700300520018101367555008701548524008501635546001601720600002001736655001601756656002201772700004801794700003501842541004901877561003901926506004601965506012302011852002402134012113016-920101027155201.0020710i19601974mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn671537639 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCampton, David.10aDavid Campton papers,f1960-1974. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other materials. aDavid Campton (1924-2006) was a prolific British dramatist inspired by the Theatre of the Absurd. Campton authored works for adult, youth and children’s theatre as well as radio and television productions. In addition to one-act plays and sketches, Campton penned full length plays, literary adaptations, and the text, Becoming a Playwright. Born in Leicester, England to parents David and Emily Campton on June 5, 1929, Campton first received recognition as a playwright in 1950 when his play Going Home was performed by an amateur theatre company. In 1955, Campton met producer Stephen Joseph who would go on to produce Dragons are Dangerous, considered Campton’s break-through work. One of the first British playwrights to embrace the style known as the Theatre of the Absurd, Campton received numerous honors throughout his career, including the British Arts Council Bursary for Playwriting in 1957 and the British Theatre Association Meyer-Whitworth Prize for Everybody’s Friend (1975), After Midnight, Before Dawn (1978), and Mrs. Meadowsweet (1985). aIncludes 2 letters to Kristin Morrison from Campton and 1 letter to Morrison from Stephen Joseph, 2 printed plays and 2 bound typescripts by Campton, and clippings and tickets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02110 aDavid Campton Papers (MS Thr 618). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library. aIn English.10aCampton, David. 7aPlays.2aat 7aPlaywrights.2aat1 aJoseph, Stephen, 1921-1967,ecorrespondent.1 aMorrison, Kristin,erecipient.0 cGift;aDavid Campton;d2001;e2003MT-6.5the1 aGift of David Campton?, 2001.5the1 aCollection is open for research use.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 61801710nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003200110245007600142300002800218351004000246545024000286520025900526524014800785555008700933544007701020546001501097600003201112655002601144655002201170656001801192740001501210541008001225561002601305506004201331852002301373012113758-920130116142142.0020710s1920 mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn682598992 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aPogédaieff, Georges A. de.10aGeorges A. de Pogédaieff costume and set designs for King Lear,f1920. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged in accession number order. aGeorges A. de Pogédaieff (Georgii Anatolievich Pozhedaev) (1899-1971) was a Russian artist, who was primarily known for his work in costume and stage design, still life, and landscape painting. He was also an illustrator and engraver. a26 graphite, watercolor and gouache, heightened with gold and silver drawings on paper. All are signed: G.P. All are costume or set designs for William Shakespeare's play King Lear. Original album cover and list of costume designs (in French) are at end. aGeorges A. de Pogédaieff Costume and Set Designs for King Lear (MS Thr 634). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02125 aEach drawing is fully cataloged and digitized in Harvard's VIA database. aIn French.10aPogédaieff, Georges A. de. 7aCostume designs.2aat 7aScenography.2aat 7aArtists.2aat02aKing Lear.0 cPurchase;aMarina Henderson;bLondon, England;d2001 July;e2003MT-42.5the1 aPurchased, 2001.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 63401997nkcaa22003495u 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110005300108245011200161300002800273351005700301520035500358555008700713524015000800546001600950600004200966600004401008600004301052600003801095600004301133600004401176600004001220610005301260650002501313655003601338541010101374561009901475506004601574852002701620004605594-020110930095901.0940811i19591994mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn612558856 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library).10aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library) collection of photographs of poets,f1959-1994 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of subject of image. aPhotographs of poets and others associated with poetry. Many are from poetry readings associated with Harvard University, some readings were for the Woodberry Poetry Room of the Harvard College Library. Includes photographs of: Conrad Aiken, Robert Creeley, Anthony Hecht, Maxine Kumin, Robert Lowell, Marianne Moore, Lloyd Schwartz, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02205 aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library) Collection of Photographs of Poets, 1959-1994 (MS Am 2753). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973vPortraits.10aCreeley, Robert,d1926-2005vPortraits.10aHecht, Anthony,d1923-2004vPortraits.10aKumin, Maxine,d1925-vPortraits.10aLowell, Robert,d1917-1977vPortraits.10aMoore, Marianne,d1887-1972vPortraits.10aSchwartz, Lloyd,d1941-vPortraits.20aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library). 0aPoetsy20th century. 7aPhotographsy20th century.2aat0 cTransfer;aWoodberry Poetry Room;d2011 September;erecataloged from PS3525.O5616 Z5 1962x.5hou1 aTransferred from the Woodberry Poetry Room, 2011; recataloged from PS3525.O5616 Z5 1962x.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBLUEBhMS Am 275301835ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002300099100003200122245005100154300002800205351003000233545020700263520027000470524013100740555008700871555009400958600003201052600004501084600004001129610004101169610002601210650002801236700004001264541012701304561005501431852002301486009248950-820060228112921.0031203i19471973mau ||||i|eng|d0 aocm79489764 aMHAT06B1 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm1 aBerman, Eugene,d1899-1972.00kLettersbto L. Arnold Weissberger,f1947-1973. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aEugene Berman (1899-1972) was a Russian-born American artist, theatre and opera designer. L. Arnold Weissberger (1907-1981) was an American theatrical lawyer; he was Eugene Berman's friend and attorney. aLetters to Berman's attorney concerning business matters: negotiations with American art galleries; arrangements of exhibitions and sales; design projects for Metropolitan Opera (New York, N.Y.) and New York City Ballet; and problems with social security and taxes. aEugene Berman Letters to L. Arnold Weissberger (MS Thr 487). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017988 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room.10aBerman, Eugene,d1899-1972.10aBerman, Eugene,d1899-1972vExhibitions.10aWeissberger, L. Arnold,d1907-1981.20aMetropolitan Opera (New York, N.Y.).20aNew York City Ballet. 0aArtistszUnited States.1 aWeissberger, L. Arnold,d1907-1981. cPurchase;aLion Heart Autographs, Inc.;bNew York, NY;d2003 November 12;e2003MT-160(b);h$10,200 (F. E. Chase fd.).5the aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase fund, 2003.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 48702300ntc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004100108245006200149300002800211351005400239545056000293520016200853555008701015524010401102546001601206600004101222600001501263600003401278600002701312600003101339600002201370600001901392600001901411600001701430700003801447700004601485700003901531700004701570700004601617700003101663541007801694561004101772506004201813852002301855010164860-X20131017104633.0061130i18021824vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612877908 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWard, Julia Rush Cutler,d1796-1824.10aJulia Rush Cutler Ward family correspondence,f1802-1824. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aJulia Rush Cutler, of Boston, an author of occasional poems, married Samuel Ward III (1786-1839), a New York City banker and philanthropist, in 1812. They had seven children, including lobbyist Samuel Cutler "Sam" Ward and poet Julia Ward Howe. Julia's mother was Sarah Mitchell Herne Cutler (Mrs. Benjamin Clarke Cutler) ; her sisters were Eliza Cutler Francis (Mrs. John W. Francis) and Louisa Charlotte Cutler McAllister (Mrs. Matthew Hall McAllister); her brother-in-law was Richard Ward; Thomas Mitchell was a cousin; and Miss Anne Clay was a friend. aPrimarily autograph manuscript letters from Julia Rush Cutler Ward to family and friends, as well as some additional Cutler family manuscript correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02469 aJulia Rush Cutler Ward Family Papers, 1802-1824 (MS Am 1869). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWard, Julia Rush Cutler,d1796-1824.10aClay, Ann.10aCutler, Sarah Mitchell Herne.10aFrancis, Eliza Cutler.10aMcAllister, Louisa Cutler.10aMitchell, Thomas.10aWard, Richard.30aCutler family.30aWard family.1 aMitchell, Thomas,ecorrespondent.1 aCutler, Sarah Mitchell Herne,erecipient.1 aFrancis, Eliza Cutler,erecipient.1 aMcAllister, Louisa Cutler,ecorrespondent.1 aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839,ecorrespondent.1 aWard, Richard,erecipient.0 cGift;aRosalind Richards;bGardiner, Maine;ddate unknown;e68M-174.5hou1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 186901329ctcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002900091245009500120300002700215351001700242500019600259500003900455500004600494546001600540600001900556600002900575600005500604600003500659600003700694600004300731600004100774506002300815541017600838852002501014012336758-120100513123920.0100503i19722007mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDonaldson, Scott,d1928-10aScott Donaldson correspondence concerning the subjects of his biographies,fca. 1972-2007. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aCorrespondence conducted in the course of writing biographies of Winfield Townley Scott, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Cheever, Archibald MacLeish, and Edwin Arlington Robinson. aSee internal file for more detail. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aCheever, John.10aDonaldson, Scott,d1928-10aFitzgerald, F. Scottq(Francis Scott),d1896-1940.10aHemingway, Ernest,d1899-1961.10aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.10aScott, Winfield Townley,d1910-1968.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aRalph B. Sipper;bTen West Micheltorena St., Santa Barbara, CA 93101;d2010 May 3, June 4;e2009M-104;h$22500.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 268002217nkcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100001900093245006500112300002800177351017100205545028000376520066700656524013401323555008701457546001601544600005001560600001901610610002601629655002601655700005001681710002601731541006801757561002501825506004201850852002301892012508677-620100914091046.0020710uuuuuuuuumau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aKarl, Charles.10aCharles Karl costume designs for Romeo and Juliet,fundated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Design style 1 (A. Designs by character name, B. Designs by sketch number, C. Designs with no labels); and II. Design style 2. aCharles Karl was the in-house costume designer from 1885 to 1934 for L. & H. Nathan Ltd. (or Nathan's), one of the big costume houses of London, England. Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson (1853-1937) was a British actor and stage-manager, and was originally trained as an artist. aCa. 50 original watercolor, pen, and pencil costume design drawings, in two distinct drawing styles. It is not known whether all are by Charles Karl, possibly some are by Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson, as 1 design in series Design style 2 is labeled: "Romeo and Juliet design by J. Forbes Robertson". The majority of these drawings are 25 x 18 cm. Some of these sketches are stamped on verso: "L. & H. Nathan Ltd., 143, Drury Lane, W.C.2. TEM 3671." All, except one set of the drawings, are for male costumes for a production of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. While the date of this production is unknown, it featured Johnston Forbes-Robertson as Romeo. aCharles Karl Costume Designs for Romeo and Juliet (MS Thr 603). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02097 aIn English.10aForbes-Robertson, Johnston,cSir,d1853-1937.10aKarl, Charles.20aL. & H. Nathan (Firm) 7aCostume designs.2aat1 aForbes-Robertson, Johnston,cSir,d1853-1937.2 aL. & H. Nathan (Firm)0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox;bLondon;d1997 July;e2003MT-275 (b).5the1 aPurchase, 1997.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 60302431ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001900108245009900127300002800226351012100254545052700375520032400902555008701226524014801313546001601461581008601477600001901563600002801582600003001610650002501640700006401665700004101729700004101770700004301811541011501854561004701969506004202016852002302058012528513-220130829092444.0020710i19561967mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn857346554 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBarnes, Djuna.10aDjuna Barnes letters to Bradley Phillips and Violet Ranney Lang and other letters,f1956-1967. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Violet Ranney Lang Phillips; and II. Letters to Bradley Phillips. aDjuna Barnes (1892-1982) was an American writer, poet and artist who was important to the development of 20th-century English language Modernist writing. Bradley Sawyer Phillips (1929-1991) was an artist and a producer and was, for a short time before her death, the husband of poet and playwright V. R. Lang. He was associated with the Poets’ Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.). Violet Ranney "Bunny" Lang Phillips (1924-1956) was an American poet, playwright, actress, and a founder of the Poets’ Theatre in Cambridge, Mass. aIncludes typescript (signed) letters from Djuna Barnes to Violet Ranney Lang Phillips (V. R. Lang) and to her husband Bradley Phillips. Also includes some clippings, an autograph manuscript letter from T. S. Eliot to V. R. Lang, and a postcard from Elizabeth Hardwick to V. R. Lang. Many concern the play The Antiphone.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02454 aDjuna Barnes Letters to Bradley Phillips and Violet Raney Lang and Other Letters, 1956-1967 (MS Am 2931). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee curatorial file for a Harvard Review article about these letters (Fall 1998).10aBarnes, Djuna.10aLang, V.R.,d1924-1956.10aPhillips, Bradley,d1929- 0aAmerican literature.1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965,ecorrespondent.1 aHardwick, Elizabeth,ecorrespondent.1 aLang, V. R.,d1924-1956,erecipient.1 aPhillips, Bradley,d1929-,erecipient.0 cGift;aSayre Phillips Sheldon;b11 Alden Street, Natick, Massachusetts 01760;d1998 November 13;e98M-17.5hou1 aGift of Sayre Phillips Sheldon, 1998.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 293102121ctcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245011700129300002700246351012800273520040300401555007700804546001600881524015200897600002101049610001701070650005601087650007501143650002801218651005401246655002401300655001601324700002601340700003101366700003101397700002101428710001701449506003701466541014601503561006301649852002301712012530825-620100802142651.0100720i19551975mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn659325720 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMiller, Richard.10aRichard Miller archive for the Tiber Press poetry series by Ashbery, Koch, O'Hara, and Schuyler,fca. 1955-1975. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aOrganized in four series: I. Correspondence with authors; II. Business correspondence; III. Compositions; IV. Other papers. aPapers of Tiber Press publisher Richard Miller relating to the textual component of the 1960 publication of four volumes by four poets with illustrations by four artists as a series: John Ashbery (The poems, illustrator Joan Mitchell); Kenneth Koch (Permanently, illustrator Alfred Leslie); Frank O'Hara (Odes, illustrator Michael Goldberg); and James Schuyler (Salute, illustrator Grace Hartigan).0 aElectronic finding aiduhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02078 aIn English. aRichard Miller Archive for the Tiber Press Poetry Series by Ashbery, Koch, O'Hara, and Schuyler (MS Am 2694). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aMiller, Richard.20aTiber Press. 0aAbstract expressionismzNew York (State)zNew York. 0aArt and literaturezNew York (State)zNew YorkxHistoryy20th century. 0aNew York school of art. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xIntellectual lifey20th century. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aAshbery, John,d1927-1 aKoch, Kenneth,d1925-2002.1 aO'Hara, Frank,d1926-1966.1 aSchuyler, James.2 aTiber Press. aCollection is open for research.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b7 West 18th St, New York, NY 10011;d2010 July 20;e2010M-6;h$17500.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, 2010.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 269402287ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004800108245011000156300002800266351003900294545039500333520034100728546001601069555008701085524014501172600003501317600005201352600003701404655001601441700003001457700005201487700003501539541012401574561005801698506004601756506012301802852002401925012573772-620100923145603.0100922i19701992mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn665231103 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aFriedman, Lawrence Jacob,d1940-ecompiler.10aLawrence Jacob Friedman collection of transcripts of interviews of Erik and Joan Erikson,fca. 1970-1992. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGerman-born as Erik Homburger, Erik Erikson (1902-1994) was an American psychoanalyst, educator, and author. In 1930 he married Joan Mowat Serson, a Canadian dancer and artist. In 1933 they immigrated from Vienna to the U.S. He was best known for his work in child development and life-span studies, coining the phrase "identity crisis", and in the field that became known as psychohistory. aTranscripts and printed copies of interviews with Erik Erikson and some also with his wife Joan Mowat Erikson. Also includes a letter, picture postcard, notes, and annotations by the interviewers. Interviewers include Margaret Brenman-Gibson, Sanford Gifford, the Harvard Educational Review, Howard B. Levine, and Forrest Glen Robinson. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02108 aLawrence Jacob Friedman Collection of Transcripts of Interviews of Erik and Joan Erikson (MS Am 2700). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aErikson, Joan M.q(Joan Mowat)10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aFriedman, Lawrence Jacob,d1940- 7aInterviews.1 aBrenman-Gibson, Margaret.1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.1 aErikson, Joan M.q(Joan Mowat)0 cGift;aLawrence J. Friedman;b335 Highland Avenue, Somerville, Massachusetts 02144;d2010 September 16;e2010M-20.5hou1 aGift of Lawrence J. Friedman, 2010 September 16.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 270004821ntcaa2200529 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001800108245005400126300002800180351010600208545121700314520122201531555008702753524010402840546001602944500036302960600001903323600004103342600003303383600003303416600004103449600001803490600001803508600001903526600001903545600003803564600002203602655001803624655003803642700005003680700001803730700005703748700005003805700003303855700003303888700004103921700003203962700005403994700001904048541010404067561005504171506004204226852002304268012595049-720130626143111.0020710i17411847mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn852396762 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGuild family.10aGuild family and Eliot family papers,f1741-1847. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized in the following three series: I. Correspondence; II. Bound letters; and III. Other papers. aSome of the individuals associated with this collection are: Elizabeth Quincy Guild (1757-1825) daughter of Josiah Quincy (1710-1784) and Elizabeth Waldron (1722-1760), wife of Benjamin Guild; Benjamin Guild (1749-1792) son of Benjamin Guild and Abigail Graves Guild, Harvard College (AB 1769; AM 1772), married Elizabeth Quincy Guild, bookseller in Boston, and ran a circulating library; Benjamin Guild (1785-1858) son of Elizabeth Quincy Guild and Benjamin Guild, Harvard College (AB 1804), married Elizabeth Eliot Guild (1790-1874) and had 7 children; Josiah Quincy Guild (1787-1861) son of Elizabeth Quincy Guild and Benjamin Guild, Harvard College (AB 1807); Elizabeth Eliot Guild (1790-1874) daugher of banker Samuel Eliot, married Benjamin Guild (1785-1858), her brother was Samuel Atkins Eliot (1798-1862); Samuel Atkins Eliot (1798-1862) son of banker Samuel Eliot, Harvard College (AB 1817), Harvard Divinity School (MA 1820), married Mary Lyman Eliot and had four daughters and two sons, including Charles William Eliot, a future president of Harvard University, he was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts's 1st district (1850- 1851) and 7th Mayor of Boston (1837–1839). aThe papers in this collection all concern family members related to historian Samuel Eliot Morison, the donor of the papers. Primarily includes letters sent by and to Elizabeth Quincy Guild (1757-1825) and her husband Benjamin Guild (1749-1792). Contains letters to and from other Quincy family and Guild family members such as: Ann Marsh Quincy (1723-1805), Josiah Quincy (1710-1784), Benjamin Guild (1785-1858), Josiah Quincy Guild (1787-1861), Ebenezer Storer (1730-1807), the Storer family, the Cranch family, and others. Also includes a bound volume of letters sent to Samuel Atkins Eliot (1798-1862) from his sisters (Mary Harrison Eliot Dwight and Elizabeth Eliot Guild), his mother (Catharine Atkins Eliot), and 1 from George Bancroft. Collection also includes autograph manuscript and manuscript transcript journal entries for Benjamin Guild (1749-1792); autograph manuscript diaries belonging to Benjamin Guild (1785-1858) from an 1806 trip to Maine; Elizabeth Quincy Guild's autograph manuscript 1790-1791 journal from Ireland and England; a composition written by Hannah Quincy (1736-1826); and a transcript in an unidentified hand concerning the deaths of Ebenezer Storer and other Storer family members.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02441 aGuild Family and Eliot Family Papers, 1741-1847 (MS Am 2922). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aMost items in this collection were received housed in paper folders which included autograph manuscript notes by an unidentified member of the family. These folders have been marked with the appropriate item number listed below and were removed to the curatorial file. Many of the notes about and identifications of the letters were taken from these folders.30aCranch family.10aEliot, Catharine Atkins,d1758-1829.10aGuild, Benjamin,d1749-1792.10aGuild, Benjamin,d1785-1858.10aGuild, Elizabeth Quincy,d1757-1825.30aEliot family.30aGuild family.10aQuincy family.10aStorer family.10aEliot, Samuel Atkins,d1798-1862.10aStorer, Ebenezer. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aBancroft, George,d1800-1891,ecorrespondent.3 aEliot family.1 aEliot, Catharine Atkins,d1758-1829,ecorrespondent.1 aEliot, Samuel Atkins,d1798-1862,erecipient.1 aGuild, Benjamin,d1749-1792.1 aGuild, Benjamin,d1785-1858.1 aGuild, Elizabeth Quincy,d1757-1825.1 aQuincy, Hannah,d1736-1826.1 aMorison, Samuel Eliot,d1887-1976,eformer owner.3 aQuincy family.0 cGift;aProfessor Samuel Eliot Morison;bHarvard;d1955 June 13;e54M-336;hFormerly MS Stor 4.5hou1 aGift of Professor Samuel Eliot Morison, 1955.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 292203066ntcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245010100146300002800247351003000275545063300305520048200938520025701420555008701677524015101764546001601915600003801931600004101969600003902010600005302049650002502102650001502127700005502142700005702197700005102254700005202305700006902357541013902426561005002565506004202615852002302657012577685-320130909113802.0020710i18621917mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn857920225 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aRalph Waldo Emerson correspondence with Franklin Benjamin Sanborn and other letters,f1862-1917. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aRalph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) was an American essayist, lecturer, and poet, who led the Transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th-century and lived in Concord, Massachusetts. His wife was Lidian Jackson Emerson, and one of their daughters was Edith Emerson [Forbes] (1841-1929). Franklin Benjamin Sanborn (1831-1917) was an American journalist, author, and reformer, who lived in Concord, Massachusetts. He was a member of the Secret Six, or "Committee of Six," that funded the militant abolitionist John Brown. The subject of the correspondence in these papers concerns Sanborn's courting of nineteen-year-old Edith Emerson. aThis collection contains letters concerning the Emerson family and the Franklin Benjamin Sanborn "affair." Includes letters between Sanborn and Lidian Emerson, Sanborn and Ralph Waldo Emerson, and a letter from Sanborn to Edith Emerson, as well as other letters concerning the Sanborn-Emerson relationship, including a letter from Ralph Waldo Emerson to Benjamin B. Wiley, a copy of a later letter from Edward Waldo Emerson to James Ford Rhodes, and another letter from Rhodes.8 aThe curatorial file includes letters concerning this collection as well as typescript transcripts of some of the letters in the collection (so noted with each cataloged item). Readers should see public services staff for access to this curatorial file.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02455 aRalph Waldo Emerson Correspondence with Franklin Benjamin Sanborn and Other Letters, 1862-1917 (MS Am 2932). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aEmerson, Lidian Jackson,d1802-1892.10aForbes, Edith Emerson,d1841-1929.10aSanborn, F. B.q(Franklin Benjamin),d1831-1917. 0aAmerican literature. 0aCourtship.1 aEmerson, Edward Waldo,d1844-1930,ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Lidian Jackson,d1802-1892,ecorrespondent.1 aForbes, Edith Emerson,d1841-1929,erecipient.1 aRhodes, James Ford,d1848-1927,ecorrespondent.1 aSanborn, F. B.q(Franklin Benjamin),d1831-1917,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aGoodspeed's book shop;b9 Park Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02108;d1994 August 8;e94M-25;hAmy Lowell fund ($5000).5hou1 aPurchase with the Amy Lowell fund, 1994.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 293202516ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245007000145300002800215351014900243545042100392545030900813520038201122555008701504524012001591546001601711600003401727600003701761650003101798655002001829700005001849541006001899561004201959506004202001506012302043852002402166012633012-320111004142356.0020710i19001912mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn756502927 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThayer, Ezra Ripley,d1866-1915.10aEzra Ripley Thayer papers concerning Leonard Merrick,f1900-1912. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Leonard Merrick correspondence with Ezra Ripley Thayer; II. Other correspondence; and III. Other papers. aEzra Ripley Thayer (1866-1915) was an attorney, teacher, and administrator. He received an A.B. from Harvard College in 1888 and an LL.B. from the Harvard Law School in 1891. He was a partner in Boston with the firm of Storey, Thorndike, Palmer & Thayer, and was the Dane Professor at the Harvard Law School and Dean from 1910-1915. In 1915, at age 49, Thayer committed suicide while suffering from acute depression. aLeonard Merrick (1864-1939) was a British dramatist, actor, and novelist. He was well regarded by other writers of his era with J. M. Barrie calling Merrick the "novelist's novelist." In 1918 fifteen writers collaborated with publisher E. P. Dutton to issue a fifteen volume The works of Leonard Merrick. aEzra Ripley Thayer was a fan of Leonard Merrick's work and this collection concerns their friendship and Thayer's assistance concerning publication of Merrick's novels in the United States. Includes autograph manuscript letters primarily from Merrick to Thayer, with only a few written by Thayer. Also includes letters from various others to Thayer about Merrick and clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02214 aEzra Ripley Thayer Papers Concerning Leonard Merrick, 1900-1912 (MS Am 2759). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMerrick, Leonard,d1864-1939.10aThayer, Ezra Ripley,d1866-1915. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aClippings.2aat1 aMerrick, Leonard,d1864-1939,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Donald Starr;d1989 August 4;e89M-39.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Donald Starr, 1989.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 275901186nkcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245004600121300002800167351001700195545022400212520017800436524008100614546002700695650001400722650001300736655002100749655002200770655002800792541004000820561002500860852002300885012617323-020101130095649.0020710i18001900mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn685183307 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs afreaeng00aFashion plate collection,fca. 1800-1900. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aUncataloged. aFashion plates are printed materials illustrating the prevailing style or a new style of dress, including both plates in a magazine and independent sheets; often serving as advertisements for a dressmaker or dress shop. aPrinted fashion plates that are primarily from France, but also include some from the United States and England. Includes hand-colored materials, lithographs and engravings. aFashion Plate Collection (MS Thr 637). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French and English. 0aCostumes. 0aFashion. 7aEngravings.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat 7aFashion plateszFrance.0 aSource unknown;ddate unknown.5hou1 aSource unknown.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 63701767ntcaa2200337K 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002300086100003400109245006100143300002800204520019800232520016900430520003100599520006700630524012400697546001600821600003400837610002500871655002200896655005900918700003400977710002501011730003001036541010501066561006901171506004201240506012301282852002401405005861497-420110504083014.0860409s1937 mau 000 0 eng d0 aocm13410373 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHellman, Lillian,d1905-1984.10aLillian Hellman screenplay for Dead end,f1937 April 29. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aTypescript mimeographs of screenplay by Hellman. All copies marked: "Second script April 29, 1937." Original play by Sidney Kingsley. Produced by Samuel Goldwyn, Inc. Directed by William Wyler.8 aItem (1): typescript mimeograph with manuscript revisions; 165 pages, verso of p.164 includes a pencil sketch of a man's face, shooting schedules at back of script.8 aItem (2): discarded pages.8 aItem (3): 165 pages, "Breakdown" at back of script (39 pages). aLillian Hellman Screenplay for Dead End (MS Thr 653). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHellman, Lillian,d1905-1984.20aSamuel Goldwyn, Inc. 7aScreenplays.2aat 7aScripts (documents)zUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aKingsley, Sidney,d1906-1995.2 aSamuel Goldwyn, Inc.02aDead end (Motion picture)0 cGift;aEdward Goodnow;d1939 June 26;erecataloged from TS 7105.5.1 A & B; no accession number.5the1 aRecataloged from TS 7105.5.1; gift of Edward Goodnow, 1939.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 65300999ctcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100005100091245006400142300002700206351001700233545006900250500009100319500004600410546001600456600005100472655003800523506004300561541014200604852002300746012752839-320110505162335.0110427i18471887mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEdes, Robert T.q(Robert Thaxter),d1838-1923.10aRobert T. (Robert Thaxter) Edes correspondence,f1847-1887. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRobert Thaxter Edes was a Harvard graduate (1858) and physician. aIncludes correspondence of family, Harvard College years, and the Civil War and after. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aEdes, Robert T.q(Robert Thaxter),d1838-1923. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aPaul J. Brzozowski;b170 Fairland Dr, Fairfield, CT 06825;d2011 April 27;e2010M-94;h$3800.00 (Jacob Blanck Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 272201899nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110002600110245004600136300002800182351002900210545014800239520024800387555008700635524012400722546001600846600001900862610002600881655003500907655004200942655004200984655002601026700003001052740003501082740003101117541022601148561010901374506004201483852002401525012798410-020110608100948.0020710nuuuuuuuumau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn730056804 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aL. & H. Nathan (Firm)10aL. & H. Nathan costume designs,fundated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aCharles Karl was the in-house costume designer from 1885 to 1934 for L. & H. Nathan Ltd. (or Nathan's), a London, England theatrical costumier. aWatercolor costume design drawings for Miss Elizabeth's prisoner, by designer Charles Karl for L. & H. Nathan Ltd. Also includes designs possibly by Charles Karl for The adventures of Lady Ursula and some unidentifed designs in a variant hand.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02165 aL. & H. Nathan Costume Designs, undated (MS Thr 687). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKarl, Charles.20aL. & H. Nathan (Firm) 7aCostume designszEngland.2aat 7aDrawingsy19th centuryzEngland.2aat 7aDrawingsy20th centuryzEngland.2aat 7aWatercolorszEngland.1 aKarl, Charles,edesigner.42aThe adventures of Lady Ursula.02aMiss Elizabeth's prisoner.0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93 (lots 12 and 14);hFrank E. Chase Bequest and George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History.5the1 aPurchase with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 68702002nkm a2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002100110245005400131300002700185545004100212520025700253520011000510520017300620524013200793546001600925600003100941600002100972600003500993610005601028650001201084650002301096655002201119655003501141655003901176710005601215541009301271561007701364506012301441506004001564852002401604012820252-120110805192912.0020710i19231938mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn740239515 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs3 aFillmore family.10aFillmore family circus scrapbook,fca. 1923-1938. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aCover inscribed with: The Fillmores. aMost items relate to the circus, including: unidentified photographs, clippings from New York newspapers, route cards for Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey Combined Shows (1923-1932), a circus ticket stub from 1938, and a visiting card of Clyde R. Beatty.8 aPhotographs depict a variety of performers and scenes from circus life including many clowns and animals.8 aAlso includes a few clippings on American president Millard Fillmore, 7 tickets from the Loteria Nacional of Mexico, and a program from the Juarez Bull ring in El Paso. aFillmore Family Circus Scrapbook, ca. 1923-1938 (MS Thr 698). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBeatty, Clyde,d1903-1965.30aFillmore family.10aFillmore, Millard,d1800-1874.20aRingling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows. 0aCircus. 0aLotterieszMexico. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooksy20th century.2aat 7aVisiting cardsy20th century.2aat2 aRingling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows.0 cPurchase;ddate unknown;eno accession number;hRose and Marian Hannah Winter Fund.5the1 aPurchase with the Rose and Marian Hannah Winter Fund, date unknown.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aMaterial is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 69802401ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106110003000129245006900159300002800228351002900256545073100285520023201016555008701248524014701335546001601482600002901498600005901527650002301586651001501609655002601624655002201650655001601672655002101688655003101709655005901740655001901799740002401818541006201842561003401904506004201938852002301980012792492-220121016135531.0k|||||||||||||||||020710i19771979mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn730056581 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aGreen, Paul,d(1894-1981)10aPaul Green papers concerning the Louisiana Cavalier,f1977-1979. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aPaul Green (1894-1981) was a North Carolina playwright. He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his 1927 play, In Abraham's Bosom. He is also known for creating a new dramatic form that he called "symphonic drama." Inspired by historical events, it incorporated music and pageantry, usually for outdoor performance. The Louisiana Cavalier was one of Green's outdoor play dramas. It was produced by the Louisiana Outdoor Drama Association and opened in the Grand Ecore Ampitheatre at Natches, Louisiana on June 16, 1976 and ran until 1979. It focused on Louis Junchereau St. Denis (1676-1744) who was a French-Canadian soldier and explorer most known for his exploration and development of the Louisiana and Texas regions. aIncludes a typescript photocopy of a rehearsal script and score for the Louisiana Cavalier, advertising fliers, a press kit, photographs of scenes from the drama, programs, and a t-shirt and bumper sticker advertising the play.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02163 aPaul Green Papers Concerning the Louisiana Cavalier, 1977-1979 (MS Thr 683). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGreen, Paul,d1894-1981.10aSt. Denis, Louis Juchereau,cchevalier de,d1676-1744. 0aTheater, Open-air. 7aLouisiana. 7aBumper stickers.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPress kits.2aat 7aScoresy20th century.2aat 7aScripts (documents)zUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aT-shirts.2aat02aLouisiana Cavalier.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number;5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 68301529nkcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001800110245007400128300002800202351005700230520009900287555008700386524015300473546003700626655004600663655003300709655002000742655002300762541018700785561007400972506004601046506012301092852002401215012796467-320110609132238.0020710i18661878mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn730056663 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafrearus00aTheatrical portrait photographs and postcards,f1866-1878 and undated a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of subject of image. aCollection of theatrical portrait photographic postcards, cartes-de-visites, and stereographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02164 aTheatrical portrait photographs and postcards, 1866-1878 and undated (MS Thr 686). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, French, and Russian. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPhotographic postcards.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aStereographs.2aat0 cPurchase;aLaurence Benelick;b117 Mystic Street, W. Medford, Massachusetts 02155;d1993 July 29;e93-94.120.13-.16;hWinter fund (.13: $50); (.14: $50); (.15: $95); (.16: $30).5the1 aPurchase with the Rose Winter & Marian Hannah Winter Fund, 1993.5the0 aCollection is open for research use.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 68601805nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110002100110245005700131300002800188520033300216520012800549520015100677524010700828546001500935600002100950610004000971650003501011655002701046655003201073730003601105700004801141541016301189561007401352506004201426852002301468012796328-620110708192948.0020710i18501890mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn730056624 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aBK Photographie.10aBK Photographie tissue stereographs,fca. 1850-1890. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aIncludes 2 boxed sets of albumen print stereographs, backed with hand-colored paper sheets, set in yellow paper mounts. Printed in Paris. Most are perforated with pin-pricks to allow light to filter through. The views' colors, when held up to the light, spring to life. All mounts are printed with text: Les Théâtres de Paris.8 aSet 1: Cendrillon Féerie du Théâtres Impérial du Châtelet. 12 stereographs depict scenes from Cendrillon (Cinderella).8 aSet 2: Ballets des Théâtres de Paris scènes vues au stéreoscope. 12 stereographs depict scenes from the opera L'Africaine (The African Woman). aBK Photographie Tissue Stereographs, ca. 1850-1890 (MS Thr 685). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French.10aBK Photographie.20aChâtelet (Theater : Paris, France) 0aTheaterzFrancey19th century. 7aAlbumen prints.2gmgpc 7aTissue stereographs.2gmgpc0 aCinderella (Choreographic work)1 aMeyerbeer, Giacomo,d1791-1864.tAfricaine.0 cPurchase;aLaurence Benelick;b117 Mystic Street, W. Medford, Massachusetts 02155;d1993 July 29;e93-94.120.17 (set 1 listed only);hWinter fund ($400).5the1 aPurchase with the Rose Winter & Marian Hannah Winter Fund, 1993.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 68501582ngcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245006800131300002800199545011700227520032900344524011800673546001600791600003000807600002900837600002300866610005700889650005200946655003600998655002001034700004801054541007001102561003101172506004201203852002301245012792874-X20110609093643.0020710s1947 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn730056588 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMunn, James Buell.10aJames Buell Munn lantern slides used in lectures,fbefore 1947. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aJames Buell Munn (1890-1967; AB 1912) was a Harvard professor of English from 1932 until his retirement in 1957. aLantern slides of English manuscripts used in Munn's Harvard lectures. Includes: 12 slides and 12 negatives of a Houghton Library manuscript of the John Keats' poem, The eve of St. Agnes (MS Keats 2.21); and 9 lantern slides and 9 negatives from the Pembroke College (Cambridge) manuscript of Thomas Gray's Commonplace Book. aJames Buell Munn Lantern Slides Used in Lectures, Before 1947 (MS Am 2727). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGray, Thomas,d1716-1771.10aKeats, John,d1795-1821.10aMunn, James Buell.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of EnglishxFaculty. 0aEnglish literaturexStudy and teaching (Higher) 7aLantern slidesy1930-1950.2aat 7aNegatives.2aat1 aKeats, John,d1795-1821.tEve of St. Agnes.0 cGift;aAnonymous donor;d1947;e47F-7 (Keats); 47F-8 (Gray).5hou1 aSource unknown, 1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 272701643ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245008000131300002800211351003800239545011100277520023800388555008700626524011900713546001600832600002300848650002400871655002000895655001600915656001600931700003800947740003900985740002301024541012301047561006901170506004201239852002401281012877367-720120621131332.0020710i19541965mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn796218693 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWingfield, Sheila.10aSheila Wingfield poetry notebooks and other papers,f1954-1965 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by title. aSheila Wingfield (neé Sheila Claude Beddington; Viscountess of Powerscourt; 1906-1992) was an Irish poet. aIncludes: 4 autograph manuscript poetry notebooks including many drafts of poems; a 1965 autograph manuscript letter from Wingfield to John Lincoln Sweeny; and printed copies of A kite's dinner. Poems 1938-1954 and The leaves darken.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02327 aSheila Wingfield Poetry Notebooks and Other Papers, 1954-1965 (MS Eng 1688). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWingfield, Sheila. 0aWomen poets, Irish. 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aSweeny, John Lincoln,erecipient.2 aA kite's dinner : poems 1938-1954.4 aThe leaves darken.0 cTransfer;aThe George Edward Woodbury Poetry Room;bLamont Library, Harvard University;d1965 March 31;e64M-196.5hou1 aTransfer from the George Edward Woodbury Poetry Room, 1965.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 168802106nkcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004800108245009100156300002800247351003700275545039500312520023600707555008700943524014101030546001601171600006501187600004901252600004201301600003701343600003401380655002201414541010701436561004801543506004201591506012301633852002401756012916235-320111003091027.0110930i18921980mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn756503712 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aFriedman, Lawrence Jacob,d1940-ecompiler.10aLawrence Jacob Friedman collection of photographs concerning Erik Erikson,f1892-1980. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged in chronological order. aGerman-born as Erik Homburger, Erik Erikson (1902-1994) was an American psychoanalyst, educator, and author. In 1930 he married Joan Mowat Serson, a Canadian dancer and artist. In 1933 they immigrated from Vienna to the U.S. He was best known for his work in child development and life-span studies, coining the phrase "identity crisis", and in the field that became known as psychohistory. a11 photographs (mostly copies) of Erik Erikson, his family, and colleagues. Also includes autograph manuscript notes about the images, from Lawrence Jacob Friedman. Includes images of Joan Mowat Erikson, Anna Freud and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02212 aLawrence Jacob Friedman Collection of Photographs Concerning Erik Erikson, 1892-1980 (MS Am 2757). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994vPhotographs.10aErikson, Joan M.q(Joan Mowat)vPhotographs.10aFreud, Anna,d1895-1982vPhotographs.10aFriedman, Lawrence Jacob,d1940-30aErickson familyvPhotographs. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aLawrence Jacob Friedman;b335 Highland Avenue, Somerville, MA;d2011 August 31;e2011M-41.5hou1 aGift of Lawrence Jacob Friedman, 2011.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 275702607ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100005200121245004800173300002800221351011400249545056700363520057400930555008701504524009801591546004301689600005201732600002101784651002401805655002001829655002201849700003301871700002101904541010401925561003902029506004202068506012302110852002402233012916253-120111003144509.0110930i18951986mau |||||||||||||ger|d0 aocn756503720 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 ageraeng1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aErik Erikson additional papers,f1895-1986. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Documents and other papers; and III. Photographs. aErik Erikson (1902-1994) was an American psychoanalyst, educator, and author. He was born in Frankfurt, Germany to Danish parents who separated before his birth, but he grew up in Karlsruhe, Germany. He used his stepfather’s last name, Homburger, until the late 1930s. In 1930 he married Joan Mowat Serson, a Canadian dancer and artist. In 1933 they immigrated from Vienna to the United States. He was best known for his work in child development and life-span studies, coining the phrase "identity crisis", and in the field that became known as psychohistory. aThis collection was assembled by the donor, Dr. Herfried Frank, in connection with the naming of a building that is part of a hospital in Karlsruhe, Germany, the Erik Homburger Erikson Haus. Includes autograph manuscript (signed) letters from Erik Erikson to Herfried Frank, as well as letters to Frank from Peter Blos and Ellen R. Katz-Homburger. Also includes photographs and copies of documents concerning Erikson's childhood in Karlsruhe. Much of the material also includes autograph manuscript notes, in English, by Herfried Frank, explaining details of each item.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02213 aErik Erikson Additional Papers, 1895-1986 (MS Am 2758). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPrimarily in German, a few in English.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.30aErickson family. 0aKarlsruhe (Germany) 7aDocuments.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBlos, Peter,ecorrespondent.1 aFrank, Herfried.0 cGift;aHerfried Frank;bAm steinbruch 7, 76227 Karlsruhe, Germany;d2011 August 31;e2011M-42.5hou1 aGift of Herfried Frank, 2011.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 275802577nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245006300129300002800192351002300220545093300243520023501176555008701411524010101498546001601599600002101615650004101636650002701677650003001704655004801734655004901782541028601831561008002117506004202197852002402239012893262-720110927123703.0020710s1958 mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn753321794 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBerry, D. Bruce.10aD. Bruce Berry drawings of space ships,f1958 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged by title. aD. Bruce Berry (1924-1998) was a comic book illustrator and inker, born in Oakland, California. He served in World War II in the Air Force as a sign painter. After World War II he became involved with science fiction fandom having met Richard Kyle in Oakland, but mainly made his living as a merchandise artist, what he called a "hard-lines artist." He moved to Chicago in the 1950s, where he continued working in advertising becoming a one-man studio doing art, paste-ups, photo-retouching and finished layouts from a free-lance art director's roughs. At the end of the 1950s he illustrated "Imagination" for the last year of its existence, one of the last of the old pulp science-fiction magazines. After this he began work on comic fanzines, and then in the late 1960s he returned to California, but to Los Angeles this time. Berry inked much of Jack Kirby's 1970s work for DC comics. He sometimes used the name Morgan Drake. aIncludes 4 signed images of space ships, both drawings and paintings, by D. Bruce Berry. Media includes acrylic paint, Chinese white (pigment), gesso, graphite, ink, scratchboard, varnish, and watercolor. 1 image is dated as 1958.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02209 aD. Bruce Berry Drawings of Space Ships, 1958 (MS Am 2756). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBerry, D. Bruce. 0aScience fiction, AmericanvDrawings. 0aSpace shipsvDrawings. 0aSpace vehiclesvDrawings. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPaintingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cSource unknown;aSome possibly gift of Alma Hill (from D. Bruce Berry);bLee Academy, Lee, Maine (Hill); 921 Eastwood Avenue, Chicago 40, Illinois (Berry);dsome with envelope from Berry to Hill dated: 1959 March 5;eno accession number (found in Lamont Science Fiction Room).5hou1 aFrom Science Fiction collection; possibly gift of Alma Hill, ca. 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 275602526ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110004300108245006300151300002800214351016500242520046900407520020700876555008701083524011301170546001601283651003501299600005401334600005301388610005101441610005201492651005001544655002001594700006601614700006501680541014201745561008801887506004201975506012302017852002402140012961503-X20111209192912.0020710i18611864mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn760458758 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSouth Carolina.bGovernor,erecipient.10aTelegrams sent to governors of South Carolina,f1861-1864. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Telegrams from the American Telegraph Company, 1861; and II. Telegrams from The Southern Telegraph Companies, 1863-1864. aAll telegrams are to the Office of the Governor of South Carolina during the period when South Carolina had seceded from the United States and was part of the Confederate States of America. Telegrams sent to Governor Francis Wilkinson Pickens (Governor 1860-1862) or to Milledge Luke Bonham (Governor 1862-1864). Telegrams are all on printed forms with manuscript additions. Forms are from either The Southern Telegraph Companies or the American Telegraph Company.8 aTelegrams are from a variety of people, including the military, government officials, and civilians. Subjects concern slave trade, movements of ships, troops, and goods and services, among other topics.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02221 aTelegrams Sent to Governors of South Carolina, 1861-1864 (MS Am 2772). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aConfederate States of America.10aBonham. Milledge L.q(Milledge Luke),d1813-1890.10aPickens, F. W.q(Francis Wilkinson),d1805-1869.10aSouth Carolina.bGovernor (1862-1864 : Bonham)10aSouth Carolina.bGovernor (1860-1862 : Pickens) 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aTelegrams.2aat1 aBonham, Milledge L.q(Milledge Luke),d1813-1890,erecipient.1 aPickens, F. W.q(Francis Wilkinson),d1805-1869,erecipient.0 cSource unknown;aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 277201999ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006300108300002800171351003500199520044100234520018200675555008700857524010200944546001601046655002101062700004401083700005001127700004101177700005901218541014201277561008801419506004201507506012301549852002501672012969336-720111114123526.0020710i16911788mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn761468588 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aAutographs of British politicians,f1691-1788 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged in order as received. aCollection of autograph manuscript signatures of British politicians, cut from 17th and 18th-century British documents. Cuttings were pasted onto separate sheets of paper and labeled: No. 1 through No. 58. Each cut page has multiple signatures. Includes signatures of prime ministers, members of Parliament, and government officials, including George Grenville, Lord Frederick North, Henry Pelham, and Robert Walpole, among many others.8 aCollection also included typescript list, item (59). This list includes page references to each autograph, titles and positions held by these persons, and birth and death dates.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02227 aAutographs of British Politicians, 1691-1788 (MS Eng 1679). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 7aAutographs.2aat1 aGrenville, George,d1712-1770,esigner.1 aNorth, Frederick,cLord,d1732-1792,esigner.1 aPelham, Henry,d1695?-1754,esigner.1 aWalpole, Robert,cEarl of Orford,d1676-1745,esigner.0 cSource unknown;aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 167902274ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004600108245007200154300002800226351005400254545035700308520042900665555008701094524012201181546001601303600004601319610002501365651007201390655007501462655003301537655004901570700003401619541014201653561008801795506004201883852002301925012967562-820111109133601.0020710i18301840mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn760469001 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHunnewell, James Frothingham,d1832-1910.10aJames Frothingham Hunnewell juvenilia and other papers,f1830-1840. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. aJames Frothingham Hunnewell (1832-1910) was the son of Captain James Hunnewell (1794-1869) and Susan Lamson Hunnewell of Charlestown, Massachusetts. His father was the founder of C. Brewer & Co., an international trading business. Hunnewell was a member of his father's business but also was a major New England antiquarian and collector of rare books. aJuvenilia created by James Frothingham Hunnewell while 6 and 7 years of age. Consists of drawings, maps, stories, copies of alphabet letters, a copybook, a spelling book, and many picture and story books with text and drawings. Also includes: a letter to his father, wax seals, a clipping of a poem, and a business notebook from 1830 possibly kept by his father, James Hunnewell (1794-1864), recording trade goods in Hawaii?0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02225 aJames Frothingham Hunnewell Juvenilia and Other Papers, 1830-1840 (MS Am 2778). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHunnewell, James Frothingham,d1832-1910.20aC. Brewer & Company. 0aCharlestown (Boston, Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aCopybooks (instructional materials)zUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDrawingsy19th century.2aat 7aJuveniliazUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aHunnewell, James,d1794-1869.0 cSource unknown;aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5hou1 aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 277802927nkcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003800110245009600148300002800244351024300272545041800515520043200933555008701365524017401452546001601626600002601642600005701668600003901725610004401764650004501808655004401853655004701897655004201944655004101986700005502027700004402082541017202126561005402298506004202352506012302394852002402517012948989-120130116143025.0020710i19011921mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn759061730 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHarvey, Herbert Hugh,ecollector.10aHerbert Hugh Harvey collection on Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Lady Maud Tree,f1901-1921. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Photographic images of Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree; II. Photographic images of Lady Maud Tree; III. Picture postcards concerning plays; IV. Letters; and V. Theater programs and other printed material. aSir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1853-1917) was born Herbert Draper Beerbohm, and was an English actor and manager. Tree also helped finance the building, and then became manager of (1897-1917), His/Her Majesty's Theatre in London. In 1904 Tree established the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and he was knighted in 1909. His wife and business partner was English actress Lady Maud Tree (1863-1937), born Helen Maud Holt. aTheatrical materials collected by theater fan, Herbert Hugh Harvey, including: photographic postcards (and 1 cabinet photograph) of images of both Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Maud Tree in various acting roles primarily at His Majesty’s Theatre (London, England); picture postcards from plays; a letter from Maud Tree to Herbert Hugh Harvey; and theater programs and clippings mostly from productions at His Majesty’s Theatre.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02217 aHerbert Hugh Harvey Collection on Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Lady Maud Tree, 1901-1921 (MS Thr 720). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHarvey, Herbert Hugh.10aTree, Herbert Beerbohm,cSir,d1853-1917vPortraits.10aTree, Maud,d1863-1937vPortraits.20aHer Majesty's Theatre (London, England) 0aTheaterszEnglandzLondony20th century. 7aCabinet photographsy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographic postcardsy20th century.2aat 7aPicture postcardsy20th century.2aat 7aTheatre programsy20th century.2aat1 aTree, Herbert Beerbohm,cSir,d1853-1917,esigner.1 aTree, Maud,d1863-1937,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aW. & G. Foyle, Ltd;b119-125 Charing Cross Road, London, W.C.2, England;d1966 November;e66T-12;hFrank E. Chase fund ($45.00) also with printed book.5the1 aPurchase with the Frank E. Chase fund, 1966.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 72001920ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245006000146300002800206351003000234545029600264520025900560555008700819524011000906546001601016544008001032600003801112655002501150655003801175655002701213700004201240700004601282541015501328561004601483506004201529852002301571012966725-020111108135757.0020710i18151821mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn760467111 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMellen, John Wendell,d1794-1829.10aJohn Wendell Mellen letters to his parents,f1815-1821. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aJohn Wendell Mellen (1794-1829) was born in Massachusetts, the child of the Reverend John Mellen Jr (1752-1828; Harvard College AB 1770) and Martha Fitch Wendell Mellen. He received an AB from Harvard College class of 1819 and married E. B. Wilde in 1818. He was a lawyer in Portland, Maine. aAutograph manuscript letters 1816-1821 from John Wendell Mellen to his parents, John Mellen and Martha Fitch Wendell Mellen, concerning family news, business transactions, and other matters. Also includes a promissory note from 1815 signed to his father.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02224 aJohn Wendell Mellen Letters to His Parents, 1815-1821 (MS Am 2774). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also Mellen Family Papers held by the Massachusetts Historical Society.10aMellen, John Wendell,d1794-1829. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPromissory notes.2aat1 aMellen, John,d1752-1828,erecipient.1 aMellen, Martha Fitch Wendell,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Andrew W. Lawrie;bFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman;d1940 May 16;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Andrew E. Lawrie, 1940.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 277402055ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100003500127245004100162300002800203351008400231545006800315520035200383555008700735524008100822546001600903600003500919600001900954600003200973650002301005655002101028700005301049700006001102700001901162700003201181541024501213561016901458506004201627852002401669012988184-820111130141530.0k|||||||||||||||||020710i18071823mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn766543278 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSouthcott, Joanna,d1750-1814.10aJoanna Southcott papers,f1807-1823. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Manuscripts; and II. Printed materials. aJoanna Southcott (1750-1814) was an English prophet and writer. aIncludes: one autograph signature by Joanna Southcott; numerous manuscripts in the hands of Jane Townley and Ann Underwood (many are transcripts of Southcott's words); letter from donor Grenville Howland Norcross to Harvard Professor George Lyman Kittredge; engravings of portraits of Joanna Southcott; and printed pamphlets by or about Southcott.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02236 aJoanna Southcott Papers (MS Eng 1680). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSouthcott, Joanna,d1750-1814.10aTownley, Jane.10aUnderwood, Ann,d1766-1825. 0aProphetszEngland. 7aEngravings.2aat1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941,erecipient.1 aNorcross, Grenville Howland,d1854-1937,eformer owner.1 aTownley, Jane.1 aUnderwood, Ann,d1766-1825.0 cGift;aGrenville Howland Norcross via Professor George Lyman Kittredge;b35 Congress Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1926 April 22;eno accession number;h[Found with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman].5hou1 aGift of Grenville Howland Norcross via Professor George Lyman Kittredge, 1926. [Found with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman].5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 168002409ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108245004000126300002800166351004800194520036500242520040200607555008701009524009001096546004901186544013901235651001801374655005401392655003101446655003701477655004801514655004701562655002001609700003301629710004301662541014901705561012801854506004201982852002302024012971096-220120703075455.0020710i17491796mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn761468758 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengageragem00aPennsylvania documents,f1749-1796. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author or title. aLegal, government and business documents in manuscript or printed documents with manuscript additions. Includes accounts, an administration bond, bank checks, a bill of lading, bills, certificates, financial receipts, letters, a redemptioner certificate, and summonses. Most documents are from Philadelphia, Reading, Lancaster County, or Sunbury, Pennsylvania.8 aOne group of documents concern Etienne Dutilh, a French merchant, who emigrated to Philadelphia in 1783 and established several commercial firms including E. Dutilh & Company, 1783-1789; Dutilh & Wachsmuth, with John Godfried Wachsmuth, 1790-1797; and Dutilh, Soullier & Company, with John Soullier, 1793-circa 1797. These firms were largely engaged in the West Indies and northern European trade.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02229 aPennsylvania Documents, 1749-1796 (MS Am 2782). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, German, and Pennsylvania German. aPapers concerning Etienne Dutilh and his various firms in Philadelphia are also held by the Independence Seaport Museum, Philadelphia. 0aPennsylvania. 7aBills of ladingy18th centuryzPennsylvania.2aat 7aChecks (bank checks).2aat 7aCertificatesy18th century.2aat 7aDocumentsy18th centuryzPennsylvania.2aat 7aReceiptsy18th centuryzPennsylvania.2aat 7aSummonses.2aat1 aDutilh, Etienne,d1748-1810.2 aDutilh & Wachsmuth (Philadelphia, Pa.)0 cGift;aCharles Taylor;bFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Charles Taylor, date unknown. [Found with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman].5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 278202507ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245005500108300002800163351003900191545060000230520035000830555008701180524010501267546001601372544011001388600003401498600004201532650002501574655003901599655003601638700003401674700004201708541014201750561008801892506004201980506012302022852002402145012970930-120111115122619.0020710i19201930mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn761468723 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPapers concerning Increase Mather,fca. 1920-1930. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aIncrease Mather (1639–1723) was a Puritan minister who was involved with the government of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Mather received his AB from Harvard in 1656, and an AM degree from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1658. He was the sixth president of Harvard College, serving as acting president from 1685 to 1686, rector from 1686 to 1692, and president from 1692 to 1701. Kenneth Ballard Murdock (1895-1975) graduated from Harvard in 1916, taught English at Harvard and served as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and produced a number of publications on Increase and Cotton Mather. aNegative and positive photostat copies and typescript transcripts of documents and printed materials (belonging to other institutions) concerning Increase Mather. This material was found in a box of items formerly owned by Professor Kenneth Ballard Murcock and these copies were possibly assembled by Murdock for his research on Increase Mather.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02228 aPapers concerning Increase Mather, ca. 1920-1930 (MS Am 2781). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aFound with: Samuel Eliot Morison Transcript of Elnathan Chauncy Commonplace Book, ca. 1936 (bMS Am 2779).10aMather, Increase,d1639-1723.10aMurdock, Kenneth Ballard,d1895-1975. 0aAmerican literature. 7aStats (copies)y20th century.2aat 7aTranscriptsy20th century.2aat1 aMather, Increase,d1639-1723.1 aMurdock, Kenneth Ballard,d1895-1975.0 cSource unknown;aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 278101852ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110003600110245007300146300002800219351006000247545035300307520024200660555008700902524014200989546001601131650005001147610003601197655001801233655001401251541006201265561003401327506004201361506012301403852002401526013002411-220130116143305.0020710nuuuuuuuumau |||||||eng|d0 aocn768584686 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aTremont Theatre (Boston, Mass.)10aTremont Theatre (Boston, Mass.) drama and receipt records,fundated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by title, then chronologically. aThe Tremont Theatre (1827–1843) on 88 Tremont Street was a playhouse in Boston, Masschusetts. The Tremont never turned a profit during its 16-year life. On December 28, 1843, the Free Church Baptists bought the theater and renamed it the Tremont Temple. The building burned in 1852, and bore no relationship to the later theater of the same name. aThese records all appear to be manuscript transcripts of original records. All items are in the same unidentified manuscript hand. They cover the time period of 1834-1843, but it is not known when the transcripts were created or by whom.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02251 aTremont Theatre (Boston, Mass.) Drama and Receipt Records (MS Thr 751). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBostony19th century.20aTremont Theatre (Boston, Mass.) 7aRecords.2aat 7aReceipts.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 75102045nkcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005500110300002800165351006000193545020500253520029900458555008700757524013300844546001500977650003100992650003101023655002201054710009801076541024001174561015201414506004201566506012301608852002401731013077326-320120830102036.0020710i18821900mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn774128400 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aFrench advertising trade cards,f1882 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of company or by title. aTrade cards were small printed sheets, and later cards, bearing tradesmen’s advertisements, often including an engraved or lithographed illustration; produced from the 17th through the 19th-century. a19th-century, Illustrated trade cards, advertising various French products and services, primarily using theatrical images. Most companies based in Paris, France. Companies include tailors, perfume makers, pharmacies, chocolatiers, trousseau makers, theaters, department stores and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02270 aFrench Advertising Trade Cards, 1882 and undated (MS Thr 791). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French. 0aAdvertisingy19th century. 0aAdvertising cardszFrance. 7aTrade cards.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 79101953nkcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005100110300002800161351009000189520038600279555008700665524012900752546001600881655003600897655003400933655002900967710009800996541024001094561015201334506004201486506012301528852002401651013074834-X20120830101639.0020710i18601900mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn774127725 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aVictorian portrait collection,fca. 1860-1900. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Portrait photographs; and II. Other material. aPortrait photographs of primarily British luminaries from the Victorian period. Some are unidentified or only partially identified. Individuals are not primarily from the theatrical world, but are scholars, politicians, military officers, etc. Also includes a stipple engraving portrait, a photomechanical print portrait, and a manuscript sample of characters of various languages.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02266 aVictorian Portrait Collection, ca. 1860-1900 (MS Thr 782). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 7aPhotographsy19th century.2aat 7aPortraitsy19th century.2aat 7aStipple engravings.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 78201954nkcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006200110300002800172351005700200545018700257520016800444555008700612524012800699546001600827650003100843650003800874650003900912655002200951710009800973541024001071561015201311506004201463506012301505852002401628013075669-520120830101924.0020710i18771887mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn774127812 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aAmerican advertising trade cards,f1877-1887 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of company or title. aTrade cards were small printed sheets, and later cards, bearing tradesmen's advertisements, often including an engraved illustration; produced from the 17th through the 19th-century. aIllustrated 19th-century trade cards, advertising various American products and services, such as soaps, tobacco products, a dental office, boat trips, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02268 aAmerican Advertising Trade Cards, 1877-1887 (MS Thr 786). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aAdvertisingy19th century. 0aAdvertising cardszUnited States. 0aHousehold supplieszUnited States. 7aTrade cards.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 78602527nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245008000110300002800190351016700218545019600385520034300581555008700924524014601011546001501157610007101172630003401243650002801277651005201305655005601357655004501413655002001458655002001478710009801498541024001596561015201836506004201988506012302030852002402153013066947-420120830100906.0020710i19301934mau||| | |||||||ger|d0 aocn773709936 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aImages concerning the Oberammergauer Passionsspiel,f1930-1934 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Oberammergau images from 1930; II. Oberammergau images from 1934; III. Oberammergau images, undated; and IV. Other images. aThe residents of Oberammergau, Germany vowed to perform a passion- play every ten years if they were spared from the plague. The play was first performed in 1634 and continues to the present. aPhotographic postcards, photographs, and images in souvenir viewbooks, concerning the Oberammergau passion-play. Includes images of actors, woodcarvers, the surrounding area, and buildings, including the Passionstheater Oberammergau. Also includes some postcards of: Switzerland; Chamonix, France; Innsbruck, Austria; and Berlin, Germany.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02264 aImages Concerning the Oberammergauer Passionsspiel, 1930-1934 (MS Thr 775). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn German.20aPassionstheater Oberammergau (Oberammergau, Germany)vPhotographs.00aOberammergauer Passionsspiel. 0aPassion-playszGermany. 0aOberammergau (Germany)xDescription and travel. 7aPhotographic postcardszGermanyy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographszGermanyy20th century.2aat 7aSouvenirs.2aat 7aViewbooks.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 77501722ngcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004600110300002800156520026000184524012400444546001600568655004000584655002500624700003900649710002300688710001100711710001500722740002200737740001900759740001800778740001900796541024000815561015201055506004201207506012301249852002401372013073731-320120120144713.0020710nuuuuuuuumau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn774127632 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aLittle Rascals motion pictures,fundated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) a4 motion pictures of Hal Roach's Little Rascals, Our Gang comedies, for home viewing. 3 distributed by Excel, and 1 by Ken Films, Inc. Excel 16mm films include: Christmas Wishes, Runaway Train, and Bold Pirates; Ken Films 8 mm film, titled: Haunted House. aLittle Rascals Motion Pictures, undated (MS Thr 780). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 7aMotion picturesy20th century.2aat 7aShort subjects.2aat1 aRoach, Hal,d1892-1992,eproducer.2 aHal Roach Studios.2 aExcel.2 aKen films.02aChristmas wishes.02aRunaway train.02aBold pirates.02aHaunted house.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 78001418ngm a2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245003100110300002800141520007900169520020100248524008200449546001600531655004000547655002200587541024000609561013800849506004200987506012301029852002401152013074791-220120123084055.0020710q1965 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn797451065 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aFireworks film,fca. 1965. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) a1 unidentified 8 mm home movie motion picture of fireworks? in metal case.8 aIncludes slip of paper inside case with text: 8-26-67 Fireworks L?ubbed. With paper labels on case: Fireworks P[?] Dora July 4 Minolta Kodak / Ant Valley July 5 1965 / Sky line B.A. Sunset 7-4-65. aMS Thr 781. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 7aMotion picturesy20th century.2aat 7aHome movies.2aat0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 78101691ntm a2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003800110245004700148300002800195545006100223520030100284520016000585524012500745546001600870544005400886600003800940650004100978655002001019655002101039656002501060700004401085541015801129561002501287506004201312852002301354013109011-920120229111154.0020710i18881948mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn778969097 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966.10aEdward Gordon Craig scrapbook,f1888-1948. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aCraig was an English scene designer, producer and actor. aScrapbook of printed articles about the theater, collected and annotated (in autograph manuscript) by Craig. Articles are from Harper's, Century Magazine, Wide World Magazine, and others. Includes Craig's autograph manuscript (signed) note from July 26/27, 1948 about the contents of this volume.8 aAlso includes some loose theater ephemera, removed to a folder, including a 1963 letter from the British Museum to B[ernard]. Miles of the Mermaid Theatre. aEdward Gordon Craig Scrapbook, 1888-1948 (MS Thr 825). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also: Edward Gordon Craig Papers, MS Thr 345.10aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and scenery. 7aClippings.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aSet designers.2lcsh1 aMiles, Bernard,d1907-1991,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aWinifred A. Myers (Autographs) Ltd., with 79M-34 (bMS Thr 345);bSuite 52, 91 St. Martins Lane, London W.I. England;d1979 July;e79T-30.5the1 aPurchase, 1979.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 82502868nkcaa2200469 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004800110300002700158351004500185545012000230520058800350555008700938524012601025546004101151600004601192600004501238600004001283600004201323600004101365600004801406600004601454600005401500630002701554600003901581650003501620650003601655650001501691655002201706655003001728655002201758655002001780655002801800710009801828506012301926506004202049541013102091561015202222852002402374013103173-220120703081240.0020710i18801899mau||| ||||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Sarah Bernhardt,f1880-1899. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by photographer. aSarah Bernhardt (1844-1923) was a French stage and screen actress whose acting career began in France in the 1860s. aThis collection includes 19th-century photographs, organized by photographer, of actress Sarah Bernhardt. Images include portraits of Bernhardt in costume from notable productions including L'Aiglon, Froufrou, Adrienne Lecouvreur, Ruy Blas, Théodora, Jeanne d'Arc, La Dame aux Camélias, Cléopâtre, and Phèdre. Additonal photographs include a portrait of Bernhardt by Jules Bastien-Lepage, Bernhardt in her studio, and artistic work completed by Bernhardt. Includes cabinet photographs, copy prints, and other photographs. Some undated photographs might date to the 20th-century.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02282 aPhotographs of Sarah Bernhardt, 1880-1899 (MS Thr 819). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aBarbier, Jules,d1825-1901tJeanne d'Arc.10aBernhardt, Sarah,d1844-1923vportraits.10aHugo, Victor,d1802-1885tRuy Blas.10aMeilhac, Henri,d1831-1897tFroufrou.10aRostand, Edmond,d1868-1918tAiglon.10aSardou, Victorien,d1831-1908tCléopâtre.10aSardou, Victorien,d1831-1908tThéodora.10aScribe, Eugène,d1791-1861tAdrienne Lecouvreur.30aLa Dame aux Camélias.10aRacine, Jean,d1639-1699tPhèdre. 0aTheaterxFrancey19th century. 0aTheaterxEnglandy19th century. 0aActresses. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCopy prints.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPanel photographs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 81902933nkcaa2200457 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004400110300002700154351008700181545028000268520038500548555008700933524012201020546004101142600003001183600006801213600005801281600006301339600006201402600004701464600006601511600004101577600005901618650001501677650004201692650004201734655002201776655003001798655003301828655002001861655002401881710009801905506012302003506004202126541013102168561015202299852002402451013107608-620120302101154.0020710i19001905mau||| ||||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Maude Adams,f1900-1905. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Portraits; and II. Theatrical productions. aMaude Adams (1872-1953) was an American stage actress well known for her roles in Peter Pan, The little minister, Quality street, and L'aiglon. Considered by many to be recuslive, Adams retired from acting in 1918 and founded the drama department at Stephens College in 1937. aThis collection contains portraits and theatrical photographs of 19th and 20th century American actress Maude Adams. Notable productions include L'aiglon, Christoperh, Jr., The lost paradise, The little minister, The masked ball, A midnight bell, Peter Pan, and Quality street. Includes cabinet photographs, portraits, photomontages, photographic postcards, and other photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02283 aPhotographs of Maude Adams, 1900-1905 (MS Thr 822). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aAdams, Maude,d1872-1953.10aBarrie, J. M. (James Matthew),d1860-1937tThe little minister.10aBarrie, J. M. (James Matthew),d1860-1937tPeter Pan.10aBarrie, J. M. (James Matthew),d1860-1937tQuality street.10aDe Mille, Henry Churchill,d1850-1893tThe lost paradise.10aFitch, Clyde,d1865-1909tThe masked ball.10aHoyt, Charles H. (Charles Hale),d1859-1900tA midnight bell.10aRostand, Edmond,d1868-1918tAiglon.10aRyley, Madeleine Lucette,d1868-1934tChristopher, Jr. 0aActresses. 0aTheaterxUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterxUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPhotographic postcards.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPhotomontages.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 82202452ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004400110245006100154300002700215351004800242545038800290520045800678555009001136524013901226544013201365600004401497610002401541650001901565650003101584650004501615650002401660655005101684656002201735700004401757541006401801561003601865506004201901506012301943852002402066013124055-220120305140953.0860826i17811814mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn779706176 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aRichard Brinsley Sheridan additional papers,f1781-1814. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author or title. aRichard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816) was a playwright, theater proprietor, and politician. He was born in Dublin, Ireland and later moved to London. He became the manager and part-owner of the Drury Lane Theatre in 1776. He wrote several plays, including the comedies The Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1780). He also served as a Minister of Parliament from 1780 to 1812. aPrimarily autograph manuscript letters (signed) from Richard Brinsley Sheridan to many others. Also contains: letter from John Jervis to Sheridan; and manuscript documents on vellum concerning and signed by Sheridan, such as a receipt and a grant of admission to the Theatres Royal. Associated names include: Richard Peake, Thomas Lindley, Thomas Harris, Edward Barlow, John Grubb, James Cobb, Henry Burgess, William Adam, Thomas Hammersley, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid is availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02288 aRichard Brinsley Sheridan Additional Papers, 1781-1814 (MS Thr 830). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional Sheridan material owned by the Houghton Library, but cataloged under separate call-numbers.10aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 0aEnglish drama. 0aPlaywritingy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy18th century. 0aTheater management. 7aFinancial recordszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aPlaywrights.2aat1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;eno accession number.5the1 aVarious sources and dates.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 83002244nkcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004700110300002700157351005200184545044900236520018100685555008700866524012500953546004101078600004401119650001501163650003601178655002201214655003001236655004601266655002001312710009801332506012401430506004301554541013201597561015301729852002401882013124103-620120307074519.0020710i18821887mau||| |||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Lillie Langtry,f1882-1887. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by photographic studio. aLillie Langtry (1853-1929) was a British actress most known for her relationships with the future King of Great Britain, Edward VII and Louis Alexander Mountbatten, 1st Marquis of Milford Haven, formerly known as Prince Louis of Battenberg. Langtry made her acting debut in London in 1881 and spent the remainder of the 1880s touring in the United States. At the end of the decade, Langtry permanently settled in England to continue her acting. aCollection includes portraits and theatrical photographs of British stage actress Lillie Langtry. Includes primarily 19th century cabinet photographs and some cartes-de-visite.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02286 aPhotographs of Lillie Langtry, 1882-1887 (MS Thr 827). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aLangtry, Lillie,d1853-1929vPortraits. 0aActresses. 0aTheaterxEnglandy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the.0 aCollection is open for research.5the.0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the.1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 82701642ckcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003100091245010200122300002700224351001700251520024100268520014500509500005200654546001600706600003100722655002600753655001900779655002500798655002200823700004200845700003000887506002300917541038800940852002401328013163521-220120424151527.0120423i18641910mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915.10aWalter Crane illustrated correspondence with Anne Ashton White Booth and Ellen White,f1864-1910. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aA collection of illustrated letters and cards, a photograph album, and a scrapbook telling the story of Crane's friendship with two sisters, Annie Ashton White Booth and Ellen White, and their family over a period of more than 40 years. aIncludes caricatures, an illustrated story, and various designs and drawings by Crane, most of which relate to the sisters and their family. aSee accompanying dealer's list for more detail. aIn English.10aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915. 7aChristmas cards.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aGreeting cards.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBooth, Anne Ashton White,erecipient.1 aWhite, Ellen,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aDouglas Stewart Fine Books;bPO Box 272, Prahran, Victoria 3181 Australia;d2012 April 23;e2011M-109;h$42200.00 ($15000.00 - Hofer Fund for the Department of Printing and Graphic Arts ; $15000.00 - Louis J. Appell, Jr. Fund for British Civilization in the Harvard College Library ; $11500.00 - George L. Lincoln Bequest ; $700.00 - Books for Houghton Library Fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 168602976nacaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245007100108300002800179351011200207545089100319520052401210555008701734524014901821546001601970610004601986600003202032610002702064650005902091650005102150655002502201541013702226561004702363506004202410506012302452852002402575561005102599013361783-120121005190802.0020710i18881939mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn811422767 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aLectures, managers, and management bureaus collection,f1888-1939. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of management bureau or sole manager. Miscellaneous material is at the end. aThis collection primarily includes items related to the lyceum movement involving organizations that sponsored public programs for self-improvement, which flourished in the mid-19th century and early 20th-century in the United States. These lectures, dramatic performances, debates, etc... were meant to improve the social, intellectual, and moral fabric of society. Some of the most successful agencies sponsoring such activities were the Boston Lyceum Bureau (est. 1868) and the Redpath Lyceum Bureau (est. 1874), both founded by James Redpath. The Redpath organizations represented figures such as Mark Twain, Julia Ward Howe, Charles Sumner, Susan B. Anthony, and prominent others. This collection also includes printed materials concerning management agencies and managers that were not part of the lyceum circuit, but also provided lecturers and entertainment for adult-education. aIncludes advertisements, announcements, and catalogs for adult-education related lectures and other entertainment, in the form of printed fliers, circulars, programs, pamphlets, newspapers, etc... Most concern the Boston or New York City areas. Includes management agencies of A. A. Lovett, Boston Young Men's Christian Association Entertainment Bureau, Robertson Lyceum Bureau, New York and Brooklyn Entertainment Bureau, People's Church Lecture Bureau, Redpath Lyceum Bureau, Slayton Lyceum Bureau, among many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02361 aLectures, Managers, and Management Bureaus Collection, 1888-1939 (MS Thr 901). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aBoston Young Men's Christian Association.10aRedpath, James,d1833-1891.20aRedpath Lyceum Bureau. 0aAdult educationzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aLyceumszUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 7aAdvertisements.2aat0 cGift;aCol. Henry J. Coolidge via Hans W. Miller;b88 Main Street, Concord, Massachusetts;d1951 June 25;eno accession number;5the1 aGift of Col. Henry J. Coolidge, 1951.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 9011 aFrom the collection of Henry D. Coolidge.5the02072nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007100110300002800181351007300209545033700282520042900619555008701048524013701135546001601272600004801288600004001336610004101376650002701417655004601444655004501490700006201535541006201597561003401659506004201693852002301735013363445-020121016091725.0020710i18561859mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn811423549 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT00aPhotographs of Charles John Kean and cast,f1856-1859 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by production title, then by title of image. aCharles John Kean (1811?-1868) was an English actor and theater manager. Kean managed the Princess's Theatre in London from 1850-1859. Martin Laroche's (ca. 1815-1886; real name William Henry Silvester) photographic studio was close to Kean's Princess's Theatre in London and he photographed many of the Kean actors and productions. aCollection includes photographs of actors in costume including: Charles John Kean, Ellen Chapman, Ellen Tree Kean, John Ryder, Walter Lacy, and others. The originals of many of these images were probably taken by the studio of Martin Laroche. With photographs and cartes-de-visite (card photographs) from Kean's productions of: Hamlet, Henry V, King Lear, Louis XI, The Merchant of Venice, Richard II, and The Winter's Tale.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02363 aPhotographs of Charles John Kean and Cast, 1856-1859 (MS Thr 905). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKean, Charles John,d1811?-1868vPortraits.10aKean, Ellen,d1805-1880vPortraits.20aPrincess's Theatre (London, England) 0aTheatery19th century. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPhotographszEnglandy19th century.2aat1 aLaroche, Martin,dapproximately 1815-1886,ephotographer.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 90502049nkcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003100110245008900141300002800230351005100258545023100309520016800540555008700708524016700795546004100962600003101003600005101034600003401085655002201119655002001141710009401161506012301255506004201378541013101420561014801551852002401699013376997-620121213105238.0020710i18751898maunnn | ||||||eng d0 aocn775085793 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBryan, Alfred,d1852-1899.10aAlfred Bryan caricatures of W. S. Gilbert, Arthur Sullivan, and friends,f1875-1898. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by caricature subject. aAlfred Bryan (1852-1899) was an English illustrator and caricaturist most known for his illustrations in the theater review magazine Entr'acte. Bryan's work was also featured in Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News and Judy. aThis collection includes 19th-century caricatures of Arthur Sullivan, W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert, and their peers. Most illustrations are from The entr'acte.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02365 aAlfred Bryan Caricatures of W. S. Gilbert, Arthur Sullivan, and Friends, 1875-1898 (MS Thr 906). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aBryan, Alfred,d1852-1899.10aGilbert, W. S. (William Schwenck),d1836-1911.10aSullivan, Arthur,d1842-1900. 7aCaricatures.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 90601482ngcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100006100108245009200169300002800261351003000289520024600319500009000565524005400655546001600709610002900725600004600754610003400800610009700834610002200931650002900953655001700982541006900999561003501068506004201103852002301145013396891-X20121206075037.0020710i19741982mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn815829095 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBond, W. H.q(William Henry),d1915-2005,ephotographer.10aWilliam Henry Bond slides on Houghton Library exhibitions and acquisitions,f1974-1982. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aA collection of 543 color slides, taken by librarian W. H. Bond, of Houghton Library exhibitions and Library Visiting Committee presentations on recent acquisitions. Also includes typescript lists of descriptions of items depicted in slides. aFormerly housed in a slide binder. The binder was discarded during preservation work. aMS Am 2855. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aHarvard College Library.10aBond, W. H.q(William Henry),d1915-2005.20aHarvard University.bLibrary.20aHarvard University.bBoard of Overseers.bVisiting Committee to the Harvard College Library.20aHoughton Library. 0aAcquisitions (Libraries) 7aSlides.2aat0 cGift;aW. H. Bond;bHoughton Library;d1983 March;e82Z-4F.5hou1 aGift of W. H. Bond, 1983.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 285501511nkcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245007100140300002800211545014500239520021600384524011000600500009100710546001600801600004100817600002300858650004600881655003900927655002000966541012800986561004101114506004201155852002401197013520060-120130320103830.0020710s1948 mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn822730274 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFraser, Elizabeth,eartist.10aElizabeth Fraser oil portraits of John Johnson,f1948 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aJohn de Monins Johnson (1882-1956) was an English papyrologist, printer of the Oxford English Dictionary, and collector of printed ephemera. a2 portrait oil paintings on board, of John de Monins Johnson: (1) 13 x 10 cm. [with frame 22 x 19 cm.]. With manuscript inscription on verso ... March 1948; (2) 8.5 x 7.5 cm. oval [with oval frame 11 x 9.5 cm.]. aElizabeth Fraser Oil Portraits of John Johnson, 1948 (MS Eng 1725). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe oval frame for item (2) has several cracks, some of which were repaired with cork. aIn English.10aJohnson, John de Monins,d1882-1956.10aFraser, Elizabeth. 0aPublishers and publishingzGreat Britain. 7aOil paintings (visual works).2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cGift;aMiss Elizabeth Fraser;bThe Old Cottage, Soulbury, near Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire;d1957 November;e57Z-2.5hou1 aGift of Elizabeth Fraser, 1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 172501546nrm a2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070245003100091300002800122520034300150520011200493520020000605524008200805546001500887650001100902655001700913656003500930700002700965700002700992700003101019541014901050561005701199852002401256013354452-420121005190652.0020710q1845 mau||| | |||||||fre|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMagician's box,fca. 1845. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aA box, with a separate lid, containing equipment for a magician to use to perform magic tricks. Box (35 x 50 x 8 cm.) is cardboard, covered with a colored lithograph depicting a magician working at a table during a party. Lithograph includes text: H. Rousseau, Edit. Paris / Bommier / Garmssage Bréveté S.G.D.G. / Lith H. Jannin. Paris.8 aBox has 28 compartments with equipment made from wood, metal, fabric, and paint for sleight-of-hand tricks.8 aAlso includes 21 printed sheets with descriptive text instructions, explaining the equipment and the tricks to be performed with each piece. Printed in Paris by A. Appert., H. Rousseau, éditeur. aMS Thr 900. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French. 0aMagic. 7aRealia.2aat 7aMagicians (illusionists).2aat1 aRousseau, H.,eeditor.1 aBommier,eillustrator.1 aJannin, H.,elithographer.0 cPurchase;aWakefield-Young Books, Inc.;b746 Madison Avenue, New York, New York;d1965 January;e64T-10PF ($135.00) Frank E. Chase bequest.5the1 aPurchase with the Frank E. Chase bequest, 1965.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 90003023nrcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070041002300091100003200114245006400146300002800210351004400238545084600282520056501128555008701693524010201780546004201882544002601924600003201950600005801982600006002040610003202100610006102132611006202193650002602255655002502281655003802306655001702344655001702361710002502378541010702403561005002510506004202560852002302602013462528-520121114112409.0020710i18171921mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengalatagreafre1 aPrince, Morton,d1854-1929.10aMorton Prince collection of medals,f1817-1921 and undated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged as received in the repository. aMorton Henry Prince (Harvard College AB 1875; Harvard MD 1879) was clinical instructor in diseases of the nervous system at Harvard Medical School from 1895 to 1898 and associate professor of abnormal and dynamic psychology at Harvard College from 1926 to 1928. He studied in Vienna and Strasbourg following graduation from medical school and on beginning practice in Boston was first associated with the Boston Dispensary (1882-1886), then with Boston City Hospital’s Neurological Department (1885-1913). He was professor of nervous diseases at Tufts College Medical School from 1902 to 1912. He established the Harvard Psychological Laboratory and wrote extensively on psychopathology; his book, The Dissociation of Personality (published 1906) was one of the first studies of multiple personality and was based on his own clinical work. aPrimarily medals commemorating events and people related to World War I, but also some medals belonging to Morton Prince and his family. Includes: a medal of Morton Prince's father, Frederick Octavius Prince (1818-1899), from the Boston Latin School in 1831; Delta Kappa Epsilon (Harvard chapter) medal belonging to Morton Prince; medal from the Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904, medal for the ceremony honoring the arrival in Boston of the Japanese Commission to the United States of 1917; an 1817 medal honoring G. L. Leclerc de Buffon; and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02376 aMorton Prince Collection of Medals, 1817-1921 (MS Am 2875). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, Latin, French, and Greek. aSee also zMS Am 2865.10aPrince, Morton,d1854-1929.10aBuffon, Georges Louis Leclerc,ccomte de,d1707-1788.10aPrince, Frederick O.q(Frederick Octavius),d1818-1899.20aBoston Latin School (Mass.)20aDelta Kappa Epsilon.bAlpha chapter, Harvard university.20aLouisiana Purchase Expositiond(1904 :cSaint Louis, Mo.) 0aWorld War, 1914-1918. 7aCommemoratives.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aMedals.2aat 7aRealia.2aat2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cGift;aMrs. Stedman Shumway Hanks;b19 East 72nd Street, New York, New York;d1945 May 3;e53Z-3.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Stedman Shumway Hanks, 19455hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Am 287502101nkcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006300108300002800171351007900199545022400278520035200502555008700854524011300941546001601054544011301070600003201183610004701215650002401262650002301286655003601309700004401345541012301389561007401512506004201586506012301628852002401751013523448-420121220121427.0020710i19711979mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn822730806 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aNegatives of John Jeffries' balloonist's suit,f1971-1979. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Negatives; and II. Other material. aJohn Jeffries (1745-1819) was a Boston physician, surgeon, scientist, and the first man (with Jean-Pierre-François Blanchard) to fly a balloon across the English Channel between England and France (on January 7, 1785). aBlack-and-white negatives taken by the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of History and Technology from 1971-1976, of John Jeffries ballonists's suit owned by the Houghton Library. Also includes 1979 copy of letter from Smithsonian curator Claudia Kidwell to Houghton and a photograph of a stipple engraving depicting Jeffries in the suit.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02387 aNegatives of John Jeffries' Balloonist's Suit, 1971-1979 (MS Am 2896). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also: MS Am 2789 for John Jeffries balloonist’s suit; and MS Am 1220-1220.25 for John Jeffries Papers.10aJeffries, John,d1745-1819.20aNational Museum of History and Technology. 0aBalloon ascensions. 0aBalloonszEngland. 7aBlack-and-white negatives.2aat1 aKidwell, Claudia Brush,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aClaudia B. Kidwell of the Smithsonian Institution;bWashington D.C.;d1979 March 22;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Claudia B. Kidwell of the Smithsonian Institution, 1979.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 289603258ntcaa2200529 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002300104245006200127300002800189351006600217545021800283520042200501555008700923524014001010546003001150544009901180544033901279650003001618650003501648650004601683650004001729650003401769650004301803650002601846650003501872650005801907650002901965650005901994650003002053650002802083655002002111655002002131655002602151655001802177655002002195655002702215655001802242655002202260710009802282541013102380561015202511506004202663852002302705013643165-820130405191724.0020710i18401922mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6316592460 aocn612879956 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aAmerican minstrel show additional collection,f1840-1922. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of minstrel company or title. aMinstrelsy was a type of popular entertainment in the United States, principally of the 19th-century, which consisted of the theatrical presentation of elements of African-American life in song, dance, and speech. aThe collection contains mostly printed materials related to American minstrel troupes, primarily performing in the United States, but also includes a few performances overseas. Includes: a few images of minstrel performers and troupes, playbills, programs, scripts, tickets, rules and regulations for performers, a songster, clippings, and miscellaneous pamphlets. Also with one watercolor image of dancing minstrels.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02418 aAmerican Minstrel Show Additional Collection, 1840-1922 (MS Thr 951). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee also HOLLIS and OASIS for additional minstrel show materials held by the Houghton Library. aOther collections concerning American minstrelsy are held by the Harris Collection at Brown University, the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Princeton University, the Ransom Center of the University of Texas at Austin, and the State Library of Ohio in Columbus. 0aAfrican AmericansvDrama. 0aAfrican American entertainers. 0aAfrican Americans in the performing arts. 0aAfrican AmericansvSongs and music. 0aAmerican dramay19th century. 0aBlackface entertainerszUnited States. 0aFolk drama, American. 0aMinstrel musiczUnited States. 0aMinstrel showszUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aMusicalszUnited States. 0aPopular culturezUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aMinstrelszUnited States. 0aSingerszUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aGroup portraits.2aat 7aScripts.2aat 7aSongsters.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat 7aTickets.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 95100926ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069110002500090245010500115300002700220351001700247500007700264546001600341600005900357610002500416506002300441541023200464852002400696013691763-120130604140001.0130524i19601998xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aVictor Gollancz Ltd.10aVictor Gollancz Ltd. publishing records concerning Elias Canetti's Crowds and Power,fca. 1960-1998. a1 box (.25 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRecords concerning the English translation of Canetti's Masse und Macht. aIn English.10aCanetti, Elias,d1905-1994.tMasse und Macht.lEnglish20aVictor Gollancz Ltd.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aR. A. Gekoski, Rare Books & Manuscripts;b13 Bathurst Mews, London, W2 2SB United Kingdom;d2013 May 16;e2012M-154;h$12515.17 ($7400.00 - Stanley Marcus Endowment for Rare Books ; $5115.17 - Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 173901537nkcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110003500110245007000145300002800215545029500243520018900538524014800727546001600875500005500891650004300946610003900989655003201028700003801060541006201098561003401160506004201194852002301236013662660-220130422074912.0020710s1915 mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn840412653 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aMiller Studios,ephotographer.10aAllegheny College centenary pageant panoramic photographs,f1915. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aA centenary pageant was held at Allegheny College in Meadville, Pennsylvannia on June 19-24, 1915. The pageant text was written and staged by Harvard professor George Pierce Baker, assisted by P. F. Reniers. Music was arranged and conducted by Charles Roepper, the anthem by Edward G. Hill. a5 panoramic photographs taken by the Miller Studios of Cleveland Ohio. Includes: Civil War scene; Hartman reunion; Laying corner stone, Bentley Hall; Mead family; and the Grand finale. aAllegheny College Centenary Pageant Panoramic Photographs, 1915 (MS Thr 958). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aAll items are rolled and may be difficult to view. 0aPageantszUnited Statesy20th century.20aAllegheny College (Meadville, Pa.) 7aPanoramic photographs.2aat1 aBaker, George Pierce,d1866-1935.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 95801600nrcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100005100093245005900144300002800203351003800231545008200269520024500351555008700596524013700683546001600820600003900836650001800875655002100893655003800914655001700952655002300969710003200992710002701024541009701051561006101148506004201209852002301251013656838-620130411141640.0020710nuuuuuuuumau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBlinn, George Richard,d1859-1926,ecollector.10aGeorge Richard Blinn toy theater collection,fundated. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aGeorge Richard Blinn was Harvard AB Class of 1885. He was a lawyer in Boston. aCollection includes hand-colored set and character engravings, cut-out for use in toy theater play. Plays include: Henry IV. Part I, Oliver Twist, and The miller and his men. Companies producing theater pieces are Pollock's and Redington's.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02422 aGeorge Richard Blinn Toy Theater Collection, Undated (MS Thr 953). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBlinn, George Richard,d1859-1926. 0aToy theaters. 7aEngravings.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aRealia.2aat 0aToy theaters.2aat2 aPollock's Toy Theatres Ltd.2 aRedington Toy Theatre.0 cGift;aMrs. George H. Blinn (Clara Augusta Pollard Blinn);d1927;eno accession number.5the1 aProbably gift of Clara Augusta Pollard Blinn, 1927.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 95301154ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069110002500090245010900115300002800224351001700252545012700269545011700396546001600513610002500529700004000554700004000594506002300634541016800657852002400825561006300849013798768-420131015153239.0131010i19301978mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aVictor Gollancz Ltd.10aVictor Gollancz Ltd. records concerning Frank Harris's biography of George Bernard Shaw,fca. 1930-1978. a1 boxa(.25 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aVictor Gollancz Ltd was a major British book publishing house of the twentieth century founded in 1927 by Victor Gollancz. aFrank Harris died as the book was in proof stages; George Bernard Shaw became involved in editing it thereafter. aIn English.20aVictor Gollancz Ltd.1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950,eauthor.1 aHarris, Frank,d1856-1931,eauthor.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aR.A. Gekoski Rare Books & Manuscripts;b13 Bathurst Mews, London, W2 2SB United Kingdom;d2013 October 3;e2013M-31;h$16500.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 17561 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, 2013.5hou01636nccaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100006300110245004300173300002800216351005000244520009500294555008700389524012100476546004100597600005200638655002300690650001100713650002200724710009400746506012300840506004200963541013101005561014701136852005101283012965128-120121212144151.0020710i18721892mausgc| n | |eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGilbert, W. S.q(William Schwenck),d1836-1911,elyricist.10aW. S. Gilbert sheet music,f1872-1892. a1 box (.25 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by composition title. aCollection includes printed sheet music from W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert productions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02222 aW. S. Gilbert Sheet Music, 1872-1982 (MS Thr 724). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aGilbert, W. S.q(William Schwenck),d1836-1911. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs. 0aOperasvExcerpts.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 724zBoxes are portfolio-sized01568nccaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004900110300002800159351004300187520007700230555008700307524012700394546004100521655002300562650001100585650003500596650003000631650003500661710009800696506012300794506004200917541013100959561015201090852002401242012988540-120111209193435.0020710i18431906mausgc| n | |eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aMinstrel show songs sheet music,f1843-1906. a1 box (.25 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by song title. aCollection contains printed sheet music of American minstrel show songs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02237 aMinstrel Show Songs Sheet Music, 1843-1906 (MS Thr 730). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs. 0aMinstrel musiczUnited States. 0aMinstrelszUnited States. 0aMinstrel showszUnited States.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 73001694nccaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245007900123300002800202351004100230520011400271555008700385524015700472546006600629650002500695650001200720650002000732655002300752650001100775710009800786506012300884506004201007541013101049561015201180852004801332013339912-520120830110459.0020710i18491935mausgc||||||||||||||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre00aSheet music featuring commercial products, stores, and hotels,f1849-1935. a1 box (.25 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by composer. aThis collection includes 19th and 20th-century sheet music featuring commercial products, hotels, and stores.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02351 aSheet Music Featuring Commercial Products, Stores, and Hotels, 1849-1935 (MS Thr 891). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some material in French. 0aCommercial products. 0aHotels. 0aStores, Retail. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 891zBox is portfolio-sized01624nccaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005900110300002800169351004800197520011700245555008700362524013600449546004100585650004000626650004000666655002300706650001100729710009800740506012300838506004200961541013101003561015201134852004801286013337446-720120827094701.0020710i19501990mausgc||||||||||||||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music featuring television programs,f1950-1990. a1 box (.25 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by television show. aThis collection includes sheet music of songs featured in 20th-century American and British television programs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02349 aSheet Music Featuring Television Programs, 1950-1990 (MSThr 890). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aTelevision programszGreat Britain. 0aTelevision programszUnited States. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 890zBox is portfolio-sized02107ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245006600154300002900220545039100249520039500640555008701035555010801122524011801230546001601348600003201364610003301396610001001429650001801439655002001457656001801477656001801495656002101513700005401534541005001588561004001638506004201678852002501720009233702-320121203085058.0031023i19011956mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm784350651 aMAHV03A362 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSarton, George,d1884-1956.10aGeorge Sarton letters to Dorothy Stimson Bullitt,f1901-1956. a1 boxa(.25 lineart ft.) aSarton was a historian of science and professor at Harvard University. Dorothy Stimson Bullitt purchased a small Seattle radio station with almost no listeners in 1947. She arranged a swap for the call letters KING and expanded it into one of the finest broadcasting empires in America.Sarton was a historian of science and professor at Harvard University. Stimson was a science writer. aLetters mostly concern Sarton's role as editor of Isis. Sarton also writes of the Sarton medal given in his honor, the appropriate dress expected at a Harvard dinner, and thanks for support after the death of Sarton's father. In addition, collection contains a booklet on the history and purpose of the Isis journal.Also includes letters from John Farquhar Fulton and May Sarton to Stimson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under 67M-123. aGeorge Sarton Letters to Dorothy Stimson Bullitt, 1901-1956 (MS Am 1803.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSarton, George,d1884-1956.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.20aIsis. 0aSarton medal. 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aEditors.2aat 7aEditors.2aat 7aScientists.2aat1 aBullitt, Dorothy Stimson,d1892-1989,erecipient.0 cGift;aDorothy Stimson;d1968;e67M-123.5hou1 aGift of Dorothy Stimson, 1968.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1803.501749ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004700108245006500155300002800220351003000248545019100278520017700469520006800646524010300714546003000817600004700847610003000894656002300924700003100947700003100978700005501009506012301064541012401187561004601311506004201357852002401399011449634-X20090417040557.0020710i19161943mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612815440 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSachs, Paul J.q(Paul Joseph),d1878-1965.10aPaul J. Sachs corresepondence with Bruce Rogers,f1916-1943. a1 boxa(.3 linear feet) bArranged chronologically. aPaul Joseph Sachs (1878-1965) was the first associate director of the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University and a Harvard professor. Bruce Rogers (1870-1957) was an American typographer. aCorrespondence concerning their friendship and mutal interests in design, printing, and art. Especially concerns commissions for Harvard University and the Fogg Art Museum. aAlso includes a 1916 letter from Edward Harmon Virgin to Sachs. aPaul J. Sachs Correspondence with Bruce Rogers (MS Am 2603). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aSachs, Paul J.q(Paul Joseph),d1878-1965.20aFogg Art MuseumxHistory. 7aTypographers.2aat1 aRogers, Bruce,d1870-1957.1 aRogers, Bruce,d1870-1957.1 aVirgin, Edward Harmon,d1876-1920,ecorrespondent.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 cGift;aProfessor Paul J. Sachs;bRoom F, Widener Library, Harvard University;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Paul J. Sachs, date unknown.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 260302657ckcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245007300108300002800181351005700209545017900266520037400445530006200819555008700881524010800968546003001076544008301106544009801189600003401287600004501321600004201366600003401408600003201442600003201474655005901506655005401565541006301619561013701682506004201819845039901861852002302260011414348-X20100514115954.0020710i18501887mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn631652248 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aImages of the Channing, Fuller, and Loring families,fca. 1850-1887. a1 boxa(.3 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by name of subject of image. aMargaret Fuller was an American Transcendentalist, an author, and feminist. The Channings, Lorings, and Fullers were prominent Massachusetts families during the 19th century. aIncludes images of a few members of the Massachusetts families of Channing, Fuller, and Loring. Images include two daguerreotypes of Margaret Fuller (1810-1850), a photograph print of the Fuller family (brothers, sister, and mother of Margaret Fuller), two cabinet photographs of Marjorie Channing Loring, and a deathbed cabinet photograph of Barbara Channing (d.1880). aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01956 aImages of the Channing, Fuller, and Loring Families (MS Am 2593). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.1 aSee also the daguerreotype of a painting of Fuller in bMS Am 1086 (1). [Box 1]1 aSee also materials from same donor: Channing family. Correspondence and papers (bMS am 1610).10aChanning, BarbaravPortraits.10aFuller, Margaret,d1810-1850vPortraits.10aLoring, Marjorie ChanningvPortraits.30aChanning familyvPhotographs.30aFuller familyvPhotographs.30aLoring familyvPhotographs. 7aCabinet photographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDaguerreotypeszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Charlotte Loring Lowell;d1960;e59M-277.5hou1 aPresented in memory of Margaret Fuller Channing Loring by her granddaughter, Charlotte Loring Lowell (Mrs. Ralph Lowell), 1960.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 259301391nacaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002700093245008400120300002700204351003200231520017800263546007100441600001500512655002000527655002700547541027200574561011400846506004200960506012301002852002401125013081796-120120131144906.0120131i17751916mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCox, Lisa,ecollector.10aLisa Cox research collection of playbills and theater programs,fca. 1775-1916. a1 box (.3 linear feet) aUnprocessed and unarranged. aCollection assembled by the British antiquarian, Lisa Cox, for study of physical and textual elements of theatrical playbills and programs. Includes approximately 330 items. aIn English predominantly, with a few instances of other languages.10aCox, Lisa. 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 571 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 79901167nacaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245004300093300002700136351001700163500008700180546007100267600003800338655002000376541025000396561011400646506004200760506012300802852002400925013081838-020120202160231.0120131i17841900mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aShakespeare playbills,fca. 1784-1900. a1 box (.3 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aApproximately 500 playbills from primarily British theaters for Shakespeare plays. aIn English predominantly, with a few instances of other languages.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616. 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 645the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80000709ntcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006400093300002700157351001700184500007100201546001600272600004000288655002100328541006600349561004200415506002300457852002300480013379698-120121016144817.0121016s1934 mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aScrapbooks concerning Jerome Kern's musical Roberta,f1934. a1 box (.3 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIncludes clippings, photographs, ticket stubs, and correspondence. aIn English.10aKern, Jerome,d1885-1945.tRoberta. 7aScrapbooks.2aat0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;d1990 December 31;e2012MT-10.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1990.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91201034npcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003500093245005700128300002700185351001700212545011300229500017000342546003400512600003500546600002200581655001900603655002200622541010200644506002300746852002300769013380198-520121017151557.0121017i19301950mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHandforth, Thomas,d1897-1948.10aThomas Handforth papers,fca. 1930-1950 and undated. a1 box (.3 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aThomas Scofield Handforth was an American etcher, lithographer, illustrator, and author of children's books. aIncludes costume designs, drawings, etchings, photographs, printed articles, and programs concerning dance in India and China and the dancer Ram Gopal in particular. aIn English, with some French.10aHandforth, Thomas,d1897-1948.10aRam Gopal,d1917- 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aStanley L. Handforth;b604 Lindsay Road, Wilmington, DE;d1950 August 14;e2012MT-13.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 91603005ntcaa2200481 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002300086041001800109245010700127300002700234351021000261546004600471545021600517520052100733555008701254524016201341500014601503600003201649600004301681600004501724600003301769600004401802600003201846600002101878650001601899650002501915650002201940650002001962655002001982700003202002700004502034700005002079700003202129700003302161710008102194541006802275561006102343561005002404506004602454852002302500010130909-020061208150325.0061018i18311882mau 000|0 fre d0 aocm84673357 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 afreageraeng00aLetters and manuscripts of Fanny Elssler, Marie and Paul Taglioni, and others,f1831-1882 and undated. a1 box (.3 linear foot) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence (A. Fanny Elssler letters, B. Marie Taglioni letters, C. Paul Taglioni letters, D. Other letters concerning the Taglioni family); and II. Manuscripts. aMaterials in French, German, and English. aFanny Elssler (1810-1884) was Viennese ballerina and Marie Taglioni (1804-1884) was an Italian dancer. Paul Taglioni (1808-1884) was a German dancer and ballet master. See finding aid for additional information. aPrimarily letters from Fanny Elssler, Marie Taglioni, and Paul Taglioni to various others concerning family, social, and professional topics, especially the ballet. Also includes: photomechanical clipping image of Fanny Elssler; postcard portrait of Marie Taglioni; letters from others concerning the Taglioni family; autobiographical manuscript note by Louis Jacques Jessé Milon; a manuscript poem, "Ihr," by Graf Anton Prokesch von Osten for Friedrich von Gentz to present to Fanny Elssler; and other manuscripts.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01941 aLetters and Manuscripts of Fanny Elssler, Marie and Paul Taglioni, and Others (MS Thr 496). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aTranslations and transcriptions of these letters and manuscripts were received with this collection. Material removed to the curatorial file.10aElssler, Fanny,d1810-1884.10aElssler, Fanny,d1810-1884vPortraits.10aMilon, Louis Jacques Jessé,d1765-1849.10aTaglioni, Marie,d1804-1884.10aTaglioni, Marie,d1804-1884vPortraits.10aTaglioni, Paul,d1808-1884.30aTaglioni family. 0aBallerinas. 0aDancey19th century. 0aDancerszAustria. 0aDancerszItaly. 7aPortraits.2aat1 aElssler, Fanny,d1810-1884.1 aMilon, Louis Jacques Jessé,d1765-1849.1 aProkesch von Osten, Anton,cGraf,d1795-1876.1 aTaglioni, Paul,d1808-1884.1 aTaglioni, Marie,d1804-1884.2 aJohn Milton and Ruth Neils Ward Collection (Harvard Theatre Collection)5the cDeposit;aJohn Milton Ward;d2006 October 03;e2006TW-138.5the aDeposited by John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward, 2006.5the aFrom the collection of John Milton Ward.5the aCollection materials are open for access.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 49603361ntc a2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245006100121300002600182500003100208520124500239546002801484500016201512524009801674600004901772600004201821610005101863650005301914650005501967650005802022650004102080651005502121651005202176651004802228651004202276651002802318651003002346651002802376700006902404700005002473700003502523700001602558700001802574700005802592700005602650700004102706710004302747541006602790852002302856010142882-020130327124137.0061101i18361910vp |||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612869757 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aengaswe00aMiscellaneous western Americana manuscripts,f1836-1910. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft) aCollection is unprocessed. aCopies of correspondence concerning Bois Blanc and Mackinac islands, furnished to Sen. James McMillan from the archives of the U. S. War department, dated 28 Dec. 1894; letters from Salmon Portland Chase to William G. Hosea, 1858-1867; J. Jackson's Notes of the life and character of the late P.T. Jackson, Esq.; letter from P. H. Jacobs to his brother concerning his experiences as a miner in the California gold rush of 1849; letters from Swedish immigrants in the Middle West to friends and relatives in the United States and Sweden, dated 1861-1869, concerning the local land and economic conditions and requesting that friends or relatives emigrate to the U.S., with typescript translations; letters from Francis Ellington to F. A. Golder, dated 1910, explaining Leupp's reasons for retirement from the Board of Indian Commissioners; Henry S. Fluk's Brief history of the phenomenon usually denominated "the jerks," which originated in Kentucky in 1800; letter from Steffan Steffanson, giving his account of the journey from Sweden and settlement in Jefferson County, Iowa, 1849, with typescript tranlation; letter from Robert McKinley Ormsby, dated at Louisville, Ky., 25 Oct. 1836, concerning daily life as a pioneer; and other items. aIn English and Swedish. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aMiscellaneous Western Americana Manuscripts (MS AmW 7). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJackson, P. T.q(Patrick Tracy),d1780-1847.10aLeupp, Francis Ellington,d1849-1918.10aUnited States.bBoard of Indian Commissioners. 0aGold mines and miningzCaliforniay19th century. 0aFrontier and pioneer lifezKentuckyy19th century. 0aFrontier and pioneer lifezMiddle Westy19th century. 0aSwedeszUnited Statesy19th century. 0aMiddle WestxDescription and travely19th century. 0aMiddle WestxEconomic conditionsy19th century. 0aCaliforniaxGold discoveriesy19th century. 0aKentuckyxReligious life and customs. 0aJefferson County (Iowa) 0aBois Blanc Island (Mich.) 0aMackinac Island (Mich.)1 aChase, Salmon P.q(Salmon Portland),d1808-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aGolder, Frank Alfred,d1877-1929,erecipient.1 aHosea, William G.,erecipient.1 aJackson, J.1 aJacobs, P. H.1 aLeupp, Francis Ellington,d1849-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aOrmsby, Robert McK.q(Robert McKinley),d1814-1881.1 aSteffanson, Steffan,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;avarious sources;dvarious dates;eno acc. number.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 702609cpcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004800123245008800171300002700259545025600286520040900542524014600951555008701097555011701184546001601301600005801317610002101375600003501396600004701431600003601478650002801514650003801542650003801580650004601618655002001664655002501684656001901709656001901728700004001747700003501787710003401822541014601856561008802002506004202090852003102132000602429-720120813084830.0860922i18911913mau eng d0 aocn1224051801 aMAHV86A570 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHeinemann, William,d1863-1920,erecipient.10aLetters from Hall Caine and William Ernest Henley to William Heinemann,f1891-1913. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aHeinemann was an English publisher. Hall Caine was an English novelist whose The Bondman (1890) was the first book published by Heinemann. Henley was an English poet, critic, and dramatist. He edited The New Review (1895-1897), published by Heinemann. aPrimarily letters from Hall Caine to Heinemann and his firm concerning business and personal matters. Peronsal letters include responses to invitations and letters about daily life. Business letters deal with financial issues, editorial discussions, and reviews, including "The Christian" and "The Mahdi." Includes one telegram and one visiting card with a handwritten note, both from Caine to Heinemann. aLetters from Hall Caine and William Ernest Henley to William Heinemann, 1891-1913 (MS Eng 1335-1335.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accession records, 1950-1951, under *50M-240 and *50M-241. aIn English.10aCaine, Hall,cSir,d1853-1931.tWhite prophet.lUrdu.20aHeinemann (Firm)10aCaine, Hall,cSir,d1853-1931.10aCaine, Hall,cSir,d1853-1931.tChristian.10aHeinemann, William,d1863-1920. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzGreat Britain. 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aVisiting cards.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aHenley, William Ernest,d1849-1903.1 aCaine, Hall,cSir,d1853-1931.2 aHeinemann (Firm),erecipient.0 cPurchase;aSweet, Forest G.;b14 Irving Place, New York 3, New York;d1951 Jan. 17;e50M-240, 50M-241;hWells fund and Morris Gray fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Wells fund and Morris Gray fund from Forest G. Sweet, 1951.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1335-1335.101876cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245008800157300002700245351004600272545010500318520022500423555008700648555010500735524012700840546001600967600002100983650006101004650003501065650005101100650003601151650004801187650004401235655002001279656001801299541007501317561004501392506004201437852002301479000602471-820100304121723.0861010i19381947mau eng d0 aocn6123755171 aMAHV86A608 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWheeler, Mary L.,erecipient.10aMary L. Wheeler war-time letters from friends in England and Australia,f1938-1947. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aWheeler worked for a time as a research assistant with the Massachusetts publisher Ginn and Company. aLetters to Wheeler from friends she met while spending a year in England (1926-1927). Includes discussion of living conditions in England and Australia and work done by women during World War II. Also includes clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002428 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-357. aMary L. Wheeler War-time Letters from Friends in England and Australia (MS Eng 805). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWheeler, Mary L. 0aWomenxEmploymentzGreat BritainxHistoryy20th century. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945zEngland. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xEvacuation of civilians. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xWar work. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xWomenzGreat Britain. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xWomenzAustralia. 7aClippings.2aat 7aEditors.2aat0 cGift;aWheeler, Mary L.;bLincoln, Mass.;d1946 May 18;e45M-357.5hou1 aGift of Mary L. Wheeler, 1946-1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 80501726cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004300123245008800166300002700254351010400281545016400385520017300549555008700722555010800809524009600917546001601013600004301029610003801072651005801110656002301168541005101191561010501242506004201347852002301389000601876-920110126081532.0860421i17811910mau eng d0 aocn1224193031 aMAHV86A175 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWarren, George Washington,d1813-1883.10aGeorge Washington Warren correspondence,f1781-1910 (inclusive),g1846-1882 (bulk). a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to George Washington Warren; and II. Other letters. aWarren, a lawyer, state legislator, and first mayor of Charlestown, Mass., was active in the Bunker Hill Monument Association, serving as president, 1847-1875. aContains letters, 1850-1875, to Warren, chiefly concerning the Bunker Hill Monument Association; and letters of a personal or social nature to contemporary politicians.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006458 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-38. aGeorge Washington Warren Correspondence (MS Am 1904). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWarren, George Washington,d1813-1883.20aBunker Hill Monument Association. 0aCharlestown (Boston, Mass.)xPolitics and government. 7aPoliticians.2lcsh0 cTransfer;aBaker Library;d1974;e74M-38.5HOU1 aTransferred from Baker Library in 1974; this collection formerly belonged to Frederic H. Viaux.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 190402223cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103041001300124100003200137245010100169300002700270351003000297545018600327520037600513555008700889555011800976524010901094546004601203600003701249600003201286650001601318650002601334650002401360655002001384656002401404656002501428700003701453700004401490700004301534700002801577541009301605561003801698506004201736852002301778000601939-020110114101432.0860509i18911946mau eng d0 aocn1223864511 aMAHV86-A230 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aWilliam James correspondence with Théodore Flournoy,f1891-1946 (inclusive),g1891-1910 (bulk). a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWilliam James was an American philosopher and psychologist. He shared an interest in psychical research with Théodore Flournoy, professor of psychology at the University of Geneva. aIncludes 69 letters and postcards, 1891-1910. from James to Flournoy together with 8 letters, 1908-1910, from Flournoy to James; 1 letter from Flournoy to William James Jr.; 1 letter from Flournoy to Alice Howe James, the wife of William James; and 4 letters from Alice Howe James to Flournoy. Also includes 2 letters, 1946, from Flournoy's daughter to William James, Jr.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-328-*45M-333. aWilliam James Correspondence with Théodore Flournoy (MS Am 1505). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIncludes materials in English and French.10aFlournoy, Théodore,d1854-1920.10aJames, William,d1842-1910. 0aPsychology. 0aPhilosophy, American. 0aPsychical research. 7aPostcards.2aat 7aPhilosophers.2lcsh 7aPsychologists.2lcsh1 aFlournoy, Théodore,d1854-1920.1 aJames, William,d1882-1961,erecipient.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,erecipient.1 aWerner, Alice Flournoy.0 cGift;aWilliam James;d1946;e45M-328, 45M-329, 45M-330, 45M-331, 45M-332, 45M-333.5HOU1 aGift of William James, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 150501735cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003600123245009600159300002700255545006800282520032300350555008700673555010500760524014700865546001601012600003601028600003401064650003801098655002401136656002201160740004501182541007001227561004601297506004201343852002401385000602306-120121214111755.0860821i19331936mau eng d0 aocn612373057 aMAHV86A490 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMarrot, H. V.q(Harold Vincent)10aH. V. Marrot correspondence concerning The life and letters of John Galsworthy,f1933-1936. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aMarrot was the bibliographer and biographer of John Galsworthy. aCorrespondence with Marrot from literary friends and relatives of John Galsworthy concerning The Life and Letters of John Galsworthy (1935). Many of the letters grant permission for Marrot to print letters to Galsworthy in his book. Also includes cut text from galley proofs of The life and letters of John Galsworthy.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002448 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-247. aH. V. Marrot Correspondence Concerning The Life and Letters of John Galsworthy, 1933-1936 (MS Eng 1089). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMarrot, H. V.q(Harold Vincent)10aGalsworthy, John,d1867-1933. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aBiographers.2aat42aThe life and letters of John Galsworthy.0 cPurchase;aMyers, Winifred A., Ltd.;d1958 May;hBemis fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Bemis fund, 1958.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 108902437cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041001100122100003300133245002400166300002700190351004200217545011900259520044900378524007800827555008700905555013100992581018301123600001901306600003301325650005101358651005401409651005101463655001901514700005101533700004701584700005201631700005201683700003101735700005001766561006601816541012201882852002302004000601751-720040524135020.0851213i17751782mau eng d0 aocn1223726311 aMAHV85A38 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aengfre1 aCooke, Nicholas,d1717-1782.00kPapers,f1775-1782. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged in rough alphabetical order. aCooke (1717-1782) was lieutenant-governor of Rhode Island from May-Oct 1775, and governor from Oct 1775- May 1778. aChiefly incoming correspondence; some outgoing letters (originals and drafts). There are letters from Nathanael Greene, John Hancock, Jonathan Trumbull, George Washington, and others; and four letters from Cooke to his wife Hannah. Other documents include a copy of speech of the Oneida Indian chiefs to the four New England provinces; abstract of John Bigelow's journal for 23 July 1776; and items pertaining to military and political affairs. aNicholas Cooke Papers (MS Am 1129). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016838 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1941-1942, under*41-1158-1162, 1164-1168, 1170-1177. aMost of this material is printed in "Revolutionary Correspondence of Governor Nicholas Cooke 1775-1781". Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, n.s. 36 (1926): 231-353.10aCooke, Hannah.10aCooke, Nicholas,d1717-1782. 0aOneida IndiansxGovernment relationsyTo 1789. 0aRhode IslandxPolitics and governmenty1775-1783. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 7aSpeeches.2aat1 aGreene, Nathanael,d1742-1786,ecorrespondent.1 aHancock, John,d1737-1793,ecorrespondent.1 aTrumbull, Jonathan,d1710-1785,ecorrespondent.1 aWashington, George,d1732-1799,ecorrespondent.1 aCooke, Hannah,erecipient.1 aJones, Matt Bushnell,d1871-1940,ecollector. aPurchased as part of the Matt B. Jones Collection, 1941.5hou cPurchase as part of Matt B. Jones Collection;aGoodspeed's;bBoston;d1941.e41-1158-1162, 1164-1168, 1170-1177.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 112901789cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002800122245005500150300002700205351003000232545029100262520014900553555008700702555011300789524010500902546001601007600002801023610003401051650003701085656002301122700004201145700004701187541008001234561007201314506004201386852002301428000602037-220130131122625.0860129i19091911mau eng d0 aocn612369791 aMAHV86A32 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aReed, John,d1887-1920.10aJohn Reed letters to Lincoln Steffens,f1909-1911. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aReed was an American journalist and revolutionary. He joined the staff of The Masses in 1913, was a war correspondent in Mexico and Europe for Metropolitan Magazine, publicist for the Russian Revolution, and head of the Communist Labor Party. Steffens was an American author and editor. aIncludes five letters Reed wrote to Lincoln Steffens when Reed was a Harvard student and then a young journalist; and one letter to Joseph Fels.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-174-179. aJohn Reed Letters to Lincoln Steffens, 1909-1911 (MS Am 1453). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aReed, John,d1887-1920.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aJournalismxVocational guidance. 7aJournalists.2lcsh1 aFels, Joseph,d1854-1914,erecipient.1 aSteffens, Lincoln,d1866-1936,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aWormser;d4 Oct 1943;e43M-174-179;h$23.00 (Sheldon fund).5hou1 aPurchased from Wormser with funds from the Sheldon Fund, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 145301420cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100002800124245006100152300002700213351003900240545004400279520019500323555008700518524011000605546001600715600002800731650003900759656001900798700005300817700006400870541006500934561004300999506004201042852002201084000602199-920130910111634.0860725i18411875mau eng d0 aocn1225901831 aMAHV86-A394 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNeal, John,d1793-1876.10aJohn Neal letters to various correspondents,f1841-1875. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aNeal was an American author and editor. aConsists of letters by John Neal to various persons, chiefly concerning literary and political subjects. Includes 10 letters to William Pitt Fessenden and 13 letters to Orville James Victor.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00656 aJohn Neal Letters to Various Correspondents, 1841-1875 (MS Am 184). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aNeal, John,d1793-1876. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aFessenden, William Pitt,d1806-1869,erecipient.1 aVictor, Orville J. (Orville James),d1827-1910,erecipient.0 cGift;aKenneth B. Murdock;d1927;eno accession number.5HOU1 aGift of Kenneth B. Murdock, 1927.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 18402417cpc a2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100001900136245004900155300002700204351013500231545026000366520035800626524009800984546005001082555008701132600001801219600001901237600002401256650003901280650003201319650004101351650003601392650003901428650004501467651003001512651002801542651003201570655002601602655002801628656002501656700002401681700001801705541010301723561005701826506004201883852002201925000602243-X20130910115933.0860805i18281836mau eng d0 aocn6123718291 aMAHV86A433 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aRaux, Bernard.10aBernard Raux slave trade papers,f1828-1836. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence, II. Miscellaneous documents, and III. Bills of sale for slaves, 1828-1835. aThese papers document a business partnership between slave traders Bernard Raux, Paul Pascal, and Nathaniel Currier. Documents show slaves purchased in Norfolk, Virginia, and transported to slave markets in New Orleans, Louisiana and Natchez, Mississippi. aPapers include correspondence, bills of sale for slaves, balance sheets, bank checks, bills of lading, promisory notes, and other documents relating to the business of slave trading. Documents record slave names, age, location of sale, and ships used to transport. Especially mentions ships used for transport: Brig Ajax, Brig Ariel, and Brig Louisiana. aBernard Raux Slave Trade Papers, 1828-1836 (MS Am 790). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPapers mostly in English, but some in French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0021510aPascal, Paul.10aRaux, Bernard.10aCurrier, Nathaniel. 0aSlaveryzSouthern StatesxHistory. 0aSlave tradezUnited States. 0aSlave tradezLouisianazNew Orleans. 0aSlave tradezVirginiazNorfolk. 0aSlave tradezMississippizNatchez. 0aSlave traderszSouthern StatesxHistory. 0aNatchez (Miss.)xHistory. 0aNorfolk (Va.)xHistory. 0aNew Orleans (La.)xHistory. 7aBills of lading.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aSlave traders.2lcsh1 aCurrier, Nathaniel.1 aPascal, Paul.0 cGift;aUnknown source.bNote from W.C. Lane notes this might be gift of J.P. Morgan.5hou3Papers.1 aUnknown source; possibly a gift of J.P. Morgan.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 79001229cpcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004800123245005300171300002700224520008700251500002800338524009800366545006100464555008000525600003600605541005500641561006100696852002300757007001400780843012900794852002800923000602433-520041216131028.0860922i17751821mau eng d0 aocn6123750981 aMAHV86A574 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822,erecipient.00aLetters from various correspondents,f1775-1821. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aConsists of 64 letters, chiefly personal in nature, to Eva Marie Violetti Garrick. aCollection is unsorted. aEva Marie Violetti Garrick Correspondence (MS Eng 962). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aEva Garrick was the wife of British actor David Garrick.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *54M-254.10aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822. aLittle, David M., Estate of, 1954.cPurchase.5hou aPurchased from the estate of David M. Little, 1954.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 962hd|bfa012baap aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Imaging Services,d2006.e1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.7s2006 maun a8 bMMFcHDhFilm Mas H188301277cpcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005300123245007500176300002700251351003100278545004400309520017300353524009400526555008000620600004400700600004100744600003300785650004300818541005400861561006100915852002300976000602436-X20110207081644.0860922i18221824mau eng d0 aocn6123751171 aMAHV86A577 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBeltz, George Frederick,d1777-1841,erecipient.10aLetters concerning the estate of Eva Maria Veigel Garrick,f1822-1824. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aBeltz was an English author and herald. aIncludes 65 letters concerning the estate of Eva Maria Veigel Garrick, widow of David Garrick, mostly addressed to George Frederick Beltz and Thomas Rackett, executors. aGeorge Frederick Beltz Correspondence (MS Eng 963). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *54M-255.10aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822xEstate.10aBeltz, George Frederick,d1777-1841.10aRackett, Thomas,d1757-1841. 0aExecutors and administratorszEngland.0 aDavid M. Little, Estate of, 1954;cPurchase.5hou1 aPurchased from the estate of David M. Little, 1954.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 96302188ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100002600121245004100147300002700188351011100215545007500326520030700401524007600708555008700784555010800871546001600979600002600995650003501021650004401056650004701100650002001147655002501167655003801192700004401230700004501274700005101319700004001370700004101410700004701451700004901498541010501547561003701652506004201689852002301731006333543-320091118102710.0960109i19401986mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn6126566861 aMAHV96A4 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aKramer, Aaron,d1921-10aAaron Kramer papers,fca. 1940-1986. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Letters to Aaron Kramer; and II. Compositions by Aaron Kramer. aAaron Kramer was an American professor of English and poet of protest. aLetters discuss Kramer's poetry, translations from Yiddish, and criticism. Correspondents include Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Lukas Foss, Alfred and Dorothy Kreymborg, Pete Seeger, Donald Swann, and Mark Van Doren. The compositions are successive drafts of articles published in various magazines and books. aAaron Kramer Papers (MS Am 2061). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-95. aIn English.10aKramer, Aaron,d1921- 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aProtest poetry, Americany20th century. 0aYiddish poetryxTranslations into English. 0aYiddish poetry. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aFerlinghetti, Lawrence,ecorrespondent.1 aFoss, Lukas,d1922-2009,ecorrespondent.1 aKreymborg, Alfred,d1883-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aKreymborg, Dorothy,ecorrespondent.1 aSeeger, Pete,d1919-ecorrespondent.1 aSwann, Donald,d1923-1994,ecorrespondent.1 aVan Doren, Mark,d1894-1972,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aAaron Kramer;b96 Van Bomel Boulevard, Oakdale, New York 11769;d1986 April 18;e86M-95.5hou1 aGift of Aaron Kramer, 1986.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 206101898npcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100110002200121245005800143300002700201351013200228545009300360520029500453524009700748555008700845555010000932600004101032610002201073650003601095650004601131655002501177700006801202700003801270700005701308541007301365561004501438506004201483852002301525006333581-620090712232820.0960105i19131955mau eng d0 aocn6126567961 aMAHV96A2 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aMerrymount Press.10aLetters relating to the Merrymount Press,f1913-1955. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence of the Merrymuont Press; and II. Correspondence of George Laban Harding. aThe Merrymount Press in Boston was the printing-office of D.B. (Daniel Berkeley) Updike. aThe correspondence of the Press consists mainly of letters from D.B. (Daniel Berkeley) Updike, including a number to the San Francisco printer Henry H. Taylor. Harding's correspondence concerns his collection of Merrymount Press printing. Also includes some letters to George Laban Harding. aLetters Relating to the Merrymount Press (MS Am 2065). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000080 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1994-1995, under *94M-32.10aUpdike, Daniel Berkeley,d1860-1941.20aMerrymount Press. 0aBook collectingzUnited States. 0aPrintingzMassachusettszBostonxHistory. 7aCorrespondence.2aat1 aHarding, George L.q(George Laban),d1893-1976,ecorrespondent.1 aTaylor, Henry H.,ecorrespondent.1 aUpdike, Daniel Berkeley,d1860-1941,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aGeorge Laban Harding;d1957;e94M-32; formerly 56H-1362.5hou1 aGift of George Laban Harding, 1957.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 206501592ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004300124245009000167300002700257520008400284520019500368555008700563555009400650524013700744600004100881600002900922655002200951700004600973700004101019700002901060541005201089561004601141506004201187852004901229007982539-720090109143350.0990121s1852 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122203700 aocmMAHV99A3 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTaylor, Tom,d1817-1880,etranscriber.10aLetters transcribed by Tom Taylor from Benjamin Robert Haydon's autobiography,f1852. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aTranscripts of letters (in the hand of Tom Taylor) from Haydon's autobiography. aWith Taylor's autograph manuscripts: (1852) Transcripts of letters to Benjamin Robert Haydon from C. Eastlake, 1815-1817; and (undated). Index to letters in Benjamin Robert Haydon's journal.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000248 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1987-88, *87M-55. aLetters Transcribed by Tom Taylor from Benjamin Robert Haydon's Autobiography (MS Eng 1331.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHaydon, Benjamin Robert,d1786-1846.10aTaylor, Tom,d1817-1880. 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aEastlake, Charles Lock,cSir,d1793-1865.1 aHaydon, Benjamin Robert,d1786-1846.1 aKeats, John,d1795-1821.0 cPurchase;aMr. J. Reading;e87M-55;d1987.5hou1 aPurchased from Mr. J. Reading, 1987.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1331.8zShelved in Keats Room02928npcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100110003500121245007900156300002700235351015700262545065900419520007601078520022001154524011601374555008701490555010901577544024701686546001601933610003501949650003601984650003302020655002002053655002502073655002102098655002002119655001802139700007102157700006802228541008302296561007102379506004602450852002202496008013581-120130910120235.0990301i19171923mau eng d0 aocn6122216971 aMAHV99A4 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aLeague to Enforce Peace (U.S.)10aLeague to Enforce Peace (U.S.) additional records,f1917-1923 and undated. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence (A. Correspondence with William Harrison Short, B. Other Correspondence); and II. Other material. aLeague to Enforce Peace (U.S.) [LEP] was founded in New York City in 1914 by wealthy citizens alarmed at the outbreak of WWI. Its purpose was to work in the U.S. to establish an international organization to ensure world peace. The League's secretary was William H. Short; it's president, former U.S. President William Howard Taft. The League did not associate itself with pacifist opposition to WWI. With the establishment of the League of Nations,the LEP took upon itself organizing political and grassroot support for the association of the U.S. with the League of Nations. The LEP was moribund after the elections of 1920 and ceased to exist in 1923. aIncludes correspondence, clippings, interviews, memoranda, and minutes. aTopics documented include: finances, relations with individual members, actions of LEP president, organizational decisions, national conferences, relations with sympathizing foreign organizations, and LEP campaigns. aLeague to Enforce Peace (U.S.) Additional Records, 1917-1923 (MS Am 785). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records for 1998-99, under *98M-31. aFor related materials see Houghton collections: League to Enforce Peace (U.S.) Records (Int 6722.8.25*) and the the Abbott Lawrence Lowell Peace Papers (*2005-481). Also see the papers of A. Lawrence Lowell in the Harvard University Archives. aIn English.20aLeague to Enforce Peace (U.S.) 0aPeace movementszUnited States. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPeace. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aInterviews.2aat 7aMemoranda.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat1 aShort, William H.q(William Harrison),d1868-1935,ecorrespondent.1 aTaft, William H.q(William Howard),d1857-1930,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aLeague of Nations Non-Partisan Association;d1925 June 4;e98M-31.5hou1 aGift of the League of Nations Non-Partisan Association, 1925.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 78502211nkcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003500107245010700142300002600249545004200275520033100317520005100648555008700699555010400786524016000890510011101050544008001161544010001241546001601341600004501357655002001402655002201422655002001444700003401464541006501498561008901563541007601652561004101728506004201769852002601811008135743-520130712115344.0990719m18971978mau||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocm82315595 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGraves, Louise B.,ecollector.10aLouise B. Graves collection of reproductions of the Emily Dickinson daguerreotype,fca. 1897 and 1978. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aEmily Dickinson was an American poet. aPhotographs and negatives of the various stages of the retouching of reproductions of the Emily Dickinson daguerreotype portrait. The original daguerreotype was photographed ca. 1847 and reproductions of it were retouched to produce an altered image, ca. 1897 by artist Laura Coombs Hills. Items collected by Louise B. Graves. aAlso includes letters concerning the portrait.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000518 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1999-2000, under 99M-3. aLouise B. Graves Collection of Reproductions of the Emily Dickinson Daguerreotype, ca. 1897 and 1978 (MS Am 1118.15). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aLouise B. Graves, "The Likeness of Emily Dickinson." Harvard Library Bulletin, Vol. 1, No. 2, Spring 1947. aSee also: MS Am 1118.99b (23) and the curatorial file for related material. aThe original daguerreotype portrait of Emily Dickinson is owned by the Amherst College Library. aIn English.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886vPortraits. 7aNegatives.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aHills, Laura Coombs,eartist.0 cGift;aAmherst College Library;d1978 March 31;e99M-3.5hou1 aPhotograph of unretouched daguerreotype, gift of Amherst College Library, 1978.5hou0 cGift;aLouise B. Graves;d1947 May 12;e46M-286; 46M-289; 46M-291.5hou1 aGift of Louise B. Graves, 1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.1501998ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105245005700126300002700183520022000210520013900430555008700569555010600656524009600762600001900858650003900877651004600916655001800962700003600980700003301016700002901049700003101078700004401109700001901153541009201172541015301264561008601417506004201503852002301545561005601568008235049-320090528151134.0991112i18581891xx |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122340790 aocmMAHV-99A31 aMH-HcMH-Heappm00aAlcott family letters to Alfred Whitman,f1858-1891. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aLetters from the Alcott family of Concord, Mass. to Alfred Whitman. Also includes miscellaneous manuscripts relating to Whitman and an autograph manuscript by the writer Louisa May Alcott: Mrs. Jarley [a monologue]. aIncludes letters from Louisa May Alcott, Abigail May Alcott Nieriker, Anna Bronson Alcott Pratt, Anna M. Pratt, and John Bridge Pratt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000558 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1941-1942, under *41-112. aAlcott Family Letters to Alfred Whitman (MS Am 1130). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aAlcott family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aLetters.2aat1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.1 aWhitman, Alfred,erecipient.1 aAlcott, May,d1840-1879.1 aPratt, John Bridge,d1870.1 aPratt, Anna Bronson Alcott,d1831-1893.1 aPratt, Anna M.0 aMiss Elizabeth Crumby;cGift Item (68);bWaterville, N.Y.;d1945 Feb 24;e44M-289.5hou0 cPurchase;afrom Mrs. Meriel W. Chapman;d1941 June 6;e41-112;hFriends of the Library fund ($500.00); copies [items (69) and (70)], gift 1956.5hou1 aPurchased from Mrs. Meriel W. Chapman, 1941; items (69) and (70) gift, 1956.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 11301 aItem (68) gift of Miss Elizabeth Crumby, 1945.5hou01729ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002100104110003700125245007800162300002700240545010100267520015400368555008700522555010700609524012000716500004000836610003700876650003900913650002800952650003100980655001801011700004801029700004701077541012501124561007501249506004201324852002501366008257777-320081218140642.0991213i18681886mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122348600 aocmMAHV85A39 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)10aRobert Brothers (Boston, Mass.) letters to Louisa May Alcott,f1868-1886. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.) was the publisher of American author Louisa May Alcott's works. aLetters from Thomas Niles (representing Roberts Brothers) to writer Louisa May Alcott. Also includes other materials relating to Alcott's publishing.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000568 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-310. aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.) Letters to Louisa May Alcott (MS Am 1130.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aRecataloged and renumbered in 1999.20aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.) 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aLetters.2aat1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888,erecipient.1 aNiles, Thomas,d1825-1894,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit, later purchase;aMrs. F. Wolsey Pratt;bIndian Spring Road, Concord, Mass.;d1960; 1992;e59M-310 (1-150).5hou1 aPresented by Mrs. F. Wolsey Pratt; deposit, 1960; purchase, 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1130.802224ntcaa22003735a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002100104245003800125300002700163351003900190520023500229520017400464555008700638555010600725524009000831600001900921650003900940651004600979655001801025655001601043700003401059700003801093700004201131700003601173700002901209700004401238852002501282561011101307506004601418845038601464008256567-820090528151157.0991210i18301888mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122347800 aocmMAHV99A33 aMH-HcMH-Heappm00aAlcott family papers,f1830-1888. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aA portion of the family papers (letters, poems, and other compositions) of the Alcott family of Concord, Mass. Includes papers of the writer Louisa May Alcott and her father, Amos Bronson Alcott, the New England transcendentalist. aAlso includes letters to and from Alcott family members: Abigail May Alcott, Elizabeth Sewall Alcott, Abigail May Alcott Nieriker, Anna Bronson Alcott Pratt, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000608 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1999-2000, under *99M-24. aAlcott Family Papers, 1830-1888 (MS Am 1130.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aAlcott family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aLetters.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aAlcott, Abba May,d1800-1877.1 aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.1 aAlcott, Elizabeth Sewall,d1835-1858.1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.1 aAlcott, May,d1840-1879.1 aPratt, Anna Bronson Alcott,d1831-1893.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1130.41 aPurchased with the Howe fund and the Friends of the Library fund, from Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940.5hou aCollection is open for research use.5hou aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou02160npcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004500122245006000167300002700227351002900254545030800283520039300591524011200984555008701096555010701183600003201290600003301322600002801355610004001383650001501423651003901438655002001477655002201497700003201519700002801551710004001579541004901619561003901668506004201707852002501749008449963-X20130910131021.0000905i19101967mau eng d0 aocn6122439371 aMAHV00A10 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLamont, Corliss,d1902-1995.ecollector.10aCorliss Lamont papers concerning John Reed,f1910-1967. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aReed (1887-1920) was an American journalist and revolutionary. He graduated from Harvard College in 1910, joined the staff of The Masses in 1913, was a war correspondent in Mexico and Europe for Metropolitan Magazine, publicist for the Russian Revolution, and head of the American Communist Labor Party. aCollection of papers by and about John Reed. The bulk of the material dates from the period after Reed's death in 1920. Includes: correspondence with Corliss Lamont and others, especially with Reed's wife Louise Bryant and the Harvard Alumni John Reed Committee, concerning Reed and the acquisition of the Reed papers; manuscripts and letters by Reed; and a few clippings and photographs. aCorliss Lamont Papers Concerning John Reed, 1910-1967 (MS Am 1091.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001228 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accession Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-53.10aBryant, Louise,d1885-1936.10aLamont, Corliss,d1902-1995.10aReed, John,d1887-1920.20aHarvard Alumni John Reed Committee. 0aCommunism. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1913-1921. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBryant, Louise,d1885-1936.1 aReed, John,d1887-1920.2 aHarvard Alumni John Reed Committee.0 cGíft;aCorliss Lamont;d1967;e67M-53.5hou1 aGift of Corliss Lamont, 1967.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1091.101930ckcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003100121245005900152300002700211520020800238530006200446524009400508555008700602555012300689510009700812600003100909610004100940610002800981651004001009655001901049541026501068506004201333852002401375561007601399561006601475561005101541008597661-X20130711134042.0010328q18211823mau||| ||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6639699431 aMAHV01F0 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFisher, Alvan,d1792-1863.10aAlvan Fisher views of Harvard College,fca. 1821-1823. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aThree drawings of views of Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts. One is an 1823 northeast view (not recorded by Bail), and two are views ca. 1821 from the south and from the northeast (Bail No. 36). aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aAlvan Fisher Views of Harvard College (MS Am 2095). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room Accessions Records, 2000-2001, under *2000M-48.1 aHamilton Vaughn Bail, "Views of Harvard" (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1949).10aFisher, Alvan,d1792-1863.20aHarvard UniversityvPictorial works.20aHarvard College (1780-) 0aCambridge (Mass.)xPictorial works. 7aDrawings.2aat0 cPurchase; Gift;bRichard C. Morrison; Antony De Wolfe Howe;d1948;eRecataloged as 2000M-48 including:h48M-267PF, purchase with Duplicate fund ($500) from Richard C. Morrison, 162 Newbury St., Boston, Mass.; and 48M-222, gift of Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 20951 apfMS Am 2095 (1) and (2) purchased from Richard C. Morrison, 1948.5hou1 apfMS Am 2095 (3) gift of Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe, 1949.5hou1 aRecataloged from *48M-267PF and *48M-222.5hou01865ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245007000153300002700223351003000250545003900280520030200319555008700621555010900708524012000817546001600937600003100953600007300984655001901057655002201076655001601098655001901114655002001133656001701153700006901170740002301239506008401262541005101346561005501397852002701452008866613-120121218095552.0020927i19601962mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806014091 aMAHV02-A90 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.10aRobert Frost papers concerning the Kennedy inaugural,f1960-1962. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aRobert Frost was an American poet. aConcerns U.S. President-elect John F. Kennedy's invitation to poet Robert Frost to attend and partipate in Kennedy's inaugural ceremony. Includes telegrams, letters, drafts of letters, invitations, programs, other ephemera, and autograph copy of Frost's poem for the occasion, "The gift outright."0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011018 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-169. aRobert Frost Papers Concerning the Kennedy Inaugural, 1960-1962 (MS Am 2134). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.10aKennedy, John F.q(John Fitzgerald),d1917-1963xInauguration, 1961. 7aEphemera.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aKennedy, John F.q(John Fitzgerald),d1917-1963,ecorrespondent.4 aThe gift outright.1 aRestricted: donor/depositor permission required; consult curatorial staff.5hou0 cGift;aMr. Robert Frost;d1962;e61M-169.5HOU1 aDeposit, then gift of Mr. Robert Frost, 1962.5hou8 bHOUcVAULThMS Am 213401874ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245004800154300002700202351015400229545003900383520025600422555008700678555011100765524010500876546001600981651002700997600003101024600006701055655001901122655002201141655002001163656001701183541014301200561006101343506008601404852003401490008865938-020121218095657.0021120i19601963mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm802910871 aMAHV02-A245 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.10aRobert Frost additional papers,f1960-1963. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 2133: Robert Frost and the Kennedy Inaugural; and II. bMS Am 2133.1: Robert Frost in the Soviet Union. aRobert Frost was an American poet. aPapers concerning U.S. President-elect John F. Kennedy's invitation to poet Robert Frost, to attend and partipate in Kennedy's inaugural ceremony, and Frost's trip to the USSR. Includes telegrams, letters, drafts of letters, invitations, and ephemera.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-69-70. aRobert Frost Additional Papers, 1960-1963 (MS Am 2133-2133.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aSoviet UnionxHistory.10aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.10aKennedy, John F.q(John Fitzgerald),d1917-1963xInauguration. 7aEphemera.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cDeposit; then gift;aMrs. Theodore Morrison;b6 Buckingham Place, Cambridge 38, Massachusetts;d1963 November; 1963;e63M-69; 63M-70.5hou1 aDeposit, then gift of Mrs. Theodore Morrison, 1963.5hou1 aRestricted: donor/depositor permission required; ; consult curatorial staff.5hou8 bHOUcVAULThMS Am 2133-2133.102705ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004000122245007100162300002700233545013400260520056900394555008700963555011001050524011201160581014501272546001601417600004001433600003901473600002201512600002001534610002701554610002201581610005401603630003101657630001901688650002401707651005801731651004901789650001901838650003701857650003901894656002101933700005101954541009002005561007302095506004202168852002502210008842317-420110126084145.0020920i18431890mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm776465361 aMAHV02-A72 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.10aGeorge William Curtis letters to John Sullivan Dwight,f1843-1890. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aCurtis was an American author, orator, editor, and reformer. Dwight was an American Transcendentalist and classical music critic. aIncludes fifty-six letters from Curtis to Dwight concerning a concert by the New York Philharmonic Society, the Norwegian violinist Ole Bull, Brook Farm and the Harbinger, the Emerson and Hawthorne families, individualism, Curtis's daily life and farming in Concord, Curtis's latest readings, Italian travels, engagement to Eliza Winthrop, a Boston Athenaeum exhibition, the beginning of Dwight's Journal of Music, and various musings by Curtis on music, art, nature, and the seasons. Also includes one letter to Dwight from Curtis's brother, James Burrill Curtis.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006608 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-117F. aGeorge William Curtis Letters to John Sullivan Dwight (MS Am 1124.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aLetters to John Sullivan Dwight were chiefly published in George Willis Cooke, ed. Early Letters of George William Curtis to John S. Dwight. aIn English.10aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.10aDwight, John Sullivan,d1813-1893.30aHawthorne family.30aEmerson family.20aNew York Philharmonic.20aBoston Athenaeum.20aBrook Farm Phalanx (West Roxbury, Boston, Mass.).00aDwight's journal of music.40aThe Harbinger. 0aMusicxPerformance. 0aUnited StatesxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aItalyxDescription and travely19th century. 0aIndividualism. 0aTranscendentalism (New England). 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aReformers.2lcsh1 aDwight, John Sullivan,d1813-1893,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aHarold T. White and Mrs. Hugh D. Marshall;d1942;e42M-117F;h$60.00.5HOU1 aPurchased from Harold T. White and Mrs. Hugh D. Marshall, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1124.202587ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004000122245005700162300002700219351003900246545010900285520063300394555008701027555010901114524010701223546001601330600004001346600005101386610002901437650006901466650003901535651005901574655002001633655001901653655001801672655005001690656001801740656002101758656002301779656002501802700003701827740002101864740001701885541005801902561006201960506007202022852002302094008858207-820121218101204.0020925i18591903mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm822512601 aMAHV02-A82 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.10aHorace Elisha Scudder additional papers,f1859-1903. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aScudder was an editor with Houghton, Mifflin and Company and editor of the Atlantic Monthly (1890-1898). aLetters concern financial matters in publishing, the process of editing manuscripts and books, questions from publishers concerning translations of Hans Andersen's works, and thank you notes and appreciation for a book Scudder edited, The Children's Book, from an elementary class at Cornwall Heights School in New York. Scudder writes to his wife about writing lectures, life in Boston, and holiday plans. Collection also includes a song book, a certificate of membership in the Atheneum club, fragments of Scudder's diary from 1822, a book cover for Scudder's book Boston Town, a book catalog, and various newspaper clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-220. aHorace Elisha Scudder Additional Papers, 1859-1903 (MS Am 2124). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.10aAndersen, H. C.q(Hans Christian),d1805-1875.20aCornwall Heights School. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEditors.2aat 7aPublishers.2aat 7aTranslators.2lcsh 7aFamily records.2aat1 aScudder, Grace Owen,erecipient.0 aChildren's Book.0 aBoston Town.0 cGift;aMrs. Ingersoll Bowditch;d1960;e60M-220.5HOU1 aDeposit of Mrs. Ingersoll Bowditch, 1960; gift 1963.5HOU0 aOpen for research use. Formerly restricted until June 1, 1963.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 212402326ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100006500122245009200187300002700279351003000306545004800336520035400384555008700738555010900825524014300934544010701077546001601184600005301200600003301253650003601286610002201322650003801344650003401382655003501416655001601451656001701467700007401484700004901558700006201607700003301669541006801702561005401770506004201824852002601866008858272-820121218101344.0020920i19561963mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm817567691 aMAHV02-A77 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948,ecollector.10aThomas W. Lamont collection of John Masefield materials: Additional papers,f1956-1963. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aMasefield was a British poet and dramatist. aCollection assembled by Thomas William Lamont, friend of John Masefield. Contains letters from Masefield to Lamont, correspondence between Corliss Lamont, Thomas W. Lamont, William Alexander Jackson, and others concerning the deposit of the Masefield papers in Houghton Library, and a manuscript poem by Masefield to Florence Haskell Corliss Lamont.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-164. aThomas W. Lamont Collection of John Masefield Materials: Additional Papers, 1956-1963 (MS Eng 1416). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also Houghton Printed Books *EC9.M377.Zzx for John Masefield Collection of miscellaneous ephemera. aIn English.10aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967. 0aAuthors, Britishy20th century.20aHoughton Library. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aLetters (correspondence).2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aLamont, Corliss,d1902-1995.ecorrespondent.1 aLamont, Florence Haskell Corliss,d1873-1952,erecipient.1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.0 cDeposit; then gift;aThomas Lamont;d1965; 1993;e64M-164.5HOU1 aDeposited by Thomas Lamont, 1965; gift 1993.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 141601752ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004500122245007900167300002700246545013300273520010800406530006200514555008700576555013400663524013100797546001600928600003300944600002000977610005600997655002701053655002401080656002501104656002801129541009901157561007901256506004201335852002501377008861214-720130406084459.0020920i18491931mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm832250931 aMAHV02-A73 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,erecipient.10aSamuel Henshaw additional letters from various correspondents,f1849-1931. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aHenshaw was an entomologist and served as Director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University from 1912 to 1927. aLetters and documents to Henshaw pertaining to professional and museum matters, and some family papers. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, 1945-1946, under *42M-1941-2087, *45-31. aSamuel Henshaw Additional Letters from Various Correspondents, 1849-1931 (MS Am 1134.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.30aHenshaw family.20aHarvard University.bMuseum of Comparative Zoology. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aEntomologists.2lcsh 7aMuseum directors.2lcsh0 cBequest;aSamuel Henshaw, Thomas Barbour, and others;d1942, 1945;e42M-1941-2087, 45-31.5HOU1 aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, Thomas Barbour, and others, 1942 and 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1134.102596ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005300122245006900175300002700244545004800271520058800319555008700907555010800994524012001102544007801222546001601300650005201316600003401368600005301402600003301455600006801488610002101556650003601577650003801613650003401651650001201685651005801697651004901755655003401804656001601838700003301854541008401887561005501971506010002026852002402126008858517-420121218100601.0030910i19521966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm816749881 aMAHV03A262 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948.10aThomas W. Lamont correspondence with John Masefield,f1952-1966. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aMasefield was a British poet and dramatist. aCollection primarily contains correspondence between Thomas Lamont and John Masefield. Correspondence written by Lamont address issues of the illness and death of Lamont's parents, other news about his family, travels in Italy, Senator McCathy, politics in the United States, the assassination of President Kennedy, and snakes. Includes Masefield poem in honor of Lamont's parents, which Lamont then had published in the Saturday Review. John Masefield also wrote Lamont of daily life in England. Collection also contains various printed matter, including printed poems by Masefield.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-78. aThomas W. Lamont Correspondence with John Masefield, 1952-1966 (MS Eng 1417). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also *EC9.M377.Zzx for John Masefield Collection of printed ephemera. aIn English. 0aEnglishxSocial life and customsy20th century.10aMcCarthy, Joseph,d1908-1957.10aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aKennedy, John F.q(John Fitzgerald),d1917-1963xAssassination.20aSaturday review. 0aAuthors, Britishy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 0aSnakes. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 0aItalyxDescription and travely20th century. 7aMagazines (periodicals).2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.0 cGift;aThomas S. Lamont;b23 Wall St., New York, NY 10015;d1966;e66M-78.5hou1 aGift of Thomas S. Lamont, class of '21, 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research. Collection was formerly restricted until January 1, 1978.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 141702116ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003700123245005700160300002700217545036500244520028300609555008700892555011400979524009601093546001601189600002001205610003701225650004601262651006301308655002201371740005201393740003301445541011801478561011701596506004201713852002301755008900563-520100412080227.0020920i18921903mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127298731 aMAHV02-A79 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aOld Cambridge Photographic Club.10aOld Cambridge Photographic Club records,f1892-1903. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aThe Old Cambridge Photographic Club was founded in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1892 by Alice C. Allyn. The first members were men and women who wanted to take up the art of photography as recreation. The members kept each other up to date on the latest photographic advancements by presenting papers, giving demonstrations, or reading from photographic books. aIncludes a written manuscript and typed history of the Club from 1892-1903, which covers events, meetings, the Club constitution, and a membership list. Also includes a manuscript of The legend of the Brown Rosarie, and a catalog from the Club's sixth annual exhibition in 1899.8 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004400 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-181F-182. aOld Cambridge Photographic Club Records (MS Am 1496). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAllyn, Alice C.20aOld Cambridge Photographic Club. 0aPhotographyxUnited Statesy19th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customs.y19th century. 7aTypescripts.2aat0 aHistory of the Old Cambridge Photographic Club.0 aLegend of the Brown Rosarie.0 cPurchased;aThomas W. Storrow;d1944;e44M-181F-44M-182;hSheldon Fund; Friends of the Library Fund ($2.00).5HOU1 aPurchased from Thomas W. Storrow, Trustee, with the Sheldon Fund and the Friends of the Library Fund, 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 149601534ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003300122245003800155300002700193545004500220520017300265524007900438555008700517600003300604600004100637600002900678650003400707655002200741655001600763541010700779541004400886561005300930561010900983506003701092852007901129008883215-520090304114634.0020410i19211952mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127276241 aMAHV02A19 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBlunden, Edmund,d1896-1974.10aEdmund Blunden papers,f1921-1952 a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aBlunden was an English poet and scholar. aIncludes correspondence, transcripts, compositions, and notes relating to Blunden's research on John Keats, especially on Keats' friendship with Charles Armitage Brown. aEdmund Blunden Papers (MS Eng 1426). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0014910aBlunden, Edmund,d1896-1974.10aBrown, Charles Armitage,d1786-1842.10aKeats, John,d1795-1821. 0aPoets, Englishy20th century. 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aNotes.2aat0 cDeposit; the gift;aArthur A. Houghton (purchased from Charles Rare Books);d1951; 1970;e51M-92.5hou0 cRecat.;aKeats Room files.5hou3papers1 aMaterial transferred from Keats Room files.5hou1 a(Item 4) deposited by Arthur A. Houghton, Jr. (purchased from Charles Rare Books), 1951; gift 1970.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1426zShelved in 1 box: MS Eng 1423, 1424, 1425, 1426, 142702720ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001700122245004700139300002700186351009600213545029200309520062600601555008701227555011801314524009701432546001601529600003401545600001701579650002901596650001601625651005801641651005101699655001801750655002301768656001901791656002101810700004801831700003401879700005301913700006001966740003302026541006602059561004702125506007902172852002302251008860556-620121218095754.0020925i18631942mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm785438941 aMAHV02-A85 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aHowe family.10aHowe family additional papers,f1863-1942. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Maud Howe Elliott; and II. Other papers. aJulia Ward Howe was the author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" and other works, and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer; her daughters were authors Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards and Maud Howe Elliott (and others), and her granddaughter was Rosalind Richards (the donor). aFirst part of the collection consists of letters written to Maud Howe Elliott by various correspondents, discussing daily life, literature discussions, and the literary works of the Howe family. Several letters from William Henry Hurlbut written while he was in Europe discuss the details of his life there and the welfare of mutual acquaintances. The second part of the collection consists of an 1863 diary of Julia Ward Howe, recording her expenditures and daily activities, a folder of contemporary translations of the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and a composition by Julia Ward Howe about the Massachusetts governor.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011038 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-158-49M-164F. aHowe Family Additional Papers, 1863-1942 (MS Am 2128). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.30aHowe family. 0aWomen authors, American. 0aLiterature. 0aUnited StatesxSocial life and Customsy19th century. 0aEuropexSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aComposers.2lcsh1 aElliott, Maud Howe,d1854-1948,erecipient.1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.1 aHurlbert, William Henry,d1827-1895,erecipient.1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943,erecipient.0 aBattle hymn of the republic.0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richards;d1950;e49M-158-49M-164F.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1950.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research. Formerly restricted until June 2001.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 212802009ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003700123245007600160300002700236351003000263545039200293520021400685555008700899555010900986524012601095546001601221600003701237650003001274650002401304656002101328700005701349700006901406541005501475561004501530506004201575852005401617008904170-420130212102654.0021002i18661887mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm779907331 aMAHV02-A110 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887.10aDorothea Lynde Dix additional letters to Thomas Lamb Eliot,f1866-1887. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aDix was a humanitarian crusader for the mentally ill. She investigated the conditions of the hospitalized insane in many U.S. states and some European countries, and petitioned state and national legislatures for reforms. She was also superintendent of army nurses during the Civil War. Eliot was a Unitarian minister, an educator, and assisted in the founding of Reed College in Oregon. aIncludes letters from Dix to Eliot and his wife, Henrietta Robins Mack Eliot, about her work, including visits to mental hospitals. Also includes letters from other correspondents to the Eliots concerning Dix.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-339. aDorothea Lynde Dix Additional Letters to Thomas Lamb Eliot, 1866-1887 (MS Am 2170). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aMental health facilities. 0aMentally illxCare. 7aReformers.2lcsh1 aEliot, T. L.q(Thomas Lamb),d1841-1936,erecipient.1 aEliot, Henrietta R.q(Henrietta Robins Mack),d1845-erecipient.0 cGift;aRev. W.G. Eliot, Jr.;d1946;e45M-339.5HOU1 aGift of Rev. W.G. Eliot, Jr., 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2170zShelved with bMS Am 2166-217001448ctcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245007500156300002700231351005400258545009300312520011000405524011400515555008700629600002200716650004700738655001800785541019800803561006601001506003701067852006601104008869452-620090304112738.0020325i18661903mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127237961 aMAHV02A15 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFletcher, Harold,erecipient.10aLetters to Harold Fletcher from prominent Boston citizens,f1866-1903. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aFletcher (d.1903?) was a Boston artisan who specialized in the restoration of paintings. aLetters thank Fletcher for his good work on paintings and are from prominent Boston citizens of the time. aLetters to Harold Fletcher from Prominent Boston Citizens (MS Am 2139). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0014410aFletcher, Harold. 0aArt objectsxConservation and restoration. 7aLetters.2aat0 cGift;aHarold Fletcher, via Charles H. Taylor;bBoston Globe, P.O. Box 189, Boston, Mass.;d1926 July 30.eGift to HCL in 1926; Transferred from Widener Library as X 5.20 and reclassified.5hou1 aBequest of Harold Fletcher, via Charles H. Taylor, 1926.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2139zShelved with bMS Am 2141 and bMS Am 2142.01850ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004900123245006300172300002700235351004600262545013900308520027800447555008700725524010300812546001600915600004900931600002900980600003801009600002901047600004401076650005101120655001601171655001901187656001801206710002101224541011701245561004801362506004201410852002401452008902203-320100412074333.0030910i18491906mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127301591 aMAHV03A267 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDay, F. Hollandq(Fred Holland),d1864-1933.10aFred Holland Day papers concerning John Keats,f1849-1906. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aDay was a Boston, Massachusetts publisher, photographer, and historian. He had a strong interest in the life and poetry of John Keats. aChiefly correspondence of Day concerning the poet John Keats, as well as an acceptance letter from the Kelmscott Press to publish his book on Emerson poems; and a letter concerning a bibliography on Oscar Wilde. Day's papers also contain his notes on the editor John Scott.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00432 aFred Holland Day Papers Concerning John Keats (MS Eng 1428). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDay, F. Hollandq(Fred Holland),d1864-1933.10aKeats, John,d1795-1821.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aScott, John,d1784-1821.10aWilde, Oscar,d1854-1900vBibliography. 0aAuthors and publisherszEnglandy19th century. 7aNotes.2aat 7aSketches.2aat 7aAuthors.2aat2 aKelmscott Press.0 cPurchase;aGoodspeed's Book Shop;bBoston, Mass.;d23 Apr. 1941;erecat. fr. Cl 8341;h$22.00 Friends fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Friends Fund, 1941.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 142801586ctcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087100003000112245005600142300002600198351003000224544012200254546001600376545009000392520013800482524012300620555008700743600003000830600003400860600003500894700004600929541014600975561007201121506006801193852002301261009003803-720071204132511.0021212i19241928mau |||||||rus|d0 aocn612744059 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aLifar, Serge,d1905-1986.10aSerge Lifar letters to Serge Diaghilev,f1924-1929. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically.1 aFor related material see: Serge Lifar Letters to Serge Diaghilev, 1942-1928. New York Public Library. Dance Division. aIn Russian. aSerge Lifar was leading dancer of Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes from 1924 to 1929. aIncludes 5 letters describing Lifar's dance lessons with Enrico Cecchetti, impressions of musical concerts and rehearsals of ballets. aSerge Lifar Letters to Serge Diaghilev (MS Thr 508). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0194710aLifar, Serge,d1905-1986.10aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929.10aCecchetti, Enrico,d1850-1928.1 aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929,erecipient. cPurchase;aSotheby's auction (through Lisa Cox);bLondon;dDecember 2002;e2007MT-61r;h$1610.00 (Parmenia Migel Ekstrom Memorial Fund).5the aPurchased with the Parmenia Migel Ekstrom Memorial Fund, 2002.5the aThere are no restrictions on physical access to the collection.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 50801933ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004600122245012400168300002700292351004600319520044900365524017400814555008700988600004601075600004501121600003301166655002001199740008301219700003301302541013201335561005701467506004201524852006501566009045725-020120307085817.0030224i19311932mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612750347 aMAHV03A62 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-10aFlora Virginia Milner correspondence concerning the catalog of the Harcourt Amory Lewis Carroll collection,f1931-1932. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aIncludes correspondence with Harvard University librarian Flora Virginia Milner Livingston (mostly letters to) concerning her work on the catalog of the Harcourt Amory Lewis Carroll collection and her publication of: Harvard University Library. The Harcourt Amory collection of Lewis Carroll in the Harvard College Library compiled by Flora V. Livingston. Cambridge, Mass: priv. print, 1932. Also includes some clippings and Carroll miscellany. aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston Correspondence Concerning the Catalog of the Harcourt Amory Lewis Carroll Collection (MS Am 2264). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0017210aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-10aCarroll, Lewis,d1832-1898xBibliography10aAmory, Harcourt,d1855-1925. 7aClippings.2aat42aThe Harcourt Amory collection of Lewis Carroll in the Harvard College Library.1 aAmory, Harcourt,d1855-1925.0 cGift;aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston;bWidener Library, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA;d1946 Jul 26;e46M-8, 46M-9.5HOU1 aGift of Flora Virginia Milner Livingston, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2264zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2262, 2263, 226402244nkcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002100122245006700143300002700210351007200237545055100309520038400860524010201244555008701346600002101433650003401454650003501488655004901523655002001572655002201592700004801614740002301662740002501685541007701710561004201787506004201829852002301871009047409-020091023134633.0030226m18811941mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn612750497 aMAHV03A63 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRichards, Henry.10aHenry Richards drawings for Sketches & scraps,f1881 and 1941. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Drawings and II. Clippings. aLaura E. Richards (1850-1943) was the daughter of Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe, founder of the Perkins School for the Blind, and Julia Ward Howe, social reformer and lyricist of the "Battle Hymn of the Republic." In 1871 she married Henry Richards (1848-1949; Harvard College A.B. 1871), architect and industrialist. Laura Richards wrote more than ninety works, mostly in the fields of children's literature and biography. One of her early publications was a book of nonsense verses, Sketches & scraps (1881) that was illustrated by her husband Henry. a63 original pen and ink and watercolor drawings, some with autograph manuscript text (in unidentified hand) for the children's book of nonsense verses: Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards. Sketches & scraps; with pictures by Henry Richards. Boston: Estes & Lauriat, 1881. Lacks drawings for cover, p. 21, and p. 59. Also inlcudes a 1941 clipping concerning the publication of the book. aHenry Richards Drawings for Sketches & Scraps (MS Am 2265). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0017310aRichards, Henry. 0aIllustrated children's books. 0aNonsense literature, American. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy19th century2gmgpc 7aClippings.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943.02aSketches & scraps.02aSketches and scraps.0 cGift;aRosalind Richards;bGardiner, Maine;d1947 Mar. 6;e46M-237.5HOU1 aGift of Rosalind Richards, 1947.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 226502024ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003500124245006100159300002700220351003900247545005800286520045800344555008700802555010800889524010100997546001601098600003501114600003901149650002801188650002601216650004801242655002401290655003801314656001501352656002101367700005101388700003301439541004801472561003901520506004201559852002501601008992575-020130528154956.0021018i19151933mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127415951 aMAHV02-A165 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chaptman letters to Conrad Chapman,f1915-1933. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aChapman was an American essayist, poet, and reformer. aPrimarly letters from John Jay Chapman to his son, Conrad Chapman, concerning friends and relatives, Chapman's world travels, his Harvard reunions, both father and son's writings and readings, and Chapman's criticism of others' writings. Many letters focus on John Jay Chapman's writings against New York Governor Al Smith's nomination as the first Roman Catholic candidate for United States President, along with a small amount of other correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004218 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1985-1986, under *85M-33. aJohn Jay Chapman Letters to Conrad Chapman (MS Am 1854.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aSmith, Alfred Emanuel.d1862-1933. 0aDescription and travel. 0aLiterature criticism. 0aPresidents.zUnited StatesxElectiony1928. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aEssayists. 7aReformers.2lcsh1 aChapman, Chanler Armstrong,d1901-erecipient.1 aChapman, Conrad,erecipient.0 cGift;aConrad Chapman;d1986;e85M-33.5HOU1 aGift of Conrad Chapman, 1986.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1854.501688ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003500124245007100159300002700230351003900257545003600296520021600332555008700548555010700635524011200742546001600854600002100870600003500891610002900926655002400955655001600979700003300995541004701028541010101075561003901176561004401215506004201259852002501301008992579-320100329111705.0021018i19141926mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127416271 aMAHV02-A166 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chapman additional letters to Conrad Chapman,f1914-1926. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aChapman was a literary scholar. aLetters from John Jay Chapman to his son Conrad Chapman, who was studying at Harvard, discussing family matters and Harvard Business School, and including one poem by John Jay Chapman; with other correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004238 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-9. aJohn Jay Chapman Additional Letters to Conrad Chapman (MS Am 1854.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChapman, Conrad.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.20aHarvard Business School. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aChapman, Conrad,erecipient.0 cGift;aConrad Chapman;d1987;e86M-9.5hou cGift;aGeoffrey W. Chapman;b1227 Shaker Drive, Herndon, VA 21070;d2005 No. 18;e2005M-24.5HOU1 aGift of Conrad Chapman, 1987.5HOU1 aGift of Geoffrey W. Chapman, 2005.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1854.702727ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245012500157300002700282351005700309545067800366520027601044524016501320555008701485555012101572610004101693610006901734600003401803610010001837650001401937655002001951655002701971655001801998656003502016710006902051541009202120561004102212506004202253852005802295009093746-520091210080818.0030425i18641865mau|||| |||| ||| ||eng d0 aocn612764791 aMAHV03A196 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBumstead, Horace,d1841-1919.10aHorace Bumstead collection of documents concerning ordnance of the 43rd regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops,f1864-1865. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically, then by title of document. aHorace Bumstead (1841-1919) was the son of Josiah Freeman Bumstead, a Boston merchant, and Lucy Douglas Willis Bumstead. He was educated at the Boston Latin School and Yale College (Class of 1863) and became a Congregationalist minister and educator. During the Civil War, Bumstead was commissioned as a Major for the 43rd regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops where he served from April 1864 to December 1865. He later joined the faculty of Atlanta University and served as their second president from 1888-1907. The 43rd regiment of the United States Colored Infantry was organized at Philadelphia, Pa. on March 12, 1864 and discharged at Philadelphia on November 30, 1865. aPrinted document forms concerning the issuance and return of military weapons to the volunteers of the 43rd regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops in the Union Army. Report forms completed in manuscript (probably by Bumstead). Also includes some letters concerning ordnance. aHorace Bumstead Collection of Documents Concerning Ordnance of the 43rd Regiment of the U.S. Colored Troops (bMS Am 2300). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Library Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-219 (7).10aUnited States.bArmyxMilitary life.10aUnited States. Army. Colored Infantry Regiment, 43rd (1864-1865)10aBumstead, Horace,d1841-1919.10aUnited States. Army. Colored Infantry Regiment, 43rd (1864-1865)xOrdnance and ordnance stores. 0aOrdnance. 7aDocuments.2aat 7aMilitary records.2aat 7aReports.2aat 7aSoldierszUnited States.2lcsh2 aUnited States. Army. Colored Infantry Regiment, 43rd (1864-1865)0 cGift;aEdward C. Holden;b16 Lowell St., Cambridge, MA;d1954 Sept.;e54M-219 (7).5hou1 aGift of Edward C. Holden, 1954.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2300zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2300-230101918nacaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007000093300002600163351008700189520027200276546001600548610003800564610005400602610003700656610003800693610004300731610004700774610004200821610001900863610002000882651004500902655002000947655002700967541028300994561011401277506004201391506012301433852002401556013086710-120120202160117.0120201i18101900mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBritish Isles theater playbills and programs: London,f1810-1900. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically in folders by theater name, with miscellaneous at the end. aPrimarily playbills, with some programs, from the Adelphi Theatre, Little Theatre in the Haymarket, Lyceum Theatre, Olympic Theatre, Princess's Theatre, Sadler's Wells Theatre, St. James's Theatre, Scala Theatre, and Surrey Theatre (many of them under earlier names). aIn English.20aAdelphi Theatre (London, England)20aLittle Theatre in the Haymarket (London, England)20aLyceum Theatre (London, England)20aOlympic Theatre (London, England)20aPrincess’s Theatre (London, England)20aSadler’s Wells Theatre (London, England)20aSt. James's Theatre (London, England)20aScala Theatre.20aSurrey Theatre. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th century. 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lots 40-44, 46-511 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 80302065ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087066000700112100004700119100005900166245006100225300002600286351003900312545013100351520014400482524011400626546001600740555008700756600005800843600005600901600005200957600006701009600004701076600005901123700006501182700006501247700005501312852002301367541017301390561006001563506006801623010075532-120070406145450.0060807i19281934mau |||||||rus|d0 aocn612843179 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs c(N1 601aGrebenshchikov, Georgīĭ,d1882-1964.1 601aГребенщиков, Георгiй,d1882-1964.10aGeorgīĭ Grebenshchikov papers,f1928-1935 and undated. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGeorgīĭ Grebenshchikov was a Russian writer. In 1925 he established Russian community "Churaevka" in Southbury, Connecticut. aIncludes partial autograph manuscript of a book, and letters with enclosures from Fyodor Chaliapin, Michel Fokine, and Sergei Rachmaninoff. aGeorgii Grebenshchikov Papers (MS Thr 498). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn Russian.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0186310602aRachmaninoff, Sergei,d1873-1943,ecorrespondent.10602aРахманинов, Сергей,d1873-1943.10603aFokine, Michel,d1880-1942,ecorrespondent.10603aФокин, Михаил Михайлович,d1880-1942.10604aGrebenshchikov, Georgīĭ,d1882-1964.10604aГребенщиков, Георгiй,d1882-1964.1 605aChaliapin, Fyodor Ivanovich,d1873-1938,ecorrespondent.1 605aШаляпин, Федор Иванович,d1873-1938.1 aGrebenshchikov, Georgīĭ,d1882-1964,erecipient.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 498 cPurchase;aLion Heart Autographs, Inc.;b470 Park Avenue South, Penthouse, New York, NY 10016;d2006 Aug. 3;e2006MT-22;h$15750.00 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest).5the aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 20065the aThere are no restrictions on physical access to the collection.01959npcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089040002100105100004500126245004600171300002700217545036000244520029800604555008700902524011400989600003301103650002301136650003201159650002901191650002801220655002201248655004201270655004201312700003301354700003701387700003701424541008101461561004401542852002301586010085954-220060821133314.0d||| | |060821i18431935mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm84670157 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBarry, Phillips,d1880-1937,ecollector.00aSongs and ballads from Maine,f1843-1935. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aPhillips Barry (1880-1937) was an American ballad scholar. He studied folklore, theology and classical and medieval literature at Harvard and founded the Folk-Song Society of the North-East and edited its Bulletin from 1930 until his death. He collected mainly in New England and collaborated with scholars in Vermont and Maine. (from: Grove Music Online) aIncludes autograph manuscript transcripts of ballad text and autograph music notation of songs, compiled in the state of Maine between 1843 and 1935. Transcribers include: Lewis Pierce, Rosallie S. Wood, and Susie Carr Young. These notebooks apparently were later collected by Philliips Barry.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01932 aPhillips Barry Collection of Songs and Ballads from Maine (MS Am 2497). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBarry, Phillips,d1880-1937. 0aFolk musiczMaine. 0aFolk songs, EnglishzMaine. 0aBallads, EnglishzMaine. 0aBalladszUnited States. 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aBalladszUnited Statesy20th century. 7aBalladszUnited Statesy19th century.1 aPierce, Lewis,etranscriber.1 aWood, Rosallie S.,etranscriber.1 aYoung, Susie Carr,etranscriber. cGift;aMrs. Phillips Barry;bCambridge, Mass.;d1955 Ma. 29;e54M-226F;5hou aGift of Mrs. Phillips Barry, 1955.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 249701780ctcaa22003495a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108100002600126245006300152300002700215351010400242545010800346520025900454555008700713524010200800544006000902546003600962600004800998600002601046650003501072655001601107655002201123655002701145700004801172541010401220561003701324506004601361852002301407009922971-420110721102754.0060417i19402006mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn674776248 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafreaswe1 aBenson, Linda Melton.10aLinda Benson collection of T. S. Eliot papers,f1940-2006. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other materials. aEliot was a playwright, essayist, publisher and critic, and one of the twentieth century's major poets. aIncludes correpondence and compositions by Eliot as well as clippings, programs and photographs. Also includes the funeral program from Eliot's memorial and samples of Eliot's seals. Collected by Linda Melton Benson, Eliot's secretary at Faber and Faber. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02114 aLinda Benson Collection of T. S. Eliot Papers (MS Am 2706). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional T. S. Eliot papers. aIn English, French and Swedish.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aBenson, Linda Melton. 0aAmerican poetryz20th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.0 cGift;aLinda Benson;b5 Great River Lane, Hillsdale, New York 12529;d2006 April 7;e2005M-52.5hou1 aGift of Linda Benson, 2006.5hou1 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 270601534ntcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245007100140300002700211500001700238520018600255545031300441524012000754651004500874610005200919610007400971651006701045655002701112541006601139561004101205852002201246009956119-020130910125446.0060504i17441745xx |||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612824464 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aStorer, John,dactive 1745.10aJohn Storer papers concerning the Louisbourg campaign,f1744-1745. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aContains enlistment records for those serving under Storer, letters concerning the campaign, printed notices concerning the soldiers' pay, accounts of the regiment, and other items. aIn 1744-1745, William Shirley, the governor of Mass., issued a call for volunteers in the surrounding British colonies to join an expedition to take the French Fortress Louisbourg in Nova Scotia. The expedition set sail from Boston in March 1745. The French forces at Louisbourg capitulated on June 16, 1745. aJohn Storer Papers Concerning the Louisbourg Campaign, 1744-1745 (MS Am 969). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aLouisbourg (N.S.)xHistoryySiege, 1745.10aGreat Britain.bArmyxColonial forceszAmerica.10aGreat Britain.bArmyxColonial forceszAmericaxPay, allowances, etc. 0aGreat BritainxForeign relationszFrancevEarly works to 1800. 7aMilitary records.2aat0 cGift;aErnest Lewis Gay;d15 June 1927;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Ernest Lewis Gay, 1927.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 96901246ntc a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100006500108245007100173300002700244520018000271524010600451555008800557600005300645655002100698700005200719700005000771700004900821541005400870561004500924852002300969010168873-320070116135646.0061206i18291915mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612878654 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFearing, Daniel B.q(Daniel Butler),d1859-1918,ecollector.10aDaniel B. Fearing collection of autograph letters,fca. 1829-1915. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aContains letters in several identified hands, signed; some are addressed to Fearing. Includes letters from Washington Irving, Herman Melville, Daniel Webster, and many others. aDaniel B. Fearing Collection of Autograph Letters (MS Am 1581). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid available:uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0185910aFearing, Daniel B.q(Daniel Butler),d1859-1918. 7aAutographs.2aat1 aIrving, Washington,d1783-1859,ecorrespondent.1 aMelville, Herman,d1819-1891,ecorrespondent.1 aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aDaniel B. Fearing;d1918;eF3.100.5hou1 aBequest of Daniel B. Fearing, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 158105030npcaa2200493 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002900110245003500139300002600174351013900200545164700339520128801986555008703274524011303361546001603474600003103490600003603521600003203557600002903589600003703618600002603655600003503681600003303716650004003749655003003789650002103819655003003840655002203870656002203892656002003914656002503934700004503959740001404004740007704018740002104095541010104116561013004217506004204347506012304389852002404512010248552-620111213164418.0070302i19171979mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn767957516 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aLoos, Anita,d1893-1981.10aAnita Loos papers,f1917-1979. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions; II. Photographs; III. Other materials; IV. Correspondence; V. Printed materials. aScreenwriter, playwright, novelist, and child actress Corinne Anita Loos was born in Sissons (now Mount Shasta), California on April 26, 1893. In 1912, she began her career as a screenwriter at D.W. Griffith’s Biograph Company, where she wrote over 100 scenarios. She married and divorced her first husband, Frank Pallma, Jr. in 1915 and was remarried to director, producer and writer John Emerson in 1920 until his death in 1956. Between 1916 and 1917, Loos formed a unit within the Biograph Company, with Emerson and actor Douglas Fairbanks, collaborating on ten films. She continued to collaborate with Emerson as a co-writer from 1916 to 1934 and as a co-producer beginning in 1919. Between 1916 and 1925, Loos worked extensively with silent film stars Norma and Constance “Dutch” Talmadge, and became close friends with their family, including their sister, Natalie Talmadge (wife of Buster Keaton), and their mother, Margaret “Peg” Talmadge. In 1919, Loos left the Griffith studio to go to New York with Emerson and work for the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation. It was during this time that she wrote the bestselling novel, Gentlemen prefer blondes: the illuminating diary of a professional lady (1925). Loos returned to Hollywood in 1932 to work as a screenwriter for MGM, before returning to New York in 1943 to write and adapt scripts for the stage. In 1949, she adapted Gentlemen prefer blondes: the illuminating diary of a professional lady with playwright Joseph Fields, and it was later popularized in the film version of the stage musical starring Marilyn Monroe (1953). Loos died in New York City on August 18, 1981.2 aThe collection, consisting mainly of personal photographs of Anita Loos and the Talmadge family, covers the time period 1917 to 1979. The bulk of the collection is a series of photographs made up of photographs of Anita Loos, including pages from her personal photo album, photographs of the Talmadge family, and photographs collected by Anita Loos. The majority of the photographs were used in her memoirs: A girl like I: an autobiography, Kiss Hollywood good-by, and The Talmadge girls: a memoir. Some prominent persons depicted in photographs include: John Emerson, Douglas Fairbanks, Buster Keaton, Constance Talmadge, Margaret L. Talmadge, Natalie Talmadge, and Norma Talmadge. Also includes three typescript copies of Anita Loos’s scripts, The duel and The king’s mare; film review by poet and contributor to the New Republic, Vachel Lindsay; letter from Ralph L. Schroeder to Anita Loos regarding his Lindsay biography; letters from Jule Styne to Anita Loos regarding Anita Loos and Joseph A. Field's adaptation of her novel into the Broadway musical, Gentlemen prefer blondes; letter from Robert D. Loomis to Anita Loos concerning Jule Styne’s 1978 biography and a typed synopsis of the book; program of The constant wife and a Christmas card from actress Elsa Maxwell. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02242 aAnita Loos Papers, 1917-1979 (MS Thr 722). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEmerson, John,d1874-1956.10aFairbanks, Douglas,d1883-1939.10aKeaton, Buster,d1895-1966.10aLoos, Anita,d1893-1981.10aTalmadge, Constance,d1898-1973.10aTalmadge, Margaret L.10aTalmadge, Natalie,d1899-1969.10aTalmadge, Norma,d1897-1957. 1aWomen screenwriterszUnited States. 7aStills (Motion pictures). 1aMusical theater. 7aScripts (documents).2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaywrights.2aat 7aNovelists.2aat 7aScreen writers.2aat1 aStyne, Jule,d1905-1994,ecorrespondent.42aThe duel.02aGentlemen prefer blondes: the illuminating diary of a professional lady.42aThe king's mare.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b825 Fifth Ave., New York NY, 10021;d1984 July 17;e2006MT-178r.5the1 aPurchased by Frederick R. Koch at a Swann Galleries auction, 1984 June 14, lots 135, 140, 170, 176, and 181; gift, 1984.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 72201357ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245006800148300002700216545025700243520025800500524005400758546003000812600004000842650003400882650003700916541005400953506004201007561003101049852002301080010262117-920070320123607.0020710q1899 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612785608 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1841-1935.10aOliver Wendell Holmes notes on contracts and equity,fca. 1899. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOliver Wendell Holmes Jr. was an American jurist who served on the Supreme Court of the United States from 1902-1932. He also received a Harvard AB in 1861, studied law at Harvard, and was an instructor and lecturer at Harvard in 1870-1871 and in 1880. aAutograph manuscript notes on contracts and equity. Includes: a notebook titled: Contract; an envelope dated 1899 February 10 addressed to Holmes from Luke P. Willard of Boston; loose scraps and loose notes; and loose and sheets of notes titled: Equity. aMS Am 2527. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1841-1935. 0aEquityzUnited StatesvNotes. 0aContractszUnited StatesvNotes. cGift;aAnonymous;d1940?;e45M-657, 45M-658.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aAnonymous gift, 1940?5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 252702452ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004400108245009600152300002700248351005500275545046500330546003000795520038500825555008701210524016301297600003201460600004001492651002301532651002501555651002001580655004701600655003801647700004401685700004001729740005101769740003701820541010501857561004201962506005102004852002302055010261395-820070320073210.0020710i18441846mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612785491 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aCollins, Lewis,d1797-1870,ecollector.10aHenry Perviance Peers papers for A complete gazetteer of the state of Kentucky,f1842-1846. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged in alphabetical order by author or title. aHenry Perviance Peers (1807-1846) assembled materials for, and wrote a draft of, a planned publication A complete gazetteer of the state of Kentucky. Peers did not complete this work before he died in March of 1846. After his death, his brother-in-law, Lewis Collins (1797-1870, newspaper editor and judge of Mason County, Kentucky) used Peers' work as a basis for the county and town information for Collins' 1847 publication, Historical sketches of Kentucky. aCollection is in English. aIncludes autograph manuscript drafts by Peers of his Gazetteer, print proofs by illustrator Harrison Eastman, a map of Kentucky ca. 1840s, sketches of buildings, clippings concerning the future publication of the book, a title page proof, a folder formerly housing these materials, and an autograph by Peers stating that he wanted Collins to publish this material after his death.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01867 aLewis Collins Collection of Henry Perviance Peers Papers for A Complete Gazetteer of the State of Kentucky (MS Am 2525). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCollins, Lewis,d1797-1870.10aPeers, Henry Perviance,d1807-1846. 0aKentuckyxHistory. 0aKentuckyxBiography. 0aKentuckyvMaps. 7aProofs (Printing)zKentuckyy19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aEastman, Harrison,dapproximately 1823-1 aPeers, Henry Perviance,d1807-1846.22aA complete gazetteer of the state of Kentucky.02aHistorical sketches of Kentucky.0 cGift;aMrs. Henry Waller;b3031 S.E. Lambert St., Portland, 2, Oregon;d1947 March 1;e46M-306.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Henry Waller, 1947.5hou0 aCollection has no restrictions on access.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 252501995ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100006400110245005100174246002700225300002600252351002900278520036800307524017300675555008700848546001600935630004300951600005200994650003601046655002001082655001901102700005001121700004901171700005201220700005501272700005301327700004901380852002301429541010001452506002301552561004601575010572591-920130405185723.0070615i18681960mau |||||i|eng|d0 aocn833587067 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWheeler, A. C.q(Andrew Carpenter),d1835-1903,erecipient.10aA. C. Wheeler letters from others,f1868-1960.13aNym Crinkle collection a1 box (.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aIncludes approximately 150 letters from actors, drama critics and newspaper editors to the New York theater critic, Andrew Carpenter Wheeler. Correspondents include Dion Boucicault, Lillie Langtry, Richard Mansfield, Edward Askew Sothern, Dame Ellen Terry, William Winter, and many others. The majority of the letters are from the latter half of the 19th century. aWheeler, A. C. (Andrew Carpenter), 1835-1903. A.C. Wheeler Letters from Others 1868-1960 (MS Thr 950). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02415 aIn English.40aThe World (New York, N.Y. : 1860-1931)10aWheeler, A. C.q(Andrew Carpenter),d1835-1903. 0aTheater criticszUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aSketches.2aat1 aBoucicault, Dion,d1820-1890,ecorrespondent.1 aLangtry, Lillie,d1853-1929,ecorrespondent.1 aMansfield, Richard,d1857-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aSothern, Edward Askew,d1826-1881,ecorrespondent.1 aTerry, Ellen,cDame,d1847-1928,ecorrespondent.1 aWinter, William,d1836-1917,ecorrespondent.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 9500 cPurchase;aGoodspeed's Book Shop;bBoston;d1960;e2006MT-268r;h$100.00 (F.E. Chase Fund)5the0 aOpen for research.1 aPurchased with F.E. Chase Fund, 19605the01987ntcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093245006000106300002600166351001700192546002700209500004600236520101700282600003601299600003201335610002401367700002801391700003601419700004601455700004701501740002401548852002301572541005601595506004601651010575857-420070703091756.0070621k17521950mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTedacscMH-HT aengafre00aMiscellaneous David Garrick collection,fca. 1752-1950. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English and French. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. a18th and 19th century documents relating to actor David Garrick and his family, most notably a manuscript draft of Garrick's poem "Song upon Sea Fish" in an unknown hand, with a manuscript endorsement by Garrick; a letter in French by Pierre Picot, 1821, describing Garrick performances he had seen in 1771 and 1772; a collection of five manuscript lists of artworks, buildings, and people supposedly created by Eva Garrick during their tour of the European continent, 1763-1765; the will of nephew David Garrick, 1790; a contemporary manuscript transcript of the inscription on a medal presented to Garrick by the actors of Drury Lane Theatre, 1777 March 25; a letter to George Garrick by an unidentified correspondent concerning actor Theophilus Cibber, [1752?] October 14; and a letter to David Garrick by an unidentified correspondent, undated. Also dealer catalogs, transcripts, copy prints, empty folders, and notes relating to the Harvard Theatre Collection's purchases of Garrick material, ca. 1900-1950.10aCibber, Theophilus,d1703-1758.10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779.20aDrury Lane Theatre.1 aGarrick, David,d-1795.1 aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822.1 aGarrick, George,d1722?-1779,erecipient.1 aPicot, Pierre,d1746-1822,ecorrespondent.02aSong upon sea fish.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 716 cOld purchases;avarious sources;e2006MT-271r.5the aRetrieval requires permission of curator.01489ntcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003500108245004500143300002700188351003100215545018000246520028000426555008700706524008400793546003000877600003500907655003800942655005100980655004501031541003401076561002401110506004201134852002301176011319113-820071129121704.0020710iuuuuuuuumau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612800574 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chapman scrapbooks,f1907-1933. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized chronologically. aJohn Jay Chapman was an American essayist, literary critic, poet, and reformer. He received an AB from Harvard College in 1885 and studied for two years at Harvard Law School. aTwo scrapbooks compiled by John Jay Chapman concerning his writings, conflicts, interests, and plays and musical compositions. Include clippings, tickets, programs, broadsides, invitations, photographs, autograph manuscript notes by JJC, a few drafts of letters, and reviews.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01898 aJohn Jay Chapman Scrapbooks (MS Am 2566). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aScrapbookszUnited Statesy20th century. cUnknown donor;e52M-316.5hou aDonor unknown.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 256602298ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004500108245004000153300002700193351005400220545023300274545035000507520033500857555008701192524007901279546003001358600004501388650003601433651003701469655004201506655004201548655004701590541007001637561006401707506004201771506012301813852002401936011321737-420071130082744.0020710i18081858mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612800744 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWight, John B.q(John Burt),d1790-1883.10aJohn Burt Wight papers,f1808-1858. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. aHenry Wight (1752-1837) was a minister and the father of John Burt Wight. He was born in Medfield, Massashusetts in 1752, married to Alice Burrington of Trenton, Rhode Island in 1789 and he died in Bristol, Rhode Island in 1837. aJohn Burt Wight was a clergyman, the pastor of the First Parish Church of East Sudbury (later Wayland), and was also Wayland's representative to the General Court of Massachusetts. The son of Henry Wight and Alice Burrington Wight, he was born in 1790 in Bristol, Rhode Island and died on December 20, 1883. He married Sarah Grout Wight in 1818. aPrimarily autograph manuscript sermons of John Burt Wight, including dates and places where each sermon was delivered. Also includes a manuscript "exercise" he wrote while at college in 1808, and a speech delivered for July 4th. Also includes a manuscript transcript by J.B. Wight of his father, Henry Wight's (1752-1837) journal.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01946 aJohn Burt Wight Papers (MS Am 2569). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aWight, John B.q(John Burt),d1790-1883. 0aClergyzMassachusettszWayland. 0aWayland (Mass.)xChurch history. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy18th century. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy19th century. 7aSermonszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cTransfer;aHarvard Law School Library;d1957 June;e56M-200.5hou1 aTransferred from the Harvard Law School Library, 1957.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 256903198ntcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245007500148300002700223351006800250545067500318520065600993555008701649524011401736546003001850600004501880600004001925600003401965610002001999610002102019610002002040610002302060650003602083650002802119650003502147650003402182700007802216700005002294700004802344700005702392541008802449561003802537506004202575506012302617852002402740011408300-220080314091211.0020710i19191944mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612810906 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Frances White,d1860-1957.10aFrances White Emerson correspondence with Geoffrey Keynes,f1919-1944. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent, then by date. aWilliam Augustus White (1843-1927) was an American investment banker, book collector, and a great collector of William Blake and of Elizabethan and Jacobean playwrights. Upon his death in 1927, his daughter, Frances White Emerson (1860-1957), inherited his collection. Sir Geoffrey Langdon Keynes (1887-1982) was a British surgeon and literary scholar, and was the brother of the economist John Maynard Keynes. Geoffrey Keynes published on and collected materials of William Blake. It was this interest that brought him into contact with William Augustus White and later with Frances White Emerson. In 1917, Keynes married Margaret Elizabeth (Darwin) Keynes (1890-1974). aAutograph manuscript and typescript correspondence primarily between Sir Geoffrey Keynes and Frances White Emerson. Also with letters from Sir Frederick George Kenyon, William Augustus White, and Margaret Elizabeth Keynes. Letters concern the donation, reproduction, and publication of William Blake manuscripts from the collection of William Augustus White, later owned by his daughter, Frances White Emerson. Mentions the Nonesuch Press, British Museum, Harvard University's Fogg Art Museum, the Rosenbach Company, and many other subjects. Personal topics include health, various trips, family concerns, memberships in clubs, and many other matters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01955 aFrances White Emerson Correspondence with Geoffrey Keynes (MS Am 2591). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aBlake, William,d1757-1827xManuscripts.10aEmerson, Frances White,d1860-1957.10aKeynes, Geoffrey,d1887-1982.20aBritish Museum.20aFogg Art Museum.20aNonesuch Press.20aRosenbach Company. 0aBook collectingzUnited States. 0aArtistszGreat Britain. 0aEnglish poetryxIllustrations. 0aPoets, Englishy19th century.1 aKenyon, Frederic G.q(Frederic George),cSir,d1863-1952,ecorrespondent.1 aKeynes, Geoffrey,d1887-1982,ecorrespondent.1 aKeynes, Margaret Elizabeth,ecorrespondent.1 aWhite, William Augustus,d1843-1927,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Jon Wiig;bP.O. Box 2577, Honolulu 3, Hawaii;d1957 July;e57M-21.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Jon Wiig, 1957.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 259101906ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003600108245005600144300002700200351002900227545009700256520029800353555008700651524009500738546003000833600003600863600003900899600003000938600004000968650003801008651004401046655003801090740009801128541010001226561004101326506004201367506012301409852002401532011403541-520080331083600.0020710i18271957mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612809917 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDale, Harrison Clifford,d1885-10aHarrison Clifford Dale research papers,f1827-1957. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aDale (1885-1969) was a Wyoming author who graduated from Harvard College with an AB in 1907. aIncludes a portion of Dale's research for his 1918 book, The Ashley-Smith explorations and the discovery of a central route to the Pacific, 1822-1829. Includes Dale's correspondence and transcripts of research materials. Especially concerns mountain men, Jedediah Strong Smith and Jim Bridger.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01822 aHarrison Clifford Dale Research Papers (MS Am 2590). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aDale, Harrison Clifford,d1885-10aAshley, William Henry,d1778-1838.10aBridger, Jim,d1804-1881.10aSmith, Jedediah Strong,d1799-1831. 0aOverland journeys to the Pacific. 0aWest (U.S.)xDiscovery and exploration. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local42aThe Ashley-Smith explorations and the discovery of a central route to the Pacific, 1822-1829.0 cGift;aMr. Harrison C. Dale;b109 Oliver Road, Santa Barbara, California;d1957;e56M-179.5hou1 aGift of Harrison C. Dale, 1957.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 259001516ctcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245004600108300002600154351003900180520029000219520008200509524008500591555008700676546001600763650003100779655004000810700005300850700002400903700002000927852002300947506003700970541008401007541005801091561006501149012036863-320100305124240.0090716i19511959mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612876497 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aScience fiction compositions,f1951-1959. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aTypescripts with manuscript corrections and sometimes layouts with illustrations for typesetters of stories and magazine features by American writers of science fiction (some of whom are notable for writing in other genres). Includes short fiction, editorial columns, and book reviews.8 aAuthors include Arthur C. Clarke, Jack Vance, Kurt Vonnegut, and many others. aScience Fiction Compositions (MS Am 2671). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02056 aIn English. 0aScience fiction, American. 7aScience fictiony20th century.2aat1 aClarke, Arthur C.q(Arthur Charles),d1917-2008.1 aVance, Jack,d1916-1 aVonnegut, Kurt.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 26710 aCollection is open for research.0 cGift;aAlma Mae Hill;bLee Academy, Lee, Maine;d1959 April 24;e2009M-6r.5hou0 cGift;aCharles Harris;d1962 October;e2009M-5r.5hou1 aGifts of Alma Mae Hill, 1959, and Charles Harris, 1962.5hou01892ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100005800121245009000179300002700269351003900296545022000335520020000555520010200755555008700857555010900944524014001053546001601193600004601209600004301255656002201298700004001320541005401360561004401414506004201458852006601500008896814-620121203090435.0020927s1915 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm786306241 aMAHV02A99 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-erecipient.10aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston letters of condolence and thanks from others,f1915. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aFlora Livingston was the wife of Luther S. Livingston, the first librarian of the Harry Elkins Widener collection at Harvard. She became assistant librarian after her husband's death in 1914; then librarian in 1926. aLetters from various colleagues and friends of Luther S. Livingston (1864-1914) to Flora Livingston thanking her for the biographical sketch and expressing condolence on the death of her husband. aThe biographical sketch was by George Parker Winship, Luther S. Livingston; a biograhical sketch.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-354. aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston Letters of Condolence and Thanks from Others, 1915 (MS Am 2152). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-10aLivingston, Luther Samuel,d1864-1914. 7aLibrarians.2lcsh1 aWinship, George Parker,d1871-1952.0 cGift;aFlora V. Livingston;d1943;e43M-354.5HOU1 aGift of Flora V. Livingston, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2155zShelved with bMS Am 2153 and bMS Am 2154.01753ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004500122245006500167300002700232351003900259545021100298520018100509524010500690555008700795555016400882546001601046600003301062650002901095655002101124700003301145541015101178561004401329506004201373852002401415009056741-220091210075502.0030311i18671927mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612753300 aMAHV03A90 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCam, Helen Maud,d1885-1968,ecollector.10aHelen Maud Cam collection of English autographs,f1867-1927. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by signer. aCam was a medieval historian, the first woman professor on the Faculty of arts and Sciences at Harvard University, and a professor at Cambridge University in England, where she was active in local politics. aA miscellaneous collection of autographs, some cut, some in letters, of English luminaries of the late 19th and early 20th century, including those collected by Emily H. Smith. aHelen Maud Cam Collection of English Autographs (MS Eng 1443). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-57 (27), (43), (60-61), (101-103), (106), (109), and (110). aIn English.10aCam, Helen Maud,d1885-1968. 0aAutographsxCollections. 7aAutographs.2aat1 aSmith, Emily H.,ecollector.0 cGift;aMiss Helen Maud Cam,b24 Chauncy St., Cambridge 38, Mass.;d1952 Oct. 2.,e52M-57 (27), (43), (60-61), (101-103), (106), (109), (110).5HOU1 aGift of Miss Helen Maud Cam, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 144302291ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004500123245006800168300002700236351003900263545010700302520066500409555008701074555010901161524011801270546001601388600003301404600003501437650004601472651005801518655002001576655002201596700004301618700004701661700005301708541005701761561003401818506004201852852002301894008988196-620130212103905.0021011i18971904mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm781121301 aMAHV02-A138 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRicketson, Anna,d1836-1927,erecipient.10aAnna Ricketson letters from various correspondents,f1897-1904. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAnna Ricketson was a friend of the Alcott family of Concord, Mass.; her husband Walton was a sculptor. aConsists of 41 letters, mostly addressed to Anna Ricketson, several of which relate to the possible publication of her father Daniel Ricketson's correspondence. These include letters from others giving permission for their own letters or family members' letters to Ricketson to be published. Other letters in the collection chiefly relate to personal matters and include several from the writer Lucy Gibbons Morse. There are also several letters addressed to Anna Ricketson and her brother Walton Ricketson from Francis Ellingwood Abbott, a prominent Unitarian and scholar of religion, a clipping about Abbott's suicide, and photographs of Abbott and his wife.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014188 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-372. aAnna Ricketson Letters from Various Correspondents, 1897-1904 (MS Am 1131). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRicketson, Anna,d1836-1927.10aRicketson, Walton,d1839-1923. 0aPublishers and publishingzMassachusetts. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aAbbot, Francis Ellingwood,d1836-1903.1 aRicketson, Walton,d1839-1923,erecipient.1 aMorse, Lucy Gibbons,d1839-1936,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aUnknown source;ddate unknown;e47M-372.5HOU1 aSource and date unknown.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 113102436ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103100002200124245011800146300002700264351003000291545004300321520045300364555008700817524017100904546001601075600002201091600003401113650003501147650004301182650004201225650003501267650003101302655002001333656002301353700003101376700004301407700003401450700004501484710003101529710003701560710003501597541013101632561015901763506004201922852002601964009575422-920130712114558.0020710i18901935mau |||||||eng|d0 aocm79380989 aMAHV05B10007 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aDickinson family.10aDickinson family contracts and correspondence concerning publication of the works of Emily Dickinson,f1890-1935. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aDickinson was a poet of Amherst, Mass. aIncludes contracts (1890-1935) to publish the poetry of, and books about, Emily Dickinson. Contracts are between Lavinia Norcross Dickinson and Martha Dickinson Bianchi and the publishing houses of Roberts Brothers (later Little, Brown and Company) and Houghton, Mifflin and Company. Collection also includes correspondence (1894-1901) of Austin Dickinson and Lavinia Norcross Dickinson with Roberts Brothers concerning the settlement of a debt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01761 aDickinson Family Contracts and Correspondence Concerning Publication of the Works of Emily Dickinson, 1890-1935 (MS Am 1118.18). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aDickinson family.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAuthors and publisherszMassachusetts. 0aLiterature publishingzMassachusetts. 0aPoets, Americany19th century. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aContracts.2aat 7aWomen poets.2lcsh1 aDickinson, Austin,d-1895.1 aBianchi, Martha Dickinson,d1866-1943.1 aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.1 aDickinson, Lavinia Norcross,d1833-1899.2 aLittle, Brown and Company.2 aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company.0 cPurchase;aMr. Alfred Leete Hampson;d1950 May;eno accession number;hFunds given by Gilbert H. Montague, class of 1901.5hou1 aPurchased from Alfred Leete Hampson, 1950 May, with funds given by Gilbert H. Montague, class of 1901, in happy memory of Amy Angel Collier Montague.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.1801929ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100001700123245005600140300002700196351003900223545023900262520014800501555008700649555010900736524010600845530006200951546001601013600001701029600002101046700004601067700006001113700004801173541013401221561017101355506004201526852002301568008921538-920130204134733.0021004i18431957mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm790740891 aMAHV02-A122 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aHowe family.10aHowe-Richards family additional papers,f1843-1957. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aJulia Ward Howe was the author of the Battle Hymn of the Republic and other works and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer; her daughter was author Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards, and her granddaughter was Rosalind Richards. aCollection pertains to both the Howe and Richards families. Includes mostly letters to them from friends and colleagues, and a few other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-120. aHowe-Richards Family Additional Papers, 1843-1957 (MS Am 2189). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aIn English.30aHowe family.30aRichards family.1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910,erecipient.1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943,erecipient.1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964,erecipient.0 cGift;aHenry Howe Richards, John Richards, Rosalind Richards, Julia Ward Shaw, and Laura Elizabeth Wiggins;d1959;e59M-120.5HOU1 aGift of the children of Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards: Henry Howe Richards, John Richards, Rosalind Richards, Julia Ward Shaw, and Laura Elizabeth Wiggins, 1959.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 218901925ctcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004800108245005600156300002600212351009500238545018900333520040100522546001600923555008700939524010601026600004801132700004201180700003401222700001901256541016101275561006301436506011301499852002301612012575401-920121214080702.0100924i19301964mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn742215104 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot letters to Geoffrey Curtis,f1930-1964. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aOrganized in two series: I. T. S. Eliot letters to Geoffrey Curtis; and II. Other letters. aT. S. Eliot was a poet, dramatist, and critic. Father Geoffrey Curtis was an Anglican clergyman, author, and member of the monastic Community of the Resurrection in Mirfield (England). aEliot's signed typescript letters to Curtis are wide-ranging, touching on religion, poetry, writing, social engagements, professional obligations, travel plans, and domestic matters, often delving into spiritual questions. The collection includes a typescript (carbon) draft of Eliot's poem, The cultivation of Christmas trees, and letters to Curtis from Frederick Wilse Bateson and Mervyn Sweet. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02176 aT. S. Eliot Letters to Geoffrey Curtis, 1930-1964 (MS Am 2702). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aBateson, Frederick Wilse,d1901-1978.1 aCurtis, Geoffrey,erecipient.1 aSweet, Mervyn.0 cPurchase;aJames S. Jaffe Rare Books LLC;b790 Madison Av, Suite 605, New York, NY 10065;d2010 September 24;e2010M-23;h$75000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, 2010.5hou1 aManuscripts of unpublished T.S. Eliot material may be consulted only with the permission of Mrs. T.S. Eliot.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 270202516cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041001300122100003100135245003700166300002700203351003900230545018600269520042100455546004000876555008700916555012801003524007601131600003101207610002801238610003101266610004501297610003601342650001801378651005101396655002001447655002601467655003501493656002501528700004101553541038901594561004601983506004202029852002302071000602461-020110114100245.0860103i17781806mau eng d0 aocn1225563991 aMAHV86-A6 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aTalbot, Silas,d1751-1813.10aSilas Talbot papers,f1778-1806. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aTalbot, a naval officer, was a captain in the Continental Navy during the American Revolution, a New York congressman (1792-1795) and commander of Santo Domingo station (1799-1800). aContains correspondence, the bulk pertaining to Talbot's naval career. Includes letters he wrote while on board the U.S. frigate Constitution, 1799-1801, cruising in the West Indies. One, 1799, to John Adams, contains Talbot's summary of his services during the Revolution. Also includes manuscript agreements, 1780?, between the owner and the company of the privateer ship General Washington which Talbot commanded. aA few of the letters are in French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006168 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-567-*42M-603, *42M-605. aSilas Talbot Papers (MS Am 1439). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aTalbot, Silas,d1751-1813.20aConstitution (Frigate).20aGeneral Washington (Ship).10aUnited States.bNavyxCruise, 1799-1801.10aUnited States.bNavyxOfficers. 0aPrivateering. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 7aContracts.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aLetters (correspondence).2aat 7aShip captains.2lcsh1 aAdams, John,d1735-1826,erecipient.0 cGift;aJohn W. Blodgett, Jr.;d1941;e42M-567, 42M-568, 42M-569, 42M-570, 42M-571, 42M-572, 42M-573, 42M-574, 42M-575, 42M-576, 42M-577, 42M-578, 42M-579, 42M-580, 42M-581, 42M-582, 42M-583, 42M-584, 42M-585, 42M-586, 42M-587, 42M-588, 42M-589, 42M-590, 42M-591, 42M-592, 42M-593, 42M-594, 42M-595, 42M-596, 42M-597, 42M-598, 42M-599, 42M-600, 42M-601, 42M-602, 42M-603, 42M-605.5HOU1 aGift of John W. Blodgett, Jr., 1941.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 143902461nkcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004800110300002700158351005200185545063800237520024800875555008701123524012601210546001601336650004201352650001501394650001301409655002201422655003001444655003301474600004501507710009801552541013201650561015201782506004201934506012301976852002402099012995796-820120830101217.0020710i18871891mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn767961507 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Lillian Russell,f1887-1891. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by photographic studio. aLillian Russell (1861-1922) was a well known American actress and singer of the late 19th and early 20th century. Russell was married four times, but it is said her longest relationship was a platonic one with "Diamond" Jim Brady, an American businessman and philanthropist who supported her and her career for 40 years. In the early part of her career she performed a great deal of comic opera, operetta, and musical theatre. Around 1904 due to vocal issues she switched to more dramatic roles and eventually retired in 1914. In addition to her theatrical career she also wrote a newspaper column and advocated for women's suffrage. aCollection of theatrical photographs of Lillian Russell in costumes and scenes from various productions primarily in the United States. The bulk of the items are cabinent photographs but includes a few photographs, and a photomechanical print.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02244 aPhotographs of Lillian Russell, 1887-1891 (MS Thr 735). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aActresses. 0aSingers. 0aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPhotomechanical prints.2aat10aRussell, Lillian,d1861-1922vPortraits.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 73502508nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007100110300002700181351006000208545066000268520016800928555008701096524015001183546001601333651004101349600004801390630001301438650004201451650001501493650001101508655002201519655004601541710009801587541013201685561015201817506004201969506012302011852002402134013000564-920120830101334.0020710i18621866mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn768584119 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCartes-de-visite photographs of Adah Isaacs Menkenfca. 1862-1866. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by name of photographic studio. aAdah Isaacs Menken (1835-1868), was a well known actress of the late 19th century. One of her most memorable roles was in an equestrian melodrama, Mazeppa. In Mazeppa she not only played the role of a man, but rode in on a horse wearing a flesh-colored body stocking to appear naked to the audience. Her lifestyle of outrageous behavior, multiple marriages, and rumored lovers was deemed very scandalous at the time. Menken desired to be a poet and was friendly with a number of literary greats including Charles Dickens, Algernon Swinburne, and George Sand. Only after her death was a collection of her poems, Infelicia, published to unfavorable reviews. aCollection of theatrical cartes-de-visite (card photographs) of Adah Isaacs Menken in costumes and scenes from various productions in the United States and France.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02248 aCartes-de-visite Photographs of Adah Isaacs Menken, ca. 1862-1866 (MS Thr 740). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aFrancezUnited Statesy19th century.10aMenken, Adah Isaacs,d1835-1868vPortraits.00aMazeppa. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aActresses. 0aPoets. 0aPhotographs.2aat 0aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 74002641ctcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245008100140300002600221351012500247545068400372520017401056520043101230544018101661546001601842524013101858600003201989655002002021655002202041700003702063700003402100506002302134541011202157561003502269852002302304012996061-620130208112037.0111208i19571968mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn827836925 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aOlson, Charles,d1910-1970.10aCharles Olson letters to Constance W. Olson and Katherine Olson,f1957-1968. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically in one sequence according to explicit dates or dates known or guessed by the donor, Ralph Maud. aCharles Olson (1910-1970) was an American modernist poet who grew up in Worcester (Mass.). Olson spent summers in Gloucester (Mass.) which was to become the focus of his writing; his first poems were written in 1940. In 1941, Olson moved to New York and married Constance Wilcock (Connie or Con), with whom he had daughter Katherine (Kate). Olson became a visiting professor at Black Mountain College in North Carolina in 1951 and subsequently became rector of Black Mountain College. He had a second child, Charles Peter Olson, with one of his students, Betty Kaiser. Before his divorce from his first wife finalized, Olson married Kaiser; she was killed in a car crash in 1964. aComprised of over 170 letters from Olson to his first wife, Constance (later Constance W. Bunker, after her remarriage), and his daughter, Kate (Katherine Olson Bunker). aMany letters are accompanied by envelopes; some envelopes are present without letters. Olson also sometimes wrote notes or letters on envelopes which were then enclosed in other envelopes. Letter of 1959 November 14 is accompanied by a photograph of Kate; occasional clippings are present from 1966 on in letters to Kate; and there is a printed proof of the half-title from Olson's publication West present in the last folder. aThe Charles Olson Research Collection (130 linear feet) is located at Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Libraries. aIn English. aCharles Olson Letters to Constance W. Olson and Katherine Olson, 1957-1968 (MS Am 2785). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aOlson, Charles,d1910-1970. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aOlson, Constance W.,erecipient.1 aOlson, Katherine,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aDr. Ralph Maud;b1104 Maple Street, Vancouver, BC V6J 386 Canada;d2011 November 22;e2011M-61.5hou1 aGift of Ralph Maud, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 278502746nkcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005300110300002700163351005400190545053800244520029700782555008701079524013101166546001601297600004101313600004101354600004701395600004901442600004901491650004201540650003601582650001501618650001201633655002201645655004601667655003001713655002201743710009801765541013201863561015201995506004202147506012302189852002402312013009418-820120830101352.0020710i18691889mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn769274184 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of the Booth family,fca. 1869-1889. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by name of family member. aThe Booth family was a well known theatrical family in the 19th century. John Wilkes, Edwin, and Junius Brutus, Jr. were all actors and had different degrees of success. Edwin was a very popular Shakespearian actor who eventually opened up the Booth Theatre in 1869 in New York. Junius Brutus, Jr.'s acting ability was not as well regarded as the rest of his family, or even his wife, Agnes Booth who was a popular actress. John Wilkes was a successful stage actor who is mostly remembered as the man who assasinated Abraham Lincoln. aCollection of portraits and theatrical photographs of Agnes Booth, Edwin Booth, John Wilkes Booth, Junius Brutus Booth Jr., and Junius Brutus Booth, III from the 19th century in the United States and England. Primarily cartes-de-visite photographs and cabinet photographs with one copy print.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02250 aPhotographs of the Booth Family, ca. 1869-1889 (MS Thr 749). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBooth, Agnes,d1843-1910vPortraits.10aBooth, Edwin,d1833-1893vPortraits.10aBooth, John Wilkes,d1838-1865vPortraits.10aBooth, Junius Brutus,d1821-1883vPortraits.10aBooth, Junius Brutus,d1868-1912vPortraits. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 0aActresses. 0aActors. 0aPhotographs.2aat 0aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 0aCabinet photographs.2aat 0aCopy prints.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 74902168nkcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005900110300002700169351005200196545044900248520016800697555008700865524013700952546001601089650004201105650001501147650001301162655002201175655003001197600004401227710009801271541013201369561015201501506004201653506012301695852002401818012998990-820120830101317.0020710i18501920mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn768583219 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCabinet photographs of Lotta Crabtree,fca. 1850-1920. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by photographic studio. aLotta Crabtree (1847-1924) was an American actress in the late 19th century. As a child she was encouraged by Lola Montez, a famous dancer and actress, to pursue her love of performance. Lotta sang and played the banjo in mining camps in California and then toured the United States performing in plays. In addition to her successful acting career she was a philanthropist and vice president of the Professional Women's Association in New York. aCollection of theatrical photographs of Lotta Crabtree in costumes and scenes from various productions in the United States. The items are all cabinet photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02246 aCabinet photographs of Lotta Crabtree, ca. 1850-1920 (MS Thr 738). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aActresses. 0aSingers. 0aPhotographs.2aat 0aCabinet photographs.2aat10aCrabtree, Lotta,d1847-1924vPortraits.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 73802719nkcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004400110300002700154351010200181520036700283555008700650524012200737545033500859546001601194600005901210600004801269600004701317600006301364650004201427650003601469650003601505650003701541650001501578655002201593655004601615655003001661600004701691710009801738541013201836561015201968506004202120506012302162852002402285012990565-820120830101201.0020710i18831906mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn767959906 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Ellen Terry,f1883-1906. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Portraits; and II. Photographs of theatrical productions. aCollection of portraits and photographs of Ellen Terry from theatrical productions, primarily Shakespeare, in the United States, England, and Scotland. The bulk of the collection consists of cabinet photographs with a few photographs and cartes-de-visite (card photographs). Notable productions include Hamlet, The merchant of Venice, and Much ado about nothing.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02240 aPhotographs of Ellen Terry, 1883-1906 (MS Thr 731). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aDame Edna Terry (1847-1928) was an English stage actress who was well known for her Shakespearean roles. Terry began acting as a child and joined Henry Irving's company in 1878 as his lead actress, later she also managed the Imperial Theatre in London. Terry had a successful stage career for almost seven decades until her death. aIn English.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMerchant of Venice.10aTerry, Ellen,cDame,d1847-1928vPortraits.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tHamlet.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMuch ado about nothing. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy20th century. 0aTheaterzScotlandy19th century. 0aActresses. 0aPhotographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat10aTerry, Ellen, Dame,d1847-1928vPortraits.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 73101188ctcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003100091245003800122300002600160351001700186545020500203500004600408546001600454600003100470610003400501651004600535655001800581506004300599506004700642541022200689852002300911013090012-520120207160313.0120206i17161780mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGay, Ebenezer,d1696-1787.10aEbenezer Gay sermons,f1716-1780. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aEbenezer Gay, born in Dedham (Mass.), was a graduate of Harvard (1714) and served as the pastor of the church at Hingham (Mass.) until his death. He is regarded as the father of American Unitarianism. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aGay, Ebenezer,d1696-1787.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aHingham (Mass.)xReligion.y18th century. 7aSermons.2aat1 aAccess requires permission of curator.1 aFRAGILE: many leaves losing parts of text.0 cPurchase;aIsland Antiques and Art Gallery Inc;bP.O. Box 591, Shelter Island Hts, NY 11965;d2012 February 7;e2011M-79;h$40000.00 ($20000.00 - Hermon Dunlap Smith Bequest ; $20000.00 - Susan A. E. Morse Fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 279302466nccaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007200093300002700165351005300192545065700245520021300902530006201115555008701177524013801264546001601402650001401418650001101432655002201443700004601465700004601511710009801557541013201655561015201787506004201939506012301981852004802104013192265-320120830102312.0020710i18231909mausgc| |||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music featuring the Grossmith family,f1823-1909 and undated. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of sheet music. aGeorge Grossmith (1847-1912) was an English comedian, writer, composer, actor, and singer with a career that spanned four decades. He is well known for his creation of a series of characters in the comic operas of W.S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert (1836-1911) and Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900). Grossmith's son, George Grossmith (1874-1935), or George Grossmith, Jr., followed in his father's footsteps as an actor, theatre producer and manager, director, playwright and songwriter. George Grossmith Jr. is well remembered for his work in and with Edwardian musical comedies, as well as being an innovator in bringing cabaret and revue to the London stage. aCollection includes printed sheet music and sheet music covers that were written, composed, or sung by either George Grossmith, 1847-1912 or his son George Grossmith, 1874-1935. Many of the items are undated. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02315 aSheet Music Featuring the Grossmith Family, 1823-1909 (MS Thr 853). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aMusicals. 0aSongs. 7aSheet music.2aat10aGrossmith, George,d1847-1912,ecomposer.10aGrossmith, George,d1874-1935,ecomposer.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 853zBox is portfolio-sized00960ctcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100003300106245004300139300002600182351001700208500020700225546002700432600003300459600003700492541016200529506002800691852002300719013223943-420120621103242.0120602i19201940mau |||||||mul|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs afrearus1 aTrefilova, Vera,d1875-1943.10aVera Trefilova papers,fca. 1920-1940. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes correspondence between Trefilova and Valerian Svietlov; Svietlov's journals (numbered 1, 2, 3, and 5), 1923-1928, and another notebook of poems; Trefilova's notebook of dance; and other papers. aIn Russian and French.10aTrefilova, Vera,d1875-1943.10aSvietlov, Valerīan,d1860-1935.0 cPurchase;aRobert Greskovic;b319 Washington Avenue (#2), Brooklyn, NY 11205-3754;d2012 April 6;e2011MT-44;h$10000.00 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest).5the0 aOpen for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 85901756nccaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005500093300002700148351003800175520039000213555008700603524012100690546001600811650001100827650001200838650001100850655002200861710009800883541013200981561015201113506004201265506012301307852004801430013221233-120120830102255.0020710i18521912maupgcd|||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPopular dance sheet music,f1852-1912 and undated. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aCollection includes printed sheet music from the United States and England from the 19th-century and the 20th-century. Most of the sheet music is intended for a specific popular dance such as a waltz, two step, mazurka, schottisch, polka, or galop. Many of the sheet music titles are derived from natural phenomena such as comets, eclipses, and volcanos. Many of the items are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02317 aPopular Dance Sheet Music, 1852-1912 (MS Thr 855). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aSongs. 0aDances. 0aMusic. 7aSheet music.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 855zBox is portfolio-sized01715nccaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007900110300002700189351006900216520017100285555008700456524014500543546001600688600005100704650001100755650001100766650001600777655002200793710009800815541013200913561015201045506004201197506012301239852005101362013240494-X20120830102219.0020710i18381894mausgcd|||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn796220988 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music based on the works of Charles Dickens,f1838-1894 and undated. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of the work of Charles Dickens. aCollection includes 19th-century printed sheet music based on the works of author Charles Dickens (1817-1870), or dedicated to him. There is also a sheet music cover.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02320 aSheet Music Based on the Works of Charles Dickens, 1838-1894 (MS Thr 860). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDickens, Charles,d1812-1870xSongs and music. 0aMusic. 0aSongs. 0aLiterature. 7aSheet music.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 860zBoxes are portfolio-sized00829nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070245006300091300002600154351001700180500003200197546001600229600003800245600002000283655002800303655003800331655003200369655002700401506002300428541011300451852002300564013644937-920130401133732.0130329i18101892mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aEmerson family photographs and miniatures,fca. 1810-1892. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aSee internal file for list. aIn English.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.30aEmerson family. 7aCased photographs.2aat 7aDaguerreotypes (photographs)2aat 7aMiniatures (paintings)2aat 7aTintypes (prints)2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cGift (with 2012M-139);aBeatrice Manz;b304 Adams Street, Milton, MA 02186;d2013 March 26;e2012M-138.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 291104391ctcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100002400090245004700114300002600161351001700187545054700204545018700751520016600938520013201104520048801236500013101724546001601855700004001871700004001911700006501951700006002016700006602076700004902142700005302191541024802244541024802492541024802740541024802988541024903236541024803485541024803733852002403981013703005-320130710155806.0130607i18921930mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHodson, Laurence W.10aLaurence W. Hodson papers,fca. 1892-1930. a1 box (.3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLaurence W. Hodson (1864–1933) was a wealthy West Midlands brewery owner, collector, and philanthropist. Following the death of his father in 1890, Hodson became a partner in the Springfield Brewery in Wolverhampton; he also inherited his father’s estate, Compton Hall near Wolverhampton. He was a founder of Birmingham University, chairman of the Wolverhampton Art and Industrial Exhibition of 1902, and supporter of the Guild of Handicraft. Hodson was a close friend of William Morris and an enthusiastic admirer of the Kelmscott Press. aConstance Belliss was Hodson’s wife Mary's cousin who worked for Hodson as a secretary and librarian, as well as organizer with John Masefield of the 1902 Wolverhampton exhibition. aIncludes letters to Hodson from Douglas Cockerell, Sir Sydney Carlyle Cockerell, Frederick James Furnivall, H.C. Marillier, William Morris, and Sir Emery Walker. aAlso includes letters to Constance Belliss from Douglas Cockerell, Sir Sydney Carlyle Cockerell, and Frederick James Furnivall. aCompositions include: autograph manuscript poem by G.J. Lawley celebrating the life of William Morris; Hodson’s autograph manuscript notes on the Kelmscott and other Presses; his autograph manuscript for a sonnet sent as Christmas greetings, with the printed version, the autograph manuscript for his long poem “A Christmas Reverie”, 1915; other autograph manuscripts by him for talks and book reviews; and other manuscript and printed material relating to the private presses. aWith letters from Sanderson, Warner, Quaritch, Hornby, and others, in addition to autograph manuscript compositions by Hodson. aIn English.1 aBelliss, Constance,ecorrespondent.1 aCockerell, Douglas,ecorrespondent.1 aCockerell, Sydney Carlyle,cSir,d1867-1962,ecorrespondent.1 aFurnivall, Frederick James,d1825-1910,ecorrespondent.1 aMarillier, H. C.q(Henry Currie),d1865-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aMorris, William,d1834-1896,ecorrespondent.1 aWalker, Emery,cSir,d1851-1933,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 267));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-160;h1452.35 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2675hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 271));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-161;h4572.50 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2715hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 259));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-162;h1245.06 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2595hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 260));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-163;h1348.81 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2605hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 257));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-164;h12462.00 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2575hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 255));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-165;h1142.57 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2555hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 280));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-166;h1245.06 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).3lot 2805hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 174202031cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100004400136245007000180300002800250351003900278545012800317520029200445555008700737555010800824524010900932600003201041600007101073650003901144650002801183655002201211656001901233700005601252700006101308700006101369700004901430541005501479561004601534506004201580852002301622000601906-420110114092358.0860501i18521882mau eng d0 aocn1224050271 aMAHV86A201 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-4631 aCarter, Robert,d1819-1879,erecipient.10aLetters to Robert Carter from various correspondents,f1852-1882. a1 boxa(.3 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aCarter was an editor and author and an active figure in the Free Soil and Republican parties in Massachusetts in the 1850s. aLetters to Robert Carter chiefly relating to editorial, literary, and social concerns. Correspondents include Richard Watson Gilder, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Charles Sumner. Also includes photograph of Benjamin Disraeli, the first earl of Beaconsfield.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-64. aLetters to Robert Carter from Various Correspondents (MS Am 1921). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCarter, Robert,d1819-1879.10aDisraeli, Benjamin,cEarl of Beaconsfield,d1804-1881,vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aFree soil party (U.S.). 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aGilder, Richard Watson,d1844-1909,ecorrespondent.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911,ecorrespondent.1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Charles F. Swift;d1976;e75M-64.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Charles F. Swift, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192101573ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004900124245006400173300002800237351003900265545003500304520013200339555008700471555011000558524010600668600004900774650003900823650003500862655001900897700003900916700005100955700003901006541006501045561005701110506004201167852002601209007723745-520090109115239.0980303i19531962mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122065090 aocmMAHV98A1 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-196210aE. E. Cummings letters to Frances Ames Randall,f1953-1962. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCummings was an American poet. aCummings letters to Randall, with letters from Marjorie Gifford and Marion Morehouse to Randall, and also drawings by Cummings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000068 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records for 1990-1991, under *90M-5. aE. E. Cummings Letters to Frances Ames Randall (MS Am 1892.21). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E.E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aDrawings.2aat1 aGifford, Marjorie,ecorrespondent.1 aMorehouse, Marion,d1906-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aRandall, Frances Ames,erecipient. cGift;aMrs. Frances Randall (Hill) Lipp;d1990;e90M-5.5hou aGift of Mrs. Frances Randall (Hill) Lipp, 1990.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892.2101477ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003400124245006000158300002800218351003800246545005200284520008600336555008700422555010900509524009900618600003400717650001600751650003900767655001800806656002200824700006500846700003400911541008800945561004101033506004201074852002301116007727672-820090713015535.0980306i19101982mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122067460 aocmMAHV98A4 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLippmann, Walter,d1889-1974.10aWalter Lippmann letters to Hazel Albertson,f1910-1982. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aLippmann was an American journalist and author. aIncludes letters from Lippmann to Carl Alfred Lanning Binger and other materials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000198 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records for 1987-1988, under *87M-56. aWalter Lippmann Letters to Hazel Albertson (MS Am 2055). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLippmann, Walter,d1889-1974. 0aJournalism. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aLetters.2aat 7aJournalists.2aat1 aBinger, Carlq(Carl Alfred Lanning),d1889-1976,erecipient.1 aAlbertson, Hazel,erecipient.0 cGift;aI. Bernard Cohen;bWidener Libray, Study W;d1985 December 27;e87M-56.5hou1 aGift of I. Bernard Cohen, 1985.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 205501756ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004600121245008100167300002800248351003000276545025600306520020900562555008700771524013400858650002600992610003501018610002901053600004601082600005701128655002001185655002201205656002301227700005001250541006101300561003101361852002601392009516217-820130910131305.0041210i19061911mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793900841 aMAHV04A91 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aKing, William Lyon Mackenzie,d1874-1950.10aWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King letters to Elizabeth Gaskell Norton,f1906-1911. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aKing was a Canadian politician and served as prime minister of Canada for 21 years (1921-1930 and 1935-1948). Elizabeth Gaskell Norton (b. 1866) was the daughter of Charles Eliot Norton, editor, literary scholar, and professor of fine arts at Harvard. aChiefly letters to Elizabeth Gaskell Norton, as well as clippings, a photograph of King, and reports concerning King's tenure as Deputy Minister of Labor and the coal miners strike at Lethbridge, Alberta.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01602 aWilliam Lyon Mackenzie King Letters to Elizabeth Gaskell Norton, 1906-1911 (MS Am 1088.11). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aCoal minerszAlberta.10aCanada.bDepartment of Labour.10aCanada.bPrime Minister.10aKing, William Lyon Mackenzie,d1874-1950.10aKing, William Lyon Mackenzie,d1874-1950vPortraits. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoliticians.2lcsh1 aNorton, Elizabeth Gaskell,d1866-erecipient. cGift;aSource unknown;d1948.eNo accession number.5hou aSource unknown, 1948.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.1101770ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004200121245010400163300002800267351003000295545027600325520018400601555008700785524014500872651005801017651005901075600004201134600005301176655002101229655002201250700005301272700004301325541002601368561002401394852002601418009532869-620130910131348.0050105i18471898mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390252 aMAHV05-A3 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCleveland, Sarah Perkins,d1818-1893.10aSarah Perkins Cleveland letters to Catherine Eliot Norton and Grace Norton,f1847-1898 and undated. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSarah Perkins Cleveland, wife of Henry Russell Cleveland, was prominent in social, literary, and political circles in 19th-century Boston. Catherine Eliot Norton was the mother and Grace Norton the sister of the American author and Harvard professor Charles Eliot Norton. aConsists primarily of correspondence from Cleveland to the Norton sisters, chiefly concerning social and personal matters. Also contains a photograph and obituaries for Cleveland.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01601 aSarah Perkins Cleveland Letters to Catherine Eliot Norton and Grace Norton, 1847-1898 (MS Am 1088.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aUnited StatesxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century.10aCleveland, Sarah Perkins,d1818-1893.10aCleveland, Sarah Perkins,d1818-1893vPortraits. 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aNorton, Catherine Eliot,d1793-1879,erecipient.1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926,erecipient. cReceived;d1948.5hou aReceived, 19485hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.1002548ctcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004800108245009100156300002800247351004800275545035100323520046500674546003001139524012901169555008701298544010701385600003101492600004801523600003301571655004501604700004701649700004001696700003601736700004501772541016101817561005201978506004202030506008902072852002502161011586564-020121212143809.0081014i19151991mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612837481 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot correspondence with Conrad Aiken and other papers,f1915-1991 and undated. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author or title. aT. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot (1888-1965) was an American-British poet, dramatist, and critic, who received an AB degree from Harvard College in 1909. Conrad Aiken (1889-1973) was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer who received an AB from Harvard College in 1911. Aiken and Eliot met at Harvard in 1907 and became lifelong friends. a11 letters from T. S. Eliot to Conrad Aiken, some also signed by Eliot's wife, Valerie Eliot, and some addressed to Aiken's wife, Mary Hoover Aiken. Also includes: 1 copy of a letter from Aiken to Eliot; letters from Valerie Eliot to Conrad and Mary Aiken; 1 letter from Allen Tate to Conrad Aiken concerning T. S. Eliot; a photograph of Valerie Eliot at the dedication of the Westminster Abbey T. S. Eliot memorial; and various printed items concerning Eliot. aMaterials are in English. aT. S. Eliot Correspondence with Conrad Aiken and Other Papers, 1915-1991 (MS Am 2669). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02051 aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional T. S. Eliot and Conrad Aiken papers owned by the Houghton Library.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aEliot, ValerievPhotographs. 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century.2aat1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aAiken, Mary Hoover,ecorrespondent.1 aEliot, Valerie,ecorrespondent.1 aTate, Allen,d1899-1979,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b7 West 18th St, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10011;d2008 October 14;e2008M-33;h$18000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Trust, 2008.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aLetters by T. S. Eliot require permission of the T. S. Eliot Estate to publish.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 266901799ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003700121245007800158300002800236545018500264520030100449555008700750524013100837600003900968600002501007655002001032655002001052700005601072700005501128700005101183700006101234700006001295541006101355561003101416852002601447009516249-620130910131225.0041210i19081909mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793900941 aMAHV04A92 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aNorton, Sara,d1864-erecipient.10aSara Norton condolences on the death of Charles Eliot Norton,f1908-1909. a1 boxa(.33 linear ft.) aSara Norton was the daughter of Charles Eliot Norton, editor, literary scholar, and professor of Fine Arts at Harvard. She later edited a published edition of her father's letters. aContains letters and cards of condolence, as well as telegrams, cables, funeral arrangements and obituaries related to the death of Charles Eliot Norton. Includes letters from Charles Francis Adams, Edward Waldo Emerson, Ferris Greenslet, Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Francis Greenwood Peabody.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01639 aSara Norton Condolences on the Death of Charles Eliot Norton, 1908-1909 (MS Am 1088.12). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aNorton, Sara,d1864- 7aClippings.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1807-1886,ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Edward Waldo,d1844-1930,ecorrespondent.1 aGreenslet, Ferris,d1875-1959,ecorrespondent.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911,ecorrespondent.1 aPeabody, Francis Greenwood,d1847-1936,ecorrespondent. cGift;aSource unknown;d1948.eNo accession number.5hou aSource unknown, 1948.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.1200886ntcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002800091245004300119300002700162351001700189500026500206500004600471546001600517600002800533506004300561541005200604852002400656012354502-120100525151711.0100525i19732010mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBailey, Anthony,d1933-10aAnthony Bailey papers,fca. 1973-2010. a1 box (.33 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes printed articles and reviews by Bailey; printed reviews of Bailey's works; a few typescript compositions by Bailey, his daughter, and others; an article and pencil drawing of a man by Margot (Speight) Bailey, his wife; and a subject file on Velazquez. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aBailey, Anthony,d1933- aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aC.J. Fox;d2010 May 25;e2009M-115;5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 165100964ckcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003800093245008500131300002800216351001700244545005800261500012800319546001600447500004600463600003800509700003200547541014400579852002300723012997894-920120104110306.0111209i19301982mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aAlexeieff, Alexandre,d1901-1982.10aAlexandre Alexeieff and Claire Parker photographs and negatives,fca. 1930-1982. a1 box (.375 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aAlexandre Alexeieff and Claire Parker were animators. aIncludes approximately 600 negatives, photographic prints, slides, and glass slides of Alexeieff and Parker and their work. aIn English. aRetrieval requires permission of curator.10aAlexeieff, Alexandre,d1901-1982.1 aParker, Claire,d1906-1981.0 cPurchase;aCecile Starr;b35 Strong Street, Burlington, VT 05401;d2011 October 3;e2011MT-15;h$2855.00 (Francis W. Hatch Book Fund).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 75601213ctcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003300091245004700124300002700171351001700198545006500215500006400280520015700344500004600501546001600547600003300563610002000596655001800616506004300634541012300677852002300800541012400823012678629-120110307093744.0110207i19061913mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRepper, Charles,d1886-1974.10aCharles Repper travel diaries,f1906-1913. a1 box (.38 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aCharles B. Repper (earlier Roepper) was a musician/composer. aIncludes accounts of Ballets russes performances in London. aDiaries are illustrated with pasted-in postcards, tickets, clippings, labels, and passenger lists. Also with photographs of Repper and his wife, Marian. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aRepper, Charles,d1886-1974.20aBallets russes. 7aDiaries.2aat1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aKarl Dan Sorensen;b88 Sadie Dunn Road, Mount Vernon, ME 04352-3623;d2011 February 7;e2010M-60.3diaries5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 27130 cGift;aKarl Dan Sorensen;b88 Sadie Dunn Road, Mount Vernon, ME 04352-3623;d2011 March 4;e2010M-60.3photographs5hou01499nacaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006900093300002700162351001700189500006000206500004600266546001600312610002400328651004500352651004500397651004500442655004900487655004900536655004900585541027200634561011400906506004201020506012301062852002401185013079055-920120202160435.0120127i17551935mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aDrury Lane Theatre playbills, posters, and programs,f1755-1935. a1 box (.4 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aThe bulk of the collection dates from the 19th century. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery18th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th century. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery20th century. 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy18th century.2aat 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy19th century.2aat 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy20th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 391 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 79301871nacaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006700110300002700177351001700204520025500221500004600476546001600522610003800538610002700576610002400603610003700627610004300664610002000707650002900727651004900756651004900805651004300854655004900897541027200946561011401218506004201332506012301374852002401497013079101-620120202160047.0120127i18301880mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn775085191 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aBritish Isles pantomime playbills and posters,fca. 1830-1880. a1 box (.4 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIncludes London playbills and posters primarily for pantomimes at Covent Garden Theatre but also for the Adelphi Theatre, Drury Lane Theatre, the Lyceum, Princess's Theatre, and Surrey Theatre. Also with material from Birmingham, Edinburgh, and Hull. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.20aAdelphi Theatre (London, England)20aCovent Garden Theatre.20aDrury Lane Theatre.20aLyceum Theatre (London, England)20aPrincess’s Theatre (London, England)20aSurrey Theatre. 0aPantomimey19th century. 0aBirmingham (England)xTheatery19th century. 0aEdinburgh (Scotland)xTheatery19th century. 0aHull (England)xTheatery19th century. 7aPlaybillszBritish Islesy19th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 551 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 79400893ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070110003800093245006300131300002700194351001700221500018500238546001600423610003800439655002900477700002100506541010100527506002300628852002400651013508493-820121206112058.0121206i19821999mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aPoets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.)10aPoets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.) records,fca. 1982-1999. a1 box (.4 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aCollection comprised of material dating from David Gullette's tenure as Artistic Director: meeting minutes, reports, programs, clippings, expense reports, and several play scripts. aIn English.20aPoets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.) 7aScripts (documents)2aat1 aGullette, David.0 cGift;aDavid Gullette;b68 Pembroke Street, Newton, MA 02158;d2012 November 6;e2012MT-24.5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 93401748ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100110004300121245007500164300002700239500001700266520026400283524011600547610004300663650001600706651004200722655001800764655002400782561009200806541009700898541013500995541013401130541012701264852005501391007982462-520111123145946.0990121i18822011mau||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6122203461 aMAHV99A2 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aCambridge Book Club (Cambridge, Mass.)10aCambridge Book Club (Cambridge, Mass.) additional records,f1882-2011. a1 boxa(.4 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes treasurer's accounts, bound volume (1v., 1882-1981); 16 folders miscellaneous papers (1960-1991) including membership lists, notes, minutes (1984-1990) and invitations; 1 folder minutes 2009; 1 folder miscellaneous, 1994-2010; 1 folder minutes, 2011. aCambridge Book Club (Cambridge, Mass.) Additional Records (MS Am 1646.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aCambridge Book Club (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aBook clubs. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xIntellectual life. 7aMinutes.2aat 7aAccount books.2aat1 aDeposited by Charles Hare and Frances Webb for the Cambridge Book Club, 1991-2011.5hou0 cDeposit;aCharles Hare and Frances Webb for Cambridge Book Club;d1991 Nov. 12;e91M-2.5hou0 cDeposit;aAnn Gibb;b40 Avon Hill Street, Cambridge, MA 02140;d2011 January 6, 10.31 folder minutes from 2007-2009 November5hou cDeposit;aFrances Webb;b19 Gray Gardens East, Cambridge, MA 02138;d2011 February 4.31 folder miscellaneous, ca. 1994-20105hou cDeposit;aAnn Cobb;b40 Avon Hill Street, Cambridge, MA 02140;d2011 November 23.31 folder minutes 178th anniversary5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1646.3z*98M-22 is shelved with this02779ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087245007900112300002600191351003000217545011500247520023600362530006200598524014600660544017700806546003500983555008701018650002901105600003401134700003601168700004901204700003801253700005201291700005001343700004701393700003501440541042001475561004601895506004201941852002301983845039902006009899778-520100407120331.0060325i19181939mau |||||||ger|d0 aocn612816378 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs10aCorrespondence concerning Waslaw Nijinsky's medical condition,f1918-1939. a1 box (.4 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWaslaw Nijinsky was a famous Russian ballet dancer and choreographer; Romola Nijinsky de Pulszky was his wife. aContains correspondence of Romola Nijinsky, her family members, Oscar Pàrdàny and Kyra Nijinsky, and others with physicians and psychiatrists, Ludwig Binswanger, Otto Binswanger, Hans Curt Frenkel-Tissot, Marta Wenger and others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aCorrespondence Concerning Waslaw Nijinsky's Medical Condition (MS Thr 507). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFor related material see: Miscellaneous Manuscripts and Photographs Relating to Nijinsky's Medical Treatment at Bellevue Sanatorium, New York Public Library. Dance Divison. aIn German, French and English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01897 0aPsychiatryzSwitzerland.10aNijinsky, Waslaw,d1890-1950.1 aNijinsky, Kyra,ecorrespondent.1 aNijinsky, Romola de Pulszky,ecorrespondent.1 aPárdány, Oscar,ecorrespondent.1 aBinswanger, Ludwig,d1881-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aBinswanger, Otto,d1852-1929,ecorrespondent.1 aFrenkel-Tissot, Hans Curt,ecorrespondent.1 aWenger, Marta,ecorrespondent.0 aGolden Legend, Inc.;cPurchase;b211 South Beverly Drive, Suite 114, Beverly Hills, CA 90212;d2006 April.;e2005MT-71;h$6605.00 (Timothy S. Mayer Fund) ; $4496.23 (Billy Rose Theatre Fund) ; $4310.90 (Theatre Collection Special Purposes Fund) ; $4289.93 (Edward Sheldon Book Fund) ; $3105.41 (Parmenia Migel Ekstrom Memorial Fund) ; $2389.23 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest) ; $11,089.57 (miscellaneous funds).5the1 aPurchased with multiple funds, 2006.5the1 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 507 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou04376ntcaa2200565 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003800091245009300129300002700222351005400249545062000303520058600923546007001509555008701579524014401666600003801810600003201848600002901880650003301909651004501942651004501987655002502032710008002057700004202137700003102179700003402210700006002244700003102304700004102335700003002376700004902406700003702455700004302492700004802535700003202583700003302615700002902648700003302677700004202710700003802752700005002790700004602840700003102886852002702917541073902944506003703683561009003720011990770-420131114144805.0090602i17581820mau 000|i eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPiozzi, Hester Lynch,d1741-1821.10aHester Lynch Piozzi, Samuel Johnson, Anna Seward letters, and other letters,f1758-1820. a1 boxa(.4 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aHester Lynch Salusbury was born in Wales in 1741, and in 1763 married wealthy London brewer Henry Thrale. After the Thrales were introduced to Samuel Johnson in 1765, their home became the center of an important coterie of literary, artistic, and political figures. Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) was one of the leading literary figures of eighteenth-century England. He is best remembered for compiling the first comprehensive dictionary of the English language, published in 1755. He was memorialized in James Boswell’s The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (1791). Anna Seward (1747-1809) was an English Romantic poet. aPredominately letters written by Hester Lynch Piozzi to her friends after the death of her husband and banishment from the artistic world. Piozzi writes to her friends and family mourning her old age and loss of artistic stimulation since her scandalous marriage to Gabriele Mario Piozzi (1740-1809) in the midst of Napoleonic Wars hardships. Includes sympathy notes, gossip, requests for literature, and bill payments on past homesteads. Also includes letters from Samuel Johnson and Anna Seward to friends and family discussing poor health and its negative effects on their work. aMaterials predominately in English. Also includes French epigram.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02473 aHester Lynch Piozzi, Samuel Johnson, Anna Seward letters, and other letters, 1758-1820 (MS Eng 1755). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPiozzi, Hester Lynch,d1741-1821.10aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-178410aSeward, Anna,d1742-1809 0aNapoleonic Wars,d1800-1815. 0aEnglandxLife and customsy18th century. 0aEnglandxLife and customsy19th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat2 aDonald & Mary Hyde Collection of Dr. Samuel Johnson (Houghton Library)5hou1 aBunn, Alfred,d1796-1860,erecipient.1 aWeston, Jacob,erecipient.1 aLewis, Charlotte,erecipient.1 aWalker, Joseph C.q(Joseph Cooper),d-1810,erecipient.1 aRobson, James,erecipient.1 aFellowes, James,d-1857,erecipient.1 aMartin, Jane,erecipient.1 aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784.ecorrespondent.1 aLangton, Bennet.ecorrespondent.1 aBurney, Fanny,d1752-1840,erecipient.1 aSiddons, Sarah,d1755-1831.ecorrespondent.1 aLysons, Daniel,erecipient.1 aBellamy, Thomas,erecipient.1 aPoole, Anne,erecipient.1 aDavies, Reynold,erecipient.1 aLee, Harriet,d1757-1851,erecipient.1 aPennington, Penelope,erecipient.1 aMead, Clement,dactive 1762-1833,erecipient.1 aSeward, Anna,d1742-1809.ecorrespondent.1 aLong, William,erecipient.8 bHOUcHYDBhMS Eng 17550 cPurchase;aChristopher Edwards;b8 St. Leonard's Square, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, OX10 0AR, England;d2009 May 15;e2008M-107;h$177474.00 (Endowment Fund for the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection - $77474.00 ; Amy Lowell Trust - $100000.00)nBloomsbury Auctions sale NY029, lots 305 ($25080.00); 306 ($2904.00); 309 ($7920.00); 380 ($4224.00); 382 ($14520.00); 383 ($21120.00); 385 ($4224.00); 386 ($4620.00); 387 ($3432.00); 388 ($2112.00); 389 ($3960.00); 390 ($4224.00); 391 ($2112.00); 392 ($4224.00); 394 ($4620.00); 395 ($9900.00); 396 ($3168.00); 397 ($9900.00); 398 ($2112.00); 399 ($2508.00); 402 ($1254.00); 403 ($8580.00); 405 ($4224.00); 440 ($9900.00); 441 ($2112.00); 442 ($2904.00); 443 ($9240.00); 444 ($2376.00).5hou0 aCollection is open for research.1 aPurchased with the Endowment Fund for the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection, 2009.5hou01132ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100001900091245003800110300002600148351001700174500018800191500004600379546001600425600001900441600004100460600004000501651005000541506004300591541023300634852002300867012746223-620110505171140.0110419i18151891mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aAbbott family.10aAbbott family papers,f1815-1891. a1 box (.4 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aCollection chiefly concerns the Civil War and this Massachusetts family. Includes letters to Josiah Gardner Abbott, letters of Henry Livermore Abbott, and letters of various notables. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.30aAbbott family.10aAbbott, Henry Livermore,d1842-1864.10aAbbott, Josiah Gardner,d1819-1891. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aLocus Solus Rare Books;bP.O. Box 529, New York, NY 10040;d2011 April 20;e2010M-95;h$8450.00 ($3560.00 - Amy Lowell Trust ; $3500.00 - Sidney J. Watts Fund ; $1390.00 - Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 272301084ntm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100006600108245005200174300002800226500003100254500004400285520007200329524005600401700006300457700006800520700004400588700008300632541005900715561003100774852002500805009769867-920091125170826.0051003i17441762enk|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612766511 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aDodington, George Bubb,cBaron of Melcombe Regis,d1691-1762.10aDodington papers :kmanuscript,fca. 1744-1762. a1 box (.4 linear ft.) ; aCollection is unprocessed. aAutograph letters, speeches, and notes. aLetters are chiefly to Lord Halifax and Frederick, Prince of Wales. aMS Eng 188.5. Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aFrederick Louis,cPrince of Wales,d1707-1751,erecipient.1 aHalifax, George Montagu-Dunk,cEarl of,d1716-1771,erecipient.1 aMatcham, Mary Eyre,eformer owner.5hou1 aRosebery, Archibald Philip Primrose,cEarl of,d1847-1929,eformer owner.5hou cGift;aAnonymous;d13 Nov. 1933;eno acc. number.5hou aAnonymous gift, 1933.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 188.501858cpcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003900121245006700160300002800227545034900255520019900604555008700803524011700890546001601007650004701023600003901070650003501109650003901144651004801183651003501231655004501266656001701311541007001328561005701398506004201455852002301497000601790-820130131120451.0851205i18391891mau eng d0 aocn6123656221 aMAHV85A9 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.00aJames Russell Lowell miscellaneous correspondence,f1839-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited the Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, the North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aLetters from Lowell to various correspondents and a few letters to him. The letters touch on both his career and his personal life, including social engagements in Cambridge and travel in Italy.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01333 aJames Russell Lowell Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1839-1891 (MS Am 1191). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, American.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 0aItalyxDescription and travel. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 119102191cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001500123245004600138300002800184351003900212545021500251520048700466524008500953555008701038555010701125546001601232600001501248650003901263650002801302650003601330650002601366650002301392650002801415655003801443700001601481700002301497710003901520541014301559561002601702506004201728852002301770000601983-820100318084439.0860528i19501977mau eng d0 aocn1225209251 aMAHV86A272 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTraven, B.10aPapers by or about B. Traven,f1950-1977. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by author. aBruno Traven (d. 1969) a mysterious author, perhaps American, perhaps German, born in 1882 or 1890, lived in Mexico for much of his writing life. He signed his name Hal Croves in the letters in this collection. aThe bulk of the collection is correspondence of Sanora Babb Howe, an author, editor at the California Quarterly, and friend of Traven. The letters concern the rights to a Traven story adapted for radio and television by Ted Allan, a playwright who worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Traven would not negotiate directly with Allan or the CBC. Also contains manuscripts by Traven with annotations by Howe and others, of his Indian mass industry and The uninvited guest. aPapers by or about B. Traven (MS Am 2008). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003728 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1983-1984, under *83M-2. aIn English.10aTraven, B. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aCopyrightxAdaptations. 0aCopyrightxBroadcasting rights. 0aMexico in literature. 0aRadio adaptations. 0aTelevision adaptations. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aAllan, Ted.1 aHowe, Sanora Babb.2 aCanadian Broadcasting Corporation.0 cPurchase;aJoseph the Provider;b903 State Street Santa Barbara, California 93101;d1983;e83M-2;hAmy Lowell fund ($9,500).5hou3Papers.1 aPurchased, 1983.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 200802967ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002300102100005400125245006200179300002800241351010100269545012700370520069000497555008701187524012901274546001601403544028101419600006901700650003601769656002101805700005001826700004601876700003701922700004301959700005302002700005902055700005602114700005302170700006202223541015402285561005202439506004202491852002402533009097911-720110415073546.0030331i18931929mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127654821 aMHAT03-A58 aMH-MTcMH-MTedacs1 aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940,erecipient.10aLetters to Mrs. Patrick Campbell from others,f1893-1929. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Mrs. Patrick Campbell; and II. Other letters. aCampbell, whose maiden name was Beatrice Stella Tanner, was a British actress. See finding aid for additional information. aContains letters to Mrs. Patrick Campbell from participants in the British theatrical community of the late 1800s and early 20th century, including George Alexander, Squire Bancroft, Edith Craig, Rosina Filippi, John Hare, Sir Henry Irving, Sir Arthur Wing Pinero, Dame Ellen Terry, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, and Sir C. Aubrey Smith. Also includes a letter from Mrs. Patrick Campbell to John Hare. Another letter written on behalf of Mrs. Patrick by her daughter, Stella Campbell, is also included. Some of this correspondence was used in Mrs. Patrick Campbell’s memoir, My life and some letters (1922) and may have been organized for that purpose with cover sheets and transcripts.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00512 aLetters to Mrs. Patrick Campbell from Others (MS Thr 372). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee HOLLIS for additional holdings at Harvard. Other collections of Mrs. Patrick’s correspondence are also held by the British Library, the Bodleian Library, the Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Theatre and Performance, and University of Chicago Special Collections.10aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940.tMy life and some letters. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 7aActresses.2lcsh1 aBancroft, Squire,d1841-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aCraig, Edith,d1869-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aFilippi, Rosina,ecorrespondent.1 aHare, John, 1844-1921,ecorrespondent.1 aIrving, Henry,cSir,d1838-1905,ecorrespondent.1 aPinero, Arthur Wing,cSir,d1855-1934,ecorrespondent.1 aSmith, C. Aubrey,cSir,d1863-1948,ecorrespondent.1 aTerry, Ellen,cDame,d1847-1928,ecorrespondent.1 aTree, Herbert Beerbohm,cSir,d1853-1917,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aSotheby & Company;b34-35 New Bond St., London W1;d1943 July 29;e79M-54; [mistakenly also assigned 2003MT-222b];hF. E. Chase fund.5the1 aPurchased with the F. E. Chase fund, 1943.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 37201815ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100003800123245005500161300002800216351013500244545010100379520014900480555008700629555010800716524013600824546001600960600003800976650004301014650004201057655002501099655001701124655001901141655003801160656002901198541011301227561004501340506004201385852002601427009250666-620130116141629.0031112i19331952mau|||||||||||||| ||eng |0 aocm838583281 aMHAT03A93 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.10aRobert Edmond Jones additional papers,f1933-1952. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Drawings; II. Compositions by Jones; and III. Letters to Jones and compositions by others. aJones graduated from Harvard in 1910 and was an American theatrical and motion-picture designer. aIncludes costume designs and miscellaneous sketches as well as essays, articles, lectures, notes, and a few letters to Jones, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-54. aRobert Edmond Jones Additional Papers, 1933-1952 (MS Thr 201.12). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954. 0aTheaterszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aCostumezUnited Statesy20th century. 7aCostume design.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aCostume designers.2lcsh0 cGift;aMiss Elizabeth Jones;bRochester Manor Nursing Home, Rochester NH 03867;d17 Jan. 1975;e74M-54.5the1 aGift of Miss Elizabeth Jones, 1975.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 201.1202437ctcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106100003700129245005400166300002800220351012700248520049600375530006200871555008700933524013201020546001601152544011101168600003701279600004801316650004201364655002001406655002801426655005901454700003301513700003601546700003701582700004901619541013901668561007301807506004201880506009401922852002302016010079586-220130524081613.0k|||||||||||||||||060811i19461983mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612843852 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams additional papers,f1946-1983. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions and biographical materials; and III. Photographs. aIncludes autograph manuscript and photocopies of Williams' correspondence with Bruce Cook, Mitch Douglas, Milton Goldman, James Kirkwood and many others. Compositions include pages from autograph manuscript drafts and typescript versions of scripts of plays, a contract, invitation, receipts, household inventory, financial documents, playbill, and other material. Includes studio portrait photographs of Williams, as well as snapshots of him and his friends, and additional shots of others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02044 aTennessee Williams Additional Papers, 1946-1983 (MS Thr 550). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983vPortraits. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPortraits.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aScripts (documents)zUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aCook, Bruce,ecorrespondent.1 aDouglas, Mitch,ecorrespondent.1 aGoldman, Milton,ecorrespondent.1 aKirkwood, James,d1924-1989,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aKeith V. Walker;b1858 Mt. Brian Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30329;d2006 July 19;e2006MT-23;h$21500.00 (F. E. Chase fund).5the1 aPurchased from Keith V. Walker with the F. E. Chase fund, 2006.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 55002790ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245006300146300002800209351012200237545105000359520027501409555008701684524010701771546003001878544007201908600003801980650003902018650001502057656001602072740006902088541007702157506012302234506003402357561004902391852002402440010271086-420080527121915.0020710i19371937mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612786468 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolbrook, Stewart H.,d1893-1964.10aStewart Hall Holbrook papers for Holy old Mackinaw,f1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into two series: I. Correspondence with Stewart Hall Holbrook; and II. Compositions and research materials. aHolbrook (1893-1964) was a lumberjack, journalist, and popular historian. He was born in Newport, Vermont, but spent much of his adult life living in Portland, Oregon. Holbrook's first book, Holy old Mackinaw: A natural history of the American lumberjack, was one of his most successful works. Published by Macmillan Company in 1938, the book focused on the lives of lumbermen, their work methods, and their culture and folklore. This book spent over five months on the national bestseller list and this success convinced Holbrook to move to Cambridge, Massachusetts in July of 1938, a place he felt was "more fitting for such a prominent literary figure as himself." While back East, he wrote five more books he would call "low-brow history," but he returned to Portland in 1943. He went on to write dozens of books, including the topics of Ethan Allen, the railroads, the timber industry, the Wobblies, eccentrics of the Pacific Northwest, and for over thirty years he wrote for the Oregonian. Source: American National Biography Online, 2007. aIncludes Holbrook's 1937 correspondence written to gather research information on logging and lumbermen for his book Holy old Mackinaw. Also includes autograph manuscript notes and printed matterials on lumbering, as well as drafts of this book and a few other writings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01869 aStewart Hall Holbrook Papers for Holy Old Mackinaw (MS Am 2530). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aPapers also held by the Oregon Historical Society Research Library.10aHolbrook, Stewart H.,d1893-1964. 0aLumberingzUnited StatesxHistory. 0aLumbermen. 7aHistorians.02aHoly old Mackinaw; a natural history of the American lumberjack.0 cDeposit;aMr. Stewart H. Holbrook, Esq.;d1939 august 25;e45M-656.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou aCollection open for use.5hou1 aDeposited by Stewart H. Holbrook, 1939.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 253002591ntcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100003400121245006900155300002800224351003000252530006200282545045800344520039400802555008701196524010801283546004101391544010101432600001801533600002101551600003001572600003201602650003501634650004501669655002801714655002001742700005901762700004601821700004801867710004101915541010701956506004202063561004102105852002302146010522929-620121105124716.0020710i19001934mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612794654 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aPinker, James B.,erecipient.10aJames B. Pinker letters concerning the James family,f1900-1934. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) bArranged chronologically. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aHenry James (1843-1916) was an American novelist, short story writer, critic, and dramatist. William James (1842-1910) was an American philosopher and psychologist, a professor of psychology and philosophy at Harvard University, and the brother of novelist Henry James. James Brand Pinker (1863-1922) was the founder of James B. Pinker and Son, a firm of literary agents in London. Pinker was literary and dramatic agent to both Henry and William James. aLetters, telegrams, and receipts to James B. Pinker (and to his firm James. B. Pinker and Son after his death in 1922), concerning the publication and printing of the works of Henry James and William James. Primarily letters from publishers and printers, but also includes letters from the James family, especially Henry James, William James, and Alice Howe Gibbens James (William's wife).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01874 aJames B. Pinker Letters Concerning the James Family (MS Am 2540). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English and French. aSee also Pinker, James B., recipient. Letters concerning Henry James, 1905-1930 (MS Am 1237.14).30aJames family.10aPinker, James B.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aJames, William,d1842-1910. 0aLiterary agentsy20th century. 0aPublishers and publishingy20th century. 7aReceiptsy20th century. 7aTelegrams.2aat1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910,ecorrespondent.2 aJames B. Pinker and Son,erecipient. cGift;aMr. Henry James, Esq.;b522 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York;d1947 December 16;e47M-141.5hou aMaterials are open for research.5hou aGift of Henry James Esq., 1947.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 254003030ntcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108100003700126245004300163300002800206351008700234545064300321520034900964555008701313524008201400546005201482544008601534544018301620600006101803600003701864600003601901600004901937650003501986650004302021655003802064655002202102655002002124700003602144541012202180561005602302506004202358506012302400852002402523541006102547010578268-820101006085141.0020710i19081954mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612798966 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengaspaachi1 aKeller, Carl Tilden,d1872-1955.10aCarl Tilden Keller papers,f1908-1954. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Subject files. aCarl Tilden Keller (1872-1955) was a Harvard College graduate (AB 1894), an accountant, partner with Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Montgomery in Boston, and a book collector. In 1898 he married Marian Mandell Keller (d.1954). He was a vice chairman and trustee of the Harvard Yenching Institute. As a collector of rare materials, Keller was especially known for collecting rare editions of Cervantes' Don Quixote and for attempting to obtain translations of Don Quixote in all major languages of the world. Keller was a friend and supporter of Sir (Marc) Aurel Stein (1862-1943), a Hungarian born, British archaeologist, explorer, and geographer. aPapers are primarily correspondence but also include a few printed items, compositions, photographs, and notes by Keller. Content deals with Keller's pursuit of collecting rare editions of Cervantes' Don Quixote, as well as translations into all languages. Collection also includes much correspondence with his friend, explorer Sir Aurel Stein.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01881 aCarl Tilden Keller Papers (MS Am 2544). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English, Spanish, and Chinese. aSee also: Carl Tilden Keller collection concerning Sir Aurel Stein (bMS Am 2532). aSee also: Collection of newspaper clippings and periodical articles relating to Cervantes mostly by or about the Cervantists Carl T. Keller ... [and others] ... (*SC6 C3375 Zzx).10aCervantes Saavedra, Miguel de,d1547-1616.tDon Quixote.10aKeller, Carl Tilden,d1872-1955.10aStein, Aurel,cSir,d1862-1943.10aStein, Aurel,cSir,d1862-1943vPhotographs. 0aBook collectingy20th century. 0aRare booksxCollectors and collecting. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aStein, Aurel,cSir,d1862-1943.0 cGift;aMr. Carl T. Keller;b80 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1946 August 26; 1952;e46CM-1F; 51M-309F.5hou1 aGift and bequest of Carl T. Keller, 1946-1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 25440 cBequest;aCarl T. Keller;d1957 April 11;e56M-168.5hou02050ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245005900139300002800198351008500226545056200311520028500873555008701158524009801245546003001343650003901373600003101412655002301443710001201466700006001478541010201538561004301640506004201683852002301725010734006-220070917195258.0020710i18841899mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612808674 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926.10aGrace Norton portfolio of Nation articles,f1884-1899. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged as received in repository, chronological by article's publication date. aGrace Norton (1834-1926) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the daughter of Andrew Norton and Catherine Eliot Norton, and the sister of American author and Harvard professor, Charles Eliot Norton. She was privately educated in Cambridge, and developed a great love for the literature of France, especially that of the French essayist, Montaigne. Norton became a Montaigne expert, translating, writing, and lecturing on his works, as well as those of other French authors. Many of her articles appeared in World Literature, Nation, and other publications. aPrimarily clippings of articles and book reviews written by Grace Norton and published in the Nation, often anonymously or under a pseudonym. Includes notes and drafts by Norton, letters and notes with comments from Wendell Phillips Garrison, and other Nation editors and readers.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01888 aGrace Norton Portfolio of Nation Articles (MS Am 2556). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.10aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926. 7aBook reviews.2aat2 aNation.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907,ecorrespondent. cGift;aMiss Lucy A. Paton;bHotel Vendome, Boston, Massachusetts;d1948 April 22;e47M-300F.5hou aGift of Miss Lucy A. Paton, 1948.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 255603570ntcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100002300121245004100144300002800185351015200213545107300365545035701438520042301795555008702218524008002305544021102385546004702596600002702643600002302670655004902693700003102742700004402773700003002817740002002847740004402867541005402911561003002965506004202995506012303037852002403160011453072-620080515080732.0020710i19161938mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612815749 aMH-HedacscMH-H0 aengafre1 aRaisbeck, Kenneth.10aKenneth Raisbeck papers,f1916-1938. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following three series: I. Correspondence with Kenneth Raisbeck; II. Compositions by Kenneth Raisbeck; and III. Other materials. aKenneth Romaver-Ron Raisbeck (1899-1931) graduated from Harvard College (Class of 1920, A.B. 1921). While at Harvard, Raisbeck was an assistant to (and later a good friend of) George Pierce Baker for his 47 Workshop play writing course and a close friend of American novelist Thomas Wolfe. Raisbeck was said to be openly homosexual while at Harvard. In 1926, Raisbeck toured Paris with Wolfe and other friends, Marjorie Crocker Fairbanks (Mrs. Sydney Fairbanks) and Miss Helen Harding. Raisbeck became a playwright and screenwriter and lived in various locations in the United States. His plays consisted of Torches (1923), Rock Me, Julie which played for two weeks on Broadway in New York City (1931), and The lady of [in?] Spain which was never produced. Late in the 1920s he worked on screenplay scenarios in Hollywood and in 1931 he came East again. He was found dead in a Westport, Connecticut cemetery on September 30, 1931. Establishing the cause of death developed into a controversy, but many said he was murdered by strangulation. The killer was never found. aRaisbeck was the model for the character Frank Starwick in Wolfe's second autobiographical novel, Of time and the river. Marjorie Crocker Fairbanks was a close friend of Raisbeck, and for a time, the wife of Sydney Van Kleek Fairbanks (1895-1985, Harvard (Class of 1917) A.B. 1920, JD 1925, AM 1933, PhD 1936). Austen Crocker Fairbanks was their child. aPapers include: letters from Raisbeck to his friend, Marjorie Crocker Fairbanks, and her husband Sydney Fairbanks, and child Austen Fairbanks; a few letters from Marjorie Fairbanks to Raisbeck; drafts of Raisbeck's plays: The lady of Spain. A play in four acts and Rock me, Julie! A play in three acts; extensive clippings concerning his death and the police investigation and scandal that ensued, and other materials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01969 aKenneth Raisbeck Papers (MS Am 2604). Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional Thomas Wolfe materials and also Marjorie C. Fairbanks Correspondence and Notes on Thomas Wolfe (MS Am 1883.9) for additional papers concerning Mrs. Marjorie C. Fairbanks. aMaterials are in English, a few in French.10aFairbanks, Marjorie C.10aRaisbeck, Kenneth. 7aClippingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aFairbanks, Austen Crocker.1 aFairbanks, Marjorie C.,ecorrespondent.1 aFairbanks, Sydney,d1895-02aRock me, Julie!42aThe lady of Spain. A play in four acts.0 aDonor unknown;d1949?;eno accession number.5hou1 aDonor unknown, 1949?5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 260402328ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002700108245005100135300002800186351004500214545056400259520038200823555008701205524009001292546003001382600002701412610008001439650002601519655004201545710008001587506012301667541009801790561006001888506004201948852002401990011575936-020081006122257.0020710i19431946mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612834837 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHammond, Mason,d1903-10aMason Hammond World War II papers,f1943-1946. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by folder title. aMason Hammond (1903–2002), graduated from Harvard College (AB 1925) and was a Harvard University professor from 1928 until he retired in 1973. He was the Pope Professor of Latin Language and Literature, was an authority on Latin and the history of Rome and its empire. During World War II, Hammond served as an intelligence officer in the United States Army Air Forces in Europe. After the war, as a monument, fine arts, and archives officer with the Allied Military Government in Italy and Germany, he recovered and protected fine arts stolen by the Nazis. aThese papers include drafts and final reports concerning United States World War II governmental agencies for Allied Military Government Division of Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives and the Chrea Training Centre for Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories (AMGOT). Includes typescript carbons, printed, mimeographs, and autograph manuscript drafts by Mason Hammond.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01994 aMason Hammond World War II Papers (MS Am 2629). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aHammond, Mason,d1903-20aAllied Military Government.bDivision of Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945. 7aReportszUnited Statesy20th century.2 aAllied Military Government.bDivision of Monuments, Fine Arts and Archives. aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 cDonor unknown; mason Hammond?;dDate unknown; probably after 1951;eno accession number.5hou1 aDonor unknown. Probably Mason Hammond, after 1951.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 262901942nkcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007300110300002800183351010400211545020300315520054800518555008701066524013601153546003001289610004201319650005001361650005001411655004401461710003401505541002401539561002401563506004201587852002301629011761021-620081209074021.0020710i18941932mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn663985407 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCastle Square Theatre souvenir portrait photographs,fca. 1894-1932. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by individual depicted in portrait. Additional items at end of finding aid. aThe Castle Square Theatre (1894-1932) was located in Boston's South End. The theatre was built by E.M. Maynard in 1894. By 1921 it had been renamed the Arlington. The theatre was demolished in 1932. aSouvenir portrait photographs of actors and actresses who performed at the Castle Square Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts. Souvenir photographs printed by the Providence Albertype Company. Each photograph is matted and printed with text: "Souvenir [with drawing of theatre exterior] Castle Square Theatre Boston, Mass." Some photographs also have name of actor or actress and role played printed on mat or on photograph. Also includes a set of portraits of individuals and a group photograph with autograph manuscript signatures of the actors.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02014 aCastle Square Theatre Souvenir Portrait Photographs (MS Thr 536). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.20aCastle Square Theatre (Boston, Mass.) 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBostony19th century. 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBostony20th century. 7aPortraitsxAmericany19th century.2aat2 aProvidence Albertype Company.0 aDonor unknown.5the1 aDonor unknown.5the aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 53602509ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001800108245009800126300002800224351007200252545062200324520047200946555008701418524014801505546003001653600003001683600001801713650003001731655003801761700004301799700003001842700004501872710004401917740005701961541004502018561003602063506003702099852002302136011833062-420120227081408.0020710i19901991mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612854543 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aUpdike, John.10aJohn Updike papers concerning Surviving: the uncollected writings of Henry Green,f1990-1991. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions. aHenry Vincent Yorke (1905-1974) was an English author who wrote under the pseudonym of Henry Green. Sebastian Yorke, (b. 1934-) a British engineer, is Henry Green's son. Matthew Henry Yorke, (b.1958-) a British engineer, novelist, and editor, is Sebastian Yorke's son and Henry Green's grandson. John Updike (1932-2009) was a novelist, critic, short story writer, poet, essayist, and dramatist. He graduated from Harvard College with an AB in 1954. In 1990-1991, Updike collaborated with Yorke family members for the production of a book of writings by Henry Green. Updike also wrote the introduction for this volume. aPapers concerning John Updike's assistance with the editing and writing the introduction for the book: Henry Green. Surviving: the Uncollected Writings of Henry Green edited by Matthew Yorke. London: Chatto & Windus, 1992. Includes 1990-1991 correspondence with Henry Green's son Sebastian Yorke, grandson Matthew Yorke, and the British publisher, Chatto & Windus, as well as photocopy versions of Henry Green's writings that were under consideration for this volume.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02017 aJohn Updike Papers Concerning Surviving: the Uncollected Writings of Henry Green, 1990-1991 (MS Am 2649). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aGreen, Henry,d1905-1974.10aUpdike, John. 0aEditingxDecision making. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aYorke, Matthew,d1958-ecorrespondent.1 aGreen, Henry,d1905-1974.1 aYorke, Sebastian,d1934-ecorrespondent.2 aChatto & Windus (Firm),ecorrespondent.02aSurviving : the uncollected writings of Henry Green.0 cGift;aJohn Updike;d1993;e92M-13.5hou1 aGift of John Updike, 1993.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 264901389ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245005000142300002800192351003100220545018700251520016800438555008700606524009100693546003000784600003400814655003800848655004200886541006400928561005400992506004201046852002301088012164960-120091222140824.0020710nuuuuuuuumau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612814355 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.10aPhillips Brooks additional sermons,fundated. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged by sermon number. aBrooks was an Episcopal clergyman. He was rector of Trinity Church, Boston (1868-1893) and Bishop of Massachusetts (1891-1893). He received an AB degree from Harvard College in 1855. a6 autograph manuscript sermons, numbers 1, 232 or 634 (fragment only), 308, 484, 708, and 804. Includes Brooks' first sermon and one marked: "For Harvard College."0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02053 aPhillips Brooks Additional Sermons (MS Am 2670). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aSermons, Americany19th century.2aat0 cGift;aProfessor Raymond W. Albright;d1962;e62M-267.5hou1 aGift of Professor Raymond W. Albright, 1962.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 267002108nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048040002100089110003000110245008300140300002800223351009600251520032900347520015600676524015100832555008800983546003001071650002301101610003901124610003001163655004901193655003101242700003601273700003601309740002101345541012401366561007901490506004201569506012301611852002401734011398666-120090417033202.0c|||||||||||||||||020710s1898 mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aFrancis Wilson & Company.10aDrawings concerning Francis Wilson & Company's The little corporal,fca. 1898. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aOrganized into the following series: I. Printed materials; and II. Costume design drawings. aAll materials concern the production of the comic opera, The little corporal. Includes: a program from the performance given for the annual benefit for the Actor's Fund of America (1898 November 10); and 60 watercolor costume sketches, with monogram of AP, with snippets of fabric, and with extensive manuscript annotations. aAlso includes a bound, printed score (33p.), libretto by Harry B. Smith, music by Ludwig Engländer, published by Breitkopf & Haertel (New York, 1898). aDrawings Concerning Francis Wilson & Company's The Little Corporal (MS Thr 151). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid available:uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01801 aMaterials are in English. 0aOperasvLibrettos.20aActors' Fund of America, New York.20aFrancis Wilson & Company. 7aCostume designsxTheatery19th century.2aat 7aWatercolorsy19th century.1 aEngländer, Ludwig,d1853-1914.1 aSmith, Harry Bache,d1860-1936.02aLittle corporal.0 cPurchase;aMr. Howard S. Mott;bSheffield, Massachusetts;d1965 November 11;e65M-71;hFrank E. Chase Fund ($225).5the1 aPurchased from Mr. Howard S. Mott with the Frank E. Chase fund, 1965.5the aCollection is open for research.5the aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 15101440ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001800108245007200126300002800198351002200226545013300248520017400381524011100555546003000666600002000696655001900716655001800735700001700753700001300770700005400783541005500837561004500892506004200937506012300979852002401102012338130-420100621191850.0020710i17671784mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn629696962 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aEliot family.10aEliot family photostats of pocket diaries and almanacs,f1767-1784. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) bArranged by date. aDiaries and almanacs belonging to ancestors? of Harvard historian Samuel Eliot Morison, listed only as J. F. Eliot and A. Eliot. aPhotostats of autograph manuscript diaries and almanacs for: (1) J. F. Eliot and A. Eliot, 1767; (2) J. F. Eliot, 1768; (3) J. F. Eliot, 1775; and (4) J. F. Eliot, 1784. aEliot Family Photostats of Pocket Diaries and Almanacs (MS Am 2681). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.30aElliott family. 7aAlmanacs.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat1 aEliot, J. F.1 aEliot A.1 aMorison, Samuel Eliot,d1887-1976,eformer owner.0 cGift;aSamuel Eliot Morison;d1954;e53M-193.5hou1 aGift of Samuel Eliot Morison, 1954.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 268102424nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002000110245005700130300002800187545077200215520029100987520025501278555008701533524010101620546003001721650004201751600002001793600004201813610002401855655005001879656002801929541006201957561002502019506004202044852002402086012544950-X20100915191351.0020710s1931 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn659793168 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCalthrop, G. E.10aG. E. Calthrop costume designs for Cavalcade,f1931. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aNoel Coward's historical extravaganza Cavalcade, opened at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane (now the Drury Lane Theatre), London, England in 1931. The play ran from October 13, 1931 through September 10, 1932. Cast included Mary Clare, Edward Sinclair, John Mills, and others. The scenery and costumes were designed by Gladys E. Calthrop. The plot chronicled about thirty years in the lives of two British families, the Marryots and the Bridges , from New Years Eve 1899 to New Years Eve 1933. One family is well-to-do and the other is not as well off, and the play shows various historical events through their eyes such as the Titanic disaster, the death of Queen Victoria, and World War I. The play required a huge cast, gargantuan sets, and a complex hydraulic stage. aOriginal watercolor, pencil, and ink costume designs by G. E. Calthrop (Gladys E. Calthrop). Most designs include annotations designating the following: sketch number; act and scene number; actor's name; and colors, fabrics, and ornaments to be used in design. All designs are unsigned.8 aAlso includes: a theater program which contains a photograph of the cast and also G. E. Calthrop; a numbered autograph manuscript list recording all the drawings included in this collection; and the cover from the case formerly holding these designs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02081 aG. E. Calthrop Costume Designs for Cavalcade (MS Thr 582). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aTheaterzGreat Britainy20th century.10aCalthrop, G. E.10aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973.tCavalcade.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 7aCostume designsxDrawingsy20th century.2aat 7aCostume designers.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 58201854nkcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004600110245006800156300002800224351005500252545020500307520023600512555008700748524013100835544003000966546002900996600004601025610002101071650003601092650002801128650003501156655004801191655003501239656002801274740003801302541006201340561002501402506004201427852002301469012552590-720100818113933.0020710i17631779mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn660230095 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aMartin, Jean Baptiste,dactive 1748-1757.10aJean Martin Baptiste costume design engravings,fca. 1763-1779. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged in alphabetical order by title of design. aJean Baptiste Martin was a French costume designer. He was the immediate successor of François Boucher at the Paris Opéra from July 1748 until 1757 or 1758. He designed costumes for opéras-ballets. a14 hand-colored costume design engravings from the set designed and engraved by Martin: Cahier de Costumes de Théâtre and for the later version Gallerie des modes et costumes français, dessinés d'après nature. Most are matted.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02091 aJean Martin Baptiste Costume Design Engravings (MS Thr 595). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also TS 515.33.80.4F. aMaterials are in French.10aMartin, Jean Baptiste,dactive 1748-1757.20aOpéra de Paris. 0aBalletxCostumezFrancezParis. 0aCostumezFrancezParis. 0aCostume designzFrancezParis. 7aCostume designszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aEngravingsy18th century.2aat 7aCostume designers.2aat02aCollection de figures theatrales.0 cSource unknown.dDate unknown.eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 59501722npcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004600110300002800156351003000184520008800214520031400302555008700616524011300703546003000816650001300846650002000859655004800879655004800927700003000975700002101005710002201026710004401048711002601092541004001118561002501158506012301183506004201306852002401348012557301-420100915191858.0020710i19381984mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn660366397 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aFigure skating show programs,f1938-1984. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) bArranged chronologically. aPrinted programs for ice skating shows held in the United States and Great Britain.8 aIncludes programs for the shows of: Holiday on Ice, Hollywood Ice Productions of Sonja Henie and Arthur M. Wirtz's Ice Revue, Shipstads and Johnson Ice Follies, Ice Capades, Robin Cousins in Electric Ice, and Sonja Henie and Arthur M. Wirtz productions at Center Theatre at Rockefeller Center (New York City).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02094 aFigure Skating Show Programs (MS Thr 601). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aSkating. 0aFigure skating. 7aProgramszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aProgramszGreat Britainy20th century.2aat1 aHenie, Sonja,d1912-1969.1 aWirtz, Arthur M.2 aIce Capades, Inc.2 aShipstads and Johnson Ice Follies, Inc.2 aHoliday on Ice (Show)0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown.5the1 aSource unknown.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60101098npcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245003300123300002800156351007200184520008300256555008700339524007200426546003000498650001100528655001600539541006300555561002500618506004200643506012300685852002400808012550772-020100816135201.0020710i18661988mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn660222493 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafre00aMenu collection,f1866-1988. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged alphabetcially by name of sponsor of event producing menu. aPrinted menus, most having a theatrical connection, and many including images.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02089 aMenu Collection (MS Thr 591). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aMenus. 7aMenus.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDates unknown.eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 59102256nkcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006000110300002800170351005200198545017100250520059000421555008701011524012701098546003001225600002701255600003001282610001801312610003501330610002201365650004001387650002701427650001601454650001801470655002201488655002001510710003401530710001801564541006201582561002501644506004201669506012301711852002401834012551406-920100915191649.0020710i19251946mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn660222585 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aPortraits of female burlesque entertainers,f1925-1946. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by name of entertainer. aThe burlesque show in 20th-century America was a type of variety show in which striptease was the chief attraction. It included a blend of comedy acts and striptease. aPortrait photographs of female striptease performers at burlesque theaters in Boston, Massachusetts. Theaters include: Columbia Theatre, Gaiety Theatre, Globe Theatre, Howard Athenaeum, Park Theatre, Waldron's Casino Theatre, and others. Includes portraits of Ann Corio, Hinda Wassau and many others. Appears to be a collection of photographs formerly kept by the Boston Globe, as most photographs are stamped on verso: Return to Dramatic Dept. Boston Globe. The majority of the photographs were shot by Strand (New York) photographic studio, but other photographers are also included.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02090 aPortraits of Female Burlesque Entertainers (MS Thr 594). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aCorio, AnnvPortraits.10aWassau, HindavPortraits.20aBoston globe.20aGaiety Theatre (Boston, Mass.)20aHoward Athenaeum. 0aBurlesque (Theater)zUnited States. 0aTheatery20th century. 0aStriptease. 0aStripteasers. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aStrand (N.Y.),ephotographer.2 aBoston globe.0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 59401620nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003100110245004600141300002800187351006400215545021100279520022000490555008700710524007800797546003000875600004500905600005100950600003101001655002201032655003301054655002001087541008401107561004901191506004201240852002401282012548211-620100811140926.0020710s1922 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn659814673 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aYoung, Roland,d1887-1953.10aRoland Young drawings,f1922 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by last name of subject in drawing. aRoland Young (1887-1953) was a British-born stage, screen and television actor, who is best known as the star of the "Topper" series of movies. Young published a number of books, some included his drawings. aOriginal pen and ink, pencil, crayon pencil, or colored pencil portrait caricature drawings. Titles are taken from annotations made by artist. Includes portraits of Arthur Houghton, Charlie Chaplin, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02087 aRoland Young Drawings (MS Thr 588). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aChaplin, Charlie,d1889-1977vPortraits.10aHoughton, Arthur Amory,d1906-1990vPortraits.10aYoung, Roland,d1887-1953. 7aCaricatures.2aat 7aDrawingsy20th century.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cGift;aOtis Skinner Blodget '53;d1989 September 11;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Otis Skinner Blodget '53, 1989.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58801184ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245009000108300002600198500003100224520012000255500016200375524013300537600001800670651004500688655004500733710004300778541006100821561003600882852002400918010144491-520130327124332.0061103s18uu mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612870965 aMH-HcMH-Heappm00aLetters and papers concerning the early history of western New York State,fca. 1800. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft) aCollection is unprocessed. aContains letters, deeds and other documents concerning western New York State, chiefly relating to the Cary family. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aLetters and Papers Concerning the Early History of Western New York, ca. 1800 (MS AmW 19). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aCarey family. 0aNew York (State)xHistoryy19th century. 7aDeedszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aThomas Cary;d10 Nov. 1919;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Thomas Cary, 1919.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 1902743nkcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004700110245008900157300002600246351010000272545041900372520035600791520025601147524015001403546002701553555008701580600003501667600004901702600004401751650004301795650003701838650002501875655003601900700003501936700003301971700001902004700002502023700003002048506003702078541013002115561007702245852002302322012213403-620100824131112.0100224i19231931mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn660310120 aMH-HTcMh-HTedacs1 aErikson, Joan M. (Joan Mowat),ecollector.10aJoan Mowat Erikson collection of photographs of modern dance in Germany,f1923-1931. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft) bArranged alpabetically either by the name of the school or by the name of the school's founder. aBetween Germany's defeat at the end of World War I in 1918, and Hitler's rise to power in 1933, culture was flourishing in the arts and sciences in the region. During this time, Rudolf von Laban and Mary Wigman laid the foundations for the development of modern dance. Laban had schools located throughout Germany; his schools and style are considered influential in early twentieth century modern dance education. aThis collection contains photographs from various schools of modern dance also including schools of movement and gymnastics. The time span (1923-1931) covered in the collection provides a glimpse into a developmental period in German body culture, the ideals of which include grace, strength, and natural physical beauty through movement and exercise.8 aStudents of Rudolf von Laban and future teachers themselves included in this collection are Mary Wigman and Margarete Schmidts. Other dancers and teachers included are Isadora Duncan (who founded a school of dance in Berlin, Germany) and Dora Menzler. aJoan Erikson Collection of Photographs of Modern Dance in Germany (MS Thr 565). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn German and English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0206110aErikson, Joan M.q(Joan Mowat)10aLaban, Rudolf von,d1879-1958,vPhotographs.10aWigman, Mary,d1886-1973,vPhotographs. 0aDancezGermanyxHistoryy20th century. 0aDancezGermanyvPictorial works. 0aBody imagezGermany. 7aPhotographsy20th century.2aat1 aLaban, Rudolf von,d1879-1958.1 aDuncan, Isadora,d1877-1927.1 aMenzler, Dora.1 aSchmidt, Margaretha.1 aWigman, Mary,d1886-1973.0 aCollection is open for research.0 cGift;aJoan Erikson through the kindness of Barbara Mettler;b1705 Centro West, Tiburon, California 94920;d1983 May 21.5the1 aGift of Joan Erikson through the kindness of Barbara Mettler, 1983.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 56502217nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110003600110245011900146300002700265351011000292545028500402520032100687524015501008546001601163555008701179600004101266600003701307600004101344610003601385650005601421650003901477655003601516700002301552711003701575506003301612541010201645561009701747852002301844012210048-420100315135650.0100223i19561987mau|||||||||||||||izeng d0 aocn612259309 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aMerce Cunningham Dance Company.10aMerce Cunningham Dance Company photographs of dancers and performances,f1956-1987 (inclusive),g1968-1987 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft). bArranged alphabetically by performance title. Miscellaneous materials are found at the end of the series. aMerce Cunningham (1919-2009) was an innovative modern dancer, choreographer, and dance company founder. Following two years of formal training and work with the dance company of Martha Graham, Cunningham started his own company in 1953 to experiment with concepts in modern dance. aThis collection contains photographs from a range of performances by the Merce Cunningham Dance Company. There are also portrait photographs of Merce Cunningham, Carolyn Brown and Douglas Dunn: one program from a Wellesley College performance, and publicity photographs for the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival of 1987. aMerce Cunningham Dance Company Photographs of Dancers and Performances (MS Thr 566). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0206010aBrown, Carolyn, 1927-.vPhotographs.10aCunningham, Merce.vPhotographs.10aDunn, Douglas,d1942-.vPhotographs.20aMerce Cunningham Dance Company. 0aModern dancezUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aDancerszUnited StatesvPortraits. 7aPhotographsy20th century.2aat1 aCunningham, Merce.2 aJacob’s Pillow Dance Festival. aCollection is open research.0 cGift;aCunningham Dance Foundationn through the generousity of David Vaughan;d1978 March 8;5the1 aGift of the Cunningham Dance Foundation through the generousity of David Vaughan, 1978.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 56602063ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002300102100002000125245006400145300002800209545013000237520037300367555008700740555010800827524013100935546001601066600002001082650005501102650004601157655002201203655002701225655002901252656002501281700004901306700003301355700003801388700001801426700002301444541009401467561003901561506004201600852002301642009107993-420130116141418.0030411i19801981mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127685271 aMHAT03-A84 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aYablans, Frank.10aFrank Yablans papers concerning Mommie dearest,f1980-1981. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft. ) aYablans (b. 1935) is an American screenwriter and producer. William Alfred was a playwright and Harvard University professor. aIncludes typescripts of the screenplay Mommie dearest by Frank Yablans, Frank Perry, and Abraham Polonsky, with annotations in the hand of Wiliam Alfred as well as shooting sequences and schedules for the film. Also includes a typescript of Ronald Harwood's television script Evita! first lady, based on the book by John Barnes, with annotations in the hand of Alfred.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004458 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-18. aFrank Yablans Papers Concerning Mommie Dearest (MS Thr 360). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aYablans, Frank. 0aMotion picture playszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aTelevision plays, Americany20th century. 7aScreenplays.2aat 7aShooting scripts.2aat 7aTelevision scripts.2aat 7aScreenwriters.2lcsh1 aCrawford, Christina,d1939-tMommie dearest.1 aAlfred, William,d1922-1999.1 aBarnes, John.tEvita, first lady.1 aPerry, Frank.1 aPolonsky, Abraham.0 cGift;aWilliam Alfred;b31 Athens St., Cambridge, MA 02138;d1981 Sept. 30;e81M-18.5the1 aGift of William Alfred, 1981.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 36001334cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101245006000122300002700182351003900209520023200248555008700480524009800567546001600665655003800681650002300719651002900742655001800771655003800789541009500827561005700922506004200979852002301021000601719-320130131122225.0851204i16701875mau eng d0 aocn6123647951 aMAHV85-A0 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMiscellaneous American sermons,f1670-1875 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSermons, most delivered in Cambridge and other Massachusetts towns, by various preachers, many of whom were Harvard graduates. Mostly handwritten in English, with one in German and with some abstracts and photostats of sermons.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01344 aMiscellaneous American Sermons, 1670-1875 (MS Am 1397). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 0aSermons, American. 2aUnited StatesxReligion. 7aSermons.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;ePartially recataloged from MS Am 926 and MS Am 927.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 139701601cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100005400121245004300175300002700218351003900245545004700284520022700331555008700558555010900645524009600754546001600850600003000866600005400896655002200950656001900972700003100991700003401022700004201056541004901098561003901147506004201186852002301228000601720-720130122100611.0851204i18681918mau eng d0 aocn1224120171 aMAHV85A1 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBarrows, Charles H.q(Charles Henry),d1853-1918.10aCharles H. Barrows papers,f1868-1918. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aBarrows was a lawyer in Springfield, Mass. aContains letters concerning literary, historical and social matters to Barrows from various correspondents, including Henry George, George Edward Woodberry and Viscount Kentarō Kaneko. Also genealogy of the Sabine family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1949-1950, under *50M-426. aCharles Henry Barrows Papers, 1868-1918 (MS Am 1232). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aSabine familyvGenealogy.10aBarrows, Charles H.q(Charles Henry),d1853-1918. 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aGeorge, Henry,d1839-1897.1 aKaneko, Kentarō,d1853-1942.1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.0 cGift;aEunice Barrows;d1951;e50M-426.5HOU1 aGift of Eunice Barrows, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 123201616cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245004800160300002700208351003900235545005900274520024100333555008700574555010900661524009800770546001600868600003800884650001300922650002000935650001500955655004500970700005301015700003501068541005401103561004401157506004201201852002301243000601722-320130122094047.0851205i19141928mau eng d0 aocn1225204711 aMAHV85A11 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aChanler, Beatrice Ashley,d-1946.10aBeatrice Ashley Chanler papers,f1914-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aChanler was an American actress, sculptor, and author. aChiefly correspondence among family members; the bulk is letters to Chanler from her sister Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler Chapman or her husband John Jay Chapman, an author, poet, and reformer. Also includes two poems, one by John Chapman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012458 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-302. aBeatrice Ashley Chanler Papers, 1914-1928 (MS Am 1311). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChanler, Beatrice Ashley,d-1946. 0aArtists. 0aFamily records. 0aSculptors. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aChapman, Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler,d1866-1937.1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.0 cGift;aM. A. De Wolfe Howe;d1949;e52M-302.5HOU1 aGift of M. A. De Wolfe Howe, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 131101904cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005600122245008200178300002700260351004600287545005600333520047700389555008700866555010900953524013401062600004401196630001601240650006901256655002201325656001801347541011401365561004401479506004201523852002501565000601735-520120813082710.0851209i18651906mau eng d0 aocn6123650541 aMAHV85A23 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to Wendell Phillips Garrison,f1865-1906. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aWendell Phillips Garrison was editor of The Nation. aLetters written to Wendell Phillips Garrison primarily concerning his retirement from the Nation as editor due to poor health. Letters also address articles that appeared in the Nation, questions regarding the Nation, and one complaint about an article. Other letters thank Garrison for gifts, remembrances of Garrison's father, schools in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and a letter inviting Garrison to join the Massachusetts Historical Society. Also contains one photograph.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009608 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-167. aLetters from Various Correspondents to Wendell Phillips Garrison, 1865-1906 (MS Am 1169.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907.40aThe Nation. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aEditors.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Alan Valentine;bPresident's House, 22 Berkeley St., Rochester 3 NY;d3 Apr. 1950;e49M-167.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Alan Valentine, 1950.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1169.101600cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004300123245006900166300002700235351003900262545009700301520018200398555008700580555010900667524011900776600003100895630001100926650002400937650002900961656002100990700004501011700005301056541004901109561003901158506004201197852002301239000602374-620120813082818.0860908i18641915mau eng d0 aocn1222976061 aMAHV86A520 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSwain, Joseph,d1820-1909,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to Joseph Swain,f1864-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSwain was a wood-engraver. He did engravings for Punch and for many other British magazines. aConsists of letters from artists and illustrators concerning engraving done by Swain. Includes 22 letters from Tom Taylor, editor of Punch, and 27 letters from Sir John Tenniel.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009618 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-392. aLetters from Various Correspondents to Joseph Swain, 1864-1915 (MS Eng 745). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSwain, Joseph,d1820-1909.00aPunch. 0aEngraverszEngland. 0aWood-engraving, English. 7aEngravers.2lcsh1 aTaylor, Tom,d1817-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aTenniel, John,cSir,c1820-1914,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aW. B. O. Field;d1947;e47M-392.5HOU1 aGift of W. B. O. Field, 1947.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 74502251cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122100004500135245006800180300002700248351003900275545012700314520025200441555008700693555010900780524010700889546001600996610005601012600003301068600003201101650003001133651004801163656002501211700005601236700003501292700006801327700004301395700004801438541015701486561013301643506004201776852002301818000601736-320100305085444.0851210i18491931mau eng d0 aocn612365069 aMAHV85A24 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS83-9371 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,erecipient.10aSamuel Henshaw letters from various correspondents,f1849-1931. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHenshaw was an entomologist and served as director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University (1912-1927). aChiefly letters to Henshaw about his study of the British naturalist Gilbert White, author of The Natural History of Selborne, from Charles William Eliot, Walter Faxon, Hugh Stewart Gladstone, Rashleigh Holt-White, and Alfred Newton, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002988 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-378. aSamuel Henshaw Letters from Various Correspondents (MS Am 1134). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aHarvard University.bMuseum of Comparative Zoology.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793. 0aNatural historyzEngland. 0aSelborne (England)xDescription and travel. 7aEntomologists.2lcsh1 aEliot, Charles William,d1834-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aFaxon, Walter,ecorrespondent.1 aGladstone, Hugh S.q(Hugh Stewart),d1877-1949,ecorrespondent.1 aHolt-White, Rashleigh,ecorrespondent.1 aNewton, Alfred,d1829-1907,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aSamuel Henshaw; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Tozzer, Mr. Thomas Barbour, and Miss Gertrude A. Thurston;dJune 1943;e47M-378, 43M-860F.5hou1 aBequest of Samuel Henshaw; gift of Mrs. And Mrs. Alfred M. Tozzer, Mr. Thomas Barbour, and Miss Gertrude A. Thurston, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 113402683cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005000122245007600172300002600248351004600274545003900320520078900359555008701148555010901235524012601344600003801470650004601508650003301554656002101587656001901608700004701627700009601674700005201770700006401822700006901886700004901955700007902004541009302083561004402176506004202220852002302262000601738-X20120813082556.0851210i18731942mau eng d0 aocn1226092321 aMAHV85A26 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBeal, Boylston Adams,d1865-1944,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to Boylston Adams Beal,f1871-1940. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aBeal was a lawyer of Boston, Mass. aLetters to Beal from Winston Churchill (an American author), John William Davis, Frank Billings Kellogg, and Sir Robert Gilbert Vansittart, among many others. Most letters were written when Beal was serving in the American Embassy to Britain and concern daily personal affairs. The letters from Kellogg regard Beal's work at the embassy and professional issues, such as hiring, and include a brief mention of the ratification of the General Pact for the Renunciation of War (the Kellog-Briand Pact of 1928). A letter from George Alexander Phillips Haldane-Duncan, the 4th Earl of Camperdown, written from America, discusses the United States' entry into World War I. A letter from Robert Lansing contains the details of Beal's employment as a Special Agent of the US State Department.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009598 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-264. aLetters From Various Correspondents to Boylston Adams Beal, 1871-1940 (MS Am 1214). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBeal, Boylston Adams,d1865-1944. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xDiplomatic history. 0aKellogg-Briand Pactd(1928). 7aDiplomats.2lcsh 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aL. A. B.q(Louisa Adams Beal),erecipient.1 aCamperdown, George Alexander Phillips Haldane-Duncan,cEarl of,d1845-1933,ecorrespondent.1 aChurchill, Winston,d1871-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aDavis, John W.q(John William),d1873-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aKellogg, Frank B.q(Frank Billings),d1856-1937,ecorrespondent.1 aLansing, Robert,d1864-1928,ecorrespondent.1 aVansittart, Robert Gilbert Vansittart,cBaron,d1881-1957,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aBoylston Adams Beal;b108 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.;d2 Nov. 1943;e43M-264.5hou1 aGift of Boylston Adams Beal, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121401581cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245007900166300002700245351005400272545010400326520011100430555008700541555010900628524013100737546001600868600003300884610004000917650003900957650001800996656001901014541010501033561005001138506004201188852002501230000601746-020130117074038.0851211i18241882mau eng d0 aocn1224120221 aMAHV85A33 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNichols, George,d1809-1882,erecipient10aGeorge Nichols additional letters from various correspondents,f1824-1882. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aNichols was a proofreader and editor. He worked chiefly for the Riverside Press in Cambridge, Mass. aLetters to George Nichols from various correspondents concerning Nichol's editorial and proofreading work.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012678 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-303. aGeorge Nichols Additional Letters from Various Correspondents, 1824-1882 (MS Am 1307.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aNichols, George,d1809-1882.20aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.). 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aProofreading. 7aEditors.2lcsh0 cDeposit;aMrs. Harold Pulsifer;b359 Henckel Circle, Winter Park FL;d1952 September;e52M-303.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. Harold Pulsifer, 1952.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1307.101966cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004000123245006300163300002700226351003800253545013600291520025200427555008700679524011400766546001600880600004000896610004800936650003900984655003301023655003201056655006701088655006701155655001801222655005101240655004501291655002301336656001701359541007001376561005701446506004201503852002301545000601750-920130131122107.0851212i18601907mau eng d0 aocn1225601401 aMAHV85-A37 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.10aThomas Bailey Aldrich miscellaneous papersfca. 1860-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aAldrich was a poet, novelist and short story writer, and editor of Every Saturday (1865-1974) and the Atlantic Monthly (1881-1890). aVarious manuscripts of literary works by Aldrich. Includes a few manuscripts of translations of poems. Also includes records and minutes relating to the founding of the Thomas Baily Aldrich Memorial Association, and Aldrich's marriage certificate.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01342 aThomas Bailey Aldrich Miscellaneous Papers, ca. 1860-1907 (MS Am 1294). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.20aThomas Bailey Aldrich Memorial Association. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aAdministrative records.2aat 7aMarriage certificates.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 129402193cpcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003200121245006900153300002700222545012400249520040900373555008700782555010900869524011900978546001601097600003201113600001901145650003401164651004301198651003101241651003801272651003501310651007001345656002501415700004601440700005801486541010501544561009301649506004201742852002301784000601765-720130117082142.0851204i16561768mau eng d0 aocn1225639911 aMAHV85A5 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aTemple, Thomas,d1614-1674.10aThomas Temple correspondence concerning Nova Scotia,f1656-1768. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aThomas Temple was a British proprietor and governor of Nova Scotia; John Nelson was a New England trader and statesman. aContains chiefly correspondence of Thomas Temple and his nephew John Nelson concerning land claims in Nova Scotia and the French role in Canada. Temple's correspondence includes letters from several 17th-century British sovereigns; Nelson's correspondence also pertains to negotiations for his release from prison in France. Includes some correspondence of Paschal Nelson and a few Nelson family records.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-224. aThomas Temple Correspondence Concerning Nova Scotia, 1656-1768 (MS Am 1249). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aTemple, Thomas,d1614-1674.30aNelson family. 0aLand settlementzNova Scotia. 0aCanadaxHistoryyto 1763 (New France). 0aFrancexColonieszAmerica. 0aGreat BritainxColonieszAmerica. 0aNova ScotiaxHistoryyTo 1763. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyColonial period, approximately 1600-1775. 7aFamily records.2aat1 aNelson, John,d1654-1734,ecorrespondent.1 aNelson, Paschal,dapproximately 1710-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. G. L. Batchelder, Jr., Gordon Abbott, and Mrs. Francis L. Lothrop;d1951;e51M-224.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. G. L. Batchelder Jr., Gordon Abbott and Mrs. Francis B. Lothrop, 1951.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 124901297cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003700122245006600159300002700225351003000252545009500282520008100377524010500458555008700563555010900650600003700759650001500796700003700811541005200848561004200900506004200942852002300984000601773-820090209091022.0851219i18561859mau eng d0 aocn6123655061 aMAHV85A57 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHurd, Charles Henry,d1833-1877.10aCharles Henry Hurd letters to Julia Edwards Hurd,f1856-1859. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aCharles Henry Hurd was a Boston lawyer. He was born 1833 January 7 and died 1877 April 25. aConsists of 215 letters from Charles Hurd to his future wife, Julia Edwards. aCharles Henry Hurd Letters to Julia Edwards Hurd (MS Am 1377). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-972.10aHurd, Charles Henry,d1833-1877. 0aCourtship.1 aHurd, Julia Edwards,erecipient.0 cGift;aHenry C. Hutchins;d1943;e42M-972.5hou1 aGift of Henry C. Hutchins, 1943.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 137701422cpcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005200123245007500175300002700250351003900277520018400316524012500500545005800625555008700683555010800770600004000878650003900918541007600957561004601033506004201079852002301121000602388-620111220093859.0860915i18911892mau eng d0 aocn1225563921 aMAHV86A533 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894,erecipient.10aOliver Wendell Holmes letters from various correspondents,f1891-1892. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aConsists of letters to Holmes from a variety of correspondents--friends, readers, editors, and others. These papers were found in Holmes's Boston house by a demolition contractor. aOliver Wendell Holmes Letters from Various Correspondents, 1891-1892 (MS Am 1636). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aHolmes was an essayist, poet, and teacher of anatomy.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007958 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-14.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.0 cPurchase;aBernard L. Baker;d1961;e61M-14;hWells fund ($35.00).5hou1 aPurchased with the Wells fund, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163601694cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003100124245002800155300002700183351010700210545004600317520019300363530006700556555008700623555013700710510014700847524007800994600003101072650003801103650002401141650002201165541009401187561007501281852002401356000602392-420130213095127.0860915q18771894mau eng d0 aocn1224688831 aMAHV86-A537 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPater, Walter,d1839-1894.00kPapers,fca. 1877-1894. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions by Walter Pater; and II. Letters by Walter Pater. aPater was an English essayist and critic. aConsists chiefly of compositions by Pater on literature, philosophy, and art. Many include notes and are discontinuous or are fragments of longer works. Also includes two letters by Pater. aColor digital images of collection available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005378 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1980-1981, under *80M-38 (recatalogued from *60M-176).4 aE. A. Falsey, "The Pater Manuscripts at Houghton Library, Harvard University." English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920,c27 (1984), 152-15 aWalter Pater Papers (bMS Eng 1150). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPater, Walter,d1839-1894. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aCriticismzEngland. 0aCriticszEngland. cPurchase;awith the Amy Lowell Fund from John Holroyd-Reece;d1961;e80M-38;h£500;5HOU aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from John Holroyd-Reece, 1961.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 115001504cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245007200162300002700234351009700261545004900358520009300407530005300500555008700553555010900640524011100749546001600860600003900876650003800915655001700953541007500970561007901045506004201124852002401166000602393-220120326170055.0860916i18261854mau eng d0 aocn6123741611 aMAHV86A538 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMitford, Mary Russell,d1787-1855.10aMary Russell Mitford letters to various correspondents,f1826-1854. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Sketches; and II. Letters to various correspondents. aMitford was an English author and dramatist. aLetters by Mary Russell Mitford to various correspondents, together with three sketches. aColor digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-213. aMary Russell Mitford Letters to Various Correspondents, 1826-1854 (MS Eng 1155). Houghton Library, Harvard aIn English.10aMitford, Mary Russell,d1787-1855. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aEssays.2aat0 cExchange;aSeven Gables Bookshop for duplicates;d1961;e60M-213;5HOU1 aObtained from Seven Gables Bookshop in exchange for duplicates, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 115502410cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004000123245006200163300002700225351003700252545008100289520068000370524011301050555008701163555010501250546001601355600004001371600005101411650005401462650003801516655005201554655004401606655003001650655001601680655005101696655004301747656001801790710004101808541006001849561002501909506004201934852002401976000602394-020130102104049.0860916i17821837mau eng d0 aocn1225750581 aMAHV86A539 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrydges, Egerton,cSir,d1762-1837.10aSir Egerton Brydges letters and other papers,f1782-1837. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged in chronological order. aEgerton Brydges was an editor of early English literature and a genealogist. aChiefly letters by Brydges to his solicitors Brooks, Grane & Company concerning his financial needs and business matters, but also peppered with philosophical and political discussions and news of Brydges' health problems. Some letters indicate a troubled relationship, including arguments regarding financial settlements, as well as the nature of Brydges' relationship with the firm. Includes a few letters from Brydges to other recipients, a sonnet and a manuscript fragment by Brydges, a few letters to Brydges from various correspondents, and 2 engraved portraits of Brydges. The letter from Brydges, dated 5 Oct. 1820, includes genealogical charts with heraldic devices. aSir Egerton Brydges Letters and Other Papers, 1782-1837 (MS Eng 1156). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011588 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-214. aIn English.10aBrydges, Egerton,cSir,d1762-1837.10aBrydges, Egerton,cSir,d1762-1837vPortraits. 0aAttorney and clientzGreat Britainy19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aEngravingszGreat Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravingszItalyy19th century.2gmgpc 7aGenealogical tables.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPortraitszGreat Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPortraitszItalyy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEditors.2aat2 aBrooks, Grane & Company,erecipient.0 cExchange;aSeven Gables Bookshop;d1961;e60M-214.5hou1 aPurchase, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 115602378cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004000124245007500164300002700239351003900266545008800305520071300393555008701106555010901193524009501302546001601397600004001413650003801453650001301491651005801504651005801562655001601620655001801636700005301654700004101707710003401748710004201782541005001824561004001874506004201914852002401956000602396-720130122101357.0860916i16791837mau eng d0 aocn1223359551 aMAHV86-A540 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrydges, Egerton,cSir,d1762-1837.10aSir Egerton Brydges papers,f1679-1837 (inclusive),g1789-1837 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSamuel Egerton Brydges was an editor of early English literature and a genealogist. aConsists chiefly of correspondence of Brydges, including a large number of letters written by him to James Sheffield Brooks, Brooks & Grane, and Brooks, Grane & Cooper, dealing with various financial transactions and lawsuits. Several letters discuss Brydges' displeasure with the firm for supposedly withholding funds from an acquaintance and for ignoring Brydges' instructions. Among the rest of the correspondence are letters from various correspondents written to Brydges, including several from Montagu Pennington that discuss the politics, literature, and society of the day. Several letters from Pennington and other correspondents discuss Brydges' autobiography. Also included are two property deeds.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012608 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-258. aSir Egerton Brydges Papers, 1679-1837 (MS Eng 1006). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBrydges, Egerton,cSir,d1762-1837. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aFinance. 0aGreat BritainxSocial life and customsy18th century. 0aGreat BritainxSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aDeeds.2aat 7aEditors.2aat1 aPennington, Montagu,d1762-1849,ecorrespondent.1 aBrooks, James Sheffield,erecipient.2 aBrooks and Grane,erecipient.2 aBrooks, Grane and Cooper,erecipient.0 cGift;aW. Powell Jones;d1955;e55M-258.5HOU1 aGift of W. Powell Jones, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 100601702cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003500122245005900157300002700216351003000243545003900273520031400312555008700626555010800713524010900821546001600930600003500946650003600981650003901017650001601056650001901072655002001091656002501111700003401136541005701170561004801227506004201275852002301317000602417-320111220094225.0860218i19301955mau eng d0 aocn6123743841 aMAHV86A56 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCaldwell, Erskine,d1903-1987.10aErskine Caldwell letters to Alfred Morang,f1930-1955. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aCaldwell was an American novelist. aConsists of letters by Caldwell to his friend the artist and author Alfred Morang. Includes discussion of Caldwell's writing and its publication; his work as a screenwriter in Hollywood; and his problems with would-be censors, especially with the dramatization of his novel Tobacco Road. Also a few clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007968 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-15. aErskine Caldwell Letters to Alfred Morang, 1930-1955 (MS Am 1638). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCaldwell, Erskine,d1903-1987. 0aAmerican fictiony20th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aCensorship. 0aScreenwriters. 7aClippings.2aat 7aScreenwriters.2lcsh1 aMorang, Alfred Gwynne,d1901-0 cGift;aMrs. Harold A. Robinson;d1961;e61M-15.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Harold A. Robinson, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163801891cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002300122245004200145300002700187351003900214545015100253520031500404555008700719555010900806524009200915546001601007600002201023600002401045600003601069650002301105650001501128656002101143700003701164700004801201700004501249700003401294541006101328561005101389506004201440852002301482000601775-420130124091747.0851219i18061902mau eng d0 aocn1225601441 aMAHV85A59 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aBatchelder family.10aBatchelder family papers,f1806-1902. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSamuel Batchelder was a cotton manufacturer and inventor. His son, John M. Batchelder, was a civil engineer involved in telegraphy and insulation. aConsists of letters to the Batchelder family, the bulk to John M. Batchelder and Samuel Batchelder. Included are letters to John Batchelder from Samuel F. B. Morse, Benjamin Peirce and others concerning early research in telegraphy and the insulation of submarine cables. Also contains a few letters to others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012828 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-246. aBatchelder Family Papers, 1806-1902 (MS Am 1368). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aBatchelor family.10aBatchelder, John M.10aBatchelder, Samuel,d1784-1879. 0aCables, Submarine. 0aTelegraph. 7aInventors.2lcsh1 aBatchelder, John M.,erecipient.1 aBatchelder, Samuel,d1784-1879,erecipient.1 aMorse, Samuel Finley Breese,d1791-1872.1 aPeirce, Benjamin,d1809-1880.0 cGift;aMrs. Charles F. Batchelder;d1955;e54M-246.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Charles F. Batchelder, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 136802079cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005200122245004200174300002700216351003900243545031300282520033000595555008700925555010901012524009601121546001601217600004001233600005201273630002301325650003901348650002801387650003701415656001901452656001901471700003601490541006101526561005301587506004201640852002301682000601778-920130122090346.0851219i18351856mau eng d0 aocn1225900861 aMAHV85A61 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGriswold, Rufus W.q(Rufus Wilmot),d1815-1857.10aRufus W. Griswold papers,f1835-1856. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGriswold, an advocate of "Americanism" in literature, worked to increase public respect for American authors. He was on the staff of various magazines including Graham's Magazine (assistant editor, 1842-1843, succeeding Edgar Allen Poe), edited anthologies of poetry, and was a controversial literary critic. aContains professional correspondence concerning printing and publishing of literary works, some in magazines. Included are letters to George Rex Graham, founder and editor of Graham's Magazine, and letters to Griswold from some of his protégés. Also letters relating to a memorial meeting in honor of James Fenimore Cooper.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012348 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-165. aRufus Wilmot Griswold Papers, 1835-1856 (MS Am 1406). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCooper, James Fenimore,d1789-1851.10aGriswold, Rufus W.q(Rufus Wilmot),d1815-1857.00aGraham's magazine. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPrintingxHistoryy19th century. 7aCritics.2lcsh 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aGraham, George R.,ecrecipient.0 cDeposit;aMrs. Arthur W. Fletcher;d1951;e50M-165.5HOU1 aDeposited by Mrs. Arthur W. Fletcher, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 140601566cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004700122245005300169300002700222351002900249545003300278520022800311555008700539555010900626524010300735546001600838600004700854650003900901650003500940655004900975655004501024541005801069561004801127506004201175852002301217000601785-120130122100245.0851220i18381850mau eng d0 aocn1226135971 aMAHV85A68 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aOsgood, Frances Sargent Locke,d1811-1850.10aFrances Sargent Locke Osgood papers,f1838-1850. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aOsgood was an American poet. aCollection contains personal correspondence, some professional correspondence pertaining to her writings, and manuscripts of her poems. Also clippings of Osgood's work from periodicals, and poems by others addressed to her.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1954-1955, under *54M-222. aFrances Sargent Locke Osgood Papers, 1838-1850 (MS Am 1355). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aOsgood, Frances Sargent Locke,d1811-1850. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aClippingszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Arthur W. Fletcher;d1955;e54M-222.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Arthur W. Fletcher, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 135502550cpcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003400121245007100155246003300226300002700259351003900286545005900325520050200384530006200886555008700948555010801035524009001143610004801233600003401281600004201315600001901357600004101376650003401417651005101451690002701502655002501529655002601554655002001580655001601600700003001616700003001646700001901676700004201695700001701737700003301754740002301787541009001810561007901900506004201979852002302021000601791-620130122101038.0860102i17651886mau eng d0 aocn1224687731 aMAHV86A0 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aArnold, Benedict,d1741-1801.10aBenedict Arnold papers,f1765-1886 (inclusive),g1775-1806 (bulk).13aGreenough Fuller Collection. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aArnold was a major-general in the American Revolution. aContains correspondence, legal documents, and financial papers pertaining to the lives of Benedict Arnold, his second wife Margaret Shippen Arnold, their children, and her family. Includes army commands issued by Arnold and other American officers such as Ethan Allen; letters by and portraits of British officer John André; correspondence between the Arnold family in England and elsewhere and the Shippens and Burds in the U.S.; and wills and other documents concerning court cases and estates. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012578 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-54. aBenedict Arnold Papers, 1765-1886 (MS Am 1446). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aUnited States.bContinental ArmyxOfficers.10aArnold, Benedict,d1741-1801.10aArnold, Margaret Shippen,d1760-1804.30aArnold family.10aAndré, John,d1751-1780xPortraits. 0aExecutors and administrators. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 4aEstate administration. 7aFamily records.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aAllen, Ethan,d1738-1789.1 aAndré, John,d1751-1780.3 aArnold family.1 aArnold, Margaret Shippen,d1760-1804.3 aBurd family.1 aShippen, Edward,d1729-1806.0 aFuller Collection.0 cGift;aFrances and John L. Loeb [in memory of Greenough Fuller];d1956;e56M-54.5HOU1 aGift of Frances and John L. Loeb in memory of Greenough Fuller, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 144601524cpcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245003200160300002700192500003100219520028800250524008300538545019900621555009100820500008500911600003700996600006701033650003901100561004201139541004201181852002301223000601795-920060627120719.0860227i18381859mau eng d0 aocn6123656601 aMAHV86A101 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBacon, Delia Salter,d1811-1859.00aCorrespondence,f1838-1859. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aPhotostats of correspondence of Delia Bacon, mostly from the 1850's and chiefly concerning her theory that the plays of Shakespeare were written by Francis Bacon. Correspondents include Nathaniel Hawthorne, Benjamin Silliman Sr., Harriet Beecher Stowe, and her brother Leonard Bacon. aDelia Bacon Correspondence (MS Am 1748). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aBacon was an American author and lecturer. She advanced the theory that Shakespeare's plays were the work of Francis Bacon in her book The Philosophy of the Plays of Shakespeare Unfolded (1857).8 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in repository, see accessions no.: *64M-178. aLetter from John Lord to DB is dated June 1854 but should probably be June 1844.10aBacon, Delia Salter,d1811-1859.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616xAuthorshipxBaconian theory. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. aGift of Vivian C. Hopkins, 1964.5hou aHopkins, Vivian C., 1964;cGift.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 174802474cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245006400164300002700228545017500255520049900430530006700929555008700996555011301083524011401196546001601310651005401326600004201380610003801422650002801460650003101488650005101519651003101570655002501601655001801626655002001644700002301664700002001687541024501707561004701952506004201999852002302041000601804-120130502093312.0860106i17201727mau eng d0 aocn1225057431 aMAHV86A11 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNicholson, Francis,cSir,d1655-1728.10aSir Francis Nicholson papers on South Carolina,f1720-1727. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aNicholson was a British colonial official in several of the American colonies beginning in 1686. His last position was as colonial governor of South Carolina (1720-1725). aLetters and petitions to Nicholson and a few documents pertain to his tenure as governor of South Carolina. Included are petitions for material aid from the South Carolina clergy, minutes of the South Carolina Assembly relating to increasing the salaries of the clergy, a census account of the area of land and number of slaves in the various parishes of S.C., letters from Francis Yonge and Charles Delafaye discussing the merchants' grievances with the governor, and two letters by Nicholson. aColor digital images of collection available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-30F-52F. aSir Francis Nicholson Papers on South Carolina, 1720-1727 (MS Am 1455). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aSouth CarolinaxPolitics and governmentyTo 1775.10aNicholson, Francis,cSir,d1655-1728.20aChurch of EnglandzUnited States. 0aClergyzSouth Carolina. 0aMerchantszSouth Carolina. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxHistoryy18th century. 0aSouth CarolinaxGovernors. 7aCensus records.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat 7aPetitions.2aat1 aDelafaye, Charles.1 aYonge, Francis.0 cPurchase;aRoland Teal and Henry Stevens;d1943;e43M-30F; 43M-31; 43M-32; 43M-33; 43M-34; 43M-35; 43M-36; 43M-37; 43M-38; 43M-39; 43M-40; 43M-41; 43M-42; 43M-43; 43M-44; 43M-45; 43M-46; 43M-47; 43M-48; 43M-49; 43M-50; 43M-51; 43M-52F.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Bright fund, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 145502493cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001900123245003800142300002700180545029100207520055400498555008701052555010901139524008801248530006201336546001601398600004301414600005101457610005101508650003801559650001801597650004601615655002101661655002401682655001901706655003801725656002001763700004301783700005101826710002901877541004901906561003901955506004201994852002302036000601806-820120813081133.0860313i18301910mau eng d0 aocn1225639961 aMAHV86A111 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aMarvin family.10aMarvin family papers,f1830-1910. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aTheophilus Rogers Marvin (1796-1882) was a publisher and printer of Boston, Mass. He was on the committee to establish a public library in Boston. William Theophilus Rogers Marvin (1832-1913) was secretary of the Boston Numismatic Society and author of Medals of the Masonic Fraternity. aThe bulk of the collection is letters to T. R. Marvin (and a few manuscripts) concerning his printing, especially of the speeches of politicians such as Daniel Webster, and educators such as Williams College president Mark Hopkins. Also contains addresses before the Boston Mercantile Library Association, some published by the firm of Perkins and Marvin. Other letters are to T. R. Marvin on libraries or education, to W. T. R. Marvin on numismatics, between Marvin family members, or between third parties. Also miscellaneous autograph signatures.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009518 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-361. aMarvin Family Papers, 1830-1910 (MS Am 1716). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aIn English.10aMarvin, Theophilus Rogers,d1796-1882.10aMarvin, William Theophilus Rogers,d1832-1913.20aMercantile Library Association (Boston, Mass.) 0aLibrarieszMassachusettszBoston. 0aNumismatists. 0aPrintingzMassachusettszBostonxHistory. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPrinters.2lcsh1 aMarvin, Theophilus Rogers,d1796-1882.1 aMarvin, William Theophilus Rogers,d1832-1913.2 aPerkins & Marvin (Firm).0 cGift;aJohn R. Marvin;d1942;e47M-361.5HOU1 aGift of John R. Marvin, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 171601919cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245006300153300002700216545004800243520038700291555008700678555010800765524010200873546001600975600003000991650003801021600006701059600005701126651006201183651005001245651005001295656002201345541009601367561004101463506004201504852002301546000601807-620110126104354.0860313i18811947mau eng d0 aocn1226136011 aMAHV86A112 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918.10aHenry Adams letters to various correspondents,f1881-1947. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAdams was an American historian and author. aLetters address personal finance issues, wedding presents to family members, and Adams' thoughts after his wife died. Adams also writes about past and present pesidents and politics, the Marbury versus Madison U.S. Supreme court case, replies to his friends' solicitations for books, dinner invitations, living in Washington D.C., and travels through Mexico and Shropshire, England.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007008 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-39. aHenry Adams Letters to Various Correspondents (MS Am 1766). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918. 0aFinance, PersonalzUnited States.10aMarbury, William,d1761 or 1762-1835xTrials, litigation, etc.10aMadison, James,d1751-1836xTrials, litigation, etc. 0aWashington (D.C.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aMexicoxDescription and travely19th century. 0aShropshire (England)xDescription and travel. 7aHistorians.2lcsh0 cGift;aMrs. Ward Thoron;b191 Commonwealth Av., Boston, Mass.;d3 Sept. 1965;e65M-39.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Ward Thoron, 1965.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 176601789cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003500124245005800159300002700217545016100244520032500405555008700730555010800817524009700925600003501022650003901057650001401096650001201110655002101122656001901143700001901162700005001181541010101231561005401332506004201386852002301428000601810-620090929094135.0860313i19501961mau eng d0 aocn6123663141 aMAHV86-A115 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aHemingway, Ernest,d1899-1961.10aErnest Hemingway letters to Harvey Breit,f1950-1961. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHemingway was an American novelist and short story writer. Harvey Breit (1909-1968) was an American author and columnist for the New York Times Book Review. aConsists of 93 letters, 1950-1961, from Hemingway to Harvey Breit together with a copy of "Fragments from Ernst von Hemingstein's Journal," a telephone interview conducted by Breit in 1954, and two letters from Mary Hemingway. Hemingway's letters are full of discussions of writers and their books, baseball, and boxing.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-74. aErnest Hemingway Letters to Harvey Breit (MS Am 1791). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHemingway, Ernest,d1899-1961. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aBaseball. 0aBoxing. 7aInterviews.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aBreit, Harvey.1 aHemingway, Mary Welsh,d1908-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aDr. and Mrs. Edmundo Lassalle;b635 Park Avenue, New York, New York;d1966;e66M-74.5HOU1 aGift of Dr. and Mrs. Edmundo Lassalle, 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 179102066cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001800123245003700141300002700178351003900205545025300244520037700497555008700874555010800961524008701069600001801156650002801174651004301202655002101245655002401266655004601290656002101336700003601357700001701393700003101410700001801441700004001459541005501499561004901554506004201603852002301645000601813-020120111101859.0860314i18431907mau eng d0 aocn1225204881 aMAHV86A118 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aStory family.10aStory family papers,f1843-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aWilliam Wetmore Story (1819-1895), an American sculptor, essayist, poet, and lawyer, was the son of Joseph Story (1779-1845), a Supreme Court Justice. William Story settled in Rome in 1847 with his wife Emelyn Eldredge (d. 1894) and their children. aThe bulk of the collection is letters to William and Emelyn Story or to their son and his wife, Waldo and Maud Story, from their international set of friends in Rome. The letters mainly concern social engagements and introductions. Also includes two letters to Judge Story, a few letters between third parties, a manuscript poem by William Story, and autograph signatures.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008358 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-20. aStory Family Papers, 1843-1907 (MS Am 1703). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aStory family. 0aAmericanszItalyzRome. 0aRome (Italy)xSocial life and customs. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century..2aat 7aSculptors.2lcsh1 aStory, Emelyn Eldredge,d-1894.1 aStory, Maud.1 aStory, Joseph,d1779-1845.1 aStory, Waldo.1 aStory, William Wetmore,d1819-1895.0 cPurchase;aW. F. K. Thompson;d1963;e63M-20.5HOU1 aPurchased from W. F. K. Thompson, 1963.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 170301763cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245005900160300002700219351003000246545006700276520015600343520012300499555008700622555010700709524009900816546001600915600003700931650003800968656001901006700004201025740006101067541013501128561009601263506004201359852002401401000602438-620110128075446.0860923i17931809mau eng d0 aocn1225812991 aMAHV86A579 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aStockdale, Percival,d1736-1811.10aPercival Stockdale letters to Jane Porter,f1793-1809. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aStockdale was a British author. Porter was a British novelist. aConsists of 103 letters from Stockdale to Porter discussing his literary work and other matters, together with a few miscellaneous papers of Stockdale. aAlso includes printed folded leaf in item (58): To Mr. Porter; on his proposals to paint some of our principal...1803.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-4. aPercival Stockdale Letters to Jane Porter (MS Eng 1250). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aStockdale, Percival,d1736-1811. 0aEnglish literaturey18th century. 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aPorter, Jane,d1776-1850,erecipient.02aTo Mr. Porter; on his proposals to paint some of our ...0 cGift;aPurchased at Sotheby & Co., London (sale 28 June 1966), through Bernard Quaritch, Ltd.;d14 July 1966;e66M-4;h£352.5HOU1 aGift of Frank Altschul (who purchased collection at Sotheby sale June 28, 1966), 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 125002795cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002700123245005300150300002700203351004600230545009500276520076600371555008701137555010901224524010301333546001601436600002701452600003201479600003101511600007501542600005501617600005001672600001801722650005401740650002601794655002201820655002301842655001601865655001801881655002201899655003801921656002301959656002301982700001802005541012002023561010502143506004202248852002302290000602440-820120813081757.0860923i18201926mau eng d0 aocn1223726521 aMAHV86A580 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolt-White, Rashleigh.10aRashleigh Holt-White correspondence,f1820-1926. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aHolt-White was the great-grand-nephew of the English naturalist Gilbert White (1720-1793). aCollection contains correspondence of Rashleigh Holt-White, mainly dealing with his novel about naturalist Gilbert White. Letters address topics such as genealogy of White family, information about Selborne, information contained in the White family diaries, passages from the White family wills, and financial matters concerning the book. Letters also contain comments on the book by Holt-White, called "Life and Letters of Gilbert White of Selborne." Collection also contains manuscripts of the first two chapters of Holt-White's book, extracts from the Garden Kalendar and the Naturalist's Journal of Gilbert White of Selborne, a list of Illustrations for the book, translations, documents about the death and will of Algernon Hyde Holt-White, and postcards.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-377. aRashleigh Holt-White Correspondence, 1820-1926 (MS Eng 732). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHolt-White, Rashleigh.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.10aHolt-White, Algernon Hyde.10aHolt-White, Rashleigh.tLIfe and letters of Gilbert White of Selborne.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.tNaturalist's Journal.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.tGarden Kalendar.30aWhite family. 0aPublishers and publishingzEnglandy19th century. 0aNaturalistszEngland. 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aWills.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aBiographies.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aBiographers.2lcsh 7aBiographers.2lcsh3 aWhite family.0 cGift;aMr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Tozzer, Mr. Thomas Barbour, and Miss Gertrude A. Thurston;dJune 1943;e47M-377.5hou1 aGift of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Tozzer, Mr. Thomas Barbour, and Miss Gertrude A. Thurston, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 73201848cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101110005300122245003400175300002700209351003900236520029300275555008700568555010800655524012300763544014300886610005301029650003501082655001601117656001701133700003101150700003001181700002801211700001901239700003001258541010001288561008501388852002501473000602450-520031015112253.0860219i18961967mau eng d0 aocn6123752371 aMAHV86A59 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library).00kAdditional poems,f1896-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aContains annotated drafts of poems by various poets, mostly American; and some correspondence between the poets and the Poetry Room concerning tape recordings of the poets reading from their works. Poets include Conrad Aiken, Richad Eberhart, Norman McCaig, Sylvia Plath, and Anne Sexton.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005398 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1980-1981, under *80M-62. aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library) Additional Poems (MS Am 1641.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. dThere is related material: Audiotapes of poets reading from their worksaat the Woodberry Poetry Room, Lamont Library, Harvard University.20aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library). 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.1 aEberhart, Richard,d1904-1 aMacCaig, Norman,d1910-1 aPlath, Sylvia.1 aSexton, Anne,d1928-1974. cDeposit;aThe George Edward Woodberry Poetry Room, Lamont Library;d31 July 1973;e80M-62.5hou aDeposited by The George Edward Woodberry Poetry Room, Lamont Library, 1973.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1641.201630cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245005500156300002700211351003000238545008100268520019200349555008700541555010900628524010800737546001600845600003300861650003300894650003800927700004100965700004901006541009701055561008601152506004201238852002401280000602455-620120111091639.0860926i18961938mau eng d0 aocn6123753491 aMAHV86A594 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTurner, Reggie,d1869?-1938.10aReggie Turner letters to Max Beerbohm,f1896-1938. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aTurner was a British author. Beerbohm was a British author and caricaturist. aConsists of 95 letters from Turner to Beerbohm and 10 letters from Turner to Lady Florence Beerbohm. The letters include discussions of plays and other literary and cultural developments.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-284. aReginald Turner Letters to Max Beerbohm, 1896-1938 (MS Eng 1220). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aTurner, Reggie,d1869?-1938. 0aEnglish dramay20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century.1 aBeerbohm, Florence Kahn,erecipient.1 aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aTania Jepson and Eva Reichman;d1962 May;e62M-284;h£200; Amy Lowell Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from Tania Jepson and Eva Reichman, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 122001727cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100006900124245008000193300002700273351010300300545010500403520014400508555008700652555010900739524011900848600005700967650003901024650005301063655002701116655002101143656001801164541010601182561004801288506004201336852002301378000601817-320090611143418.0860314i18681926mau eng d0 aocn6123663751 aMAHV86-A121 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPease, Theodore C.q(Theodore Claudius),d1853-1893,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to Theodore Claudius Pease,f1868-1926. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Theodore Claudius Pease; and II. Other letters. aPease was a Congregational minister in West Lebanon, N.H. (1880-1884) and Malden, Mass. (1884-1893). aConsists of 26 letters to Pease, chiefly from literary figures, an autograph album, miscellaneous autographs, and 8 letters between others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-214. aLetters From Various Correspondents to Theodore Claudius Pease (MS Am 1754). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPease, Theodore C.q(Theodore Claudius),d1853-1893. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aCongregational churchesxClergyxCorrespondence. 7aAutograph albums.2aat 7aAutographs.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh0 cBequest;.aArthur Stanley Pease;b984 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1964;e64M-214.5HOU1 aBequest of Arthur Stanley Pease, 1964.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 175401513cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002900123245005400152300002700206520027700233524010400510545003200614555008700646555010900733546001600842600002900858650003900887650003500926700006200961541007101023561005201094506004201146852002301188000601823-820120502100138.0860320i19261962mau eng d0 aocn1222975861 aMAHV86A127 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.10aEzra Pound letters to E. E. Cummings,f1926-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aConsists of 157 letters, 1926-1962 (but mostly after 1945), from Pound to Cummings; 5 letters, 1949-1953, from Pound to Marion Morehouse Cummings; one telegram, 1952, from Cummings to Pound; and letters to Cummings from Douglas Duncan Paige, Dorothy Pound, and Omar Pound. aEzra Pound Letters to E. E. Cummings, 1926-1962 (MS Am 1806). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPound was an American poet.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-158. aIn English.10aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Edward Estlin Cummings;d1967;e66M-158.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Mrs. Edward Estlin Cummings, 1967.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 180602258cpcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245003700153300002700190351017200217545002900389520029600418555008700714555010900801524010000910546001601010600004201026600003101068600004201099600004401141650003801185650003901223650004901262650003201311655004201343655002301385655002201408655001601430656001701446700003701463740003401500740002801534740001401562541009501576561003901671506004201710852003601752000602465-320130122085114.0860929i19361954mau eng d0 aocm822958131 aMAHV86A602 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.10aDylan Thomas papers,f1936-1954. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Eng 943: Compositions; II. MS Eng 943.2: Papers concerning Dylan Thomas; and III. MS Eng 943.3: Letters from Caitlin Thomas. aThomas was a Welsh poet. aContains worksheets of Thomas' poems in various stages including drafts for Prologue. Other manuscripts include Adventures in the skin trade and Memories of Early Days. Also contains a few letters by Caitlin Thomas; photographs of Thomas, Williams, and Gene Derwood; and a drawing by Thomas.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-125. aDylan Thomas Papers, 1936-1954 (MS Eng 943, 943.2-943.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDerwood, Gene,d1909-1954vPortraits.10aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.10aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953vPortraits.10aWilliams, Oscar,d1900-1964vPortraits. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish literaturexWelsh authors. 0aEnglish poetryxWelsh authorsy20th century. 0aPoets, Welshy20th century. 7aDrawingszWalesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aThomas, Caitlin,ecorrespondent.0 aAdventures in the skin trade.0 aMemories of early days.0 aPrologue.0 cGift;aOscar Williams;b35 Water St., New York, New York;d1954 December 9;e54M-125.5hou1 aGift of Oscar Williams, 1954.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 943, 943.2-943.401759cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005200123245010400175300002700279351003900306545008100345520020100426555008700627555011300714524012400827546001600951600004000967650004601007651005201053655004601105656001901151656002901170541008801199561006801287506004201355852002401397000602472-620121109120654.0861010i18071832mau eng d0 aocn1226093221 aMAHV86A609 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLawrence, Thomas,cSir,d1769-1830,erecipient.10aSir Thomas Lawrence letters from various correspondents,f1807-1832 (inclusive),g1814-1829 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLawrence was an English portrait painter and president of the Royal Academy. aConsists primarily of letters to Lawrence from English aristocrats concerning business and social engagements and his portrait painting. Also includes a few engravings after paintings by Lawrence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-457-503. aSir Thomas Lawrence Letters from Various Correspondents, 1807-1832 (MS Eng 1064). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLawrence, Thomas,cSir,d1769-1830. 0aPortrait painting, Englishy19th century. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aEngravings, Englishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aArtists.2lcsh 7aPortrait painters.2lcsh0 cGift;aMrs. Bayard Warren & Mrs. Sears Tuckerman;d31 July 1942;e43M-457-503.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Bayard Warren and Mrs. Sears Tuckerman, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 106401740cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245004700157300002700204351003000231545009700261520030200358555008700660555010800747524010300855600003400958650003800992650004201030651005501072655001701127655002201144700006101166541009101227561006901318852002701387000602474-220031031115231.0861010i18851918mau eng d0 aocn1226093271 aMAHV86A610 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936.00kLettersbto Baron Beaverbrook,f1885-1918. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aKipling was a British author. Beaverbrook was a British capitalist, and newspaper publisher. aContains Kipling's letters to William Maxwell Aitken (Baron Beaverbrook) concerning politics, investments, personal and social matters, and including some references to his writings. Also includes a few other letters by Kipling, an autograph composition, notes, and photographs, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-36. aRudyard Kipling Letters to Baron Beaverbrook (MS Eng 809.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPublic opinion. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty1901-1936. 7aEssays.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBeaverbrook, Max Aitken,cBaron,d1879-1964,erecipient. cPurchase;aUnknown source;dAug. 1977;e77M-36;hNo price given, Livingston fund.5hou aPurchased with the Flora Virginia Livingston Bequest, 1977.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 809.401649cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004900123245007000172300002700242351003000269545005800299520021800357555008700575555010900662524011700771546001600888600003700904651004300941651005200984651005801036656002101094541010001115561004201215506004201257852002401299000602482-320120425094541.0861027q17981865mau eng d0 aocn1223726551 aMAHV86A618 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBowring, John,cSir,d1792-1872,erecipient.10aSir John Bowring letters from various correspondents,f1798-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aBowring was a British linguist, diplomat, and author. aPrimarily letters to Bowring from British correspondents, including government figures and foreign correspondents. Letters pertain to diplomatic, commercial, and political matters, and to his travels and writings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008908 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-189. aJohn Bowring Letters From Various Correspondents, 1798-1865 (MS Eng 1247). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBowring, John,cSir,d1792-1872. 0aGreat BritainxCommercey19th century. 0aGreat BritainxForeign relationsy19th century. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aDiplomats.2lcsh0 cGift;aHamill and Barker;b230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago IL 60601;d26 May 1966;e65M-189.5hou1 aGift of Hamill and Barker, 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 124701555cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100001900124245003800143300002700181351003900208545006600247520026700313555008700580555010800667524007700775600001900852650001300871651005800884651005400942651005100996655002401047541005101071561004201122506004201164852002301206000601863-720110114090913.0860415i17771904mau eng d0 aocn1225750041 aMAHV86-A163 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aSewall family.10aSewall family papers,f1777-1904. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe Sewalls lived in Massachusetts and Saint Paul, Minnesota. aConsists of correspondence between family members, mostly on personal matters: weddings, births, visits, and household moves, though the earliest letter predicts the British defeat in North America. Also contains two unidentified manuscripts relating to schools.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005808 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-38. aSewall Family Papers (MS Am 1933). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aSewell family. 0aSchools. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aMinnesotaxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 7aFamily papers.2aat0 cGift;aRada Dyson-Hudson;d1976;e76M-38.5HOU1 aGift of Rada Dyson-Hudson, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 193301346cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004700123245003800170300002700208351003800235545005500273520009400328555008700422555010800509524007700617546001600694600004700710650003500757655004500792541009700837561004500934506004200979852002301021000601864-520121213105205.0860415i19211964mau eng d0 aocn1225057451 aMAHV86A164 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.),d1904-1965.10aR. P. Blackmur poems,f1921-1964. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aBlackmur was an American literary critic and poet. aContains primarily typescript early poems by Blackmur as well as some autograph versions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-84. aR. P. Blackmur Poems (MS Am 1880). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.),d1904-1965. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aGeorge A. Palmer;b12 Concord Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138;d12 Mar. 1972;e71M-84.5hou1 aGift of Mr. George A. Palmer, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 188001642cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100005000124245007600174300002700250351003900277545010000316520017900416555008700595555010800682524011600790610003800906600005000944650004000994650004701034650004001081700005701121541004701178561002501225506004201250852002401292000602497-120110105090219.0861104i18881903mau eng d0 aocn1225058521 aMAHV86-A631 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSpielmann, M. H.q(Marion Harry),d1858-1948.10aM. H. Spielmann correspondence with James McNeill Whistler,f1888-1903. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aMarion Harry Spielmann was an English art and literary critic; Whistler was an American artist. aCorrespondece between Spielmann and Whistler primarily discusses reviews and articles about Whistler. Also includes Spielmann's notes on the Royal Society of British Artists.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005158 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-50. aM. H. Spielmann Correspondence with James McNeill Whistler (MS Eng 1352). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aRoyal Society of British Artists.10aSpielmann, M. H.q(Marion Harry),d1858-1948. 0aArtzGreat BritainxSocieties, etc. 0aArtzGreat BritainxHistory and criticism. 0aArtzGreat BritainxSocieties, etc.1 aWhistler, James McNeill,d1834-1903,ecorrespondent.0 cUnknown;aUnknown;dUnknown;e79M-50.5HOU1 aSource unknown.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 135201292cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003700124245005700161300002700218545003600245520017200281555008700453524009600540546001600636600003700652650003800689650003400727655002000761655001600781656001700797541004200814561005700856506004200913852002300955000602500-520110105084504.0861104i18011853mau eng d0 aocn1223726561 aMAHV86-A634 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWordsworth, William,d1770-1850.10aWilliam Wordsworth miscellaneous papers,f1801-1853. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWordsworth was an English poet. aManuscripts of Wordsworth's sonnets and poems; letters which pertain to his writings, publication of his works, other poets, and personal matters; and a few documents.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00503 aWilliam Wordsworth Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 327). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWordsworth, William,d1770-1850. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 7aDocuments.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cVarious sources;dVarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 32702142ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101110007300122245009300195300002700288351004900315545013600364520029900500555008700799524014800886546001601034650004201050610007301092610005701165650002401222650003301246650002301279650005601302655001701358655002201375655002901397655002101426541006001447561004801507506004201555506012301597852002401720000602504-820120106110704.0860220s1920 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn1224051991 aMAHV86A64 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aUnited States.bNavy Department.bBureau of Construction and Repair.10aUnited States Navy Dept. Bureau of Construction and Repair war activities report,f1920. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged in order as received in repository. aThe Bureau of Construction and Repair of the U.S. Navy merged with the Bureau of Engineering to become the Bureau of Ships in 1940. aConsists of a report (typescript carbon) of the activities of the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Construction and repair during World War I. Includes appendices with information on submarine-chasers and the Destroyer Program with photographs, charts, tables, schematic drawings of ships, and statistics.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02258 aUnited States Navy Department Bureau of Construction and Repair War Activities Report, 1920 (MS Am 1619). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aDestroyers (Warships)zUnited States.10aUnited States.bNavy Department.bBureau of Construction and Repair.10aUnited States.bNavyxHistoryyWorld War, 1914-1918. 0aNaval architecture. 0aShipbuildingzUnited States. 0aSubmarine chasers. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xEngineering and construction. 7aCharts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSchematic drawings.2aat 7aStatistics.2aat0 cGift;aRobert Albion;d1959;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Professor Robert Albion, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 161901610cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004900122245007200171300002700243351003900270545015400309520024600463555008700709555010900796524012200905546001601027600003701043700003801080740003101118541005201149561004201201506004201243852002301285000602512-920130117091711.0860221i18611914mau eng d0 aocn1225058621 aMAHV86A71 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aForbes, John Murray,d1813-1898,erecipient.10aJohn Forbes Murray letters from various correspondents,f1861-1914. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aForbes was a Boston businessman who was engaged in the China trade early in his life and later involved in railroad development in the American West. aIncludes 14 letters to Forbes from various correspondents and 32 letters to Sarah Forbes Hughes, daughter of John Murray Forbes, relating chiefly to her biographical work on her father, Letters and Recollections of John Murray Forbes (1899).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-289. aJohn Murray Forbes Letters from Various Correspondents, 1861-1914 (MS Am 1398). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aForbes, John Murray,d1813-1898.1 aHughes, Sarah Forbes,erecipient.0 aLetters and recollections.0 cGift;aW. Cameron Forbes;d1952;e54M-289.5HOU1 aGift of W. Cameron Forbes, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 139801620cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245007800166300002700244351004600271545004800317520017400365555008700539524012800626546001600754600003200770650003900802650003500841650003800876656001700914700006600931700005800997700006401055541004301119561004301162506004201205852002301247000602513-720130131123401.0860221i19051948mau eng d0 aocn1225903351 aMAHV86A72 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968,erecipient.10aWitter Bynner additional letters from various correspondents,f1905-1948. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aBynner was an American poet and translator. aLetters to Bynner from various correspondents. Includes 29 letters from D. H. Lawrence, 24 letters from Edna St. Vincent Millay, and 4 letters from William Butler Yeats.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01354 aWitter Bynner Additional Letters from Various Correspondents, 1905-1948 (MS Am 1589). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930,ecorrespondent.1 aMillay, Edna St. Vincent,d1892-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aYeats, W. B.q(William Butler),d1865-1939,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aWitter Bynner;d1959-1960.5hou1 aGift of Witter Bynner, 1959-1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 158902149cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100003100120245007100151300002700222351003000249545010700279520041100386555008700797555010900884524012100993546001601114600003901130600003601169610002901205650003901234650002801273655002001301655002901321655002601350655001601376656004001392700003601432710002301468710003001491710003001521541005501551561004401606506004201650852002301692000602521-820120502111305.0860103i18461935mau eng d0 aocm861438131 aMAHV86A8 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFields, Annie,d1834-1915.10aPapers pertaining to the estate of Annie Adams Fields,f1846-1935. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aAnnie Adams Fields was an author and charity worker, the wife of the Boston publisher James T. Fields. aIncludes wills, estate inventories, accounts of distributions and other legal papers. Also includes contracts with Houghton Mifflin and other publishers for books by Annie Fields as well as royalty statements from Houghton Mifflin and Small, Maynard & Company. There are also some documents pertaining to Sarah Orne Jewett, including the contract for her books, The Mate of the Daylight and Friends Ashore.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-866. aPapers Pertaining to the Estate of Annie Adams Fields, 1846-1935 (MS Am 1492). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFields, Annie,d1834-1915xEstate.10aJewett, Sarah Orne,d1849-1909.20aCharles Scribner's Sons. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aContracts.2aat 7aEstate inventories.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aWills.2aat 7aExecutors and administrators.2lcsh1 aJewett, Sarah Orne,d1849-1909.2 aHarper & Brothers.2 aHoughton Mifflin Company.2 aSmall, Maynard & Company.0 cGift;aBoylston Adams Beal;.d1944;e43M-866.5HOU1 aGift of Boylston Adams Beal, 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 149201771cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100001900122245003800141300002700179351008700206545011400293520022400407555008700631555010900718524008800827600001900915610003000934650002500964651003600989655001801025655001901043655002201062655001601084656002301100656002801123700005101151541005301202561006501255506004201320852002301362000602529-320120111095403.0860225i18511907mau eng d0 aocn6123767231 aMAHV86A87 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aFelton family.10aFelton family papers,f1851-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other Manuscripts. aCornelius Conway Felton (1807-1862) was a classical scholar and professor, then president of Harvard College. aContains lectures Cornelius Felton delivered at Harvard and elsewhere, a few poems by him, manuscripts and diaries of European trips by Felton women, probably his daughters, some family correspondence, and a photograph.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-340. aFelton Family Papers, 1851-1907 (MS Am 1714). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aFelton family.20aHarvard CollegexFaculty. 0aVoyages and travels. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aClassicists.2lcsh 7aCollege teachers.2lcsh1 aFelton, C. C.q(Cornelius Conway),d1807-1862.0 cPurchase;aMaxwell Hunley;d1962;e62M-340.5HOU1 aPurchased with funds from the sale of duplicates, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 171409195cpc a2201801 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101100004100126245006400167300002700231351003900258545016700297520015800464555008700622555010800709524013100817546001600948600002900964650001700993650003201010656002201042700006301064700004601127700005701173700006601230700004801296700007101344700004801415700004701463700004401510700005101554700007501605700004501680700005001725700007201775700004401847700004801891700004801939700004801987700006802035700005002103700005902153700005002212700005102262700003802313700005202351700004702403700005002450700003902500700007102539700005102610700005302661700004302714700004402757700004602801700005402847700005202901700003702953700004602990700004803036700003803084700005003122700005303172700006703225700003703292700005103329700004603380700005003426700005703476700005003533700003703583700004703620700004603667700005603713700005203769700005203821700005303873700003503926700004403961700003304005700004604038700005504084700005004139700004604189700005704235700005304292700004904345700005004394700005004444700007104494700004704565700004804612700004704660700006804707700003304775700004804808700003204856700003904888700005304927700005004980700006105030700005205091700003705143700004805180700005205228700004605280700003705326700005005363700003505413700004405448700003905492700004505531700004705576700005305623700005005676700005205726700005405778700005205832700003405884700004205918700006905960700004906029700005806078700006806136700004406204700006306248700005306311700004806364700005106412700003806463700005106501700005306552700006906605700005106674700004506725700005506770700003906825700003806864700004606902700004806948700004506996700005407041700004807095700004407143700004807187541005107235561004207286506004207328852002307370000603144-720100318085513.0851119i19151967mau eng d0 aocn6123780351 aMHAT85A35 aMH-ThreappmcMH-Thr1 aRice, Elmer,d1892-1967,erecipient.10aElmer Rice letters from various correspondents,f1915-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAmerican dramatist and lawyer, Rice won the Pulitzer Prize in 1929 for his play, Street Scene. His plays often reflected the social/political issues of their day. aConsists of 245 letters to Rice from both theatrical and political correspondents. The collection was compiled by his widow, the former Barbara Marshall.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003778 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1983-1984, under *83M-30. aElmer Rice Letters from Various Correspondents (MS Thr 380). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRice, Elmer,d1892-1967. 0aPlaywriting. 0aTheaterxPolitical aspects. 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aWoods, A. H.q(Albert Herman),d1870-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aWallach, Ira,d1913-1995,ecorrespondent.1 aTrachtenberg, Alexander,d1884-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aPriestley, J. B.q(John Boynton),d1894-1984,ecorrespondent.1 aPauling, Linus,d1901-1994,ecorrespondent.1 aMumford, L. Quincyq(Lawrence Quincy),d1903-1982,ecorrespondent.1 aMoore, Douglas,d1893-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aMielziner, Jo,d1901-1976,ecorrespondent.1 aMann, Paul,d1915-1985,ecorrespondent.1 aLe Gallienne, Eva,d1899-1991,ecorrespondent.1 aLa Guardia, Fiorello H.q(Fiorello Henry),d1882-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aGordon, Max,d1892-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aGollancz, Victor,d1893-1967,ecorrespondent.1 aFulbright, J. Williamq(James William),d1905-1995,ecorrespondent.1 aEdel, Leon,d1907-1997,ecorrespondent.1 aCopland, Aaron,d1900-1990,ecorrespondent.1 aConnelly, Marc,d1890-1980,ecorrespondent.1 aCanfield, Cass,d1897-1986,ecorrespondent.1 aBehrman, S. N.q(Samuel Nathaniel),d1893-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aAtkinson, Brooks,d1894-1984,ecorrespondent.1 aAldrich, Richard Stoddard,d1902-1986.ecorrespondent.1 aAnderson, Marian,d1897-1993,ecorrespondent.1 aAnderson, Maxwell,d1888-1959,ecorrespondent.1 aAnderson, Robert,ecorrespondent.1 aAnderson, Sherwood,d1876-1941,ecorrespondent.1 aBarry, Philip,d1896-1949,ecorrespondent.1 aBernstein, Aline,d1881-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aBrady, William S.,ecorrespondent.1 aBuck, Pearl S.q(Pearl Sydenstricker),d1892-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aChalmers, Allan Knight,d1897-ecorrespondent.1 aChute, Marchette Gaylord,d1909-ecorrespondent.1 aClemens, Cyril,d1902-ecorrespondent.1 aClurman, Harold,d1901-ecorrespondent.1 aCobb, Lee J.,d1911-1976,ecorrespondent.1 aConant, James Bryant,d1893-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aCornell, Katherine,d1898-1974,ecorrespondent.1 aCousins, Norman,ecorrespondent.1 aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aCrouse, Russel,d1893-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aCrowther, Bosley,ecorrespondent.1 aDamrosch, Walter,d1862-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aDavis, Elmer Holmes,d1890-1958,ecorrespondent.1 aDewey, Thomas E.q(Thomas Edmund),d1902-1971,ecorrespondent.1 aDouglas, Melvyn,ecorrespondent.1 aDreiser, Theodore,d1871-1945,ecorrespondent.1 aEastman, Max,d1883-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aEinstein, Albert,d1879-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aFackenthal, Frank Diehl,d1883-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aFlanagan, Hallie,d1890-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aGinsburg, Ralph,ecorrespondent.1 aGoldman, Emma,d1869-1940,ecorrespondent.1 aGordon, Ruth,d1896-1985,ecorrespondent.1 aGruening, Ernest Henry,d1887-1974,ecorrespondent.1 aHammarskjöld, Dag,d1905-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aHammerstein, Oscar,d1895-1960,ecorrespondent.1 aHansberry, Lorraine,d1930-1965,ecorrespondent.1 aHarris, Julie,ecorrespondent.1 aHart, Moss,d1904-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aHavoc, June,ecorrespondent.1 aHayes, Helen,d1900-1993,ecorrespondent.1 aHays, Arthur Garfield,d1881-1954,ecorrespondent.1 aHelburn, Theresa,d1887-1959,ecorrespondent.1 aHersey, John,d1914-1993,ecorrespondent.1 aHocking, William Ernest,d1873-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aHolmes, John Haynes,d1879-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aHopkins, Arthur,d1878-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aHornblow, Arthur,d1865-1942,ecorrespondent.1 aHughes, Langston,d1902-1967,ecorrespondent.1 aHumphrey, Hubert H.q(Hubert Horatio),d1911-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aHurst, Fannie,d1889-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aJameson, Storm,d1891-1986,ecorrespondent.1 aKanin, Garson,d1912-1999,ecorrespondent.1 aKaufman, George S.q(George Simon),d1889-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aKazan, Elia,ecorrespondent.1 aKent, Rockwell,d1882-1971,ecorrespondent.1 aKerr, Jean,ecorrespondent.1 aKerr, John,d1931-ecorrespondent.1 aKrutch, Joseph Wood,d1893-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aKuniyoshi, Yasuo,d1889-1953,ecorrespondent.1 aLindsey, Ben B.q(Ben Barr),d1869-1943,ecorrespondent.1 aMcClintic, Guthrie,d1893-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aMaltz, Margaret,ecorrespondent.1 aMarch, Fredric,d1897-1975,ecorrespondent.1 aMarshall, Thurgood,d1908-1993,ecorrespondent.1 aMartin, Mary,d1913-1990,ecorrespondent.1 aMassey, Raymond,ecorrespondent.1 aMeyner, Robert Brumle,d1908-ecorrespondent.1 aMilne, Daphne,ecorrespondent.1 aMuni, Paul,d1895-1967,ecorrespondent.1 aO'Neal, Frederick,ecorrespondent.1 aOppenheimer, Max,d1919-ecorrespondent.1 aRivera, Diego,d1886-1957,ecorrespondent.1 aRobinson, Edward G.,d1893-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aRomberg, Sigmund,d1887-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Eleanor,d1884-1962,ecorrespondent.1 aRoss, Harold Wallace,d1892-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aRoss, Nancy Wilson,d1901-1986,ecorrespondent.1 aSchary, Dore,ecorrespondent.1 aSeligson, Seymour A.,ecorrespondent.1 aSherwood, Robert E.q(Robert Emmet),d1896-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aSinclair, Upton,d1878-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aStanislavsky, Konstantin,d1863-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aStevenson, Adlai E.q(Adlai Ewing),d1900-1965,ecorrespondent.1 aStout, Rex,d1886-1975,ecorrespondent.1 aTairov, Aleksandr IAkovlevich,d1885-1950.ecorrespondent.1 aThalberg, Irving G.,d1899-1936,ecorrespondent.1 aThomas, Norman,d1884-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aThompson, Dorothy,d1893-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aTodd, Ann,d1909-ecorrespondent.1 aUntermeyer, Louis,d1885-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aValency, Maurice Jacques,d1903-ecorrespondent.1 aWeaver, Robert C.q(Robert Clifton),d1907-1997.ecorrespondent.1 aWebster, Margaret,d1905-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aWeill, Kurt,d1900-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aWhite, Walter Francis,d1893-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aWhitney, John Hay,ecorrespondent.1 aWidmark, Richard,ecorrespondent.1 aWilkins, Roy,d1901-1981,ecorrespondent.1 aWilson, Edmund,d1895-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aWood, Peggy,d1894-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aWoollcott, Alexander,d1887-1943,ecorrespondent.1 aWynyard, Diana,d1906-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aYoung, Art,d1866-1943,ecorrespondent.1 aYoung, Stanley,d1906-1975,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;d1983;e83M-30.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1983.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 38001557ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100003500123245004900158300002700207351011000234545007900344520021500423555008700638555010800725524011600833700003400949700003200983700004001015700003201055541005601087561004701143506004201190852002301232000603163-320110126092835.0030401i18631891mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm819950081 aMHAT03A81 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBarrett, Lawrence,d1838-1891.10aLawrence Barrett correspondence,f1863-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Mollie Barrett; II. Letters to various correspondents. aBarrett was an American actor noted for his Shakespearean interpretations. aIncludes 100 letters from Barrett to his wife, Mary F. "Mollie" Barrett, as well as letters from Barrett to various correspondents, such as J. L. Carhart, Katie Barrett Tisdale, and Frank Wendell, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Record, 1963-1964, under *63M-221. aLawrence Barrett Correspondence (MS Thr 137). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aBarrett, Mary F.,erecipient.1 aCarhart, J. L.,erecipient.1 aTisdale, Katie Barrett,erecipient.1 aWendell, Frank,erecipient.0 cGift;aUnknown source;dbefore 1924;e63M-221.5the1 aUnknown source, received before 1924.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 13701897cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003100124245004500155300002700200351003900227545010100266520029800367555008700665555010800752524008400860546001600944600003100960600005600991650002001047655005301067655004501120656001901165656002601184700002501210700003701235700004601272541009101318561003701409506004201446852002301488000601896-320110126090734.0860430i19231935mau eng d0 aocn6123672601 aMAHV86-A193 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974.10aJacob Blanck correspondence,f1923-1935. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aBlanck was a bibliographer and author. He was editor of the Bibliography of American Literature. aConsists of letters to Blanck from various correspondents, mostly friends from Boston, but also from a few writers about whom he was doing bibliographical work. Includes 9 letters from Joseph Presser, 34 letters from Harold Koplow Zimmerman, and 9 drawings in pencil and crayon by Hyman Bloom.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006698 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-35. aJacob Blanck Correspondence (MS Am 1868). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974.10aZimmerman, Harold KoplowvCaricatures and cartoons. 0aBibliographers. 7aCaricatureszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawingszAmericany20th century.2gmgpc 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aBibliographers.2lcsh1 aBloom, Hyman,d1913-1 aPresser, Joseph,ecorrespondent.1 aZimmerman, Harold Koplow,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aJacob Blank;b19 Reservoir Road, Brookline, Massachusetts;d1971;e71M-35.5HOU1 aGift of Jacob Blanck, 1971.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 186801955cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005800123245006300181300002700244351003000271530003300301545011000334520043200444555008700876555010800963524010001071600005801171610003401229610002201263650003101285650003601316650003001352655001601382656002201398700005101420541005401471561004501525852002301570000601898-X20090520141504.0860501s1945 mau eng d0 aocn6123672901 aMAHV86A195 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.10aWilliam A. Jackson letters to Keyes DeWitt Metcalf,f1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aTyped transcripts available. aJackson was a bibliographer and librarian. He was the first librarian of the Houghton Library at Harvard. aConsists of 18 letters from Jackson to Keyes Metcalf, director of the Harvard University Library written during a trip in April and May of 1945 to Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina, and Brazil. The letters discuss libraries and book collectors in these countries and include information on possible acquisitions for the Harvard library. Also includes notes taken in Lima, Peru and a small amount of other correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-33. aWilliam A. Jackson Letters to Keyes Metcalf (MS Am 1950). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.20aHarvard University.bLibrary.20aHoughton Library. 0aRare bookszLatin America. 0aBook collectorszLatin America. 0aLibrarieszLatin America. 7aNotes.2aat 7aLibrarians.2lcsh1 aMetcalf, Keyes DeWitt,d1889-1983,erecipient. cGift;aKeyes DeWitt Metcalf;d1978;e77M-33;5HOU aGift of Keyes DeWitt Metcalf, 1978.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 195002229cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245003500162300002700197545009400224520052700318555008700845555010800932524010801040600003801148610006001186650003401246651003901280650003101319651004901350651006001399650002701459650002201486655002801508655002401536655001801560655002001578656002001598700003601618541009501654561004501749852002501794000601902-120100611131848.0860501i18961963mau eng d0 aocn1225209151 aMAHV86A199 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGreene, Roger Sherman,d1881-1947.00kAdditional papers,f1923-1941. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aGreene was an American diplomat, foundation official, and medical administrator in China. aCollection includes letters written from Roger Sherman Greene to his wife Kate, mostly during his stay in China. Letters address topics such as the earthquake in Yokohama and the recovery after, train travel through and descriptions of China, hospitals and medical care in China, teaching illiterate adults to read, Soochow University, and travels through Shanghai. Collection also includes various notebooks, day books, account books, appointment books, and calenders that Green kept during his time in China and at home.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005238 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-63. aRoger Sherman Greene Additional Papers, 1923-1941 (MS Am 1864.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGreene Roger Sherman,d1881-1947.20aSoochow University,bSoochow, China (Kiangsu Province). 0aEarthquakeszChinazYokohama. 0aMedical carezChinay20th century. 0aEducationzChinaxHistory. 0aChinaxDescription and travely20th century. 0aShanghai (China)xDescription and travely20th century. 0aTransportationzChina. 0aRailroadszChina. 7aAppointment books.2aat 7aAccount books.2aat 7aAgendas.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aDiplomats.2aat1 aGreene, Kate Brown,erecipient. cGift;aEdward F. Greene;b10 Patterson St., Providence RI 02906;dOct. 1973;e77M-63.5hou aGift of Mr. Edward F. Greene, 1973.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1864.101843cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100006200124245008300186300002700269351003900296545005500335520031200390555008700702555010800789524013300897546001601030600002501046600006201071650003901133650001701172700003901189700004201228700005701270541005401327561004701381506004201428852002301470000601905-620120813082253.0860501i19561965mau eng d0 aocn1223359491 aMAHV86-A200 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960.10aMark Antony De Wolfe Howe correspondence with Jack W. C. Hagstrom,f1956-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHowe was a biographer, editor, historian and poet. aConsists of 17 letters, 1956-1958, from Howe to Jack Hagstrom, chiefly concerning Howe's books and current writers; 16 letters (carbon copies) from Hagstrom to Howe; and correspondence between Hagstrom and Howe's daughter, Helen Howe Allen. Also includes two letters from Howe to Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005968 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, *75M-96, under 1975-1976. aMark Antony De Wolfe Howe Correspondence with Jack W. C. Hagstrom, 1956-1965 (MS Am 1924). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHagstrom, Jack W. C.10aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aBiographers.1 aAllen, Helen Howe,ecorrespondent.1 aHagstrom, Jack W. C.,ecorrespondent.1 aSergeant, Elizabeth Shepley,d1881-1965,erecipient.0 cDeposit;aThomas H. Fleming;d1976;e75M-96.5HOU1 aDeposited by Thomas H. Fleming, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192401628cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003100124245006400155300002700219545012500246520028100371555008700652555010800739524011500847600001900962650003900981650003501020655004501055656001901100700004901119700003201168541004901200561004201249852002301291000601908-020061221144757.0860502i19471962mau eng d0 aocn1226431921 aMAHV86-A203 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEngel, Monroe,erecipient.00kLettersbfrom Marianne Moore and Charles Olson,f1947-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEngel, a novelist and English professor, was an editor at Viking Press (1947-1951). Moore and Olson were American poets. aMoore's 34 letters, 1950-1954, to Engel concern the editing and publishing of her work, particularly her translations of the Fables of La Fontaine. Olson's 41 letters discuss both personal and professional matters. Also includes poems by Olson that were sent with his letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005468 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-33. aMonroe Engel Letters from Marianne Moore and Charles Olson (MS Am 1982). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEngel, Monroe. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aMoore, Marianne,d1887-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aOlson, Charles,d1910-1970. cDeposit;aMonroe Engel;d1979;e78M-33;5HOU aDeposited by Monroe Engel, 1979.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 198201808cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100002800124245002400152300002700176351008100203545011100284520034300395555008700738555010800825524007800933600002801011610003301039610004601072650003901118650003501157655004501192700004601237700006701283541005301350561004401403852002301447000601912-920061221144826.0860505i19481969mau eng d0 aocn1224120341 aMAHV86-A207 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSchroeder, Eric,d1904-00kPapers,f1948-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Manuscripts. aSchroeder, an English-born author, was the Keeper of Islamic Art at the Fogg Museum at Harvard University. aContains letters to Schroeder from his friends Lincoln Kirstein and Ivor Armstrong Richards; and manuscripts, mostly poems, by Kirstein, Richards and others. The letters discuss writing projects as well as personal matters. Also includes ephemera relating to plays by Richards performed at Harvard with Schroeder and Richards in the cast.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-41. aEric Schroeder Papers (MS Am 1893). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSchroeder, Eric,d1904-20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.20aHarvard UniversityxStudentsxRecreation. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aKirstein, Lincoln,d1907-ecorrespondent.1 aRichards, I. A.q(Ivor Armstrong),d1893-1979.ecorrespondent. cGift;aMrs. Eric Schroeder;d1973;e73M-41;5HOU aGift of Mrs. Eric Schroeder, 1973.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 189301752cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004500124245005100169300002700220545008900247520026600336555008700602555010700689524009000796600004500886610006600931650005200997651007101049655002001120655002501140656002001165700003701185700002301222541005001245561004201295506004201337852002301379000601916-120110114093821.0860505i18621865mau eng d0 aocn1225563681 aMAHV86-A210 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNightingale, Charles Lowell,d1829-1906.10aCharles Lowell Nightingale papers,f1862-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aNightingale was a private in the 29th Massachusetts Volunteers during the Civil War. aIncludes 68 letters, 1862-1865, chiefly written to his mother Louisa Nightingale; clippings concerning the 29th Massachusetts Regiment; a daguerreotype of Nightingale; and a typed transcription of the letters with an introduction and notes by Wolcott D. Street.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1975, under *75-28. aCharles Lowell Nightingale Papers (MS Am 1916). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aNightingale, Charles Lowell,d1829-1906.10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 29th. 0aSoldierszMassachusettsxHistoryy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xPersonal narratives. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDaguerreotypes.2aat 7aSoldiers.2lcsh1 aNightingale, Louisa,erecipient.1 aStreet, Wolcott D.0 cGift;aWolcott D. Street;d1975;e75-28.5HOU1 aGift of Wolcott D. Street, 1975.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 191601602cpcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245005100154300002700205545003700232520025500269555008700524524010100611546001600712530006200728600003100790650002800821656002200849700005300871710004600924710003700970710005901007541007701066561005601143506004201199852002301241000601920-X20130204140750.0860506i18991907mau eng d0 aocn1225812671 aMAHV86A214 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAdams, Brooks,d1848-1927.10aBrooks Adams miscellaneous papers,f1899-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAdams was an American historian. a18 letters (chiefly carbon copies or revised drafts) from Adams and 39 letters to him. Most of the letters to Adams are from publishers, including Macmillan, S. S. McClure, and George W. Jacobs Company. Includes three letters from Theodore Roosevelt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01368 aBrooks Adams Miscellaneous Papers, 1899-1907 (MS Am 1971). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aAdams, Brooks,d1848-1927. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aHistorians.2lcsh1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.2 aGeorge W. Jacobs Company,ecorrespondent.2 aMacmillan & Co.,ecorrespondent.2 aS.S. McClure Company (New York, N.Y.),ecorrespondent.0 cGift;avarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various donors at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 197102848cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100003200136245007000168300002700238351003900265545047700304520054500781546004601326535008001372530006701452555008701519555010701606524012001713600003201833600004701865610003301912650005501945650003602000651002502036656002302061700003602084700004702120700005902167700004202226541004502268561003602313506004202349852002302391000601921-820130122100354.0860507i18631882mau | fre d0 aocn6123674831 aMAHV86A215 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs afreaeng1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873.10aLouis Agassiz letters to Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil,f1863-1882. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAgassiz was born in Switzerland; taught at Neuchâtel from 1832 to 1845; and in 1846 moved to the United States to teach natural history at Harvard. Agassiz and his wife, Elizabeth Cabot Cary, spent 19 months in Brazil (1865-1866) to collect zoological specimens for the Harvard Museum. An account of this expedition is found in A Journey to Brazil (1868) written mainly by Elizabeth. Agassiz's collections formed the basis of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. aConsists of 53 letters in French from Louis Agassiz to Pedro II, mainly concering Agassiz's expedition to Brazil (to collect specimens for the Harvard Museum in Cambridge, Mass.). His letters are written from the U.S., Brazil and on board ship and give progress reports on his trips to the Amazon and other areas in Latin America. He also discusses American literary figures, such as Longfellow and Emerson, with Pedro II. A few other letters in the collection are from Alexander Agassiz, Elizabeth Cary Agassiz and John Greenleaf Whittier. aIncludes materials in French and English.1 aOriginals of the letters are in the Imperial Museum,bPetrópolis,cBrazil. aColor digital images available of collection; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *52M-77 aLouis Agassiz Letters to Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil, 1863-1882 (MS Am 1282). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873.00aPedrobII,cEmperor of Brazil,d1825-1891.20aHarvard UniversityxMuseums. 0aZoological specimensxCollection and preservation. 0aScientific expeditionszBrazil. 0aAmazon River Region. 7aNaturalists.2lcsh1 aAgassiz, Alexander,d1835-1910.1 aAgassiz, Elizabeth Cabot Cary,d1822-1907.1 aPedrobII,cEmperor of Brazil,d1825-1891,erecipient.1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.0 cGift;aDavid James;d1952;e52M-77.5HOU1 aGift of David James, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 128202076cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004000124245007800164300002700242545024700269520028000516555008700796555011200883524009700995546001601092600004001108650004201148651007101190655002201261700001901283541008101302561014301383541010601526561004101632506004201673852002301715000601923-420130102112724.0860507i18621892mau eng d0 aocn6123675101 aMAHV86-A217 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHooper, Edward William,d1839-1901.10aEdward William Hooper letters,f1862-1892 (inclusive),g1862-1865 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHooper was treasurer of Harvard College (1876-1898). During the Civil War, he served as additional aide-de-camp on the staff of General Rufus Saxton, Department of the South, and on the staff of General John Adams Dix, Department of the East. aLetters of Edward William Hooper, chiefly to his father and sisters, detailing his experiences in the Civil War in South Carolina where he worked with the freedmen on the Sea Islands. Includes a manuscript, ca. 1892, on the governance of the Sea Islands during the Civil War.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-109-111 aEdward William Hooper Letters, 1862-1892 (MS Am 1969). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHooper, Edward William,d1839-1901. 0aFreedmenzSouth CarolinazPort Royal. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xPersonal narratives. 7aManuscripts.2aat3 aHooper family.0 cGift;aMrs. John B. Potter et al.;d1951 and later years;e51M-109-111.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. John Briggs Potter, Mrs. Ward Thoron, Mrs. Greely Stevenson Curtis, and Mrs. Roger Sherman Warner, 1951 and later years.5hou0 cGift;aMrs. Ward Thoron;b191 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston 16, MA;d1961 summer;e61M-76; 61M-77.5hou aGift of Mrs. Ward Thoron, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 196902260cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003900124245010300163300002700266351003900293545010900332520060700441555008701048555010801135524014201243600004401385600002701429650004501456650003101501655002001532700004201552700004501594700004301639700004201682541005901724561005001783506004201833852002301875000601930-720110114091935.0860508i19431964mau eng d0 aocn1226560251 aMAHV86-A222 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHampson, Alfred Leete,ecollector.10aAlfred Leete Hampson collection of correspondence concerning Emily Dickinson's papers,f1943-1964. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHampson was the sole heir to Martha Dickinson Bianchi's Dickinson manuscripts and rights of publication. aThe collection concerns the permanent placement of the Emily Dickinson manuscripts and the publication of various editions of her works, including a one-volume edition of the complete works published by Little, Brown. The main correspondents are Hampson; his wife, Mary; Gilbert Montague, a NY lawyer and collateral relative of Dickinson who provided the funds that enabled Harvard to buy the collection from Hampson; William McCarthy, curator at the Rosenbach Foundation in Philadelphia, who was instrumental in arranging the sale; and Arthur Thornhill of Little, Brown. Also contains a few clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-74. aAlfred Leete Hampson Collection of Correspondence Concerning Emily Dickinson's Papers (MS Am 1923). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886xArchives.10aHampson, Alfred Leete. 0aPoets, Americany19th centuryxArchives. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aClippings.2aat1 aHampson, Mary Landis,ecorrespondent.1 aMcCarthy, William Henry,ecorrespondent.1 aMontague, Gilbert Holland,d1880-1961.1 aThornhill, Arthur H.,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Alfred Leete Hampson;d1975;e75M-74.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Alfred Leete Hampson, 1975.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192301536cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040001900102100003000121245009000151300002700241351004200268545007900310520014900389555008700538555010800625524012900733546001600862600003000878650003900908700004500947700004400992541008401036561004201120506003701162852002301199000601931-520090520140831.0860508i18741933mau eng d0 aocn6123675571 aMAHV86A223 aMH-HeappmcMH1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James letters to Edward Holton James and Mary Lucinda Holton James,f1874-1933. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by recipient. aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. aConsists of 37 letters by Henry James, the bulk of them either to his nephew Edward Holton James or his sister-in-law Mary Lucinda Holton James.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-18. aHenry James Letters to Edward Holton James and Mary Lucinda Holton James (MS Am 1975). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aJames, Edward Holton,d1873-erecipient.1 aJames, Mary Lucinda Holton,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Slater Brown;bBox 536, Rockport, Mass. 01966;d1979;e78M-18.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Slater Brown, 1979.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 197501781cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245004500161300002700206351003900233545006300272520029000335555008700625555010900712524009500821546001600916600003900932610001700971610001800988650002101006650002101027650002101048655001901069656003501088656002701123700001701150700005901167541005101226561004101277506004201318852002301360000602536-620120111100520.0860225i19141928mau eng d0 aocn1223359621 aMAHV86A93 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCoykendall, Frederick,d1872-1954.10aFrederick Coykendall papers,f1914-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCoykendall was an American businessman and book collector. aLetters to Frederick Coykendall from various correspondents relating to his book collecting interests. Includes 156 letters from the London bookseller James Bain and 16 letters from A. J. A. Symons. Also includes printed ephemera having to do with the Cuala Press and the Talbot Press.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-344. aFrederick Coykendall Papers, 1914-1928 (MS Am 1724). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCoykendall, Frederick,d1872-1954.20aCuala Press.20aTalbot Press. 0aBook collecting. 0aBook collectors. 0aPrivate presses. 7aEphemera.2aat 7aAntiquarian booksellers.2lcsh 7aBook collectors.2lcsh1 aBain, James.1 aSymons, A. J. A.q(Alphonse James Albert),d1900-1941.0 cGift;aGeorge Goodspeed;d1956;e62M-344.5HOU1 aGift of George Goodspeed, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172401603cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245003900156300002700195351003900222545011400261520022200375524007800597555008700675555010700762546001600869600003300885650003900918655003800957700003000995700003301025700003801058541005601096561004801152506004201200852002301242000601982-X20100318084850.0860528i19331973mau eng d0 aocn6123679931 aMAHV86A271 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLeech, Margaret,d1893-1974.10aMargaret Leech papers,f1933-1973. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aMargaret Kernochan Leech was an American novelist, biographer, historian, and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner. aContains letters to Leech, mostly of a personal nature from other writers who were her friends including Edna Ferber, Frank Sullivan, and Alexander Woollcott. Also includes a manuscript by Leech and notes for stories. aMargaret Leech Papers (MS Am 2020). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003748 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1983-1984, under *83M-8. aIn English.10aLeech, Margaret,d1893-1974. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aFerber, Edna,d1887-1968.1 aSullivan, Frank,d1892-1976.1 aWoollcott, Alexander,d1887-1943.0 cGift;aSydney Joseph Freedberg;d1984;e83M-8.5hou1 aGift of Sydney Joseph Freedberg, 1984.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 202001611cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245006200161300002700223351003000250545011500280520013100395555008700526555010800613524011500721600003900836600001900875651003700894655002400931700004300955700004700998700003401045541008101079561004501160506004201205852002601247000602021-620111220085747.0001002q18251928mau eng d0 aocn6123690821 aMAHV00A13 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aCharles Eliot Norton letters to Eliot Norton,f1867-1908. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aNorton was an American author, editor, and teacher. He was a professor of the history of Fine Arts at Harvard.0 aLetters from Charles Eliot and Grace Norton to Eliot Norton and his wife Margaret, some of which pertain to a trip to England.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-34. aCharles Eliot Norton Letters to Eliot Norton, 1867-1908 (MS Am 1088.13). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.30aNorton family. 0aEnglandxDescription and travel. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aNorton, Eliot,d1863-1932,erecipient.1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aNorton, Margaret,erecipient.0 cGift;aCharles Eliot Norton;bP.O. Box 27, Keswick, VA;d1960;e60M-34.5hou1 aGift of Charles Eliot Norton, 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.1301758ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001800123245004100141300002700182351006100209520019700270555008700467555011400554524009300668600001800761650003900779650004000818655001800858655001900876655002200895700003000917700003000947700003000977700003201007541005001039541006801089561007601157561007201233506004201305852002501347000602038-020130910130515.0860617q18461916mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6123698051 aMAHV86A320 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aJames family.10aJames family papers,fca. 1846-1916. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically with James family letters first. aCorrespondence and papers of Henry James Jr., William James, Alice James, and Henry James II. Includes a diary of Henry James Jr. and 2 etchings and 10 photographs related to the James family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003938 aUnpublished printed finding aids available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1958-1959, under *58M-238-239. aJames Family Papers, ca. 1846-1916 (MS Am 1094.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPhilosophy, Americany19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aEtchings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aJames, Alice,d1848-1892.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.1 aJames, Henry,d1879-1947.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.0 cDeposit;aJames family;d1959;e58M-238.5hou0 cGift;aRuth Draper through William James;d1959;e58M-239.5hou1 aBulk of collection (*58M-238) deposited by the James family, 1959.5hou1 a*58M-239 presented by Ruth Draper through William James, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1094.502096cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003200122245006900154300002700223351010900250545032000359520030900679555008700988555010901075524008801184546001601272600003201288630002201320630002701342650001601369651004701385655003801432656001901470700003301489740002101522541006201543561005201605506004201657852002301699000602071-220130122093553.0860129i19251954mau eng d0 aocn1225205251 aMAHV86A35 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGarrett, Garet,d1878-1954.10aGaret Garrett papers,f1925-1954 (inclusive),g1941-1943 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to and from Garet Garrett; and II. Miscellaneous Papers. aGarrett was an American financial writer and editor for newspapers, a novelist, and the author of books and essays on economics and politics. He was editorial writer-in-chief of the Saturday Evening Post (1940-1942) and editor of American Affairs, a quarterly published by the National Conference Board (1944-1950). aContains professional correspondence, mostly incoming, concerning Garrett's editorials and other writings, and subjects such as international trade and national defense during World War II. Includes correspondence with Herbert Hoover and others. Also the manuscript of That Satan Said, a play by Garrett.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012428 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-171. aGaret Garrett Papers, 1925-1954 (MS Am 1481). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGarrett, Garet,d1878-1954.00aAmerican affairs.00aSaturday evening post. 0aEditorials. 0aUnited StatesxEconomic policyy1933-1945. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aHoover, Herbert,d1874-1964.0 aThat satan said.0 cBequest;aDorothy Williams Garrett;d1956;e56M-171.5HOU1 aBequest of Dorothy Williams Garrett, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 148102298cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245005500158300002700213545009500240520050700335555008700842524010500929546001601034600003501050610006001085650001601145650003901161655001901200655006701219655005101286655004501337655003801382656002401420656001701444700004101461700006001502700003601562700003401598700004001632541007001672561005701742506004201799852002301841000602106-920130131123119.0860129i18861952mau eng d0 aocn1225812871 aMAHV86-A38 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aSantayana, George,d1863-1952.10aGeorge Santayana miscellaneous papers,f1886-1952. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aSantayana was a philosopher, poet, and author. He taught philosophy at Harvard, 1889-1911. aLetters by Santayana to various correspondents, together with a few manuscripts and memorabilia. Includes letters to Francis Henry Appleton, Benjamin Apthorp Gould Fuller, Bruno Lind, and Richard C. Lyon. Manuscripts include To German Americans, Introduction to Hamlet, More about Philosophers in America, and some occasional verse. Also includes diplomas from Harvard, a photograph, and papers written in Santayana's Philosophy 12 course at Harvard by Harry Austryn Wolfson with comments by Santayana.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01352 aGeorge Santayana Miscellaneous Papers, 1886-1952 (MS Am 1542). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSantayana, George,d1863-1952.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of PhilosophyxFaculty. 0aPhilosophy. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aDiplomas.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aHarvard students' essays.2local. 7aPhilosophers.2lcsh 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aAppleton, Francis Henry,erecipient.1 aFuller, B. A. G.q(Benjamin Apthorp Gould),d1879-1956.1 aLind, Bruno,d1909-erecipient.1 aLyon, Richard C.,erecipient.1 aWolfson, Harry Austryn,d1887-1974.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 154201557cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003800123245007200161300002600233500001700259520023200276524012100508544010500629545024000734600003800974610003401012651003801046651003801084541004701122561003801169583003801207852002201245000602197-220130910120911.0860725i18661892mau eng d0 aocn6123706341 aMAHV86A392 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBond, Edward Pearson,d1824-1893.10aEdward Pearson Bond correspondence on Hawaiian affairs,f1866-1869. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aCorrespondence of Edward P. Bond and others concerning affairs in the Hawaiian Islands and relations and trade between the Hawaiian Islands and the U.S. Includes letters concerning the activities of the Hawaiian Club of Boston. aEdward Pearson Bond Correspondence on Hawaiian Affairs, 1866-1869 (MS Am 771). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThere is related material in the records of the Hawaiian Club, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aBond graduated from the Harvard Divinity School in 1849, was engaged in government work in the Hawaiian Islands, and later worked at Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. For many years he was secretary of the Hawaiian Club of Boston.10aBond, Edward Pearson,d1824-1893.20aHawaiian Club (Boston, Mass.) 0aBoston (Mass.)xCommercezHawaii. 0aHawaiixRelationszUnited States. 3Papers.aBond, Lawrence, 1915.cGift.5hou aGift of Lawrence Bond, 1915.5hou 3Papers.aSurvey/pbec07/09/86kdw8 bHOUcBhMS Am 77101943cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245006000152300002700212351002900239545010300268520022100371555008700592555010900679524009900788546001600887600003000903600002900933610003200962650004200994650006301036651005501099655002001154655002001174656002301194656002301217700004501240541005001285561014501335506004201480852002301522000602217-020111220092336.0860130i18221850mau eng d0 aocn1224688381 aMAHV86A41 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSloane, John,d1779-1856.10aJohn Sloane correspondence with Henry Clay,f1822-1850. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aSloane was a congressman from Ohio and Treasurer of the U.S. Clay was a congressman from Kentucky. aLetters address politics and government, senatorial and presidential elections, and extensive analysis of the Whig party. Collection also includes circulars and newspaper articles about the letters in the collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-104. aJohn Sloane Correspondence with Henry Clay (MS Am 1621). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSloane, John,d1779-1856.10aClay, Henry,d1777-1852.20aWhig Party (Great Britain). 0aElectionszUnited StatesxPresidents. 0aPolitical campaignszUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1815-1861. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCirculars.2aat 7aLegislators.2lcsh 7aPoliticians.2lcsh1 aClay, Henry,d1777-1852,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFoster, Frances;d1961;e60M-104.5hou1 aManuscripts from the estate of Senator George Frisbie Hoar presented by Mrs. Frances Foster, courtesy of Dr. Clifford K. Shipton, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 162103868ctcaa2200541 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245005700151300002700208351039700235545042600632520022601058520046401284524009601748530006201844555008701906500016201993600003602155600003002191600003702221600004002258600004302298600003302341610003302374630002602407650003102433651002602464710003802490700004902528700005402577710004102631710004602672700005202718700004602770700005302816700005602869700005102925700005502976700004903031710004303080541008903123561004903212506004203261852002303303000602223-520111025130101.0860731i18891927mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn612371046 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTurner, Frederick Jackson,d1861-1932.10aFrederick Jackson Turner correspondence,f1889-1927. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Theodore Roosevelt letters to Frederick Jackson Turner, 1894-1898; II. Horace Elisha Scudder, Walter Hines Page, and Bliss Perry correspondence with Frederick Jackson Turner, 1896-1899; III. Woodrow Wilson letters to Frederick Jackson Turner, 1889-1919; and IV. Letters concerning gift of collection, 1924-1927. Each series is arranged chronologically. aFrederick Jackson Turner (1861–1932) was an American historian. He graduated with a B.A. from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1884, obtained his Ph.D. in history from Johns Hopkins University in 1890, and was a professor of history at Wisconsin from1890-1910. Turner was a professor of history at Harvard University from 1911-1924. He is best known for his The Significance of the Frontier in American History. aChiefly letters to Turner concerning his writings on the American West, a few of Turner's notes on the correspondence, and two printed articles by Turner: The problem of the American West and Problems in American history.8 aIncludes letters to Turner from Woodrow Wilson, Theodore Roosevelt, and William Edward Dodd. Contains correspondence with Houghton, Mifflin and Company and the Atlantic Monthly, especially with Atlantic Monthly editors Horace Elisha Scudder, Walter Hines Page, and Bliss Perry. Also includes letters from Turner to William Peterfield Trent, from Woodrow Wilson to Reuben Gold Thwaites, and from Turner to the Harvard College Library and to Ray Stannard Baker. aFrederick Jackson Turner Correspondence (MS AmW 104). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02059 aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History.10aPage, Walter Hines,d1855-1918.10aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.10aTurner, Frederick Jackson,d1861-1932.10aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.40aThe Atlantic monthly. 0aHistorianszUnited States. 0aWest (U.S.)xHistory.2 aAtlantic Monthly,ecorrespondent.1 aBaker, Ray Stannard,d1870-1946,erecipient.1 aDodd, William Edward,d1869-1940,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard College Library,erecipient.2 aHoughton Mifflin Company,ecorrespondent.1 aPage, Walter Hines,d1855-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902,ecorrespondent.1 aThwaites, Reuben Gold,d1853-1913,erecipient.1 aTrent, William Peterfield,d1862-1939,erecipient.1 aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.0 cGift;aProfessor Frederick Jackson Turner;d1924 June 27;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Frederick Jackson Turner, 1924.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS AmW 10401296cpcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102245005100123300002700174520027300201555008700474524010100561546001600662610004200678651005000720655001900770700004200789541007700831561005700908506004200965852002301007000602228-620130204135702.0860130i18621864mau eng d0 aocn1224193921 aMAHV86-A42 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aUnited States Civil War documents,f1862-1864. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aDocuments pertaining to the U.S. Civil War. Includes a pay voucher of a Confederate surgeon, a staff list of a Confederate general, a letter requesting the release of steamboats pressed into service for the Confederacy, and a document of appointment signed by Lincoln.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01356 aUnited States Civil War Documents, 1862-1864 (MS Am 1625). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aConfederate States of America.bArmy. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aVouchers.2aat1 aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865esigner.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 162501485cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245007600155300002700231351003900258545010900297520018100406524009500587555008700682555010900769546001600878600003200894610003300926630002700959650003900986541004601025561003601071506004201107852002201149000602231-620130910125400.0860801i17241909mau eng d0 aocn1225057601 aMAHV86A422 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBowen, Francis,d1811-1890.10aFrancis Bowen correspondence,f1724-1909 (inclusive)g1836-1892 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aFrancis Bowen was an American philosopher, editor of the North American Review and professor at Harvard. aConsists chiefly of letters to Francis Bowen. Includes some letters concerning contributions to the North American Review and a few letters relating to his teaching at Harvard. aFrancis Bowen Correspondence, 1724-1909 (MS Am 972). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007608 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-114. aIn English.10aBowen, Francis,d1811-1890.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.00aNorth American review. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.0 cGift;aMaria Bowen;d1931;e71M-114.5hou1 aGift of Maria Bowen, 1931.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 97201650cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245003700154300002600191351001700217520047700234524008800711545006600799600001900865600003100884650002000915650007000935650003701005651006401042655002801106655001601134655001701150656003401167541004301201561004401244852002401288000602244-820130910123004.0860805i17841849mau eng d0 aocn6123718541 aMAHV86A434 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPrince, James,d1784-1849.10aJames Prince papers,f1784-1849. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aContains official papers of Prince in his position of marshal (during the War of 1912) including correspondence on prisoners of war in Massachusetts; personal correspondence; family business and legal papers including household bills, deeds, and leases; a few political letters and addresses, 1810-1820; and miscellaneous 18th century papers. Includes correspondence of James Prince Jr., private business papers of James and Agnes Prince and Prince family household bills. aJames Prince Papers, 1784-1849 (MS Am 800.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPrince was the U.S. marshal at Boston during the War of 1812.30aPrince family.10aPrince, James,d1784-1849. 0aFamily records. 0aHome economicszMassachusettsxAccountingxHistoryy19th century. 0aPrisoners of warzMassachusetts. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyWar of 1812xPrisoners and prisons. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aLeases.2aat 7aUnited States marshals.2lcsh aMrs. A. Ward Lamson, 1917.cGift.5hou aGift of Mrs. A. Ward Lamson, 1917.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.101613cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003600124245008200160300002700242545003500269520022300304555008700527524012000614651003600734600003600770650003900806655003800845656001900883700004700902700001900949700003200968700004301000740006601043541004801109561004201157506004201199852002201241000602254-520110114103118.0860807i18211859mau eng d0 aocn1223726461 aMAHV86-A443 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aIrving, Washington,d1783-1859.10aWashington Irving letters to Thomas Wentworth Storrow and family,f1821-1859. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aIrving was an American author. aContains over fifty personal letters (1821-1827) by Irving in various European cities to his friends Susan and T.W. Storrow in Paris. Also a fragment of "A History of New York," and a few letters by Irving's relatives.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00620 aWashington Irving Letters to Thomas Wentworth Storrow and Family (MS Am 148). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aEuropexDescription and travel.10aIrving, Washington,d1783-1859. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aIrving, Peter,d1771-1838,ecorrespondent.3 aIrving family.1 aStorrow, Susan,erecipient.1 aStorrow, Thomas Wentworth,erecipient.2 aA history of New York from beginning to end of Dutch dynasty.0 cGift;aEdward C. Storrow;d1928 May 4.5HOU1 aGift of Edward C. Storrow, 1928.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 14801754cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003700123245005700160300002700217351010100244545003700345520015900382555008700541555010900628524010900737546001600846600004500862610003700907655002700944655002800971655001800999700004801017700004801065541013901113561008501252506004201337852002501379000602258-820130122091440.0860808i18821889mau eng d0 aocn1226093041 aMAHV86A447 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aLongfellow Memorial Association.10aLongfellow Memorial Association records,f1882-1889. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Longfellow Memorial Association; and II. Correspondence. aLongfellow was an American poet. aIncludes minutes, financial records, and other papers of the Longfellow Memorial Association as well as correspondence of John Bartlett and Arthur Gilman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012408 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-249. aLongfellow Memorial Association Records, 1882-1889 (MS Am 1340.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.20aLongfellow Memorial Association. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat1 aBartlett, John,d1820-1905,ecorrespondent.1 aGilman, Arthur,d1837-1909,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aMaury A. Bromsen;b195 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Massachusetts;d1960 June;e59M-249;h$375.00, Parkman D. Howe fund.5hou1 aPurchased with assistance from Parkman D. Howe from Maury A. Bromsen, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1340.801560cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245004500153300002700198545010600225520023200331555008700563555010900650524009500759546001600854600003100870650001500901650001300916655003000929655002200959656002100981700001901002700002001021541005701041561004701098506004201145852002301187000602261-820111220093056.0860131i18471890mau eng d0 aocn1226560381 aMAHV86A45 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKemble, Fanny,d1809-1893.10aFanny Kemble correspondence,f1847-1890. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aKemble, an actress and author, was born in England, and lived and worked in both England and the U.S. aContains personal correspondence between Kemble and members of the Parkman and Dwight families in America. Also includes Philadelphia court records of the divorce case between Kemble and her husband, and a photograph of Kemble.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007908 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-208. aFanny Kemble Correspondence, 1847-1890 (MS Am 1639). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKemble, Fanny,d1809-1893. 0aActresses. 0aDivorce. 7aCivil court records.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aActresses.2lcsh3 aDwight family.3 aParkman family.0 cGift;aMrs. Langdon P. Marvin;d1961;e60M-208.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Langdon P. Marvin, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163901686cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001800123245003400141300002700175520036500202546006800567555008700635524008400722600003100806600003800837600002000875650001500895650004200910651006700952651006601019655002001085655002201105656001701127541007001144561005701214506004201271852002301313000602283-920130131123228.0860131i17751956mau eng d0 aocn1224688621 aMAHV86-A47 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafreager00aEspionage papers,f1775-1956. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLetters, reports, and documents involving matters of espionage in all nations. The bulk is American, pertaining mainly to the American Revolution and the Civil War. Also includes World War I material including letters by and about Edith Cavell and letters and photographs of Mata Hari; an opinion, 1956, in the case of U.S. vs. Morton Sobell; and other papers. aPapers are in English or French; one news article is in German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01353 aEspionage Papers, 1775-1956 (MS Am 1553). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCavell, Edith,d1865-1915.00aMata Hari,d1876-1917vPortraits.10aSobell, Morton. 0aEspionage. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xSecret service. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783xSecret service. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xSecret service. 7aDocuments.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSpies.2lcsh0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 155301869cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245005800156300002700214351003000241545009600271520031300367555008700680555010800767524010900875546001600984600003301000600002101033610002401054650002801078650003801106650003401144650004501178700003301223541011501256561007001371506004201441852002401483000602308-820130107100600.0860822i19101923mau eng d0 aocn1224688691 aMAHV86A492 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aJohn Masefield letters to Frank Sidgwick,f1910-1923. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aMasefield was a British poet. Sidgwick was a publisher with the firm of Sidgwick & Jackson. aIncludes 55 letters and postcards from Masefield to Sidgwick concerning publication of works by Masefield by Sidgwick & Jackson, together with notes on the cast and production of Masefield's Pompey the Great in 1910 and the draft of a letter by Sidgwick to the Times Literary Supplement concerning Masefield.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-54. aJohn Masefield Letters to Frank Sidgwick, 1910-1923 (MS Eng 1069). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aSidgwick, Frank.20aSidgwick & Jackson. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy20th century.1 aSidgwick, Frank,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aElkin Mathews, Ltd.;bTakely, Bishops Stortford, England;d1957;e57M-54;h$98.00, Wells Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Wells Fund from Elkin Mathews Ltd., 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 106901961cpc a2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245008700154300002700241351003000268545023100298520030800529555008700837555010900924524013801033546001601171600003101187650002801218650003801246650003901284700004301323700004701366710002201413541006201435561004801497506004201545852002401587000602309-620130312082546.0860822i19151931mau eng d0 aocn1225902751 aMAHV86A493 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMoore, George,d1852-1933.10aGeorge Moore correspondence with Thomas R. Smith and Horace Liveright,f1915-1931. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aMoore was an Irish author and journalist. Horace Liveright was a publisher in New York. Thomas R. Smith was editor of the Century Magazine, a literary advisor to Boni & Liveright, and then editor-in-chief for Horace Liveright. aIncludes correspondence (letters from Moore and carbon copies of letters from Smith and Liveright) concerning Moore's publications in the U.S. in the Century and by Boni & Liveright and Horace Liveright. Also includes a few manuscripts of writings by Moore and other papers relating to his publications.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-802. aGeorge Moore Correspondence with Thomas R. Smith and Horace Liveright, 1915-1931 (MS Eng 1066). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMoore, George,d1852-1933. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish literaturexIrish authors.1 aLiveright, Horace Brisbin,d1886-1933.1 aSmith, T. R.q(Thomas Robert),d1880-1942.2 aBoni & Liveright.0 cPurchase;aC. A. Stonehill;d1944 June 16;e43M-802.5hou1 aPurchased with the Peabody fund, 1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 106601637ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245005500153300002700208351003000235545008500265520016100350524010600511555008700617555011700704546001600821600003000837600003300867650003600900650003900936650002800975650003601003655002001039740001501059541008701074561004801161506004201209852002401251000602311-820130102103504.0860822i19051914mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn1225750441 aMAHV86A495 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJoyce, James,d1882-1941.10aJames Joyce letters to Grant Richards,f1905-1914. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aJoyce was an Irish author. Richards was a British publisher, editor, and author. a45 letters and postcards from Joyce to Grant Richards relating chiefly to the publication of Dubliners. Also includes typescript transcripts of the letters. aJames Joyce Letters to Grant Richards, 1905-1914 (MS Eng 1068). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Reading Room Accession Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-268. aIn English.10aJoyce, James,d1882-1941.10aRichards, Grant,d1872-1948. 0aIrish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish literaturexIrish authors. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aNovelists, Irishy20th century. 7aPostcards.2aat02aDubliners.0 cPurchase;aElkin Mathews;d1944 September 12;e44M-268;hSheldon Fund, £105.5hou1 aPurchased with the Sheldon fund, 1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 106802245cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245005600155300002700211351003000238545011700268520051100385555008700896555010800983524010601091546001601197600003201213600005901245600003201304650001501336650004101351650002201392650002201414650003801436656001801474656002201492700003901514700003501553541013001588561005201718506004201770852002301812000602319-320130212103645.0860827i19021908mau eng d0 aocn1224689251 aMAHV86A501 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSymons, Arthur,d1865-1945.10aArthur Symons letters to Edward Hutton,f1902-1908. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSymons was a British poet and critic. Hutton was a British author, writing principally on Italy and Italian art. aTopics include literary, theatrical, and art criticism, and other related interests. Symons critiques Hutton's writing and discusses his own work, including writing projects and commissioned articles for various literary magazines, including an article called "The Praise of Gypsies" for which he studied the Romany language. Symons letters frequently mention the actress Eleonora Duse. Collection also includes letters from Rhoda Symons (Arthur's wife) to Edward Hutton regarding Symons' mental breakdown.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *53M-93. aArthur Symons Letters to Edward Hutton, 1902-1908 (MS Eng 861). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSymons, Arthur,d1865-1945.10aSymons, Arthur,d1865-1945tThe praise of the gypsies.10aDuse, Eleonore,d1858-1924. 0aCriticism. 0aDramaxCriticism and interpretation. 0aRomany languages. 0aMental disorders. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aCritics.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aHutton, Edward,d1875-erecipient.1 aSymons, Rhoda,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aBeauchamp Bookshop;b15A and 17 Harrington Rd., London SW7 England;d1952;e52M-83;h£50 (Morris Gray Fund).5HOU1 aPurchased with the Morris Gray Fund, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 86101543cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003000121245005000151300002700201351004600228545004800274520022900322555008700551524010000638546001600738600003000754650003900784655001600823656002200839700005000861700005000911700005200961541007001013561005701083506004201140852002301182000602516-120130131120938.0860221i18591918mau eng d0 aocm831762681 aMAHV86A75 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918.10aHenry Adams miscellaneous papers,f1859-1918. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aAdams was an American historian and author. aLetters by Henry Adams to various people and one folder of typescripts of poems, original and translated. Larger groups of letters include 35 to Henry Lee Higginson, 17 to Henry Osborn Taylor, and 8 to William Roscoe Thayer.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01337 aHenry Adams Miscellaneous Papers, 1859-1918 (MS Am 1217). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aHistorians.2lcsh1 aHigginson, Henry Lee,d1834-1919,erecipient.1 aTaylor, Henry Osborn,d1856-1941,erecipient.1 aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121701282cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002500123245003600148300002700184545005300211520015500264555008700419524008700506546001600593600002500609650003900634650003500673655002900708655003800737655001600775656001700791541004000808561004300848506004200891852002300933000602528-520130204135944.0860224s1962 mau eng d0 aocn1226093381 aMAHV86-A86 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHall, Donald,d1928-10aDonald Hall compositionsf1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHall is an American poet, essayist, and teacher. aIncludes notes, two drafts, and the final version of a short story, The Shade of New Pine; and notes and drafts leading to the finished poem Sleeping.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01359 aDonald Hall Compositions, 1962 (MS Am 1668). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHall, Donald,d1928- 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aDrafts (documents).2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cGift;aanonymous donor;d1962.5hou1 aGift of an anonymous donor, 1962.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 166801458ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245005100154300002700205351005600232545003200288520017400320555008700494524010100581546001600682600003100698650003900729650003500768655002900803655001600832655002900848656001700877700005000894541004200944561005700986506004201043852002301085000602530-720130204140225.0860225i19151961mau ||| | eng d0 aocn6123767451 aMAHV86-A88 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.10aRobert Frost miscellaneous papers,f1915-1961. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent and title. aFrost was an American poet. aLetters by Frost to his friend, the author Nathan Haskell Dole, among other correspondence. Compositions include drafts and fair copies of poems and a television script.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01361 aRobert Frost Miscellaneous Papers, 1915-1961 (MS Am 1690). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aDrafts (documents).2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aTelevision scripts.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aDole, Nathan Haskell,d1852-1935,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dVarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 169001937cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002300101100004600124245007400170300002700244351004600271545005100317520022400368555008700592524015200679546001600831600003400847600006700881600006800948650002401016656001801040656002701058700004801085700003301133700003801166700004901204700004601253700005401299541007601353561004501429506004201474852002301516000603131-520131108134215.0851106i19251976mau eng d0 aocn1225609401 aMHAT85A23 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aSprague, Arthur Colby,d1895-erecipient.10aArthur Colby Sprague letters from various correspondents,f1925-1976. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aSprague was an American Shakespearean scholar. aConsists of letters addressed to Sprague from various critics and Shakespearean actors. Correspondents include Robert Atkins, Nevill Coghill, Baliol Holloway, Godfrey Tearle, Alan Wilkie and Donald Wolfit, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01568 aArthur Colby Sprague Letters from Various Correspondents, 1925-1976 (MS Thr 390). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSprague, Arthur Colby,d1895-10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616xStage historyzUnited States10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616xCriticism and interpretation. 0aDramatic criticism. 7aActors.2lcsh 7aTheater critics.2lcsh1 aAtkins, Robert,d1886-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aCoghill, Nevill,d1899-1980.1 aHolloway, Baliol,ecorrespondent.1 aTearle, Godfrey,d1884-1953,ecorrespondent.1 aWilkie, Alan,d1878-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aWolfit, Donald,cSir,d1902-1968,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aArthur Colby Sprague;d1981 April 21;eNo accession number.5the1 aGift of Arthur Colby Sprague, 1981.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 39001338cpcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245006800164300002700232545005200259520005900311555008700370524012000457546001600577600004200593650003900635650003500674650001900709655002100728655004500749656001700794541007700811561005700888506004200945852002500987000601730-420130131120734.0851209i18331875mau eng d0 aocn1225204781 aMAHV85A19 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.10aJohn Greenleaf Whittier miscellaneous compositions,f1833-1875. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWhittier was an American poet and abolitionist. aAutograph manuscripts of various poems and editorials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01335 aJohn Greenleaf Whittier Miscellaneous Compositions, 1833-1875 (MS Am 1211.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAbolitionists. 7aEditorials.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1211.102683cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245007000161300002700231351017300258545022100431520048500652555008701137555011301224524012901337546001601466600003901482600001901521650001401540651004401554651006001598655002001658655001601678700005001694700004101744700004901785700006001834700007401894541016001968561007102128506004202199852003202241000601745-220130102110158.0851211i18941917mau eng d0 aocn6123651441 aMAHV85A32 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aWilliam Dean Howells correspondence and compositions,f1894-1917. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1251.1: Letters to Elinor Howells; II. MS Am 1251.2: Letters to William Dean Howells; and III. MS Am 1251.3: Compositions. aWilliam Dean Howells was a novelist and man of letters, United States consul in Venice (1861-1865), editor of The Atlantic Monthly (1871-1881) and of Cosmopolitan (1891-1892), and a champion of realism in literature. aContains correspondence between the Howells family on such topics as travels in New York City, finding apartments in New York, church and religion, sickness and paralysis, and extensive communication about William Dean Howells' father who was ill. Collection also contains one birthday telegram from Woodrow Wilson to William Dean Howells. Also includes two manuscripts: Masque of Disease written by Howells in collaboration with Edmund Gosse and notes on Court Martial at Fort P.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-242-246. aWilliam Dean Howells Correspondence and Compositions, 1894-1917 (MS Am 1251.1-1251.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.30aHowell family. 0aReligion. 0aApartmentszNew York (State)zNew York. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aNotes.2aat1 aHowells, Elinor Mead,d1837-1910,erecipient.1 aHowells, Mildred,d1872-erecepient.1 aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924,ecorrespondent.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.tMasque of diseases.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.tNotes on court martial at Fort P.0 cGift;aMiss Mildred Howells and John Mead Howells;b63 Pine St., Peterborough NH, and 580 Park Ave., New York 21 NY;d29 May 1952;e51M-242 - 51M-246.5hou1 aGift of Miss Mildred Howells and Mr. John Mead Howells, 1952.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1251.1-1251.301809cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001400122100004100136245004700177300002700224351003900251545009800290520028400388555008700672555010900759524009700868546001600965600005000981610005201031610004501083650004601128655002201174700005601196700004201252541004901294561003901343506004201382852002301424000601759-220120813082129.0851216i18861941mau eng d0 aocn1225204851 aMAHV85A44 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS84-19531 aSlattery, Charles Lewis,d1867-1930.10aCharles Lewis Slattery papers,f1886-1941. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSlattery was Episcopal bishop of Massachusetts and preacher of Harvard University, 1921-1927. aConsists of letters to Charles Slattery from various correspondents, chiefly concerning appointments, invitations, and Slattery's biographical writings. Also includes some letters to his wife, Sarah Lawrence Slattery, and manuscript of biographical remarks by A. Lawrence Lowell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009588 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-225. aCharles Lewis Slattery Papers, 1886-1941 (MS Am 1132). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSlattery, Charles Lewis,cBishop,d1867-1930.20aEpiscopal Theological School (Cambridge, Mass.)20aHarvard University.bBoard of Preachers. 0aEpiscopal churchxClergyxCorrespondence. 7aBiographies.2aat1 aLowell, A. Lawrenceq(Abbott Lawrence),d1856-1943.1 aSlattery, Sarah Lawrence,erecipient.0 cGift;aSarah Slattery;d1948;e48M-225.5HOU1 aGift of Sarah Slattery, 1948.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 113202792cpc a2200469 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005500122245008100177300002700258351003900285545028800324520045500612555008701067555010901154524013101263546001601394600003101410600003801441600004301479600006001522600003301582650001901615650001801634650002001652650005201672651005801724651006201782651003901844656002501883700006101908700005501969700005002024700005002074541009302124561004002217506004202257852002302299000601783-520121218100348.0851220i18381880mau eng d0 aocn6123655721 aMAHV85A66 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShaw, Sarah Blake Sturgis,d1815-1902,erecipient.10aLetters to Sarah Blake Sturgis Shaw from various correspondents,f1838-1880. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSarah Shaw was the wife of Francis George Shaw, a prominent philanthropist and reformer of Boston and West Roxbury, Mass., and Staten Island, N.Y. The Shaws were the parents of Robert Gould Shaw, Civil War soldier and colonel of the first black regiment to serve with the Union Army. aConsists of letters written to Francis George and Sarah Blake (Sturgis) Shaw by various correspondents. Topics discussed include family matters, the details of daily life, spiritualism and Swedenborgianism, slavery, and important events leading up to the Civil War, such as the assault on Charles Sumner, the publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin, and John Brown's raid. Letters from Lydia Maria Child also frequently mention American artist William Page.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-621. aLetters to Sarah Blake Sturgis Shaw from Various Correspondents, 1838-1880 (MS Am 1417). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPage, William,d1811-1885.10aShaw, Francis George,d1809-1882.10aShaw, Sarah Blake Sturgis,d1815-1902.10aStowe, Harriet Beecher,d1811-1896.tUncle Tom's Cabin.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aAbolitionists. 0aSpiritualism. 0aSwendeborgians. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxAnti-slavery movements. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aHarpers Ferry (W. Va.)xHistoryyJohn Brown's Raid, 1859. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1849-1877. 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh1 aChild,cMrs.q(Lydia Maria),d1802-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aCairnes, John Elliott,d1823-1875,ecorrespondent.1 aFuller, Margaret,d1810-1850,ecorrespondent.1 aShaw, Francis George,d1809-1882,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Pierre Jay;b133 East 64th Street, New York, New York;d1942;e42M-621.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Pierre Jay, 1942.5HOU aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 141702148cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245006800162300002700230351003000257545034900287520029200636555008700928555010801015524012001123546001601243600003901259651004901298651005801347651005501405651006101460655002401521700003701545541009801582561005101680506004201731852002501773000601794-020120111102221.0860227i18511890mau eng d0 aocn1225057421 aMAHV86A100 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell letters to Mary Lowell Putnam,f1851-1890. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited The Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, The North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aContains letters written by James Lowell to his sister Mary Lowell Putnam, concerning his travels in Europe, including Italy, Paris, and Switzerland. Letters also discuss life in London, and family news. Many letters confirm invitations to dinner, or when they will see each other again.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008378 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-84. aJames Russell Lowell Letters to Mary Lowell Putnam, 1851-1890 (MS Am 1659.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891. 0aItalyxDescription and travely19th century. 0aParis (France)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aSwitzerlandxDescription and travely19th century. 0aLondon (England)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aPutman, Mary Lowell,erecipient.0 cGift;aDr. Francis Lowell Burnett;bProctor St., Manchester, Mass.;dJan. 1964;e63M-84.5hou1 aGift of Dr. Francis Lowell Burnett, 1964.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1659.101393cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005100123245007700174300002700251351002900278545009000307520006700397555008700464555010900551524011600660600003900776610003300815656001900848700005400867541005700921561004800978506004201026852002301068000601797-520110126091640.0860307i17781895mau eng d0 aocn6123656721 aMAHV86A103 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThayer, James Bradley,d1831-1902,erecipient.10aLetters to James Bradley Thayer from various correspondents,f1778-1895. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aJames Bradley Thayer was a Boston lawyer and professor of law at Harvard (1873-1902). aLetters to Thayer, including letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-6-9. aLetters to James Bradley Thayer from Various Correspondents (MS Am 1613). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aThayer, James Bradley,d1831-1902.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aThayer, James Bradley;d1960;e60M-6.5hou1 aBequest of James Bradley Thayer, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 161302175cpc a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004600123245007000169300002700239351021300266545004600479520035700525555008700882555012900969524011601098546001601214600003001230600004601260650003101306656002301337700004601360700004301406541014001449561012101589506009701710852003001807000601811-420121213105136.0860313i18381951mau eng d0 aocn1225563611 aMAHV86A116 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.)d1904-1965.10aR. P. Blackmur correspondence concerning Henry Adams,f1838-1951. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1750: Correspondence concerning Henry Adams; II. MS Am 1750.1: Papers concerning Henry Adams; and III. MS Am 1750.2: Correspondence by and concerning Henry Adams. aBlackmur was an American literary critic. aChiefly letters by Blackmur to Louisa Hooper Thoron, niece of Mrs. Henry Adams, concerning Blackmur's research and writings on Henry Adams. Includes letters to Mrs. Thoron from others concerning his research on Adams as well as from friends and family members. Also includes two letters by Henry Adams and seven letters from Mrs. Thoron to Henry Adams.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008658 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-199, *64M-221, *65M-194. aR. P. Blackmur Correspondence Concerning Henry Adams (MS Am 1750-1750.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918.10aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.)d1904-1965. 0aHistorianszUnited States. 7aBiographers.2lcsh1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aThoron, Louisa Hooper,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Ward Thoron;b191 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass.;d31 Mar. 1965, 26 May 1965, June 1966;e64M-199, 64M-221, 65M-194.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Ward Thoron, 1965 and 1966, in memory of Richard Blackmur and of his deep interest in Henry Adams.5hou1 aLetters in MS Am 1750.2 may not be published without the permission of Ms. Ward Thoron.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1750-1750.201511cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005400123245008000177300002700257351008500284545012100369520009900490555008700589555010800676524011900784600004200903610003600945651004500981541008701026561004301113506004201156852002301198000601824-620110126104240.0860320i17991945mau eng d0 aocn1223726351 aMAHV86A128 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858,erecipient.10aLetters to Matthew Calbraith Perry from various correspondents,f1799-1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Perry; and II. Other letters. aPerry was an American naval officer, best known for negotiating the treaty that opened Japan to trade with the West. aContains letters to Perry, many pertaining to naval affairs and letters between third parties.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-25. aLetters to Matthew Calbraith Perry From Various Correspondents (MS Am 1815). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858.10aUnited States.bNavyxOfficers. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationszJapan.0 cGift;aMrs. George Tilton;bLittleton, New Hampshire;d15 July 1965;e65M-25.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. George Tilton, 1965.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 181502525cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245004100158300002700199351002900226545027100255520057400526555008701100555010901187524009101296546001601387600003501403650003301438655001901471655002501490655006701515655004501582656002601627656002701653656002501680700006201705700003901767710002601806710006501832541009901897561004201996506004202038852002302080000601849-120121126102611.0860408i19421965mau eng d0 aocn6123667861 aMAHV86A150 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNewhall, Beaumont,d1908-1993.10aBeaumont Newhall papers,f1947-1957. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aNewhall (1908-1993), an art historian, photographer, and author, was the curator, 1948-1958, then director, 1958-1971, of the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House in Rochester, N.Y., and a visiting professor of art at various universities. aThe bulk of the collection is correspondence between Newhall and his friend and colleague Ferdinand Reyher. The Newhall-Reyher correspondence discusses their research and writing on photography and early photographers. The manuscripts include articles and drafts for photography magazines, and bibliographies and notes on photography. Also contains an article by Berenice Abbott, "Photography today and tomorrow," correspondence of Newhall in his position as curator at the George Eastman House, a few letters to Reyher from third parties, a poem, and printed material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-112. aBeaumont Newhall Papers, 1947-1957 (MS Am 1857). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aNewhall, Beaumont,d1908-1993. 0aPhotographyxHistoriography. 7aArticles.2aat 7aBibliographies.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aArt historians.2lcsh 7aMuseum curators.2lcsh 7aPhotographers.2lcsh1 aAbbott, Berenice,d1898-tPhotography today and tomorrow.1 aReyher, Ferdinand,ecorrespondent.2 aGeorge Eastman House.2 aInternational Museum of Photography at George Eastman House.0 cGift;aErnst Halberstadt;b261 Upland Rd., Newton, Massachusetts;d1969 August;e69M-112.5hou1 aGift of Ernst Halberstadt, 1969.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 185701759cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004000124245007200164300002700236351003900263545006600302520030900368555008700677555010900764524012200873546001600995600002801011600003401039600004001073650003901113700004001152700002201192700003401214541005301248561004301301506004201344852002301386000601867-X20121203084308.0860416i19201937mau eng d0 aocn1225750071 aMAHV86-A167 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aSedgwick, Henry Dwight,d1861-1957.10aHenry Dwight Sedgwick letters to Mabel Hooper La Farge,f1920-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSedgwick was an American essayist, biographer, and historian. aConsists of 55 letters by Sedgwick to Mabel Hooper La Farge, together with one letter from Ellery Sedgwick to Mabel Hooper La Farge and one letter from Thomas La Farge to Henry Dwight Sedgwick. Sedgwick's letters are often concerned with questions of religious belief as well as his travels and writings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010718 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-102. aHenry Dwight Sedgwick Letters to Mabel Hooper La Farge, 1920-1957 (MS Am 1836). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLa Farge, Mabel,d1875-10aSedgwick, Ellery,d1872-1960.10aSedgwick, Henry Dwight,d1861-1957. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century.1 aLa Farge, Mabel,d1875-erecipient.1 aLa Farge, Thomas.1 aSedgwick, Ellery,d1872-1960.0 cGift;aL. Bancel La Farge;d1969;e68M-102.5HOU1 aGift of L. Bancel La Farge, 1969.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 183602009cpc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110002500123245005300148300002700201545014100228520036200369555008700731524009200818546001600910600004800926600004600974610002501020610003301045650002801078650004101106650001601147655002201163656003501185656001901220656002601239700003901265700003901304700005701343710004201400541005501442561002501497506004201522852002301564000601875-020100305085634.0860417i19241943mau eng d0 aocn6123670661 aMAHV86A174 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aEdgar H. Wells & Co.10aEdgar H. Wells & Co. correspondence,f1924-1943. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEdgar Huidekoper Wells (1875-1938; A.B. 1897) operated Edgar H. Wells and Company, a rare book shop in New York City, from 1921 to 1938. aCCorrespondence concerning book purchases with various booksellers and customers, and a stock inventory. Also includes correspondence between Geoffrey G. L. Gomme, an employee of Edgar H. Wells & Co., and Harvard professor James Buell Munn regarding book requests. Also contains letters concerning Flora V. Livingston's Bibliography of the works of Kipling.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00299 aEdgar H. Wells & Co. Correspondence (MS Am 1882). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936vBibliography.10aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-20aEdgar H. Wells & Co.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aBibliographyzEnglandy20th century. 0aRare books. 7aInventories.2aat 7aAntiquarian booksellers.2lcsh 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aBibliographers.2lcsh1 aGomme, Geoffrey G. L.,erecipient.1 aMunn, James Buell,ecorrespondent.1 aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938,ecorrespondent.2 aEdgar H. Wells & Co.,ecorrespondent.0 aUnknown.dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5hou1 aSource unknown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 188202468cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100003300136245007600169300002700245351002900272545014700301520052800448555008700976555010801063524011501171600002101286610003001307650005901337655001901396655001901415655002001434655002501454655004501479655002001524656002301544700004701567700003601614700004501650541016101695561012501856506004201981852002302023000601880-720110114105741.0860421i19301971mau eng d0 aocn1225205021 aMAHV86A179 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-4581 aCairnie, Gordon,erecipient.10aLetters to Gordon Cairnie from Conrad Aiken and Ezra Pound,f1930-1971. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aCairnie (1896-1973) was the proprietor of the Grolier Book Shop in Cambridge, Mass. Cairnie founded the shop, specializing in poetry, in 1927. aCollection contains letters written to book collector and seller Gordon Cairne from Conrad Aiken, Ezra Pound, and Dorothy Pound. These letters mostly are requests for books that they wish to buy from Cairne, and also concern how much money they owe the bookseller. Letters also discuss the bookselling business. The collection also contains limericks written for Cairne by Aiken, a Hallmark card with a poem written by Aiken, many postcards, a musical program, an invitation, newspaper clippings about books, and a cartoon.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-68. aLetters to Gordon Cairnie from Conrad Aiken and Ezra Pound (MS Am 1897). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCairnie, Gordon.20aGrolier Poetry Book Shop. 0aBooksellers and booksellingzMassachusettszCambridge. 7aPrograms.2aat 7aCartoons.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aGreeting cards.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aBooksellers.2lcsh1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aPound, Dorothy,ecorrespondent.1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aEstate of Gordon C. Cairnie;bc/o Arthur Freeman, 4 Trowbridge Place, Cambridge MA 02138;d16 Nov. 1973;e73M-68;h$2,000.00 Friends of HCL.5hou1 aPurchased with assistance from the Friends of the Harvard College Library, from the estate of Gordon Cairnie, 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 189701786cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245006000158300002700218351002900245545018800274520022700462555008700689555010900776524010100885600003500986650002801021650002101049650003501070656002601105700002001131710002101151710002901172740002601201541009001227561004001317506004201357852002501399000601911-020110114092713.0860505i19501953mau eng d0 aocn6123674411 aMAHV86A206 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959.10aBernard Berenson additional correspondence,f1950-1953. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aBerenson, an art historian and leading authority on Italian Renaissance painting, was born in Lithuania, grew up in Boston, and from 1900 lived in his Villa I Tatti, outside Florence. aContains correspondence between the publisher, Simon and Schuster, the literary agent, Brandt & Brandt, and Berenson's secretary, Nicky Mariano, concerning the publication of Berenson's war-time diary Rumor and reflection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005948 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-104. aBernard Berenson Additional Correspondence (MS Am 1801.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aLiterary agents. 0aWorld war, 1939-1945xDiaries. 7aArt historians.2lcsh1 aMariano, Nicky.2 aBrandt & Brandt.2 aSimon and Schuster, Inc.0 aRumor and reflection.0 cGift;aBrandt & Brandt;b101 Park Ave., New York NY 10017;dDec. 1971;e75M-104.5hou1 aGift of Brandt & Brandt, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1801.101787cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004200123245003700165300002700202545014000229520021400369555008700583555011300670524010000783600004200883610003300925630001900958650003200977650002701009651005001036655005701086655001801143656001901161656002301180700005201203541007801255561006901333852002301402000601914-520041220093707.0860505i18761900mau eng d0 aocn1225812651 aMAHV86A209 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEverett, Charles Carroll,d1829-1900.00kLetters and diaries,f1876-1900. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEverett was an American theologian and Bussey Professor of Theology at Harvard (1869-1900) and dean of the Divinity School (1878-1900). aContains letters to Nicholas Paine Gilman, concerning The New World, a quarterly journal of philosophy and religion edited by Everett and Gilman. Also includes diaries of European trips and a commonplace book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016828 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-231-233. aCharles Carroll Everett Letters and Diaries (MS Am 1963). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEverett, Charles Carroll,d1829-1900.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.40aThe New world. 0aChristianityy19th century. 0aTheologyxPeriodicals. 0aEuropexDescription and travely19th century. 7aCommonplace bookszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh 7aTheologians.2lcsh1 aGilman, Nicholas Paine,d1849-1912,erecepient. cTransfer;aAndover-Harvard Theological Library;d1950;e49M-231-233.5hou aTransferred from Andover-Harvard Theological Library, 1950.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 196302235cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003700124245006700161300002700228351003900255545015700294520048900451555008700940555010801027524012201135546001601257600002501273600002001298650003901318650002001357650004001377650001501417655002001432655002201452655002201474656001901496700003301515700004901548700005201597541005401649561004501703506004201748852002301790000601917-X20111220084930.0860505i19241963mau eng d0 aocn1226092621 aMAHV86-A211 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFink, Frances Sharf,erecipient.10aFrances Sharf letters from various correspondents,f1924-1963. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aFrances Sharf Fink, an author, has written on art and been an editor at the Jewish Advocate. Her husband, Nathan H. Fink, was a dentist in Boston, Mass. aChiefly contains personal letters to the Finks, especially from musicologist and pianist, Nicolas Slonimsky, and author, critic, and editor, Isaac Goldberg. Also includes some letters to Goldberg concerning his writings (which included work on music, Spanish, Portuguese, and Yiddish literature), H.L. Mencken, George Gershwin and others; a notebook and sheet music by Slonimsky; a memorial to Goldberg; and photographs and clippings of Frances Fink, Goldberg, Mencken, and Slonimsky.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-61. aFrances Sharf Fink Letters from Various Correspondents, 1924-1963 (MS Am 1954). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFink, Frances Sharf.10aFink, Nathan H. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aJews, American. 0aMusiczUnited Statesy20th century. 0aMusicians. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSheet music.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aFink, Nathan N.,erecipient.1 aGoldberg, Isaac,d1887-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aSlonimsky, Nicolas,d1894-1995,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Edgar R. Taylor;d1978;e77M-61;5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Edgar R. Taylor, 1978.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 195401822cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004000123245007100163300002700234351020800261545005700469520022900526524011000755555008700865555010800952600001901060600004001079650003901119655002701158655004901185655001601234655004501250541006401295561006001359506004201419852002301461000601926-920110114085148.0860507i18241898mau eng d0 aocn1224687771 aMAHV86A219 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.10aOliver Wendell Holmes correspondence and compositions,f1824-1898. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Oliver Wendell Holmes; II. Letters from Oliver Wendell Holmes; III. Other letters; IV. Compositions by Oliver Wendell Holmes; and V. Other compositions. aHolmes was an essayist, poet and teacher of anatomy. aConsists of correspondence of Oliver Wendell Holmes (together with other family letters), manuscripts of poems and other short writings, notes, a few business papers, and clippings. Letters by Holmes are mostly draft copies. aOliver Wendell Holmes Correspondence and Compositions (MS Am 1937). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005678 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-49.30aHolmes family.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aClippingszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cTransfer;aHarvard Law School Library;d1977;e76M-49.5hou1 aTransferred from Harvard Law School Library, 1977.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 193702011cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245006300158300002700221351007600248545012300324520020600447555008700653555010800740524011900848546001600967600003500983600006101018600004601079600002401125610003301149650003901182650003501221655002001256655002201276656001701298656005001315700003601365541009301401561004201494506004201536852002301578000601975-720100305085001.0860521i19671981mau eng d0 aocn1225205161 aMAHV86A264 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979.10aLetters to Maryette Charlton and other papers,f1967-1981. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author, followed by miscellaneous materials. aBishop was an American poet and taught at Harvard University (1974-1978). She won a Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1956. aConsists chiefly of letters written by Bishop while living in Brazil to the filmmaker Maryette Charlton. Also includes notes, photographs of Bishop, clippings, a postcard, and copies of The New Yorker.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002948 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1982-1983, under *82M-38. aElizabeth Bishop Letters to Maryette Charlton and Other Papers (MS Am 2001). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979.10aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979xHomes and hauntszBrazil.10aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979vPortraits.10aCharlton, Maryette.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh 7aMotion picture producers and directors.2lcsh1 aCharlton, Maryette,erecipient.0 cGift;aMaryette Charlton;b77 Seventh Ave., New York, NY 10011;dMay 1983;e82M-38.5hou1 aGift of Maryette Charlton, 1983.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 200102495cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003300122245006000155300002700215351016600242545014800408520038900556555008700945555010901032524011701141581008201258546001601340600004101356600003301397650002501430651005201455651003601507655002401543655002201567655001801589656002101607700003001628541012801658561023701786506004202023852003202065000602014-320130122102223.0860128i18221839mau eng d0 aocn1224120491 aMAHV86A30 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852.10aDaniel Webster and Caroline Webster papers,f1822-1839. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1462: Mr. W. and I; II. MS Am 1462.1: Calling cards; and III. MS Am 1462.2: Letters to Daniel and Caroline Webster. aWebster was an American statesman and lawyer. During the 1839 European trip documented in this collection, he was a senator from Massachusetts. aContains letters and invitations from prominent Britons that Webster and his wife Caroline LeRoy Webster received while visiting England in 1839; the journal she kept of their tour; and an album of engraved invitations and calling cards also from their European trip. Also includes a few letters Caroline Webster wrote to her sister and other LeRoy family members before her marriage.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012668 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-270. aDaniel Webster and Caroline Webster Papers, 1822-1839 (MS Am 1462-1462.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCaroline Webster's journal was published in 1942 under the title: Mr. W. & I. aIn English.10aWebster, Caroline LeRoy,d1797-1882.10aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852. 0aVoyages and travels. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 7aVisting cards.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aStatesmen.2lcsh1 aLeroy family,erecipient.0 cGift;.aThe Corporation of Harvard University;d1943 September 30;e43M-181, 43M-184, 55M-270 (recat. fr 43M-182-183).5hou1 aGift of Helena Hall Smith to the Women's Division of the Cambridge War Finance Committee of the Third War Loan Drive, 1943, awarded by the committee to the Harvard Corporation which presented them to the Houghton Library, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1462-1462.202082cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122100004400135245009800179300002700277351003900304545012900343520038800472555008700860555010900947524011701056546001601173650002701189600003201216651005501248651003901303700003101342700002701373700003801400700003901438700003301477700003101510541005301541561002501594506004201619852002301661000602194-820111220092802.0860129i18511898mau eng d0 aocn1225057581 aMAHV86A39 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-4631 aCarter, Robert,d1819-1879,erecipient.10aRobert Carter letters from various correspondents,f1851-1898 (inclusive),g1851-1862 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCarter was an editor and author and an active figure in the Free Soil and Republican parties in Massachusetts in the 1850's. aLetters to Robert Carter chiefly relating to his political and anti-slavery activities in Massachusetts in the 1850's and his journalistic work. Includes 15 letters from Charles Sumner and 10 letters from Henry Wilson. Also includes an 1891 letter from Charles Eliot Norton to his wife Susan N. Carter and an 1898 letter from Edward Everett Hale to J. L. Carter, Robert Carter's son.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007878 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-215. aRobert Carter Letters from Various Correspondents, 1851-1898 (MS Am 1640). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aAntislavery movements.10aCarter, Robert,d1819-1879. 0aMassachusettsxPolitics and governmenty1775-1865. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1849-1877.1 aCarter, J. L.,erecipient.1 aCarter, Susan Nichols.1 aHale, Edward Everett,d1822-1909.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.1 aWilson, Henry,d1812-1875.0 cPurchase;aHarvey S. Teal;d1961;e60M-215.5HOU1 aPurchase, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 164002146cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100005200121245008300173300002700256351006100283545020600344520035600550555008700906555010900993524013301102546001601235600004801251600003301299600004001332610003001372630002601402650003901428650001301467650002801480700004801508700003301556541005801589561004801647506004201695852002301737000602205-720131007120933.0860102i18861901mau eng d0 aocn1224688231 aMAHV86A4 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902,erecipient.10aHorace E. Scudder letters from Margaret Deland and Agnes Repplier,f1886-1901. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author, then chronologically. aMargaret Deland was a novelist and short story writer. Agnes Repplier was an essayist. Horace E. Scudder was an editor with Houghton, Mifflin and Company and editor of The Atlantic Monthly (1890-1898). aIncludes 26 letters from Margaret Deland, one letter from Lucy Derby (writing for Deland), and 55 letters from Agnes Repplier. Also includes four letters from Deland to Grace Owen Scudder. The letters are concerned chiefly with contributions to The Atlantic Monthly by Deland and Repplier and to their books published by Houghton, Mifflin and Company.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012228 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-154. aHorace E. Scudder Letters from Margaret Deland and Agnes Repplier, 1886-1901 (MS Am 1464). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDeland, Margaret Wade Campbell,d1857-1945.10aRepplier, Agnes,d1855-1950.10aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.20aHoughton Mifflin Company.40aThe Atlantic Monthly. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aEditors. 0aAuthors and publishers.1 aDeland, Margaret Wade Campbell,d1857-1945.1 aRepplier, Agnes,d1855-1950.0 cGift;aMrs. Ingersoll Bowditch;d1957;e56M-154.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Ingersoll Bowditch, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 146401773cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100004700136245005800183300002600241500001700267520037100284524010700655545033800762546006501100600004701165651005301212651007001265655003001335541005201365561004401417852002201461000602220-020130910120718.0860730i18241835mau eng d0 aocn6123709771 aMAHV86A412 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aHowe, S. G.q(Samuel Gridley),d1801-1876.10aSamuel Gridley Howe letters and journals,f1824-1835. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aThis collection concerns Howe's involvement in the struggle of the Greeks against Turkey. Consisting of four journals, 1825-1829, and letters written mostly to his father or his friend William S. Sampson, the papers describe the war in Greece, Howe's experiences in the Greek navy, and his reconstruction work, including his efforts to raise material aid in the U.S. aSamuel Gridley Howe Letters and Journals, 1824-1835 (MS Am 781). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aHumanitarian crusader for many causes including Greek freedom, education for the disabled, prison reform, abolition, and black suffrage, Howe founded the Perkins School for the Blind and was the chairman of the Massachusetts Board of State Charities. When just out of the Harvard Medical School, he went to Greece as an army surgeon. aHowe's letters to the Greek government are mostly in French.10aHowe, S. G.q(Samuel Gridley),d1801-1876. 0aGreecexHistoryyWar of Independence, 1821-1829. 0aGreecexHistoryyWar of Independence, 1821-1829xCivilian relief. 7aJournals (notebooks)2aat cGift;aMrs. Henry Richards;d1922 June 27.5hou aGift of Mrs. Henry Richards, 1922.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 78101196cpcaa2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102245004900123300002700172520020100199555008700400524009900487546001600586651005000602651007100652656002000723541007700743561005700820506004200877852002300919000602239-120130204135609.0860130i18611864mau eng d0 aocn1226093011 aMAHV86-A43 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aUnited States Civil War letters,f1861-1864. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLetters written during the U.S. Civil War by various Confederate and Union soldiers and civilians, some anonymous. Includes 32 letters from a Union soldier in the Louisiana campaign to his family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01357 aUnited States Civil War Letters, 1861-1864 (MS Am 1626). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xPersonal narratives. 7aSoldiers.2lcsh0 cGift;aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various dates.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 162603712ctcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002100121110011000142245012900252300002700381351010500408545043300513545039800946520061301344555008701957524017002044546001602214544008702230600002202317610008502339610006802424651005502492651004502547650001402592650004702606650003602653650002002689655002502709655001702734655002002751655003402771655004402805655001902849655002002868655001702888655001802905700002202923710006802945541005103013561005103064506004203115852002503157000602245-620110330123444.0r|||||||||||||||||860805i18941902mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn6123718761 aMAHV86A435 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women. Newton Branch Committee.10aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women Newton Branch Committee records,f1894-1902. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Printed material. aThe Massachusetts Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women was formed on May 21, 1895 to "increase public interest in the great question of the extension of Suffrage to women, and to stimulate public opinion in opposition to it." This group was also known as Massachusetts Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage to Women and later known as Women’s Anti-Suffrage Association of Massachusetts. aThe parent association encouraged local groups to form and the Newton Branch Committee was formed by Newton resident Harriet Hodges Stone (Mrs. Lincoln R. Stone). Her husband, Lincoln Ripley Stone (born 1833 in Maine), was a physician with offices in Newton. Harriet Stone was born in October of 1834 in Salem, Massachusetts, and after marriage was identified in the census as "keeping house." aCorrespondence concerns the business of the Newton Branch and also of the larger Association, primarily with Harriet H. Stone and Helen Mansfield. Compositions include journal entries made by Stone about her daily activities for the Association ca.1898, manuscript lists of names contacted for the group, receipts, and other materials. Also includes leather wallets used to house diaries. Printed materials concern the Association and include: annual reports, bylaws; forms; form letters; lists of members; and leaflets, fliers and pamphlets printed by the group to lobby for their views on women's suffrage.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02149 aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women Newton Branch Committee Records (MS Am 800.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aRecords also held by the Schlesinger Library and Massachusetts Historical Society.10aStone, Harriet H.20aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women.20aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage. 0aMassachusettsxPolitics and governmenty1865-1950. 0aNewton (Mass.)xPolitics and government. 0aLobbying. 0aWomenzMassachusettsxSocieties and clubs. 0aWomenxSuffragezMassachusetts. 0aWomen's rights. 7aAnnual reports.2aat 7aBylaws.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aFliers (printed matter).2aat 7aJournals (accounts)y19th century.2aat 7aLeaflets.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aRealia.2aat 7aWallets.2aat1 aStone, Harriet H.2 aMassachusetts Association Opposed to the Extension of Suffrage.0 cGift;aMrs. Charles F. Batchelder;d1930.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Charles F. Batchelder, 1930.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.1002459cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245006500162300002700227545034900254520037600603555008700979524011701066546001601183600003901199600001701238650003501255651004901290651005101339655004501390655002301435700004101458700004701499700002901546700004701575541011601622561027801738506004202016852002702058000602253-720130312085740.0860807i18451872mau eng d0 aocn1225812941 aMAHV86A442 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell letters to the Howe family,f1845-1872. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited The Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, The North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aContains letters to the Howe family, including dinner invitations, family news, and a description of a woman whom Lowell was in love with and wanted to marry. Lowell also describes his travels in Italy and Germany. Collection contains various poems, including To the False One, manuscript Versus for the Burns Centenary, and a bill of fare for a dinner in Lowell's honor.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01479 aJames Russell Lowell Letters to the Howe Family, 1845-1872 (MS Am 183.32). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.30aHowe family. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aItalyxDescription and travely19th century. 0aGermanyxDescription and travely19th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aBill of fare.2aat1 aHowe, Estes,d1814-1887,erecipient.1 aHowe, Lois Lilley,d1864-1964,erecipient.3 aHowe family,erecipient.1 aLowell, Maria,d1821-1853,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aLois Lilley Howe;b2 Appleton St., Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1936 August 17;eno accession number.5HOU1 aPresented to Harvard College on the occasion of its Tercentenary celebration in memory of Estes Howe (A.B. 1832; M.D. 1835) and his wife Lois Lilly Howe and their sons Samuel Howe (A.B. 1871) and James Robbins Howe (A.B. 1881) by their daughter Lois Lilley Howe, 1936.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 183.3202038cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103110002800124245006300152300002700215351008200242545007700324520039600401555008700797524011500884546001600999610003501015630007101050650003901121650002601160650003101186655002801217655002601245656001901271700005601290700003201346700005601378541006301434561004101497506004201538852007201580000602256-120130910122437.0860807i18541859mau eng d0 aocn1225209871 aMAHV86-A445 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aDix, Edwards & Company.10aDix, Edwards & Company letters and agreements,f1854-1859. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other papers. aDix, Edwards & Company were the publishers of Putnam's Monthly Magazine. aConsists of letters chiefly to Joshua A. Dix, mainly concerning Putnam's Monthly Magazine. Includes 78 letters from George William Curtis, who served as associate editor of the magazine and became a partner in the firm in 1857; letters from Frederick Law Olmsted, who was also a partner; and letters from contributors. Also includes partnership agreements, blank checks, and a business card.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00666 aDix, Edwards & Company Letters and Agreements, 1854-1859 (MS Am 800.13). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aDix, Edwards & Company (firm).00aPutnam's monthly magazine of American literature, science and art. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican periodicals. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892,ecorrespondent.1 aDix, Joshua A.,erecipient.1 aOlmsted, Frederick Law,d1822-1903,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aWarren R. Dix;d1936;eno accession number.5HOU1 aBequest of Warren R. Dix, 1936.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.13zSee internal file for additional information.02192cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245004000157300002700197351008500224545047900309520045200788524008901240530006201329555008701391546001601478600003401494650001701528650001201545650001501557650001501572650002201587655002001609655001901629656002501648541004401673561003701717506004201754852002201796000602287-120130910115847.0860818i18981915mau eng d0 aocn6123728381 aMAHV86A473 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFletcher, Horace,d1849-1919.10aHorace Fletcher papers,f1898-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other materials. aFletcher, an American businessman, was best known for his writing and lectures on popular nutrition. His major innovation in eating habits, called Fletcherism, prescribed eating in small amounts only when hungry and chewing food thoroughly. He was president of the Health and Efficiency League of America, subsidized research on nutrition, and worked in Belgium during World War I teaching refugees his system of vital economics: how to make the most of their scant rations. aCollection consists primarily of letters by Fletcher, mostly carbon copies, concerning his studies and writings in nutrition, exercise, and health. Includes correspondence with various professors, doctors, and publishers. Also contains a few lectures, a memorandum of a plan to enlist government aid in promoting Fletcherism, and a scattering of questionnaires, clippings, printed circulars, and other material on nutrition, health and efficiency. aHorace Fletcher Papers, 1898-1915 (MS Am 791). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00218 aIn English.10aFletcher, Horace,d1849-1919. 0aFood habits. 0aHealth. 0aIngestion. 0aNutrition. 0aPhysical fitness. 7aClippings.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aNutritionists.2lcsh0 cGift;aW.D. Orcutt;d1921 Jan. 11.5hou1 aGift of W. D. Orcutt, 1921.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 79101633cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245003700153300002700190545005700217520019500274555008700469555010900556524008700665546001600752600003100768650003900799650003500838650003100873655004500904655005300949656001701002700003701019541008601056561007601142506004201218852002301260000602294-420111220092708.0860131i19041905mau eng d0 aocn1224689201 aMAHV86A48 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKilmer, Joyce,d1886-1918.10aJoyce Kilmer papers,f1904-1905. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aKilmer was an American poet who died in World War I. aContains mostly poems, also a few letters, and two short stories that appeared in The Targum, a college publication. Most of the material is addressed to Kilmer's friend, Sarah Flagler Cary.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-160. aJoyce Kilmer Papers, 1904-1905 (MS Am 1643). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKilmer, Joyce,d1886-1918. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aCollege stories, American. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aShort storieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aCary, Sarah Flagler,erecipient.0 cGift;aElizabeth B. Cushmah and Mrs. William A. Evans, Jr.;d1961;e60M-160.5HOU1 aGift of Elizabeth B. Cushman and Mrs. William A. Evans, Jr., 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 164301599cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003000121245006700151300002700218351003900245545005600284520023900340555008700579555010900666524008600775546001600861600003000877650003200907651005500939655002600994656002301020700002901043541008801072561003601160506004201196852002301238000602316-920120502111517.0860103i17921876mau eng d0 aocn6123732271 aMAHV86A5 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aUpham, Jabez,d1764-1811.10aJabez Upham papers,f1792-1876 (inclusive),g1802-1810 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aUpham was a U.S. representative from Massachusetts. aContains correspondence; the bulk is letters, 1803-1810, that Upham wrote to his wife, Lucy Franklin Upham, while he was in Congress. Also includes legal documents and letters to him from others pertaining mainly to political matters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1944-1945, under *44M-433. aJabez Upham Papers, 1792-1876 (MS Am 1494). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aUpham, Jabez,d1764-1811. 0aLegislatorszUnited States. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1801-1809. 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aLegislators.2lcsh1 aUpham, Lucy,erecipient.0 cGift;aRoland Gray;b36 Larch Road, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1945;e44M-433.5HOU1 aGift of Roland Gray, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 149402957cpc a2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004300123245006600166300002700232351025600259545003600515520055300551555008701104555011301191524012201304546001601426600003101442610004801473650002301521650006901544650002901613650001601642650003901658650003501697650003801732650003401770650005501804650005501859651005001914651005101964651004902015655003802064655001602102655002002118700003602138700003802174700004202212541008802254561002602342506004202368852002902410000602379-720130204141801.0860911i19161936mau eng d0 aocn1224194571 aMAHV86A525 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCournos, John,d1881-1966,erecipient.10aJohn Cournos letters from various correspondents,f1916-1936. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Eng 998: Letters from Richard Aldington; II. bMS Eng 998.1: Letters from H. D. (Hilda Doolittle); III. bMS Eng 998.2: Letters from John Gould Fletcher; IV. bMS Eng 998.3: Compositions by John Gould Fletcher. aCournos was an American author. aCollection contains letters written to John Cournos from Richard Aldinton, his wife H. D. (Hilda Doolittle), and friend John Gould Fletcher. Letters discuss love between friends and marital troubles, depression, and Aldinton's life in the military as a officer in the Devonshire Regiment. Letters also discuss writing and publishing, traveling around Europe, living in Paris, personal finance, and life during World War II in Europe. The collection also contains several poems and literary manuscripts written by John Gould Fletcher, and postcards.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013778 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-291-303. aJohn Cournos Letters from Various Correspondents, 1916-1936 (MS Eng 998-998.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCournos, John,d1881-1966.20aGreat Britain.bArmy.dDevonshire Regimant. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aInterpersonal Relations. 0aDepression. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918zEuropexPersonal narratives. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xEuropexPersonal narratives. 0aEuropexDescription and travely20th century. 0aFrancexSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aItalyxDescription and travely20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat1 aAldington, Richard,d1892-1962.1 aFletcher, John Gould,d1886-1950.1 aH. D.q(Hilda Doolittle),d1886-1961.0 cPurchase;aCollectors' Bookshop;d1938;e54M-291-303;hNo price or fund given.5hou1 aPurchased, 1938.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 998-998.301583cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005400123245010200177300002700279545005400306520016600360555008700526555010900613524015300722600005400875650002700929651005000956651003401006700003501040700003601075541005101111561004101162506004201203852002401245000602399-120121109122934.0860916i19291950mau eng d0 aocn1223726491 aMAHV86A543 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKosambi, D. D.q(Damodar Dharmanand),d1907-1966.10aD. D. (Damodar Dharmanand) Kosambi letters to Robert J. Conklin and Agnes E. Conklin,f1929-1950. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aKosambi ws an Indian mathematician and physicist. aConsists of 39 letters from Kosambi to Prof. Conklin or to his wife Agnes commenting on his personal life, academic career, and the political situation in India.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-239. aD. D. (Damodar Dharmanand) Kosambi Letters to Robert J. Conklin and Agnes E. Conklin, 1929-1950 (MS Eng 1176). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKosambi, D. D.q(Damodar Dharmanand),d1907-1966. 0aMathematicianszIndia. 0aIndiaxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 0aIndiaxHistoryy20th century.1 aConklin, Agnes E.,erecipient.1 aConklin, Robert J.,erecipient.0 cGift;aAgnes E. Conklin;d1961;e61M-239.5hou1 aGift of Agnes E. Conklin, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 117601699cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002400123245007700147300002700224545005200251520033500303555008700638555010900725524012900834546001600963600002400979600003401003650003901037700006101076700005201137541008401189561004301273506004201316852002701358000602451-320130102085947.0860926i18961930mau eng d0 aocn6123752571 aMAHV86A590 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAllen, Mary Adèle.10aMary Adèle Allen correspondence concerning Emily Dickinson,f1896-1930. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAllen was possibly a resident of Amherst, Mass. aCorrespondence between Mary Adèle Allen and MacGregor Jenkins concerning Jenkins' work, Emily Dickinson as friend and neighbor, along with one letter from Lavinia Dickinson to Allen. Note: Pictures, clippings, and printed ephemera received with this material have been placed with similar items in the Emily Dickinson collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011438 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-218. aMary Adèle Allen Correspondence Concerning Emily Dickinson, 1896-1930 (MS Am 1118.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAllen, Mary Adèle.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aDickinson, Lavinia Norcross,d1833-1899,ecorrespondent.1 aJenkins, MacGregor,d1869-1940,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Grant Squires;b105 E. 67th St., New York NY;d1954;e54M-218.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Grant Squires, 1954.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1118.601224cpcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245005800153300002700211351004200238545004300280520012500323555008700448524009700535600003000632655004400662700004100706541007700747561005700824506004200881852002300923000602454-820110114104403.0860926i18361888mau eng d0 aocn1226136331 aMAHV86A593 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLear, Edward,d1812-1888.10aEdward Lear miscellaneous correspondence,f1836-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aLear was an English artist and author. aContains letters, mostly personal, some illustrated, by Lear to various correspondents, including several to John Gould.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00630 aEdward Lear Miscellaneous Correspondence (MS Eng 797). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLear, Edward,d1812-1888. 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc1 aGould, John,d1804-1881,erecipient.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 79701708cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003000121245004100151300002700192545010500219520019200324555008700516555011900603524010100722600004200823600003000865650003900895650003500934655002300969655003800992655002201030655002201052655001601074655002001090655002701110656001701137740001501154541007501169561005501244852002301299000602473-420050206191708.0860219s1947 mau eng d0 aocm861438061 aMAHV86A61 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEberhart, Richard,d1904-00kPapersbconcerning Burr oaks,f1947. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEberhart is an American poet who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1966 and the National Book Award in 1977. aContains autograph manuscript and typescript drafts of poems, a printers' copy, page proofs, dust jackets and portrait photographs of Eberhard for the publication of his Burr oaks (1947).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-211, *60M-188. aRichard Eberhart Papers Concerning Burr Oaks (MS Am 1642). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEberhart, Richard,d1904-vPortraits.10aEberhart, Richard,d1904- 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aBook jackets.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPrinters' proofs.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh02aBurr oaks. cDeposit;aWoodberry Poetry Room;dSpring 1961;e60M-211, 60M-188.5hou aDeposited by the Woodberry Poetry Room, 1961.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 164201559cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002900123245004900152300002700201545003300228520024800261555008700509524009800596600002900694610004600723650003900769650003500808655002000843655002200863655001600885656001600901700006800917700005300985541004901038561005701087506004201144852002301186000602514-520111018110009.0860221i19151925mau eng d0 aocn1226136511 aMAHV86-A73 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.10aAmy Lowell miscellaneous papers,f1915-1925. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLowell was an American poet. aLetters, manuscripts of poems, clippings, and photographs. Includes 4 letters to William Sumner Appleton and 11 letters to Eleanor Robson Belmont. Also includes 5 photographs of Sevenels, Amy Lowell's home in Brookline, Mass. and other papers.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01355 aAmy Lowell Miscellaneous Papers, 1915-1925 (MS Am 1597). Houghton Library, Harvard University10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.20aSevenels (Brookline, Mass.)vPhotographs. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aAppleton, William S.q(William Sumner),d1840-1903,erecipient.1 aBelmont, Eleanor Robson,d1879-1979,erecipient.0 cGift;avarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 159701581ntm a22002657a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100004800087245009000135300002700225545020700252520016500459520006800624524008200692600004800774630001600822650004200838655003600880656004000916700003700956541014500993561015301138852002401291002274518-120101105085541.0910715s1951 mau||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6124491981 aBrowne, E. Martinq(Elliott Martin),d1900-10aE. Martin Browne promptbook for The York Cycle of Mystery Plays :kmanuscript,f1951. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aThe York Cycle was staged and produced by E. Martin Browne for the Festival of Britain in 1951; it was the first staging of the complete cycle since 1572. Ruth Thomson was the assistant to the producer. aDisbound printed text attached to pages of two copy books with manuscript annotations for cuts, cues, blocking, stage directions, music, and other instructions.8 aIncludes name Ruth Thomson inside front covers of both volumes. aMS Thr 579. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBrowne, E. Martinq(Elliott Martin),d1900-00aYork plays. 0aMysteries and miracle-plays, English. 7aPromptbooksy20th century.2aat 7aTheatrical producers and directors.1 aThomson, Ruth,eassociated name.0 cGift;aE. Martin Browne to Sr. Bernarda through Sherwood Collins;d1990;eno accession number; recataloged from TS Promptbook Br812.Y6.5hou1 aGiven by E. Martin Browne to Sr. Bernarda. Gift to Harvard Theatre Collection from Sr. Bernarda through the kindness of Sherwood Collins, 1990.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 57901441ckcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100003600120245005000156300002600206545004400232520010400276555008700380555011500467524008900582600003600671650002500707650002400732655005300756655005000809541015100859561006201010506004201072852002501114007482942-420121109121128.0030115s1805 mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm784115561 aMAHV03A5 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCruikshank, Isaac,d1756?-1811?10aIsaac Cruikshank drawings,f1805 and undated. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aCruikshank was an English caricaturist. aFour of the drawings are political cartoons; the other three form a series depicting hunting birds.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009948 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-688F-692F. aIsaac Cruikshank Drawings, 1805 (MS Eng 1065). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCruikshank, Isaac,d1756?-1811? 0aGame and game-birds. 0aPolitical cartoons. 7aCaricatures, Great Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawings, Great Britainy19th century.2gmgpc0 cPurchase;aYe Olde Antique and Hobby Shoppe;b914 Third Ave., New Yor City;d1944 May 17;e43M-688F-692F;h$40 (Friends of the Library Fund).5HOU1 aPurchase with the Friends of the Library Fund, 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 106501467cpc a2200325z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100005000124245005300174300002700227351005200254545004100306520019000347555008800537524009200625600003100717600005000748650003900798650003500837700003500872700003100907700003900938541004200977561005701019506004201076852002301118007529066-920110105073257.0860509i19571962mau eng d0 aocn6121984021 aMAHV86-A229 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings miscellaneous papers,f1957-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author or recipient. aE. E. Cummings was an American poet. aIncludes letters to Louisa Alger from Marion Morehouse Cummings and Elizabeth Cummings Qualey concerning the funeral of E. E. Cummings and other matters relating to the Cummings family.0 aElectronic finding aid available.uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00462 aE. E. Cummings Miscellaneous Papers (MS Am 1769). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAlger, Louisa,d1900-1995.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aMorehouse, Marion,d1906-1969.1 aAlger, Louisa,d1900-1995.1 aQualey, Elizabeth Cummings,d1901-0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 176901477nkcaa22003015a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245005700151300002700208351003100235545030200266520015100568524010100719546001600820600004300836650003400879655004500913655002100958650003500979650003101014655002101045541001801066506006801084852002301152007483071-620130515080258.0921103i18001899mau||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocn612194473 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJohnston, David Claypoole,d1799-1865.10aDavid Claypoole Johnston drawings and papers,f18--? a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aDavid Claypoole Johnston (1798–1865) was an 19th-century American cartoonist, printmaker, painter and actor from Boston, Massachusetts. He was the first natively trained American to master all the various graphic arts processes of lithography, etching, metal plate engraving, and wood engraving. a291 drawings in chalk, pencil, pen, and wash, on paper. Also includes 1 drawing on wood, some metal plates, engravings, letters, and other papers. aDavid Claypoole Johnston Drawings and Papers (MS Am 1608). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJohnston, David Claypoole,d1799-1865. 0aDomestic lifezUnited States. 7aDrawingsxAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravings.2aat 7aTheatrical productions.2lctgm 7aCity and town life.2lctgm 7aLandscapes.2aat0 e59M-260.5hou1 aRestricted: fragile; consult curatorial staff (Item (59)).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 160801988npcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004700122245006200169300002700231545009700258520025100355520008200606524010100688530006200789555008700851555010100938600003001039650003701069651005001106655002501156655001801181655002901199656002201228700004001250700003301290700003601323710005201359541005901411561005501470506004201525852002301567007529010-320110419143154.0970721i18561950mau eng d0 aocn6121982201 aMAHV97A17 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aHatch, Francis Whiting,d1925-ecollector.10aFrancis Whiting Hatch Noah Brooks Collection,f1856-1950. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBrooks was an American journalist, editor and author of historical fiction for young people. aBrooks materials include his diary (1856-1859), 2 autograph letters from Mary Todd Lincoln to Brooks (1865 and 1866), 3 stock certificates (1864), and Brooks' 1872 certificate of membership in the Independent Order of Odd Fellows (San Francisco). aCollection also includes letters by Charles Jarvis and Oliver Wendell Holmes. aFrancis Whiting Hatch Noah Brooks Collection (MS Am 2059). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001038 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1991-1992, under *91M-5.10aBrooks, Noah,d1830-1903. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aStock certificates.2aat 7aJournalists.2aat1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.1 aJarvis, Charles,d1788-1865.1 aLincoln, Mary Todd,d1818-1882.2 aIndependent Order of Odd FellowsbSan Francisco0 cGift;aFrancis Whiting Hatch, Jr.;d1992;e91M-5.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Francis Whiting Hatch, Jr., 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 205901739ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245006700161300002600228351003900254545009400293520022100387524010800608555008700716555010200803600003900905600001800944650005400962651003401016655002501050656002001075700002401095700004801119700004001167700004201207541005601249561004701305852002501352007529052-920090109133136.0970721i18981925mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6121983791 aMAHV97A20 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGreene, Roger Sherman,d1881-1947.10aRoger Sherman Greene additional papers, 1898-1925,f1898-1925. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aGreene was an American diplomat, foundation official, and medical administrator in China. aCorrespondence with members of Greene family and miscellany concerning the Japan earthquake of 1923. Correspondents include: Daniel Crosby Greene, Mary Jane Forbes Greene, Evarts Boutell Greene, and Katherine Greene. aRoger Sherman Greene Additional Papers, 1898-1925 (MS Am 1864.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000118 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-74.10aGreene, Roger Sherman,d1881-1947.30aGreen family. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, AmericanzChina. 0aJapanxHistoryy20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDiplomats.2aat1 aBarrett, Katherine.1 aGreene, D. C.q(Daniel Crosby),d1843-1913.1 aGreene, Evarts Boutell,d1870-1947.1 aGreene, Mary Jane Forbes,d1845-1910.0 cGift;aKatherine Greene Owens;d1987;e87M-74.5hou aGift of Katherine Greene Owens, 1987.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1864.202491ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245003700153300002700190351003900217545019600256520030400452520021900756520008700975524007701062555008701139555010201226600003101328650003901359650003701398655002501435656001801460700002901478700002701507700003501534700003701569700005401606700003301660700003101693700003201724700007201756541010001828561005101928506004201979852002402021007529091-X20090108090213.0970722i18941945mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6121984311 aMAHV97A22 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHarris, Frank,d1855-1931.10aFrank Harris papers,f1894-1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHarris was an Irish-born American novelist, biographer, journalist, editor, and playwright. He edited several literary journals including Vanity Fair, Saturday Review, and Pearson's Magazine. aIncludes correspondence, manuscripts, and printed materials. Correspondents include: John Burns, Nellie O'Hara Harris, C. Fred (Charles Frederick) Kenyon, Holbrook Jackson, Mitchell Kennerley, Grant Richards, Temple Scott, Martin Secker, Countess Frances Evelyn Maynard Greville Warwick, and others. aAlso includes holograph and typescript manuscripts, and galley proofs by Harris: Contemporary portraits (4th vol.); A fool's paradise; Jezebel's daughter; A straight flush; The ugly duckling; and The veils of Isis. aWith typescript manuscript by Grant Richards, [Frank Harris--biographical sketch]. aFrank Harris Papers (MS Eng 1376). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000878 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-67.10aHarris, Frank,d1855-1931. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aEditors.2aat1 aBurns, John,d1858-1943.1 aHarris, Nellie O'Hara.1 aJackson, Holbrook,d1874-1948.1 aKennerley, Mitchell,d1878-1950.1 aKenyon, C. Fredq(Charles Frederick),d1879-1926.1 aRichards, Grant,d1872-1948.1 aScott, Temple,d1864-1939.1 aSecker, Martin,d1882-1978.1 aWarwick, Frances Evelyn Maynard Greville,cCountess of,d1861-1938.0 cPurchase;aInterlibrum;bLiechtenstein;d1986;e86M-67;hAmy Lowell Fund ($7,500).5hou3Papers1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1986.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 137602060ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003500122245005200157300002700209351002900236545005800265520032100323555008700644555010300731524009400834546001600928600002100944600001800965600003500983600002001018650003901038650003901077650002101116650003701137650003701174650001501211655002501226655001601251700003101267700002801298700005301326700001801379700004201397541004601439561003801485506004201523852002501565007536630-420110325141005.0970724i18041937mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6121991051 aMAHV97A27 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chapman additional papers,f1804-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aChapman was an American essayist, poet, and reformer. aIncludes correspondence, land deeds, and manuscripts. Correspondents include Margaret Chanler Aldrich, Conrad Chapman, Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler Chapman, Jay Chapman, Charles Stewart Davison, and others. Many letters are condolences to Elizabeth and John Jay Chapman on the death of their son, Jay Chapman, in 1903.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1989-1990, under *89M-9. aJohn Jay Chapman Additional Papers (bMS Am 1854.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aChandler family.10aChapman, Jay.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.30aChapman family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetry. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aReformers. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat1 aAldrich, Margaret Chanler.1 aChapman, Conrad,d1896-1 aChapman, Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler,d1866-1937.1 aChapman, Jay.1 aDavison, Charles Stewart,d1855-1942.0 cGift;aRichard Stone;d1990;e89M-9.5hou1 aGift of Richard Stone, 1990.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1854.901416ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245005900154300002700213545006600240520018100306555008700487524011100574546001600685600003100701700003300732700005800765700005300823700004400876541007000920561005700990506004201047852002501089007960583-420130131122348.0031022i19141969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm796640021 aMAHV03-A351 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.10aConrad Aiken miscellaneous correspondence,f1914-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAiken was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. aChiefly letters written by Aiken to various correspondents, including several to Gordon Bassett, William Stanley Braithwaite, Alfred Claghorn Potter, Martin Secker, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01347 aConrad Aiken Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1914-1969 (MS Am 1422.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.1 aBassett, Gordon,erecipient.1 aBraithwaite, William Stanley,d1878-1962,erecipient.1 aPotter, Alfred Claghorn,d1867-1940,erecipient.1 aSecker, Martin,d1882-1978,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1422.301749ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100001800121245006400139300002700203520013700230524010600367555008700473555012300560600001800683650003900701655001800740700005900758700004600817700004600863700004800909541014300957541010801100561008201208561005301290506004201343852002601385007903123-420090109105143.0981002i18461916mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122157941 aMAHV98A6 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aJames family.10aJames family letters to various correspondents,f1846-1916. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLetters by various members of the James family, including Henry James Sr., Henry James, William James, and Alice Howe Gibbens James. aJames family Letters to Various Correspondents (MS Am 1237.18). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000038 aUnpublished print finding aids available in the Houghton Accessions Records for 1950-1951, under *51M-95 and *51M-125.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aLetters.2aat1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Henry,d1811-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase; gift;afrom Miss Florence Pertz; gift of Charleton R. Richmond,b220 Devonshire St., Boston, Massachusetts;d1951;e51M-95.5hou0 cGift;aProfessor Ralph Barton Perry;b985 Memorial Dr., Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1951;e51M-125.5hou1 aPurchased from Miss Florence Pertz; gift of Charleton R. Richmond, 1951.5hou1 aGift of Professor Ralph Barton Perry, 1951.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.1801573cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004900123245007500172300002700247351003900274520023500313524011600548555008700664555010900751600003700860651006100897655001600958656002800974700004601002700005301048541005301101561003801154506004201192852002501234008479430-520110209084000.0001005i18361892mau | eng d0 aocn1225601171 aMAHV00-A17 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887,erecipient.10aLetters to Dorothea Lynde Dix from various correspondents,f1836-1892. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aMostly letters addressed to and concerning social reformer Dorothea Lynde Dix. Includes only one letter from Dix, manuscript poem addressed to Dix from Pliny Earle, bills, letter from William Wordsworth to Dix, and other material. aLetters to Dorothea Lynde Dix from Various Correspondents (MS Am 1838.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007388 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-109.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xHospitals. 7aPoems.2aat 7aSocial reformers.2lcsh1 aEarle, Pliny,d1809-1892,ecorrespondent.1 aWordsworth, William,d1770-1850,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMiss Rosamund Lamb;d1971;e70M-109.5HOU1 aGift of Rosamund Lamb, 1971.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1838.201830cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004900123245007200172300002700244351003900271545029100310520009500601555008700696555010800783524012300891546001601014600003701030651006001067655001801127655002601145656002801171700004301199700004701242541007501289561004901364506004201413852002501455008479220-520121109123713.0001005i18611872mau eng d0 aocn6122454991 aMAHV00-A16 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887,erecipient.10aDorothea Lynde Dix letters from various correspondents,f1861-1872. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aDix was a humanitarian crusader for the mentally ill. She investigated the conditions of the hospitalized insane in many U.S. states and some European countries, and petitioned state and national legislatures for reforms. She was also superintendent of army nurses during the Civil War. aIncludes letter from Clara Barton and a military pass signed by President Abraham Lincoln.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010168 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-24. aDorothea Lynde Dix Letters from Various Correspondents, 1861-1872 (MS Am 1838.1). Houghton Library, Harvard Univesity. aIn English.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War 1861-1865xHospitals. 7aLetters.2aat 7aMilitary passes.2aat 7aSocial reformers.2lcsh1 aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865,esigner.1 aBarton, Clara,d1821-1912,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aGoodspeed's Book Shop;d1969;e69M-24;hDearborn Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Dearborn Fund, 1969.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1838.102013npcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087100004300103245008800146300002700234520034200261555008700603555011800690524012900808600003700937655001800974656002800992700002101020700001901041700003901060700003701099700004801136700002801184700002101212700005101233700005401284700005201338700002101390541010501411561004401516506004201560852002501602008478518-720090108133631.0001004i18761888mau||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6122454730 aocmMAHV01A01 aKennard, Caroline Augusta,erecipient.10aLetters sent to Caroline Augusta Kennard concerning Dorothea Lynde Dix,f1876-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLetters concerning humanitarian crusader, Dorothea Lynde Dix sent to Caroline Augusta Kennard. Includes letters from: Jane Alexander, A.L. Barnett, James Freeman Clarke, John Murray Forbes, Robert Bennet Forbes, Horatio Appleton Lamb, Mary S. Langley, William Henry Lyon, Andrew Preston Peabody, Samuel Edmund Sewall, and Edward Stearns.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000928 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room Accession Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-50. aLetters Sent to Caroline Augusta Kennard Concerning Dorothea Lynde Dix (MS Am 1838.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 7aLetters.2aat 7aSocial reformers.2lcsh1 aAlexander, Jane.1 aBarnett, A. L.1 aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888.1 aForbes, John Murray,d1813-1898.1 aForbes, R. B.q(Robert Bennet),d1804-1889.1 aLamb, Horatio Appleton.1 aLangley, Mary S.1 aLyon, William H.q(William Henry),d1846-1915.1 aPeabody, Andrew P.q(Andrew Preston),d1811-1893.1 aSewall, Samuel E.q(Samuel Edmund),d1799-1888.1 aStearns, Edward.0 cGift;aDr. John H. Kennard;b55 Liberty Hill Road, Bedford, N.H. 03102;d1981 October;e81M-50.5hou1 aGift of Dr. John H. Kennard, 1981.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1838.301564cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001900123245004600142300002700188351003900215545011500254520012300369555008700492555010600579524009800685600001900783600004000802630002200842630001200864650003900876655002800915656001900943730001200962541007900974561006601053506004201119852005301161008477978-020130910131712.0001004i18571888mau eng d0 aocn6122454371 aMAHV00-A15 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGodkin family.10aGodkin family correspondence,f1857-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEdwin Lawrence Godkin was an editor and political writer. He was the founder and first editor of "The Nation." aIncludes personal correspondence of E.L. Godkin and his family, and business papers from his time at the Evening Post.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005798 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-39. aGodkin Family Correspondence, 1857-1888 (MS Am 1083.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aGodkin family.10aGodkin, Edwin Lawrence,d1831-1902.40aThe Evening Post.00aNation. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh0 aNation.0 cPurchase;aMaurice Sagoff;d1977;e76M-39;h($75.00) P. D. Howe Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with P.D. Howe Fund from Maurice Sagoff, 1977.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1083.2zShelved with bMS Am 1083.102874ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002000122245007000142300002700212351008200239545088000321520056201201524007801763555008701841555011001928600002002038600004002058600003302098600002902131650002002160655002902180655001602209655001602225700003402241700002802275700002002303541005502323561004502378506004202423852002302465008615611-X20090129090239.0010501i18211935mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126980541 aMAHV01A13 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aHancock family.10aHancock family papers,f1821-1935 (inclusive),g1837-1856 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other papers. aPamelia (Goggin) Clemens (1775-1844) was married first to Samuel Clemens (d. 1805) and, after his death, to Simon Hancock of Adair County, Kentucky. Her son by her first marriage, John Marshall Clemens (1798-1847), was the father of American author Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain). Her children by her second marriage were: Ann Hill Hancock, Mary G. Hancock, Pamelia G. Hancock, and a son whose name is unknown. Ann Hill Hancock married William H. Saunders of England; they had a daughter, Mary Ann Pamela Xantippe (Tippy) and a son, James Saunders. When Ann died (ca. 1841) William Saunders married her sister, Mary G. Hancock. Mary Hancock Saunders is said to be the inspiration for her nephew Mark Twain's "Aunt Polly" in The adventures of Tom Sawyer. Pamelia and Simon Hancock's son (name unknown) was the father of Elsie Hancock, the donor, Paul E. Carrico's aunt. aCorrespondence of Hancock family members including two letters from John Marshall Clemens to his mother Pamelia (Goggin) Clemens Hancock as well as letters from Elsie Hancock to Paul E. Carrico discussing Mark Twain, Mary G. (Hancock) Saunders, and Mary Ann Pamela Xantippe Saunders. Non-correspondence materials include deeds for the family's land, William H.Saunder's certificate of citizenship, and Pamelia G. Hancock's will, among other items. These papers were gathered by Paul E. Carrico (apparently as research for a thesis at Notre Dame University). aHancock Family Papers (MS Am 2103). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 2000-2001, under *2000M-51.30aHancock family.10aSaunders, Mary Ann Pamela Xantippe.10aSaunders, Mary G. (Hancock).10aTwain, Mark,d1835-1910. 0aFamily records. 7aCitizenship papers.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aCarrico, Paul E.,ecollector.1 aClemens, John Marshall.1 aHancock, Elsie.0 cDeposit;aPaul E. Carrico;d1937;e*2000M-51.5hou1 aDeposited by Paul E. Carrico, 1937.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 210304022ctcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100110002400121245004400145300002700189351010100216545086800317520087501185524008302060544006302143555008702206555010502293610002402398650003902422650002802461650003102489655003002520655004602550655001702596655002502613700004502638700003202683700004002715700003102755700003802786700006402824700002102888700003102909700004702940710003202987710003003019506004603049852002303095541009203118561016403210541014203374008574230-920130930114440.0010301i18391881mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126918911 aMAHV01A7 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aTicknor and Fields.10aTicknor and Fields records,f1839-1881. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other papers. aTicknor and Fields of Boston, Massachusetts was the premier literary publishing house in the United States during the middle years of the nineteenth century. Ticknor and Fields originated in the firm of Allen and Ticknor established in 1832. The partners in Ticknor and Fields were William D. Ticknor (one of the partners in Allen and Ticknor) and James T. Fields, who entered the firm as a junior partner in 1843. Fields edited the Atlantic Monthly from 1861-1870. Fields was also a writer; his writings include: Poems (1849), Yesterdays with authors (1872), and Hawthorne (1876). In 1854, Fields married Annie Adams, an author, literary hostess, and social welfare worker. Ticknor and Fields became Fields, Osgood and Co. in 1868 when James R. Osgood joined the firm. After a series of changes, Fields, Osgood and Co. evolved into Houghton, Mifflin and Company. aPrimarily correspondence of James Thomas Fields, along with the correspondence of James R. Osgood and other Ticknor and Fields editors. Correspondents include Louis Agassiz, Lydia Maria Francis Child, George William Curtis, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, among other nineteenth-century literary figures. Some letters include cartes-de-visite of the correspondent. There is a small amount of correspondence among Ticknor and Fields authors as well as letters from Annie Fields. Compositions include autograph manuscript poems by Annie Fields, print and autograph manuscript poems by James Thomas Fields, and a partial autograph manuscript of George Stillman Hillard's Six months in Italy, among other items. Finally, there are royalty checks to various Ticknor and Fields authors, visiting cards of James Thomas Fields, and a cabinet photograph of an unidentified man. aTicknor and Fields Records (MS Am 2100). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFor other records of Ticknor and Fields, see MS Am 2030.2.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001068 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1998-1999, under *98M-2.20aTicknor and Fields. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aChecks.2aat 7aVisiting cards.2aat1 aChild,cMrs.q(Lydia Maria),d1802-1880.1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873.1 aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.1 aFields, Annie,d1834-1915.1 aFields, James Thomas,d1817-1881.1 aHillard, George Stillman,d1808-1879.tSix months in Italy.1 aOsgood, James R.1 aParton, James,d1822-1891.1 aWard, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps,d1844-1911.2 aFields, Osgood and Company.2 aHoughton Mifflin Company. aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 21000 cPurchase;aJ.W. Pye Rare Booksd2001 November 13;e2001M-31;hTeplow fund ($1520).5hou1 aPurchased with the Parkman D. Howe Fund, the James Duncan Phillips Fund for Harvard College, the Teplow fund, and funds from the sale of duplicates, 1998.5hou0 cPurchase;aJohn William Pye Rare Books;d1998 June 24;e98M-2;h$4200 (P. D. Howe fd.); $7000 (Phillips fd.); $300 (Duplicates fd.).5hou02318ntcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100003000120245009300150300002700243351004600270545026700316520028400583524014500867555008701012555018201099600003001281600003501311600001801346650003901364650002601403655001801429700004301447700004201490700005501532700004201587700005101629700004401680700004401724700003401768700003501802852002501837506004601862008591409-620130910130716.0010316i18271878mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm830943811 aMAHV01A8 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1811-1882.10aLetters from Henry James Sr. and Mary Walsh James to various correspondents,f1827-1878. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aHenry James Sr. was an American philosophical theologian. He and his wife Mary Robertson Walsh James (1810-1882) were the parents of the novelist Henry James Jr., the philosopher William James, the diarist Alice James, Robertson James, and Garth Wilkinson James. aLetters from James Sr. to family and various others include: Annie Fields, his father Rev. William James, Fanny MacDaniel, and Samuel Gray Ward. Collection also includes letters from Mary James to Alice James, Alice Howe Gibbens James, Henry James Jr., William James, and others. aLetters from Henry James Sr. and Mary Walsh James to Various Correspondents, 1827-1878 (MS Am 1093.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. This index has been bound with others and titled: "The James Family Correspondence."10aJames, Henry,d1811-1882.10aJames, Mary Walsh,d1810-1882.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPhilosophy, American. 7aLetters.2aat1 aFields, Annie,d1834-1915,erecipient.1 aJames, Alice,d1848-1892,erecipient.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,erecipient.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916,erecipient.1 aJames, Mary Walsh,d1810-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1771-1837,erecipient.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910,erecipient.1 aMacDaniel, Fanny,erecipient.1 aWard, Samuel Gray,erecipient.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1093.1 aCollection is open for research use.5hou02726ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100001700121245007800138300002700216351008600243545072000329520063501049524008601684555008701770555010601857600001701963651002901980655001902009655001902028700004002047700003102087700003702118700003502155541007102190561004602261506004602307852002302353008551790-920090108143737.0010126i17571929mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126891751 aMAHV01A5 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aDana family.10aDana family financial records,f1757-1929 (inclusive),g1767-1811 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Dana family papers; and II. Other papers. aThe Dana family was prominent in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Francis Dana (1743-1811), son of Richard Dana, was a Massachusetts revolutionary leader, member of the Continental Congress, unofficial United States Minister to Russia, and Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court. Edmund Trowbridge was Francis Dana's brother in law. Francis Dana's son, Richard Henry Dana (1787-1789) was a literary scholar and edited the periodical Idle man. Richard Henry Dana, Jr. (1815-1882) was the United States Attorney for Massachusetts during the Civil War and author of Two years before the mast. Richard Henry Francis Dana (1743-1811) was a Continental Congressman and Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court. aThe collection primarily contains bills and receipts of Francis Dana and other Dana family members as well as bills and receipts of Francis Dana's contemporaries including Israel Thorndike. There is correspondence of the Dana family members including letters from William Cullen Bryant to Richard Henry Dana as well as correspondence between Richard Henry Dana III and William Penn Cresson about the latter's biography, Francis Dana, a Puritan diplomat in the court of Catherine the Great. There is a small amount of correspondence and other materials received with the collection whose relationship to the Dana family is unclear. aDana Family Financial Records (MS Am 2097). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000998 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1991-1992, under *91M-24.30aDana family. 0aMassachusettsxCommerce. 7aInvoices.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat1 aBryant, William Cullen,d1794-1878.1 aDana, Francis,d1743-1811.1 aDana, Richard Henry,d1851-1931.1 aThorndike, Israel,d1755-1832.0 cGift;aGoodspeed's Book Shop;bBoston, Mass.;d1991;e91M-24.5hou1 aGift of Goodspeed's Book Shop, 1991.5hou aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 209701747ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100004000121245010400161300002700265545011500292520030100407524011200708555008800820555010800908600004001016650003901056650003101095655002001126656001901146710003501165710002401200541007101224561006101295506004201356852002301398008558384-720090109083231.0010301i18581900mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126898221 aMAHV01A6 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.10aOliver Wendell Holmes contracts with Ticknor and Fields,f1858-1900 (inclusive),g1959-1871 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOliver Wendell Holmes was an American humorist and poet who also served as Dean of the Harvard Medical School. aThe collection includes book contracts between Holmes and the Boston, Massachusetts publishing house Ticknor and Fields, copyright contracts for two of Holmes' books, and a letter to Holmes' son, Oliver Wendell Holmes,Jr. from Houghton, Mifflin and Company (successor firm to Ticknor and Fields). aOliver Wendell Holmes Contracts with Ticknor and Fields (MS Am 2098). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid available.uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001048 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1991-1992, under *91M-39.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aContracts.2aat 7aHumorist.2aat2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company.2 aTicknor and Fields.0 cTransfer;aHarvard Law School Library;d1992 Jan. 1;e91M-39.5hou1 aTransfer from the Harvard Law School Library, 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 209801843ntc a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070041001100086100004100097245005400138300002700192545028800219520008800507520012400595520009600719546004500815561006300860524009100923581009801014581006401112600002001176600003801196600004101234650003901275650004501314700003901359700005701398740002301455852002701478008688297-X20020606104010.5010719i18581882xxx |||||||ger|d0 aocm826934770 agereng1 aGrimm, Herman Friedrich,d1828-1901.00kPapers concerning the Emerson family,f1858-1882. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aGrimm was a German polymathic scholar, literary historian, art critic and philosopher. He and his wife, Gisela von Arnim Grimm, met Ralph Waldo Emerson and his daughter Ellen Tucker Emerson in 1873, but the friendship flourished via correspondence from 1856 until 1882 when RWE died. aItem (1) letter from Gisela von Arnim Grimm to Ellen Tucker Emerson, 1880 Jun. 2-3. aItem (2) is an autograph manuscript by Herman Friedrich Grimm titled "Emerson, a letter", Berlin, 1858 Dec., 18 leaves. aItem (3) letter from Hermann Friedrich Grimm to Ellen Tucker Emerson, Berlin, 1882 Apr. 29. aIncludes material in German and English. aDeposited by the Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association. aHerman Friedrich Grimm Papers (bMS Am 1280.237). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aArticle concerning these papers was published in the Harvard Library Bulletin (date unknown). a"Emerson, a letter" published in Literature (London, 1886).30aEmerson family.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aGrimm, Herman Friedrich,d1828-1901. 0aPhilosophyzGermanyy19th century. 0aPhilosophyzUnited Statesy19th century.1 aEmerson, Ellen Tucker,erecipient.1 aGrimm, Gisela von Arnim,d1827-1889,ecorrespondent.| aEmerson, a letter.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1280.23701659ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005000122245007300172300002700245351002900272545005900301520015100360555008700511555010800598524012700706530006200833600003800895600002000933650003900953650003600992650003701028700003701065541007601102561007401178506004201252852002701294008679899-520120111083926.0010711i18201877mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127016361 aMAHV01A19 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,erecipient.10aRalph Waldo Emerson letters from various correspondents,f1820-1877. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aRalph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist and poet. aIncludes letters to Ralph Waldo Emerson from friends and colleagues, and Emerson family correspondence, including letters from Mary Moody Emerson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003438 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-14. aRalph Waldo Emerson Letters from Various Correspondents, 1820-1877 (MS Am 1280.225). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.30aEmerson family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 0aTranscendentalists (New England)1 aEmerson, Mary Moody,d1774-1863.0 cDeposit;aRalph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association;d1942.e73M14.5hou1 aDeposited by the Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1280.22501837ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002000122245005800142300002700200351002900227545005900256520025000315555008700565555010800652524010100760600002000861655004500881655001600926656001700942700004100959700004501000700003901045700005501084700003101139541012601170561011001296506004201406852002701448008679942-820110114092042.0030124i18111859mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm792000761 aMAHV03-A13 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aEmerson family.10aEmerson family additional correspondence,f1811-1859. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aRalph Waldo Emerson was an American poet and essayist. aCorrespondents include Lucy (Jackson) Brown, Charles Emerson, Edward Bliss Emerson, Ruth Haskins Emerson, and Waldo Emerson, among others. Also includes the poem Farewell ye lofty spires... by Edward Bliss Emerson and a drawing by Waldo Emerson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005898 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-71. aEmerson Family Additional Correspondence (MS Am 1280.229). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aEmerson family. 7aDrawings, Americany19th century.2gmgpc 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBrown, Lucy Jackson,ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Charles,d1841-ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Edward Bliss,d1805-1834.1 aEmerson, Ruth Haskins,d1768-1853,ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Waldo, 1836-1842.0 cDeposit;aRalph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association from the estate of Edith Emerson Forbes;d1976 April 22;e75M-71.5HOU1 aDeposited by Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association from the estate of Edith Emerson Forbes, 1976.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1280.22901761npcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245007800153300002700231351003900258545028000297520020000577524011900777555008700896555010800983600003101091600002901122651002901151651005101180655002201231700002901253541005001282561004101332506003701373852002501410008716677-120090303093402.0010823i19411942mau | eng d0 aocn6127048661 aMAHV01A29 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aHofer, Philip,d1898-1984.10aPhilip Hofer papers concerning the Henry Hamilton collection,f1941-1942. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHamilton (1734?-1796) was a British army officer in the American Revolutionary War. He was also Lieutenant-Governor and Governor of Detroit, Quebec, Bermuda, and Dominica. Philip Hofer was Curator of the Department of Printing and Graphic Arts of the Harvard College Library. aThis collection concerns Hofer's desire to publish manuscripts and images from the Henry Hamilton collection. Includes correspondence, lists, transcripts of manuscripts, and a negative photostat. aPhilip Hofer Papers Concerning the Henry Hamilton Collection (MS Eng 509.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1993-1994, under *93M-97.10aHofer, Philip,d1898-1984.10aHamilton, Henry,d-1796. 0aNorthwest, OldxHistory. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aHamilton, Henry,d-1796.0 cGift;aPhilip Hofer;dca. 1943;e93M-97.5hou1 aGift of Philip Hofer, ca. 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 509.301328ctcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245006400152300002700216351003000243545014400273555008700417555010900504524011600613546001600729600003000745650003900775700004200814541007400856561004100930506004200971852002501013008736869-220130910130529.0010924i18971915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127067871 aMAHV01A39 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James letters to Gaillard Thomas Lapsley,f1897-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aJames was an American novelist, short story writer, critic and dramatist. Lapsley was a constitutional historian and friend of Henry James.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003418 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1946-1947, under *46M-424. aHenry James Letters to Gaillard Thomas Lapsley, 1897-1915 (MS Am 1094.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aLapsley, Gaillard Thomas,erecipient.0 cGift;aGaillard Lapsley;bLenox, Massachusetts;d1946;e46M-424.5hou1 aGift of Gaillard Lapsley, 1946.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1094.401888ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245005300152300002700205351003500232545007900267520014500346520008600491555008700577555014300664524010600807600003000913650003400943650003400977655001601011655002901027740001801056740001801074740001801092740001601110541009001126541013501216561003601351506003701387852002601424561004001450008744502-620090304102938.0011003q18941910mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127076561 aMAHV01A47 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James additional compositions,f1894-1910. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged by typescript number. aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. aTypescript and autograph manuscript versions of James's compositions, mostly plays. Also includes notes, scenarios, and drafts of dialogues. aIncludes materials for: The American, The chaperon, Guy Domville, and The saloon.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001348 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-482-488, and 1949-1950, under *49M-16. aHenry James Additional Compositions, 1894-1910 (MS Am 1237.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican dramay19th century. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat4 aThe American.4 aThe chaperon.0 aGuy Domville.4 aThe saloon.0 cGift;aLeon Edel, Esq.;b309 East 23rd St., NY 10, NY;d1949 October 4;e49M-16.5hou0 cGift;aHenry James Esq;b522 Fifth Ave., New York, NY;d1944;e44M-482; 44M-483; 44M-484; 44M-485; 44M-486; 44M-487; 44M-488.5hou1 aGift of Henry James, 1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.10 aGift of Leon Edel, Esq., 1949.5hou02126ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004200122245008500164300002700249351011900276545015100395520012600546530006200672555008700734555016200821524013800983500017001121546001601291600004501307600004201352600003701394700004701431700005301478730005801531541005701589561004801646506004201694852002801736008755125-X20130311132200.0020626i18221921mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810012061 aMAHV02-A48 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRobinson, Monroe Douglas,d1887-1944.10aMonroe Douglas Robinson family papers,f1822-1921 (inclusive)g1887-1921 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: A. Letters; B. Compositions and miscellaneous documents; C. Printed ephemera. aMonroe Douglas Robinson was the son of Douglas Robinson and Corinne (Roosevelt) Robinson, younger sister of American president Theodore Roosevelt. aIncludes letters from Theodore Roosevelt to Douglas Robinson, and recollections by Monroe Douglas Robinson of his mother. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-10. aMonroe Douglas Robinson Family Papers, 1822-1921 (MS Am 1785.9). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Roosevelt family papers (008186829) aIn English.10aRobinson, Corinne Roosevelt,d1861-1933.10aRobinson, Monroe Douglas,d1887-1944.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aRobinson, Douglas,d1855-1918,erecipient.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aMrs. Randolph A. Kidder;d1988;e88M-10.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Randolph A. Kidder, 1988.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1785.901790ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245004200152300002700194351005800221545007800279520010400357555008700461555014000548524008300688600003000771650003900801650003900840541007100879541008700950541020701037506003701244852002501281561005501306561005501361561003601416008744642-120090304103129.0011004i18931915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127076941 aMAHV01A48 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James compositions,f1893-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged by typescript number, then accession number. aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic and dramatist. aAutograph manuscript and typescript versions of compositions by James. Also includes a translation.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001358 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1945, under *42M-1435F, *43M-410F, and *44M-467-481. aHenry James Compositions (MS Am 1237.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century.0 cDeposit, then gift;aTalbot Aldrich;d1943; 1948;e42M-1435F.5hou0 cPurchase;aLibrary of Congress;bWashington D.C.;d1943 December;e43M-410PF.5hou0 cGift;aHenry James Esq;b522 Fifth Ave., New York, NY;d1944;e44M-467; 44M-468; 44M-469; 44M-470; 44M-471; 44M-472; 44M-473; 44M-474; 44M-475; 44M-476; 44M-477; 44M-478; 44M-479; 44M-480; 44M-481.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.71 aDeposited by Talbot Aldrich, 1943; gift 1948.5hou1 aPurchased from the Library of Congress, 1943.5hou1 aGift of Henry James, 1944.5hou02100ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004200124245007200166300002700238351003000265545032400295520023500619555008700854555010900941524011101050546001601161600004201177600003801219610003901257610003801296650003601334650001401370651005901384655003801443656001801481700005001499541005501549561004501604506004201649852002301691008755139-X20100317141315.0021016i18621899mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127088671 aMAHV02-A144 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEverett, Charles Carroll,d1829-1900.10aCharles Carroll Everett letters to Edward Everett Hale,f1862-1899. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aCharles Carroll Everett (Harvard, S.T.B., 1859) taught theology, served as Dean of the Divinity School and as preacher at Harvard. Edward Everett Hale was an Unitarian minister, author, reformer, and minister, Church of the Unity, Worcester, Mass. (1846-1956) and South Congregational Church, Boston, Mass. (1856-1899). aLetters from Charles Carroll Everett to his cousin Edward Everett Hale about daily life, delivering sermons and religious matters. The letters also discuss Harvard Divinity School's professors, students, scholarships, and classes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-748. aCharles Carroll Everett Letters to Edward Everett Hale (bMS Am 1219).Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEverett, Charles Carroll,d1829-1900.10aHale, Edward Everett,d1822-1909.20aHarvard Divinity SchoolxStudents.20aHarvard Divinity SchoolxFaculty. 0aSermons, AmericanzNew England. 0aReligion. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aClergy.2lcsh1 aHale, Edward Everett,d1822-1909,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Mary S. Jackson;d1943;e42M-748.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Mary S. Jackson, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121901699ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003300122245006800155300002700223545011700250520016300367524010700530555008700637555011000724544012900834600003300963600002100996650003501017650003501052655002001087655002201107655001601129700003301145541006801178561004301246506003701289852002301326008736373-920090303094813.0010924i19821996mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127066931 aMAHV01A36 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLaughlin, James,d1914-1997.10aJames Laughlin compositions sent to Hugh Witemeyer,f1982-1996. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aJames Laughlin (1914-1997) was an American publisher, poet and founder of New Directions Publishing Corporation. aIncludes copies of Laughlin's poems and essays sent to his friend and colleague, Hugh Witemeyer. Also with printed material about Laughlin and one photograph. aJames Laughlin Compositions Sent to Hugh Witemeyer (MS Am 2110). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 2001-2002, under *2001M-17. aThe Laughlin letters that were originally part of this accession can be found with other Witemeyer materials in bMS Am 2077.10aLaughlin, James,d1914-1997.10aWitemeyer, Hugh. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aPoets, Americany20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aWitemeyer, Hugh,erecipient.0 cGift;aDr. Hugh Witemeyer;d2001;e2001M-17.5hou3compositions1 aGift of Dr. Hugh Witemeyer, 2001.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 211002597ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002100121100004400142245005700186300002700243351012700270545013000397520038600527555008700913530006201000555016201062524014001224500017601364546001601540600004401556600003801600600003701638600002901675600003501704655002201739700003801761700004301799700006301842700003701905730005801942541005102000561004202051506004202093852002802135008755341-420130311123359.0k||| | || ||020626i18781918mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127089671 aMAHV02-A45 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLongworth, Alice Roosevelt,d1884-1980.10aAlice Roosevelt Longworth family papers,f1878-1918. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: A. Letters; B. Compositions and miscellaneous documents; C. Photographs; D. Ephemera. aAlice Lee (Roosevelt) Longworth was the daughter of American president Theodore Roosevelt and Alice Hathaway (Lee) Roosevelt. aLongworth's correspondence includes letters from Theodore Roosevelt and stepmother Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt. There are also papers of Alice Hathaway (Lee) Roosevelt, including letters exchanged with Theodore Roosevelt, family photographs, and memorabilia relating to her death and Longworth's birth in 1884; also letters from Theodore Roosevelt to Martha (Bulloch) Roosevelt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc00016 aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.8 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1985-1986, under *85M-24. aAlice Roosevelt Longworth Family Papers, 1878-1918 (MS Am 1541.9). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aForms part of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Roosevelt family papers (008186829) aIn English.10aLongworth, Alice Roosevelt,d1884-1980.10aRoosevelt, Alice Lee,d1861-1884.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.30aLee familyvPhotographs.30aRoosevelt familyvPhotographs. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aRoosevelt, Alice Lee,d1861-1884.1 aRoosevelt, Martha Bulloch,d1835-1884.1 aRoosevelt, Edith Kermit Carow,d1861-1948,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aJoanna Sturm;d1985-1986;e85M-24.5hou1 aGift of Joanna Sturm, 1985-1986.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1541.902495ctcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003600124245005300160300002700213351003900240545006000279520066800339555008701007555010801094524009201202546001601294600003601310600004801346650003901394651006201433655001801495655002401513655003801537655001601575656002501591700005401616700004601670700006001716700003101776541012901807561007201936506004202008852002302050008822403-120100412082107.0021113i18391888mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127151441 aMAHV02-A224 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.10aLouisa May Alcott additional papers,f1839-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAlcott was an American novelist and short story writer. aCollection of papers dealing with Louisa May Alcott's writing and details of her daily life. Letters from Bronson Alcott during her childhood contain some moral precepts and details of family life. Letters from Louisa's adulthood include a letter written to her mother, Abigail, describing her works in progress and rate of pay, and a letter from Anna Alcott Pratt (Louisa's sister) to Mary Walpole describing Louisa's involvement in daily chores. Louisa's last diary chiefly records the details of her daily life and the illness leading to her death. Among other items are a manuscript fragment from the novel Jo's Boys and a poem written for her nephew Freddie.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004468 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-19. aLouisa May Alcott Additional Papers (MS Am 2114). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.10aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.tJo's Boys. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888,ecorrespondent.1 aAlcott, Abba May,d1800-1877,erecipient.1 aPratt, Anna Bronson Alcott,d1831-1893,ecorrespondent.1 aWalpole, Mary,erecipient.0 cDeposit;aLouisa May Alcott Memorial Association;bOrchard House, PO Box 343, Concord MA 01742;d1981 Dec. 15;e81M-19.5HOU1 aDeposited by the Louisa May Alcott Memorial Association, 1981.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 211402433ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100002000121245007700141300002700218351016400245545016900409520023400578555008700812555016200899524016001061530006201221500017201283546001601455600003701471610005101508650004401559650004601603700005301649700002201702700003501724700005301759730005801812541005201870561004301922506004201965852002802007008851122-720130311110232.0020228i18981899mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810624021 aMAHV02-A8 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aSanders family.10aSanders family correspondence concerning William H. Sanders,f1898-1899. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters addressed to Charles Sanders; II. Letters addressed to Helen A. Sanders; III. Other letters; IV. Miscellaneous. aWilliam H. Sanders, son of Charles and Helen A. Sanders and orderly to Colonel Theodore Roosevelt of the Rough Riders, died in Cuba during the Spanish-American War. aCorrespondence includes a letter from Sanders to his mother, letters of condolence from Theodore Roosevelt to both parents, and correspondence between the parents and army officials regarding the circumstances of Sanders's death.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000068 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-47. aSanders Family Correspondence Concerning William H. Sanders, 1898-1899 (MS Am 1834.3). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aSanders, William H.,d1871-1898.10aUnited States.bArmy.bVolunteer Cavalry, 1st. 0aSpanish-American War, 1898xCasualties. 0aSpanish-American War, 1898xMedical care.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.1 aSanders, Charles.1 aSanders, Helen A.,erecipient.1 aSanders, William H.,d1871-1898,ecorrespondent.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aMrs. C. S. Sanders;d1971;e71M-47.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. C. S. Sanders, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1834.301750ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003600122245008100158300002700239351003900266545009200305520017900397524012400576555008700700555010800787546001600895600003600911650003900947655002200986655002401008656001901032700003901051700007101090700005201161541005801213561004901271506004201320852002601362008895467-620100427095838.0020424i19291951mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127291341 aMAHV02A22 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRoberts, Margaret Rose,d-1947.10aMargaret Rose Roberts correspondence and papers on Thomas Wolfe,f1929-1951. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aMargaret R. Roberts taught American novelist Thomas Wolfe while he was in grade school. aCorrespondence, reminiscences, photographs, and printed ephemera relating to Thomas Wolfe. Correspondents include Elizabeth Nowell, Maxwell E. Perkins, and William B. Wisdom. aMargaret Rose Roberts Correspondence and Papers on Thomas Wolfe (bMS Am 1883.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004608 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1982-1983, under *82M-81. aIn English.10aRoberts, Margaret Rose,d-1947. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aReminiscences.2aat 7aTeachers.2aat1 aNowell, Elizabeth,ecorrespondent.1 aPerkins, Maxwell E.q(Maxwell Evarts),d1884-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aWisdom, William B.,d1900-1977,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMiss Margaret R. Roberts;d1977;e82M-81.5hou1 aGift of Miss Margaret R. Roberts, 1977.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883.1001363ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001700122245003600139300002700175351003900202520011400241555008700355555011100442524008600553546001600639600001700655600002900672600003100701655001800732655003800750700002900788700003100817541006200848561005000910506004200960852002301002008894082-920121218093832.0020927i18351848mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm781120221 aMAHV02-A93 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aWare family.10aWare family papers,f1835-1848. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aIncludes diaries of Henry Ware (1824-1885) and William Ware (1797-1852), and one composition by William Ware.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010968 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-29-31. aWare Family Papers, 1835-1848 (MS Am 2148). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aWare family.10aWare, Henry,d1824-1885.10aWare, William,d1797-1852. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aWare, Henry,d1824-1885.1 aWare, William,d1797-1852.0 cGift;aMrs. Robert de W. Sampson;d1947;e47M-29-31.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Robert de W. Sampson, 1947.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 214801537ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245005500160300002700215351002900242545007300271520015600344555008700500555010700587524010900694600003800803650003900841650003600880650003700916700003900953561005000992541011201042506004201154852002701196008679923-120100318083500.0010711i18521898mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127016561 aMAHV01A21 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aRalph Waldo Emerson additional papers,f1852-1898. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aRalph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist, poet, and philosopher. aIncludes letters from RWE to Edward Waldo Emerson, compositons by RWE and Edward Waldo Emerson, and other correspondence of RWE and the Emerson family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003508 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-9. aRalph Waldo Emerson Additional Papers, 1852-1898 (MS Am 1280.228). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 0aTranscendentalists (New England)1 aEmerson, Edward Waldo,d1844-1930.1 aDeposited by Mrs. Raymond Emerson, 1974.5hou0 cDeposit;aMrs. Raymond Emerson;b393 Estabrook Rd., Concord, Massachusettsd1974 September 11;e74M-9.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1280.22801559ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100001800121245005700139300002700196351004600223520024600269555008700515555009700602524010700699600001800806650003900824650004000863700005900903700005600962700005001018700003801068541003101106561003601137506003701173852002301210008717687-420090303094151.0010828i18581906mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm811795051 aMAHV01A31 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aJames family.10aLetters from other James family members,f1858-1906. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aConsists chiefly of correspondence and other papers of members of the James family other than Henry James or William James. Includes letters from: Garth Wilkinson James, Robertson James, Alice Howe Gibbens James, Catharine Walsh, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. aLetters From Other James Family Members, 1858-1906 (MS Am 1095). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPhilosophy, Americany19th century.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Garth Wilkinson,d1845-1883,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Robertson,d1846-1910,ecorrespondent.1 aWalsh, Catharine,ecorrespondent.0 cGifts;aJames Family.5hou1 aGifts of the James family.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 109501264ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003200122245004900154300002700203520008900230524009900319545005600418555008700474600003200561650004000593650003100633655002000664655001600684700004800700541009600748561005300844506004200897852002300939008913604-720090923083753.0020517i19031910mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127317761 aMAHV02A27 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aWilliam James additional papers,f1903-1910. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aA few notes (by James), clippings, pamphlets, and other miscellany of William James. aWilliam James Additional Papers, 1903-1910 (MS Am 2175). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aJames was an American philosopher and psychologist.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0015210aJames, William,d1842-1910. 0aPhilosophy, Americany19th century. 0aPsychologyzUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotes.2aat1 aPerry, Ralph Barton,d1876-1957,ecompiler.0 cGift;aMr. Ralph Barton Perry;bCambridge, Mass.;d1937 Dec. 23;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Professor Ralph Barton Perry, 1937.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 217502151ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003000110245007800140300002700218351009900245545026500344520030100609530006200910555008700972524015601059546001601215600003001231600003501261610002101296655005101317655002001368655004901388655001901437700004501456700004701501541015101548561002501699506004201724852002301766008936973-420130917164851.0020807i18651870mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn819855516 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aBooth, Edwin,d1833-1893.10aEdwin Booth letters to Richard A. Robertson and other papers,f1865-1870. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Booth to Robertson; and II. Other papers. aEdwin Booth (1833-1893) was an American actor and theater owner. Richard Austin Robertson (died 1891), a Boston businessman, invested heavily in the building and management of Booth's Theatre in New York, which opened in February 1869 and was bankrupt by 1874. aCollection contains 19 letters from Edwin Booth to Richard Austin Robertson, 1865-1870. Also with 7 manuscript documents concerning the financial matters of Booth's Theatre (New York, N.Y.), including letters from Oakes Ames to Robertson, a receipt, clipping, and work order for painting scenery. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02381 aEdwin Booth Letters to Richard A. Robertson and Other Papers, 1865-1870 (MS Thr 932). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBooth, Edwin,d1833-1893.10aRobertson, Richard A.,d-1891.20aBooth's Theatre. 7aFinancial recordsxTheatery19th century.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aLetters (correspondence)y19th century.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat1 aAmes, Oakes,d1804-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aRobertson, Richard A.,d-1891,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aAssociated Appraisers, Inc.;bRoom 603, 15 Westminster Street, Providence, Rhode Island;d2002 June;e2003MT-59; HTC 2002-2003.15.5the1 aPurchase, 2002.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 93202193ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089035001500105040002100120100003700141245007800178300002700256545009500283520020100378510021900579555008700798555009900885524012900984546001601113600003501129650003601164650003401200650004101234655005001275655002201325655002301347655002201370655001701392700006701409740002901476541014901505561006301654506004201717852002401759008922243-120130204141711.0k|||||||||||||||||030908i18831887mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm830881841 aMAHV03A254 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886.10aRandolph Caldecott papers concerning Jack and the bean-stalk,f1883-1887. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCaldecott, an English artist, was a popular illustrator, especially of books for children. aContains drawings, photograph, proofs, sketchbook, and letters to and from Caldecott. The drawings include pen and ink preliminary drawings to illustrate Hallam Tennyson's Jack and the bean-stalk.3 aNancy Finlay, "Randolph Caldecott: A Checklist of the Caroline Miller Parker Collection in the Houghton Library" (Cambridge, MA: Dept. of Printing and Graphic Arts, Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, 1986).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, under *53-64-65. aRandolph Caldecott Papers Concerning Jack and the Bean-stalk, 1883-1887 (MS Eng 1431). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCaldecott, Randolph,1846-1886. 0aDrawing, Englishy19th century. 0aIllustrated children's books. 0aIllustration of booksy19th century. 7aDrawingszGreat Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aSketchbooks.2aat 7aIllustrators.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aProofs.2aat1 aTennyson, Hallam Tennyson,cBaron,d1852-1928,ecorrespondent.02aJack and the bean-stalk.0 cPurchase;aHamill and Barker;b664 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago Ill.;d20 Nov. 1953;e53M-64-65;hNo price given, Caroline Miller Parker fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Caroline Miller Parker Fund, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 143101425ckcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101245005900122300002700181351003000208545018200238520005300420555008700473555010800560524010900668600005100777650003900828655002200867655002000889655001900909656001900928541005400947561004501001506004201046852002301088008926132-120130204134233.0030214i18551903mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm813601781 aMAHV03-A52 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aWilliam Dean Howells portrait photographs,f1855-1903. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWilliam Dean Howells was a novelist. He served as United States consul in Venice (1861-1865), editor of The Atlantic Monthly (1871-1881), and editor of Cosmopolitan (1881-1892). a19 photographs of Howells, including 3 tintypes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013828 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-44. aWilliam Dean Howells Portrait Photographs, 1855-1903 (MS Am 2200). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920,xPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aTintypes.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh0 cGift;aMiss Mildred Howells;d1955;e55M-44.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Mildred Howells, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 220002173nkcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245008300157300002700240351020600267545011200473520017800585520015600763555008700919524012601006650003701132651004301169655002201212655002301234700003701257700003901294700004201333700003801375700003501413710002601448710002201474710002501496710003101521541007401552561007201626506004201698852002301740008931714-920090923084345.0020718s1872 mau|||| |||||| |||k|eng d0 aocn612733891 aMAHV02-A49 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, Georgina,ecollector.10aGeorgiana Lowell collection of stereographs of the Boston fire of 1872,f1872. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Stereographs by J.W. & J.S. Moulton; II. Stereographs by A.C. Partridge; III. Stereographs by H.G. Smith; IV. Stereographs by John P. Soule; and V. Loose images. aThe "Great Boston Fire of 1872" (November 9th and 10th) destroyed most of the commercial section of Boston. a53 stereographs and 5 loose photographs taken by Boston-area photographers. All photographs were taken in 1872, but none of the cards show a date of printing or publication.8 aPhotographic studios represented are: J.W. & J.S. Moulton of Salem, Mass., A.C. Partridge of Boston, H.G. Smith of Boston, and John P. Soule of Boston.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00155 aGeorgina Lowell Collection of Stereographs of the Boston Fire of 1872 (MS Am 2205). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aGreat Fire, Boston, Mass., 1872. 0aBoston (Mass.)xHistoryy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aStereographs.2aat1 aMoulton, John S.,ephotographer.1 aMoulton, Joshua W.,ephotographer.1 aPartridge, Asa Cheney,ephotographer.1 aSmith, Horatio G.,ephotographer.1 aSoule, John P.,ephotographer.2 aA.C. Partridge (firm)2 aH.G. Smith (firm)2 aJohn P. Soule (firm)2 aJ.W. & J.S. Moulton (firm)0 cBequest; recataloged from US 13178.1*;aGeorgiana Lowell;d1924.5hou1 aBequest of Georgina Lowell, 1924; recataloged from US 13178.1*5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 220501459ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245003700154300002700191351009300218545008600311520012000397555008700517555010900604524008700713546001600800600003100816650003500847655001600882656001700898700003900915541005700954561005701011506004201068852002301110008921586-920130204134538.0021004i18721895mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm818958961 aMAHV02-A123 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aField, Eugene,d1850-1895.10aEugene Field papers,f1872-1895. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Manuscripts by E. Field; and II. Correspondence. aField was an American poet and journalist, best known as the "poet of childhood." aContains 39 compositions by Field and letters to various correspondents, mostly to his wife Julia (Comstock) Field.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013848 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-1-2. aEugene Field Papers, 1872-1895 (MS Am 2190). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aField, Eugene,d1850-1895. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aField, Julia Comstock,erecipient.0 cGift;aThomas S. Lamont;d1962;e58M-1 - 58M-2.5HOU1 aDeposited by Thomas S. Lamont, 1958; gift 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 219001824ntc a22003135a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001300070040002500083100003100108245006500139300002700204351006400231545016300295520034300458524013200801555008700933546001501020600003401035600003101069610002001100610004301120700004901163700003701212541013501249561006101384506004201445852002301487008946052-920100304111935.0020828i19091913fr |||||||fre|d aMHAT04A4 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aPavlova, Anna,d1881-1931.10aAnna Pavlova correspondence with Gabriel Astruc,f1909-1913. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Correspondence; II. Contract. aAnna Pavlova was a Russian ballet dancer. Gabriel Astruc was a French producer, talent manager, publisher and a founder of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. aCollection contains correspondence between Anna Pavlova, her manager Victor Dandré, her secretary, and Gabriel Astruc regarding Pavlova's inauguration of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, and letters from Concert-Direction Hermann Wolff agency to Astruc about the proposed season of the Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in Berlin in 1911. aAnna Pavlova Correspondence with Gabriel Astruc (MS Thr 459). Harvard Theatre Collection. Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00222 aIn French.10aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929.10aPavlova, Anna,d1881-1931.20aBallets Russes.20aThéâtre des Champs-Elysées (1913- )1 aAstruc, Gabriel,d1864-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aDandré, Victor,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aGolden Legend, Inc.;bBeverly Hills, CA;d2002 Aug. 12;e2003MT-159 and HTC 2002-2003.58;h$6500 (Rothschild fd.).5the1 aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 2002.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 45901666ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004200123245004800165300002700213351004000240545022300280520012900503555008700632555010900719524009800828546001600926600004200942600001900984600003201003651006001035655003801095700003201133541005401165561004401219506004201263852002301305008916372-920130212092433.0021002i18361863mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813787851 aMAHV02-A115 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRipley, Christopher Gore,d1822-1881.10aChristopher Gore Ripley papers,f1836-1863. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranaged alphabetically by author. aRipley was a lawyer in Concord, Massachusetts, son of Samuel and Sarah Ripley, and a part of the social circle of Transcendentalists of mid-19th century New England. Ripley was a graduate of Harvard College, A.B. 1841. aPapers concern both his business associates and his friends and family, including materials by and about Rev. Samuel Ripley.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-360. aChristopher Gore Ripley Papers, 1836-1863 (MS Am 2178). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRipley, Christopher Gore,d1822-1881.10aRipley family.10aRipley, Samuel,d1783-1847. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aRipley, Samuel,d1783-1847.0 cGift;aEdward Waldo Forbes;d1942;e47M-360.5HOU1 aGift of Edward Waldo Forbes, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 217801649ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003700123245006500160300002700225351003000252520015900282555008700441555010900528524011500637546001600752600003700768651005000805651006200855700005100917700004400968710009001012541005701102561006301159506004201222852005901264008921728-420130204134345.0021009i17771800mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782257271 aMAHV02-A124 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHamilton, Alexander,d1757-1804.10aAlexander Hamilton correspondence and documents,f1777-1800. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aIncludes letters from Hamilton as Secretary of the U.S. Treasury to diplomat William Short, letter to Hamilton from William Bradford, and other materials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013838 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-214. aAlexander Hamilton Correspondence and Documents, 1777-1800 (MS Am 2191). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHamilton, Alexander,d1757-1804. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyConstitutional period, 1789-1809.1 aBradford, William,d1755-1795,ecorrespondent.1 aShort, William,d1759-1849,erecipient.1 aUnited States.bDepartment of the Treasury.bOffice of the Secretary,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aThomas S. Lamont, Esq.;d1962;e57M-214.5HOU1 aDeposited by Thomas S. Lamont, Esq., 1958; gift 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2191zShelved in 1 box: bMS Am 2191-219401745ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004300123245005800166300002700224545021100251520031000462555008700772555010900859524010700968546001601075600003101091600002601122655002001148656002301168700003901191700003401230541005001264561004001314506004201354852002301396009002533-420130102110639.0021023i18731878mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm785148621 aMAHV02-A171 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aParton, James,d1822-1891,erecipient.10aJames Parton letters from Ida L. Greeley,f1873-1878. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aParton was an American biographer. His The life of Horace Greeley : editor of "The New-York tribune", from his birth to the present time was published in 1872 and his Life of Voltaire was published in 1881. aLetters from Greeley to Parton concern daily life, and a letter from Clarissa Greeley to Parton is about his daughter, Effie. Also includes autograph manuscript notes on Voltaire centennial and newspaper clippings, including speech by Victor Hugo, translated by Parton, and French newspapers of the event.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-258. aJames Parton Letters from Ida L. Greely, 1873-1878 (MS Am 1267). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aParton, James,d1822-1891.10aVoltaire,d1694-1778. 7aClippings.2aat 7aBiographers.2lcsh1 aGreeley, Clarissa,ecorrespondent.1 aGreeley, Ida,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aJames Parton II;d1952;e51M-258.5HOU1 aGift of James Parton II, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 126701520ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245006700162300002700229545007200256520014300328555008700471524011900558546001600677600003900693600001900732655001600751656001700767700004200784700004300826700003700869700003200906700003600938541008000974561004901054506004201103852002501145008970252-220130311144458.0021017i18441889mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127390591 aMAHV02A156 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell letters to the Norton family,f1844-1889. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLowell was an American author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. aLetters of a personal and social nature to Jane, Grace and Sarah Norton, and Sara and Theodora Sedgwick, as well as a few poems by Lowell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01489 aJames Russell Lowell Letters to the Norton Family, 1844-1889 (MS Am 183.34). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.30aNorton family. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aNorton, Jane,d1824-1877,erecipient.1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926,erecipient.1 aNorton, Sara,d1864-erecipient.1 aSedgwick, Sara,erecipient.1 aSedgwick, Theodora,erecipient.0 cGift;aMiss Elizabeth G. Norton;d1939 March 11;eNo accession number.5hou1 aGift of Miss Elizabeth G. Norton, 1939.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 183.3402035ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003200123245006300155300002700218351003900245545016800284520028500452555008700737555010900824524011300933546001601046600001901062600003201081650003901113650003701152651006201189651005201251656001801303700004601321700004901367700003101416541007301447561006401520506004201584852002301626008999904-520130122101526.0021025i19011916mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm790747861 aMAHV02-A186 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMarble, Manton,d1834-1917.10aManton Marble correspondence with Henry James,f1901-1916. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aManton Marble (1834-1917) was a journalist, editor, and publisher of the New York World. James was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. aCorrespondence concerns daily events, James' writing, life in Cambridge, Massachusetts and England, and their visits to each other. Also includes letters of Henry James to other members of the Marble family and a letter to Theodore Roosevelt from Manton Marble, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012618 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1953-1954, under *53M-105. aManton Marble Correspondence with Henry James, 1901-1916 (MS Am 1318). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aMarble family.10aMarble, Manton,d1834-1917. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aAuthors.2aat1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,erecipient.3 aMarble family,erecipient.0 cPurchased;aJoan Evans;d1954;e53M-105;h£100 (Gifford fund).5HOU1 aPurchased with the Gifford fund from Joan Evans, 1954.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 131802234ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003700123245009900160300002700259545019400286520031100480555008700791555011100878524014900989546001601138600002501154610003301179650003901212650003901251650003201290651005601322651005601378656002501434656002201459700005001481700006101531541011501592561007601707506004201783852002301825008999923-120120813081409.0021025i18841928mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm845846791 aMAHV02-A184 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMoore, Eva Gertrude,erecipient.10aLetters from Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Edward Channing to Eva Gertrude Moore,f1884-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHigginson was an American author, Unitarian minister and leading abolitionist. Channing was an American historian who taught at Harvard (1883-1929). Moore was possibly Channing's secretary. aLetters from Higginson to Eva Gertrude Moore concern daily life. Letters from Edward Channing to Moore are primarily about her secretarial work for him. Includes autograph manuscript essay Heine and the monkey's skin and three autograph manuscript drafts of the National hymn for July 4, 1896 by Higginson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-13-18. aLetters From Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Edward Channing to Eva Gertrude Moore, 1884-1928 (MS Am 1456). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMoore, Eva Gertrude.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aSecretarieszUnietd States. 0aNew EnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aNew EnglandxSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh 7aHistorians.2lcsh1 aChanning, Edward,d1856-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchased;afrom Miss Eva Gertrude Moore;d1943;e43M-13-18;hBright fund ; $25 (43M-15); $5.00 (43M-18).5HOU1 aPurchased with the Bright Fund from Miss Eva Gertrude Moore, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 145601531ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002900123245003900152300002700191351013300218545009900351520018900450555008700639555010900726524008900835546001600924600002900940650003500969655003801004655001601042656001701058740001701075541005001092561004001142852002301182008988089-720120502104438.0021016i19571964mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm783547461 aMAHV02-A153 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aStarbuck, George,d1931-10aGeorge Starbuck poems,f1957-1964. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Miscellaneous poems; II. Poems published in White Paper (1966); and III. Other material. aStarbuck was an American poet, editor at Houghton Mifflin, and professor at Boston University. aContains transcripts of most poems published in White Paper (1966), as well as various poems in autograph, typescript, manuscript or typescript carbon copy, and miscellaneous material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-181. aGeorge Starbuck Poems, 1957-1964 (MS Am 1808). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aStarbuck, George,d1931- 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aWhite paper. cGift;aGeorge Starbuck;d1967;e66M-181;5HOU aGift of George Starbuck, 1967.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 180802664ctcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004500123245007800168300002700246351003900273545003700312520063200349555008700981555010801068524011701176546001601293600005601309600004501365650002301410650003601433650003201469650004601501650004301547651006001590651006201650655001701712655001501729655002201744655001901766656001701785700004901802700005201851700005001903700003301953541004501986561008602031506004202117852002302159008988112-520100329112656.0021011i18661874mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127408791 aMAHV02A143 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.10aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow letters to various correspondents,f1830-1883. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLongfellow was an American poet. aWritten from Cambridge, Mass., or Brunswick, Me., to Thomas Bailey Aldrich, James Thomas Fields, and William Greene, among others, the letters tell of Longfellow's personal and social activities. The letters answer questions about publishers and give advice about publishing poetry. Also discussed are Longfellow's health, personal finance issues, rare books, and bookbinders. Longfellow comments in many letters about his translation of Dante's Divine Comedy. Also Included are a canceled check, a receipt, a lock of hair, a signed photograph of Longfellow, and a letter purporting to be the last letter Longfellow ever wrote.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-10. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Letters to Various Correspondents (MS Am 1127). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882vPortraits.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aBook collectingzUnited States. 0aBookbinderszUnited States. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 0aRare booksxCollectors and collecting. 0aBrunswick (Me.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aChecks.2aat 7aHair.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aDante Alighieri,d1265-1321.tDivine Comedy.1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907,erecipient.1 aFields, James Thomas,d1817-1881,erecipient.1 aGreene, William,erecipient.0 cGift;aVarious;dVarious;eVarious.5HOU1 aReceived from various sources at various times; see finding aid for details.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 112701662ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004500123245007100168300002700239351003900266545010400305520022800409555008700637555010900724524012100833546001600954600003300970610003901003656001901042700006101061700004901122541005501171561004501226506004201271852002301313008988116-820120813083352.0021011i18691883mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm841858041 aMAHV02-A142 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNichols, George,d1809-1882,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to George Nichols,f1869-1883. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aNichols was a proofreader and editor. He worked chiefly for the Riverside Press in Cambridge, Mass. aContains letters to Nichols from various writers, chiefly pertaining to proof corrections and other printing and publishing matters. Includes several letters from Charles Sumner and one note from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009658 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-298. aLetters from Various Correspondents to George Nichols, 1869-1883 (MS Am 1180). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aNichols, George,d1809-1882.20aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.) 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aGeorge Nichols, Esq.;d1948;e48M-298.5HOU1 aGift of George Nichols, Esq., 1948.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 118001353ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002400123245007700147300002700224545004500251520008700296555008700383555010800470524010900578546001600687600002400703650003900727655003800766656001900804656001700823740002900840541005100869561004200920506004200962852002301004008992582-320110209081019.0021018s1967 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm784573871 aMAHV02-A168 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDelbanco, Nicholas.10aNicholas Delbanco papers for Consider Sappho burning,f1967 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aDelbanco is an American author and poet. aTypescript with autograph revisions of Consider Sappho burning, published in 1969.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007258 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-40. aNicholas Delbanco Papers for Consider Sappho Burning (MS Am 1860). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDelbanco, Nicholas. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aConsider Sappho burning.0 cGift;aNicholas Delbanco;d1970;e70M-40.5hou1 aGift of Nicholas Delbanco, 1970.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 186001710ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004200122245006900164300002700233351003900260545010200299520035600401555008700757524012000844546001600964600002900980600006501009630002001074651006101094655002201155656002101177541007001198561004801268506004201316852002601358008962526-920121109104652.0031204i18701879mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm808817491 aMAHV03A386 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBadeau, Adam,d1831-1895,erecipient.10aAdam Badeau letters from various correspondents,fca. 1870-1879. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAdam Badeau was an American author, military general during the American Civil War, and diplomat. aLetters include many dinner invitations and thank-you notes for engagements, notably invitations to the Travelers Club for a month at a time, and letters telling Badeau that he is being considered as a permanent member of the club. Many correspondents comment on Badeau's book concerning Ulysses S. Grant. Letters also discuss Badeau's life in London.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01003 aAdam Badeau Letters from Various Correspondents, ca. 1870-1879 (MS Am 889.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBadeau, Adam, 1831-1895.10aGrant, Ulysses S.q(Ulysses Simpson),d1822-1855vBiography.20aTravelers club. 0aLondon (England)xSocial life and customsy18th century. 7aInvitations.2aat 7aDiplomats.2lcsh0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno accession number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 889.602738ntcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245006700153300002700220351004600247545065800293520046800951524010601419555008701525555010801612600001801720600003101738600003901769610003301808600002101841600001701862650001301879650002601892650001601918656002301934700005501957700003302012700003402045541011002079561005702189506005902246852002302305009026787-720091023133155.0030127i19001989mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612748076 aMAHV03A15 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRoyce, Josiah,d1855-1916.10aJosiah Royce correspondence with the Mason family,f1900-1989. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aJosiah Royce (1855-1916) was an American idealist philosopher and a professor of history of philosophy at Harvard from 1892 to 1914. Royce was a friend of the Hocking and the Mason families. Daniel Gregory Mason (1873-1953) was a professor of music at Columbia University and his brother, Edward Palmer Mason, was a president and owner of the Mason-Hamlin Music Company of Boston. Both were the sons of Henry Mason (1831-1890) a founder of Mason-Hamlin Piano Company. Mary Mason was the wife of Edward Palmer Mason, then later married Daniel Gregory Mason. William Ernest Hocking was a professor of philosophy at Harvard and his son was Richard Hocking. aLetters concern Royce's attempt to mitigate a Mason family problem (divorce) through the use of his pragmatism theory of philosophy, especially concerning loyalty and the natural moral order. Correspondence concerns Daniel Gregory Mason, Edward Palmer Mason, and Mary Mason. Also includes some notes and letters from others concerning family issues. Materials entrusted to Harvard philosophy professor William Ernest Hocking and later to his son, Richard Hocking. aJosiah Royce Correspondence with the Mason Family (MS Am 2258). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001698 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-49.30aMason family.10aRoyce, Josiah,d1855-1916.10aMason, Daniel Gregory,d1873-1953.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.10aMason, Edward P.10aMason, Mary. 0aDivorce. 0aPhilosophy, American. 0aPragmatism. 7aPhilosophers.2aat1 aMason, Daniel Gregory,d1873-1953,ecorrespondent.1 aMason, Mary,dcorrespondent.1 aMason, Edward P.,erecipient.0 cDeposit, then gift;aRichard Hocking, gift by Kay Hocking;d1989 Apr. 4; gift 2003 Jan. 22;e88M-49.5HOU1 aDeposited by Richard Hocking, 1989; gift, 2003.5HOU0 aFormerly restricted. Restriction lifted 2003 Jan.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 225801551ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245003600153300002700189545011500216520013400331555008700465555010800552524008200660546001600742600003100758600001900789650003500808655001600843655002300859656001700882656002300899541011900922561010501041506004201146852002501188009030951-020110209090405.0021127s1965 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm837176341 aMAHV02A261 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFitzgerald, Robert,d1910-10aRobert Fitzgerald poems,f1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aRobert Fitzgerald was an American poet, educator, and critic best known for his translation of Greek classics. aManuscript and typescript drafts of poems, together with a fragment of a translation of the Iliad, and two letters by Fitzgerald.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-71. aRobert Fitzgerald Poems (MS Am 1771.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFitzgerald, Robert,d1910-10aHomer.tIliad. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh 7aTranslators.2lcsh0 cDeposit (gift);aThe George Edward Woodbury Poetry Room;bLamont Library, Harvard University;d1972;e71M-71.5HOU1 aTransfer from the George Edward Woodbury Poetry Room, Lamont Library, Harvard University, 1972.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1771.101723ntm a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004400108245003700152300002700189545032600216500011600542500015500658520006800813524005400881600004300935600005500978610003501033651001901068651001901087651001101106655001801117655001601135655002201151655002601173561005201199541011101251852002301362009049421-020111115074847.0030228i18861887xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612750973 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBatchelder, Charles Foster,d1856-1954.00kDiary :kmanuscript,f1886-1887. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBatchelder (1856-1954) graduated from Harvard College in 1878 and from the Lawrence Scientific School in 1882. In April of 1886 he went on a European tour and remained until September of 1887. His principal pursuit in later life was the study of natural history, especially the study of ornithology, mammalogy and botany. aAutograph travel diary of Batchelder's European trip. First entry on April 29, 1886 and last on Sept. 30, 1887. aAlso includes plant specimens, photographs, menus, tickets, and other ephemera (especially from the Cunard Steamship Company) pasted into this volume. aPhotographs are of: Italy, Paris, Dr. Wilhelm Luebe and others. aMS Am 2270. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBatchelder, Charles Foster, 1856-1954.10aLeube, Wilhelm Olivier von,d1842-1912vPortraits.20aCunard Steamship Company, ltd. 0aEuropexTours. 0aParis (France) 0aItaly. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aMenus.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlant materials.2aat aGift of Laura Poor Stone Batchelder, 1955.5HOU cGift (transfer from the HUA, 1976);aLaura Poor Stone (Mrs. Charles Foster) Batchelder,d1955e76M-895HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 227002650ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004400122245008600166300002700252351014700279545004800426520031100474530006200785555008700847555011000934524014701044546001601191600003201207650003901239650003901278650003501317700003801352700003201390700003301422700003001455700004901485700003101534700003601565541005801601561004701659506004201706852003401748541004801782845038601830009023934-220120111090313.0020624i19041962mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm817298981 aMAHV02-A41 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,e1881-1968,erecipient.10aWitter Bynner letters from various correspondents and other material,f1904-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1891.19: Letters to Witter Bynner, and II. bMS Am 1891.20: Additional letters to Witter Bynner. aBynner was an American poet and translator. aLetters to Witter Bynner from William Rose Benét, Stella Benson, Robert Silliman Hillyer, Henry James Jr., Frieda von Richthofen Lawrence, Bruce Porter, and Eleanor Roosevelt, among others. Also includes compositions by other authors collected by Bynner, some letters of others, and some drafts by Bynner. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records under *61M-123 and *62M-157. aWitter Bynner Letters from Various Correspondents and Other Material, 1904-1962 (MS Am 1891.19-1891.20). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aBenét, William Rose,d1886-1950.1 aBenson, Stella,d1892-1933.1 aHillyer, Robert,d1895-1961.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.1 aLawrence, Frieda von Richthofen,d1879-1956.1 aPorter, Bruce,d1865-1953.1 aRoosevelt, Eleanor,d1884-1962.0 cGift;aWitter Bynner;baddress;d1961;e61M-123.5HOU1 aGift of Witter Bynner, 1961 and 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1891.19-1891.200 cGift;aWitter Bynner;d1962;e62M-157.5HOU aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou02077ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002400122245008400146300002700230351014100257545011600398520036100514555008700875555010900962524015201071546001601223600002401239610002401263630002201287655002001309700006401329700003601393541013501429561005401564506004201618852007901660009035682-920121203085211.0020920i19461967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm804050131 aMAHV02-A74 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLittle, Leon Magaw.10aLeon Magaw Little correspondence with T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot,f1946-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1691.4: Correspondence and other papers; and II. MS Am 1691.13: Additional correspondence. aEliot was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. Little and Eliot were classmates at Harvard (Class of 1910). aCorrespondence of Leon Magaw Little with T.S. Eliot is largely concerning personal matters. Also includes correspondence with Valerie (Fletcher) Eliot and other correspondents, an autograph manuscript about T.S. Eliot written for the T.S. Eliot memorial issue of the Harvard Advocate, as well as news clippings and other printed material about T. S. Eliot.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010778 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-129. aLeon Magaw Little Correspondence with T.S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot,1946-1967 (MS Am 1691.4 and MS Am 1691.13). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLittle, Leon Magaw.20aHarvard University.00aHarvard Advocate. 7aClippings.2aat1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965,ecorrespondent.1 aEliot, Valerie,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aHarvard College Class of 1910 (via William B. Durant);b985 Memorial Drive, Cambridge 38 Mass;d1968 May 13;e67M-129.5HOU1 aGift of Harvard College Class of 1910, 1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.4, 1691.13zMS Am 1691.13 is shelved with MS Am 1691.1003468ctcaa2200553 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002100123245006500144300002700209351003900236545012700275520069000402520017301092555008701265555010901352524011501461546001601576600002101592600003001613650004201643650003301685651005801718651005801776655001801834655005001852655002401902655001601926656002501942700005001967700005802017700005002075700006102125700005002186700004602236700004702282700005402329700004302383700005302426700003402479740002002513541016302533561015302696506004202849852002302891009035684-520130122091657.0021101i18251936mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm789510271 aMAHV02-A204 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aChanning family.10aChanning family correspondence and other papers,f1825-1936. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe Channings were a prominent Massachusetts family with strong ties to the Unitarian church and the antislavery movement. aConsists chiefly of correspondence of various members of the Channing family including Marjorie (Channing) Loring, Margaret Fuller (Channing) Loring, Walter Channing, and William Ellery Channing, concerning family matters, details of daily life, and travel anecdotes. There are letters to Margaret Fuller (Channing) Loring from Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Julia Ward Howe, and Henry James among others. Also includes an excerpt from Margaret (Fuller) marchesa d'Ossoli's account of a visit to George Sand, a letter written by Thomas Wentworth Higginson to Ralph Waldo Emerson urging him to publish his speech on the Fugitive Slave Law, and a manuscript poem by William Ellery Channing. aAlso includes a few drawings such as: Cale Young Rice, 1 pencil drawing, A critical cow; and Alice Caldwell Hegan, drawings with a limerick and a cow, and one of a cat.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012418 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-274. aChanning Family Correspondence and Other Papers, 1825-1936 (MS Am 1610). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aChanning family.10aSand, George,d1804-1876. 0aAntislavery movementszUnited States. 0aFugitive slave laws of 1850. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh1 aChanning, Walter,d1786-1876,ecorrespondent.1 aChanning, William Ellery,d1780-1842,ecorrespondent.1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,erecipient.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911,ecorrespondent.1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Henry,d1811-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aLoring, Marjorie Channing,ecorrespondent.1 aLoring, Margaret Fuller Channing,ecorrespondent.1 aRice, Cale Young,d1872-1943,eartist.1 aRice, Alice Caldwell Hegan,d1870-1942,eartist.1 aFuller, Margaret,d1810-1850.22aA critical cow.0 cGift;aCharlotte Loring Lowell (Mrs. Ralph Lowell), in memory of her grandmother, Margaret Fuller Channing Loring (Mrs. Thacher Loring);d1960;e59M-274.5HOU1 aGift of Charlotte Loring Lowell (Mrs. Ralph Lowell), in memory of her grandmother, Margaret Fuller Channing Loring (Mrs. Thacher Loring), 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 161001603ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003200123245005500155300002700210545003300237520014800270555008700418555010800505524009600613600003200709650003500741655003800776655001600814656001700830700003800847740001400885541013700899561007901036506013701115852002501252009065373-420110114084103.0021120i19701976mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793565501 aMAHV02-A254 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, Robert,d1917-1977.10aRobert Lowell letters to Frank Bidart,f1970-1976. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLowell was an American poet. aPrinted copy of Notebook with Lowell's handwritten revisions, together with 33 letters to Frank Bidart, drafts of poems and other compositions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005628 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-29. aRobert Lowell Letters to Frank Bidart (MS Am 1905.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLowell, Robert,d1917-1977. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBidart, Frank,d1939-erecipient.0 aNotebook.0 cPurchase;aFrank Bidart;b63 Sparks Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138;d1977 26 Dec.;e77M-29;h($19,800) Amy Lowell Fund;5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund from Mr. Frank Bidart, 1977, 1979.5HOU0 aSome letters item (3) may not be consulted without the permission of Frank Bidart. Rest of collection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1905.201458ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100001900123245005900142300002700201351003000228545004600258520016500304555008700469555010900556524010900665546001600774600001900790651003000809655001600839655002400855700002600879541011900905561004301024506004201067852002301109009035736-120120111091442.0021108i16481737mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm828629501 aMAHV02-A216 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aLasell family.10aLasell family documents on land ownership,f1648-1737. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aThe Lasell family lived in Hingham, Mass. aContains 34 documents pertaining to land ownership and transfers in Hingham, Mass., and neighboring towns by the Lasell family, including John Lasell (d. 1695).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-282. aLasell Family Documents on Land Ownership, 1648-1737 (MS Am 1693). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLasell family. 0aHingham (Mass.)xHistory. 7aDeeds.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aLasell, John,d-1695.0 cGift;aCharles A. Ruggles;b199-335 W. 246th St., Riverdale on the Hudson, NY 71 NY;d1963 June 10;e62M-282.5HOU1 aGift of Charles A. Ruggles, 1963.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 169302035ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003500123245006300158300002700221351003900248545021800287520039900505555008700904555010900991524011301100546001601213600003501229600003501264610001901299651005801318655002001376655002101396700004901417700004801466541005201514561004201566506004201608852002301650009035739-620121210145153.0021113i19091946mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm791068081 aMAHV02-A228 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aPeabody, Endicott,d1857-1944.10aEndicott Peabody letters to Rosalind Richards,f1909-1946. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEndicott Peabody co-founded the Groton School for Boys (Groton, Mass.) and served as its headmaster. Rosalind Richards was a daughter of novelist Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards and granddaughter of Julia Ward Howe. aPrimarily letters from Endicott Peabody and Fannie Peabody to Rosalind Richards, along with correspondence with Richards' parents. Letters includes discussion of family matters, travels (including postcards), events at the Groton school, and visits to one another and with family and friends. Also includes the memorial booklet for William Amory Gardner and newspaper clippings about his death.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-343. aEndicott Peabody Letters to Rosalind Richards, 1909-1944 (MS Am 1722). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPeabody, Endicott,d1857-1944.10aGardner, William Amory,d1863-20aGroton School. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aPostcards.2aat 7aObituaries.2aat1 aPeabody, Fannie,d1860-1946,ecorrespondent.1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964,erecipient.0 cGift;aRosalind Richards;d1956;e62M-343.5HOU1 aGift of Rosalind Richards, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172201911ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003700123245005300160300002700213545006000240520034200300555008700642555010900729524010500838546001600943600003700959610002300996650003901019651004701058651004901105655001801154655002401172655001501196656002401211700003101235700004001266700005201306541004901358561003901407506004201446852002501488009035741-820120425090420.0021108s1879 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm849456131 aMAHV02-A217 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916.10aMary Tappan Wright letters to her family,f1879. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWright was an American novelist and short-story writer. aContains 61 personal letters to family members concerning daily matters, people at Dartmouth, parties and dinners, visits to Cambridge and Poughkeepsie, various notes including a hand-drawn map of Hanover and a map of the Common at Dartmouth in 1879. Also includes two letters from her husband John Henry Wright to Lydia McDowell Tappan.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-165. aMary Tappan Wright Letters to Her Family, 1879 (MS Am 1701.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916.20aDartmouth College. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xDescription and travel. 0aPoughkeepsie (N.Y.)xDescription and travel. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aWomen authors.2aat3 aWright family,erecipient.1 aTappan, Lydia McDowell,erecipient.1 aWright, John Henry,d1852-1908,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aJohn K. Wright;d1966;e65M-165.5HOU1 aGift of John K. Wright, 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1701.201752ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004900123245007200172300002700244351003900271545008500310520024300395555008700638555010900725524012200834546001600956600003700972600003801009651005001047655002701097700004801124700003201172700003101204541005601235561004601291506004201337852002301379009035756-620120111095539.0021113i18431902mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm844474581 aMAHV02-A227 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCabot, James Elliot,d1821-1903,erecipient.10aJames Elliot Cabot letters from various correspondents,f1843-1902. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aJames Elliot Cabot was a long-time friend and biographer of Ralph Waldo Emerson. aIncludes letters to Stephen Cabot and his military records as an officer during the Civil War. Letters to James Cabot concern his work an relationship with Emerson, as well as personal letters from Louis Agassiz, Fanny Kimble, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-342. aJames Elliot Cabot Letters from Various Correspondents, 1843-1902 (MS Am 1719). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCabot, James Elliot,d1821-1903.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aMilitary records.2aat1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aCabot, Stephen,erecipient.1 aKemble, Fanny,d1809-1893.0 cBequest;aJames Elliot Cabot;d1942;e62M-342.5HOU1 aBequest of James Elliot Cabot, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 171901640ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004700123245005300170300002700223351003000250545005500280520024700335555008700582555010900669524010500778546001600883600004700899650001300946700003100959541012900990561007601119506011801195852002501313009035763-920121212144041.0021106i19471963mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm825761251 aMAHV02-A209 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEliot, T.S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot letters to Ruth Harding,f1947-1963. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aEliot was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. aConsists of eleven letters from Eliot to Ruth Harding, who was a nurse or caretaker to "Miss Eliot", mainly concerning Miss Eliot's health but also announcing his marriage and thanking Mrs. Harding for her hospitality when the Eliots visited.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008678 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-207. aT. S. Eliot Letters to Ruth Harding, 1947-1963 (MS Am 1691.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEliot, T.S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965. 0aNursing.1 aHarding, Ruth,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aMrs. Verger Harding;b329 Concord Ave., Cambridge Mass.;d1965 Apr. 28;e64M-207;h$350.00; Amy Lowell Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased from Mrs. Verger Harding with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1965.5HOU1 aManuscripts of unpublished T.S. Eliot material may be consulted only with the permission of Mrs. T.S. Eliot.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.101820ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003500123245007900158300002700237351003900264530006200303545009300365520026300458555008700721555011300808524013000921600002201051600003101073650004301104651005101147655002101198700004001219541011301259561004501372506004201417852002301459009035797-320120128111846.0021101i18221921mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm815687481 aMAHV02-A205 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFields, Joseph E.,ecollector.10aJoseph E. Field collection of letters by autograph collectors,f1822-1921. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aFields was an American historian and biographer who wrote about the American Revolution. aPrimarily letters of collectors of autographs who were interested in signers of the Declaration of Independence, including many letters from collector William Buell Sprague. With offprints concerning Thomas Lynch, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007848 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-102-103. aJoseph E. Fields Collection of Letters by Autograph Collectors, 1822-1921 (MS Am 1630). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aFields, Joseph E.10aLynch, Thomas,d1726-1776. 0aAutographsxCollectors and collecting. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 7aAutographs.2aat1 aSprague, William Buell,d1795-1876.0 cGift;aDr. Joseph E. Fields;bWessington, 1221 Glenwood Ave., Joliet Ill.;d1960 Dec. 28;e60M-102-103.5HOU1 aGift of Dr. Joseph E. Fields, 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163001848ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004800123245010900171300002700280351003900307545018200346520010600528555008700634555010800721524015100829546001600980600004800996600004801044650005601092655002101148655002701169655002701196740002901223541009901252561004501351506004201396852006001438009035898-820110209081151.0021108i19351970mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm804050041 aMAHV02-A213 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrowne, E. Martinq(Elliott Martin),d1900-10aE. Martin Browne stage plans and related material for T. S. Eliot's Murder in the Cathedral,f1935-1970. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aE. Martin Browne (1900-1980) directed and taught modern and medieval religious drama, in England and America. He was the first director of T. S. Eliot's Murder in the Cathedral. aStage plans, seating plan, and programs for the 1935 and 1970 productions of Murder in the Cathedral.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-42. aE. Martin Browne Stage Plans and Related Material for T. S. Eliot's Murder in the Cathedral (bMS Am 1691.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aBrowne, E. Martinq(Elliott Martin),d1900- 0aTheatersxStage-setting and sceneryzUnited States. 7aBlueprints.2aat 7aPlans (drawings).2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat0 aMurder in the Cathedral.0 cGift;aMr. E. Martin Browne;b20 Lancaster Grove, London NW3 Englandd1971 Jan.;e70M-42.5HOU1 aGift of Mr. E. Martin Browne, 1971.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.8zShelved with MS Am 1691.7 (box 3)02626ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005400122245006200176300002700238351007200265545017100337520050400508555008701012555010901099524010101208600004201309600002001351610003301371655002001404655001601424655002401440655002201464655001601486655002701502700006101529700004501590700004901635700004901684700004901733700006101782700004801843700004901891740002701940541006901967561005502036506004202091852002302133009059706-020110114092602.0030205i17571865mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806161361 aMAHV03-A34 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDunbar, Charles Franklin,d1830-1900,ecollector.10aCharles Franklin Dunbar autograph collection,f1757-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters; and II. Documents. aDunbar (Harvard, A.B., 1851) taught political economy at Harvard University and served as Dean of the Harvard College Faculty and of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. aAutograph collection includes letters from Lydia Maria (Francis) Child, Henry Clay, Edward Everett, Horace Greeley, Andrew Jackson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Pierpont, and Daniel Webster among other literary and historical figures. There are manuscript deeds, promissory notes, indenture contracts, and other documents created in Massachusetts. Additionally, the collection includes autograph fragments and miscellaneous printed material, including pre-revolutionary specimens of paper money.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-106. aCharles Franklin Dunbar Autograph Collection (MS Am 1928). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDunbar, Charles Franklin,d1830-1900.30aRuggles family.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 7aContracts.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPaper money.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPromissory notes.2aat1 aChild,cMrs.q(Lydia Maria),d1802-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aClay, Henry,d1777-1852,ecorrespondent.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aGreeley, Horace,d1811-1872,ecorrespondent.1 aJackson, Andrew,d1767-1845,ecorrespondent.1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aPierpont, John,d1785-1866,ecorrespondent.1 aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852,ecorrespondent.0 aNew Hampshire gazette.0 cGift;aHeirs of Charles F. Dunbar;d1937 Feb. 20;e75M-106.5HOU1 aGift of the heirs of Charles F. Dunbar, 1937.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192801642ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003800124245006600162300002700228351005500255545012900310520021600439555008700655524011600742600003800858650003500896655001600931656001700947700004500964700005001009700003501059541004901094561010801143506004201251852002301293009071516-020120111083517.0030318i18251881mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127592321 aMAHV03-A104 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aRalph Waldo Emerson miscellaneous correspondence,f1825-1881. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent or title. aRalph Waldo Emerson was an American lecturer, poet, and essayist, and the leading exponent of New England Transcendentalism. a"Catch-all" collection chiefly consisting of letters from Emerson to various correspondents, including Thomas Carlyle, Edward Everett Hale, and Samuel Gray Ward. Also includes several autograph manuscript poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01462 aRalph Waldo Emerson Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1825-1881 (MS Am 1189). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aCarlyle, Thomas,d1795-1881,erecipient.1 aHale, Edward Everett,d1822-1909,erecipient.1 aWard, Samuel Gray,erecipient.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various donors at various times. Accession information is given with the item entry.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 118901702ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245003900156300002700195545020000222520021900422524007800641555008700719555010900806600003400915600003000949650003500979650002201014655001601036655002401052655002001076656001601096700003001112541008001142561006501222506004201287852002301329009028804-120091023133411.0030129i18311834mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612748209 aMAHV03A16 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.10aJulia Ward Howe poems,f1831-1834. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aJulia Ward Howe was the author of the "Battle hymn of the Republic" and other works and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer. Her father was successful banker, Samuel Ward (1786-1839). aVolume of poems containing a few loose notes, poems, and letters. JWH wrote this volume when she was between twelve and fifteen years old and dedicated it to her father, Samuel Ward. Also includes one poem by Ward. aJulia Ward Howe Poems (MS Am 2259). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-225.10aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.10aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aFather and child. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoetry albums.2aat 7aJuvenilia.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839.0 cGift;aJohn Richards and Miss Rosalind Richards;d1964 Apr.;e63M-225.5HOU1 aGift of John Richards and Miss Rosalind Richards, 1964.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 225901712ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004300123245004100166300002700207545012600234520037200360555008700732555010900819524008000928650004201008650004201050655002001092655002001112655001701132655001801149700004401167541006101211561004901272506004201321852002301363009030561-220110114094824.0021127i16951884mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm827435741 aMAHV02-A260 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWinsor, Justin,d1831-1897,ecompiler.10aJustin Winsor scrapbook,f1695-1884. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWinsor was superintendent (1868-77) of the Boston Public Library and afterward librarian (1877-97) of Harvard University. aScrapbook volume, presumably compiled by Winsor, containing letters to scholar and librarian Justin Winsor, an indenture, a signed confession, and other manuscript documents as well as printed ephemera such as tickets, programs, and newspaper clippings along with other items. An inscription in the volume says that these are items received at the library, 1878-1893.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-108. aJustin Winsor Scrapbook (MS Am 1930). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aHistoryzUnited Statesy18th century. 0aHistoryzUnited Statesy19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aContracts.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aMemoirs.2aat1 aWinsor, Justin,d1831-1897,erecipient.0 cGift (transfer);aWidener Library;d1894;e75M-108.5HOU1 aTransferred from Widener Library, 1894.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 193002195ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005500123245005100178300002700229351003900256545007000295520030600365555008700671555010900758524010100867546001600968600005500984650003901039650003901078651003501117651003501152651004301187651003701230655002001267655004501287655002101332655002201353656001901375700003901394700004801433700004301481700004401524541005701568561004701625506004201672852002301714009030618-X20130122094916.0021016i18791910mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm783429231 aMAHV02-A146 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrawford, F. Marionq(Francis Marion),d1854-1909.10aF. Marion Crawford correspondence,f1879-1910. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCrawford was a successful author of romance and adventure novels. aPrimarily letters of Francis Marion Crawford to Louisa Howe Crawford and Maude Howe Elliott. Letters are about travels in India, England, Italy and the U.S., and Crawfod's writing. Also includes letters of Mary Crawfors Fraser and Baroness Ann Crawford von Rabe, and biographical material on Crawford.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-175. aF. Marion Crawford Correspondence, 1879-1910 (MS Am 1207). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCrawford, F. Marionq(Francis Marion),d1854-1909. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aIndiaxDescription and travel. 0aItalyxDescription and travel. 0aUnited StatesxDescription and travel. 0aEnglandxDescription and travel. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDrawingszAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aCrawford, Louisa Howe,erecipient.1 aElliott, Maud Howe,d1854-1948,erecipient.1 aFraser, Mary Crawford,ecorrespondent.1 aVon Rabe, Ann Crawford,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richards;d1951;e50M-175.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 120701634ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245006400156300002700220351006600247545005700313520016800370555008700538524010300625546001600728600003300744650003500777650006900812655002000881655003800901655001600939656001700955740007100972541013101043561004501174506004201219852002301261009030639-220100317134237.0021101i19441945mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127486811 aMAHV02A196 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWilliams, Oscar,d1900-1964.10aOscar Williams papers concerning The War Poets,f1944-1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically, with miscellaneous materials at end. aOscar Williams was an American poet and anthologist. aLetters, permissions, and draft poems from the contributors to The war poets, an anthology of the war poetry of the 20th century, edited by Oscar Williams in 1945.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00975 aOscar Williams Papers Concerning The War Poets (MS Am 1513). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWilliams, Oscar,d1900-1964. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aContracts.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh4 aThe War poets, an anthology of the war poetry of the 20th century.0 cGift;aOscar Williams;b35 Water St., New York City;d1945 July 13, and 1946 Apr. 20;e45M-6F, 45M-6AF, 45M-6BF, 45M-6CF.5HOU1 aGift of Oscar Williams, 1945, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 151302699ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004000121245006900161300002700230545025500257520044000512530006200952555008701014555010901101524011901210546001601329651006801345600004001413600003101453650003501484650001601519650001401535655002001549655001701569655002001586655002501606656001901631700003701650700003101687541005301718561004301771506004201814852002301856845038601879009059921-720130107102834.0030122i18891902mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm783263401 aMAHV03-A9 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBucke, Richard Maurice,d1837-1902.10aRichard Maurice Bucke letters to Edith Maclure Love,f1889-1902. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBucke was a Canadian psychiatrist and psychologist, Walt Whitman's literary executor, and superintendent of the London Ontario Asylum for the Insane. Love was an American and the Director of Physical Training for Women at Indiana State Normal School. aIncludes 24 letters from Bucke to Love concerning writings of Walt Whitman, religion, Bucke's writings, and Bucke's vacation at Gloucester Pool in Muskoka. Also includes an unsigned autograph manuscript of Walt Whitman's Spain, an unsigned autograph manuscript of Whitman's It Is Probably a Spasm of Temper, two cancelled checks from Whitman, photographs of Bucke, pamphlets, and a piece of homespun suiting purporting to be Whitman's. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-258. aRichard Maurice Bucke Letters to Edith Maclure Love, 1889-1902 (MS Am 1545). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aMuskoka (Ont. : District municipality)xDescription and travel.10aBucke, Richard Maurice,d1837-1902.10aWhitman, Walt,d1819-1892. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aPsychiatry. 0aReligion. 7aArtifacts.2aat 7aChecks.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aTextile fabric.2aat 7aPhychiatrists.1 aLove, Edith Maclure,erecipient.1 aWhitman, Walt,d1819-1892.0 cGift;aMrs. Paul Holinger;d1958;e57M-258.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Paul Holinger, 1958.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1545 aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou02047ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005700122245008300179300002700262351002900289520052400318555008700842555010800929524012201037546001601159600004501175650006901220650002401289651005501313651005801368655002201426655002201448656002701470541009101497561004401588506004201632852002301674009059951-920110128074811.0030205i18881940mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm835549241 aMAHV03-A29 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAtherton, Ellen Maud Tilton,d1872-1965,erecipient.10aLetters to Ellen Maud Tilton Atherton from various correspondents,f1888-1940. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aLetters to Ellen Maud Tilton Atherton from various correspondents. Friends of Atherton write of travels in Holland, politics in the United States, women who tried to run for office in the United States, and of being sick of the shingles. She was also thanked for various donations she gave to orphanages. The collection includes 2 photographs, and many dinner invitations to Atherton from politicians such as the Hoovers, Eleanor Roosevelt, Florence Harding, and the Russian, Italian, French and British Prime Minister.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007018 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-92. aLetters to Ellen Maud Tilton Atherton From Various Correspondents (MS Am 1770). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAtherton, Ellen Maud Tilton,d1872-1965. 0aWomenxPolitical activityzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aShingles (Disease). 0aNetherlandsxDescription and travely20th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 7aInvitations.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPhilanthropists.2lcsh0 cGift;aMrs. Francis Kernan;b163 E. 65th St., New York City;d1965 Dec.;e65M-92.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Francis Kernan, 1965.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 177001822ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004100122245005800163300002700221545006200248520034100310555008700651555012100738524011600859546001600975600004100991650003801032650003801070650002901108655001901137655001601156700006601172700004501238541005901283561005701342506004201399852003101441009060010-X20130107111318.0030214i17961805mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm802325351 aMAHV03-A55 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHerschel, William,cSir,d1738-1822.10aSir William Herschel astronomical papers,f1796-1805. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHerschel was a German-born astronomer working in England. aIncludes six manuscript catalogs concerning the comparative brightness of stars, two Flamsteed catalogs, observations on the rotations of planets with diagrams, notes on the properties of light in four packets, among other documents. Documents chiefly in the hand of Caroline Lucretia Herschel, her brother's amanuensis and co-observer.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012188 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1968, under *59M-243 and *67M-41. aSir William Herschel Astronomical Papers, 1796-1805 (MS Eng 1144-1144.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHerschel, William,cSir,d1738-1822. 0aAstronomyxHistoryy18th century. 0aAstronomyxHistoryy19th century. 0aAstronomyxObservations. 7aDiagrams.2aat 7aNotes.2aat1 aFlamsteed, John,d1646-1719.tHistoriae coelstis britannicae.1 aHerschel, Caroline Lucretia,d1750-1848.0 cGift;aunknown sources;dvarious dates;e59M-243.5HOU1 aReceived from various sources at various dates.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1144-1144.101514ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004100122245007400163300002700237545003500264520010500299555008700404555011400491524012500605546001600730600004100746600003400787650003800821655003800859700005800897740004600955541007201001561004901073506004201122852002401164009049243-920121109121018.0030129i19261937mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm792929531 aMAHV03-A19 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aChandler, Lloyd Horwitz,d1869-1947.10aLloyd Horwitz Chandler papers concerning Rudyard Kipling,f1926-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aKipling was an English author. aTypescripts by Chandler concerning Kipling as well as letters to Flora Virginia (Milner) Livingston.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-660-668F. aLloyd Horwitz Chandler Papers Concerning Rudyard Kipling, 1926-1937 (MS Eng 1193). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChandler, Lloyd Horwitz,d1869-1947.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-erecipient.2 aA summary of the work of Rudyard Kipling.0 cGift;aMrs. Flora V. Livingston;d1944 Apr. 15;e43M-660-668F.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Flora V. Livingston, 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 119302090ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003300122245006700155300002700222545010200249520042800351555008700779555010800866524010700974546001601081600003301097600001901130650005201149655002001201656001601221700003301237700005301270700005001323541009401373506007201467506012201539561004301661852002401704009060014-220110209085606.0030205i19251967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793589311 aMAHV03-A35 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aJohn Masefield correspondence with Corliss Lamont,f1925-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aMasefield was an English poet. Lamont was an American humanist philosopher, author and socialist. aConsists of two volumes of photocopied correspondence between Masefield and Lamont, concerning events of daily life and family news as well as Masefield and Lamont's work. Several letters deal with the composition and publication of a history of the Lamont family, for which Masefield specially wrote and recorded a poem. Also includes various photocopied newspaper clippings and Lamont's accounts of visits with Masefield.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007458 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-43. aJohn Masefield Correspondence with Corliss Lamont (MS Eng 1291). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.30aLamont family. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aLamont, Corliss,d1902-1995.1 aLamont, Thomas Stilwell,d1899-1967,erecipient.1 aMasefield, Constance,d-1960,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aCorliss Lamont;b315 W. 106th St., New York NY 10025;d1971 Nov. 26;e71M-43.5HOU0 aThere are no restrictions on physical access to this material.5hou1 aPermission to publish from the manuscripts in item (1) must be obtained from the Librarian of Philips Exeter Academy.1 aGift of Mr. Corliss Lamont, 1971.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 129102769ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003600107245006200143300002700205351003900232545038900271520046700660555008701127524011401214546001601328544002501344600003501369600003601404600003601440700004901476700005101525700005801576700005201634700005101686700007501737700005801812541018201870561014002052506004202192506012302234852002602357009066926-620120105114701.0021120i19011940mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm82394738 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWinslow, Mary Stedman Williams.10aMary Stedman Williams Winslow correspondence,f1901-1940. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aMary Stedman Williams was born in Buffalo, New York in 1875 and was educated in Buffalo and Europe. On 1 October 1902 she married Frederick Bradlee Winslow (1873-1937). Frederick and Mary resided in Boston, where he was a prominent physician. Mary was known for her expertise in classical Greek. Their children were Mary (known as Polly), born in 1908, and Frederick Jr, born in 1910. aLetters sent to Mary Stedman Williams Winslow (Mrs. Frederick Winslow) from Elizabeth Chapman, John Jay Chapman, Archibald Cary Coolidge, Morris Carter of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Henry Cabot Lodge, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Edmund Clarence Stedman. Also includes a draft of Winslow's letter to Franklin D. Roosevelt and her letters to Harvard Librarian Keyes DeWitt Metcalf, including a list of materials sent to the Harvard University Library.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02256 aMary Stedman Williams Winslow Correspondence, 1901-1940 (MS Am 800.40). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also MS Am 1352.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aLodge, Henry Cabot,d1850-1924.10aWinslow, Mary Stedman Williams.1 aCarter, Morris,d1877-1965,ecorrespondent..1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933,ecorrespondent.1 aCoolidge, Archibald Cary,d1866-1928,ecorrespondent.1 aLodge, Henry Cabot,d1850-1924,ecorrespondent.1 aMetcalf, Keyes DeWitt,d1889-1983,erecipient.1 aRoosevelt, Franklin D.q(Franklin Delano),d1882-1945,ecorrespondent.1 aStedman, Edmund Clarence,d1833-1908,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Frederick Winslow [Mary Stedman Williams Winslow] in memory of her husband, Dr. Frederick Winslow;d1940; 1943 March 24;eno accession number; 42M-631; 42M-632.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Frederick Winslow [Mary Stedman Williams Winslow] in memory of her husband, Dr. Frederick Winslow AB 1895, 1940-1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 800.4002113ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245006000158300002700218351006500245545020500310520036200515524011600877555008700993555010801080600003501188600002001223650003901243650003901282650003701321650002901358655002001387700004001407700006901447541013101516561003901647506004201686852002301728009067313-120091210080050.0030325i19011958mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn122404963 aMAHV03A117 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aLetters to Theodore Baird and other papers,f1901-1958. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Letters, and II. Other papers. aJohn Jay Chapman was an American essayist, poet, playwright, and reformer. His wife was Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler Chapman. Theodore Baird was a professor of English at Amherst College, Massachusetts. aJohn Jay Chapman's letters to Baird contain thoughts and advice on reading and other matters concerning young Baird's life and studies. Elizabeth Chapman's letters concern securing her husband's letters to Baird for possible publication. Collection also contains clippings on various members of the Chapman family and pamphlets by or about John Jay Chapman. aJohn Jay Chapman Letters to Theodore Baird and Other Papers (MS Am 2286). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001798 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1984-1985, under *84M-30.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.30aChapman family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aEducationy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat1 aBaird, Theodore,d1901-erecipient.1 aChapman, Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler,d1866-1937,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aTheodore Baird;b38 Shays Street, RD 6, Amherst, MA 01002 (via transfer from HU Archives);d1984 Dec. 13;e84M-30.5HOU1 aGift of Theodore Baird, 1984.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 228602288ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004800121245009600169300002700265545008400292520053200376555008700908555010800995524014901103546001601252600003601268600004201304650002201346651005201368656001801420700004401438700005001482700004501532700005301577700004301630541012101673561005201794506004201846852002601888009077285-720121127113124.0030115i19051957mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm828037101 aMAHV03-A7 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRothenstein, John,cSir,d1901-erecipient.10aSir John Rothenstein letters from the Beerbohm family and other correspondents,f1905-1957. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aRothenstein (1901-1992) was an English author and Director of the Tate Gallery. aLetters from the Beerbohm family, notably Eliza, Elisabeth, Lady Florence, and Sir Max to Rothenstein and his wife Lady Alice Rothenstein. Letters from Elisabeth (Jungmann) Beerbohm describe Max Beerbohm's last illness and death and the compilation of William Rothenstein's letters. Max Beerbohm's letters to Lady Alice Rothenstein concern social engagements and include Beerbohm's reminiscences of William Rothenstein. Beerbohm's letters to Sir John include commentary on John Rothenstein's publications about English artists.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-42. aSir John Rothenstein Letters from the Beerbohm Family and Other Correspondents, 1905-1957 (MS Eng 1148.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRothenstein, John,cSir,d1901-10aRothenstein, Sir William,d1872-1945. 0aArtistszEngland. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aAuthors.2aat1 aBeerbohm, Eliza Draper,ecorrespondent.1 aBeerbohm, Elizabeth Jungmann,ecorrespondent.1 aBeerbohm, Florence Kahn,ecorrespondent.1 aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956,ecorrespondent.1 aRothenstein, Alice,cLady,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aSir John Rothenstein;bDept. of Fine Arts, Fordham University, Bronx, NY 10458;d1968 Oct.;e68M-42.5HOU1 aPurchased from Sir John Rothenstein, 1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1148.501830ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005100123245005900174300002700233351003900260545012500299520021500424555008700639524010900726546001600835600003900851610003300890650003900923656001900962700004700981700006501028700005701093700006301150700005601213541007701269561005701346506004201403852002301445009121628-120130204140120.0030421i19221976mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807096891 aMAHV03-A179 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJones, Howard Mumford,d1892-1980,erecipient.10aHoward Mumford Jones miscellaneous papers,f1922-1976. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aJones (1892-1980) was Professor of English and Abbott Lawrence Lowell Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University. aLetters to Jones from various literary correspondents. Includes several from Ellen Glasgow, William Ellery Leonard, and H. L. Mencken. Other correspondents include Conrad Aiken, Wallace Stegner and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01360 aHoward Mumford Jones Miscellaneous Papers, 1922-1976 (MS Am 1684). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJones, Howard Mumford,d1892-1980.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aGlasgow, Ellen Anderson Gholson,d1873-1945,ecorrespondent.1 aLeonard, William Ellery,d1876-1944,ecorrespondent.1 aMencken, H. L.q(Henry Louis),d1880-1956,ecorrespondent.1 aStegner, Wallace Earle,d1909-1993,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 168401521ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100001800124245003500142300002700177545012900204520006500333555008700398555010800485524011300593546001600706600003000722650005500752650004200807650001700849655002200866655001600888656002200904656002500926541011600951561003901067506004201106852002301148009097683-520121128082202.0030326i19471969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807102971 aMHAT03-A54 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWhedon, John.10aJohn Whedon plays,f1947-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aJohn O. Whedon (1905-1991) was an American dramatist who became a successful situation comedy writer in the 1950s and 1960s. aContains typescript television script, screenplay, and play.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010648 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-83. aJohn Whedon Plays, 1947-1969 (MS Thr 214). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWhedon, John,d1905-1991. 0aMotion picture playszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aPlaywriting. 7aScreenplays.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh 7aScreenwriters.2lcsh0 cGift;aJohn O. Whedon;b1108 Tellem Drive, Pacific Palisades, California 90272;d1968 December 3;e68M-83.5the1 aGift of John O. Whedon, 1968.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 21401767ckcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100002100126245008600147300002700233545004100260520017600301555008700477555010800564524015800672546001600830610004600846600002100892650003800913655002100951655002200972655005600994656002501050700007901075740002101154541010801175561005601283506004201339852002401381009097710-620110209082625.0030331s1971 mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm792853691 aMHAT03-A61 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aMahard, Francis.10aFrancis Mahard set designs for Peter Illich Tchaikovsky's Queen of spades,f1971. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aMahard was an American set designer. aIncludes six drawings in pencil and watercolor of set designs, seven blueprint stage plans, and four photographs of the WGBH-TV Boston opera production of Queen of spades.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-77. aFrancis Mahard Set Designs for Peter Illich Tchaikovsky's Queen of Spades (MS Thr 255). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aWGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.)10aMahard, Francis. 0aOperaxStage-setting and scenery. 7aBlueprints.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSet design drawingsxAmericany20th century.2gmgpc 7aSet designers.2lcsh1 aChaĭkovskiĭ, Modest Ilʹich,d1850-1916.tPikovaia︠ ︡dama.lEnglish.0 aQueen of spades.0 cGift;aFrancis Mahard;bWGBH-TV, Boston, 125 Western Ave., Boston MA 02134;d1971 Mar. 2;e70M-77.5the1 aGift of Francis Mahard, WGBH-TV, Boston, 1971.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 25502360ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002300086100004800109245007300157300002700230545020800257520065400465555008701119555010901206524013201315600006001447600004801507650001701555650002801572655001601600655002201616656002201638700004201660700004601702740001801748740002801766541009501794561004501889506004201934852002201976009097721-120110105073054.0030401i18971928mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm81328742 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm1 aBarrie, J. M.q(James Matthew),d1860-1937.10aJ. M. Barrie letters to Maude Adams and Charles Frohman,f1897-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBarrie was a Scottish playwright and novelist. Adams was an American actress and starred in several of Barrie's plays. Frohman was an American theatrical manager and producer as well as manager of Adams. aIncludes 29 letters from Barrie to Adams, congratulating her on her past performances, invitations to come visit Barrie in Scotland, and travel plans. Barrie also tells Adams of current play projects he is working on, parts in his plays he thinks would be suitable for her to act, and asks her opinions about other plays she has seen. The 13 letters from Barrie to Frohman discuss ideas for staging his production of the Taming of the Shrew and other productions, and tells him of news from Adams. Collection also contains an unsigned autograph manuscript of Barrie's Golf Croquet and a section of his play What Every Woman Knows from the third act.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004618 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-197. aJ. M. Barrie Letters to Maude Adams and Charles Frohman (MS Thr 19). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard Univ10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tTaming of the shrew.10aBarrie, J. M.q(James Matthew),d1860-1937. 0aPlaywriting. 0aTheaterzGreat Britain. 7aPlays.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aAdams, Maude,d1872-1953,erecipient.1 aFrohman, Charles,d1860-1915,erecipient.0 aGolf croquet.0 aWhat every woman knows.0 cGift;aMiss Phyllis Robbins;b271 Dartmouth St., Boston 16 MA;d1956 May 3;e55M-197.5the1 aGift of Miss Phyllis Robbins, 1956.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 1901707ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100003100124245004000155300002700195351003800222545023600260520013100496555008700627555010800714524011800822546001600940600003100956650003400987650001701021650004201038655001601080656002201096700003801118541009401156561004201250506004201292852002301334009097770-X20121126101236.0030331i19201936mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826294231 aMHAT03-A62 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBarry, Philip,d1896-1949.10aPhilip Barry plays,fca. 1920-1936. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aBarry was an American dramatist; George Pierce Baker was a Harvard graduate (1887) and a Harvard faculty member in the English dept. (1888-1924), where he instituted in 1906 a class on playwriting techniques called the 47 Workshop. aIncludes autograph and typescript theatrical scripts by Barry; some scripts contain manuscript corrections and notes by Baker.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010258 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-59. aPhilip Barry Plays, ca. 1920-1936 (MS Thr 237). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBarry, Philip,d1896-1949. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aPlaywriting. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBaker, George Pierce,d1866-1935.0 cGift;aMrs. Philip Barry;b1695 34th St., N.W., Washington DC;d1969 March;e69M-59.5the1 aGift of Mrs. Philip Barry, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 23701462ctcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100001700126245004300143300002700186545008300213520027100296555008700567555010800654524011500762650004500877600001700922650004300939655001600982656002200998541009201020561003501112852002501147009097771-820050607170808.0030331s1977 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm792397651 aMHAT03-A63 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aSimon, Neil.10aCalifornia suite :kmanuscript,f1977. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aSimon (1927- ) is an American playwright, screenwriter, and television writer. aIncludes various drafts of the theatrical script of California suite (premiere 1977), including signed typescript with autograph corrections of original copy of the first draft. Also includes autograph manuscript sketches of They're playing our song, and Mr. Famous.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005478 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-28. aNeil Simon California Suite (bMS Thr 228.2). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aTheaterzNew York (State)y20th century.10aSimon, Neil. 0aAmerican drama (Comedy)y20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh cGift;aNeil Simon;b1075 Chalon Rd., Los Angeles CA 90024;d1979 Mar. 19;e78M-28.5the aGift of Neil Simon, 1979.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 228.201725ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100003700126245005000163300002700213545018900240520015700429555008700586555010800673524012400781546001600905600003700921650004200958650001701000650002801017655002401045655001601069656002201085700006801107541009001175561004301265506004201308852002501350009097782-320110404120918.0030331s1971 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807756331 aMHAT03-A66 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.10aArchibald MacLeish papers for Scratch,f1971. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aMacLeish (1892-1982) was a Pulitzer Prize winning American poet, playwright, teacher, librarian of Congress, and public official. He was also Boylston professor at Harvard (1949-1962). aTypescripts, galley proofs, and page proofs of the theatrical play, Scratch, based on Stephen Vincent Benét's short story The Devil and Daniel Webster.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007518 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-76. aArchibald MacLeish Papers for Scratch (MS Thr 206.1). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aPlaywriting. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBenét, Stephen Vincent,d1898-1943.tDevil and Daniel Webster.0 cGift;aArchibald MacLeish;bUphill Farm, Conway MA 01341;d1972 May 16;e71M-76.5the1 aGift of Archibald MacLeish, 1972.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 206.101902ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100001900124245003700143300002700180351003900207545009400246520033900340555008700679555010900766524011500875546001600990600002901006650003901035650004201074655003801116655002201154656002501176700004301201700004501244700002601289541009901315561004901414506004201463852002301505009097793-920121109123105.0030401i19521956mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm778989451 aMHAT03-A67 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aLurie, Alison.10aAlison Lurie papers,f1952-1956. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLurie (b. 1926) graduated from Radcliffe College (1947) and writes novels and nonfiction. aLetters to Alison Lurie are from a friend discussing her upcoming wedding and honeymoon, and their opinions of her novels. Letters also ask for Lurie's opinion of plays written, and other plays that she has read. Collection includes an unsigned autograph manuscript and page proofs for V.R. Lang, a memoir, published by Lurie in 1959.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-149. aAlison Lurie Papers, 1952-1956 (MS Thr 284). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLang, V. R.,d1924-1956. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aGorey, Edward,d1925-2000,erecipient.1 aLang, V. R.,d1924-1956,ecorrespondent.1 aV. R. Lang: a memoir.0 cGift;aMrs. Alison Lurie Bishop;bHalcyon Hall, Ithaca, NY 14850;d1969 August;e69M-149.5the1 aGift of Mrs. Alison Lurie Bishop, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 28402372ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100002600124245006300150300002700213351003900240545026400279520035200543555008700895555010800982524012901090546001601219600002601235610004301261650004701304650002301351655002201374655004601396655001601442656004601458700007401504700005001578700005901628700005501687541011001742561004501852506004201897852002301939009097796-320121128082032.0030401s1967 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm845080621 aMHAT03-A69 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aEveringham, Joseph D.10aJoseph D. Everingham stage adaptations,f1967 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEveringham (Harvard, B.A., 1949, M.A., 1950) was a member of the Brattle Theatre Co. (1948-1952), director of drama and professor of English at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and director and publicity manager for the Loeb Summer Theatre (1960- ). aContains theatrical play adaptations by Everingham, including typescripts of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment, Maksim Gorky's The lower depths, William Shakespeare's The merchant of Venice, and Dylan Thomas' The doctor and the devils. Also includes nine design drawings for the 1967 Loeb Drama Center's production of Crime and Punishment.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010638 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-81. aJoseph D. Everingham Stage Adaptations, 1967 (MS Thr 212). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEveringham, Joseph D.20aHarvard UniversityxLoeb Drama Center. 0aCollege theaterzMassachusettszCambridge. 0aStage adaptations. 7aAdaptations.2aat 7aSet design drawingsy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPlays.2aat 7aTheatrical producers and directors.2lcsh1 aDostoyevsky, Fyodor,d1821-1881.tPrestuplenie i nakazanie.lEnglish.1 aGorky, Maksim,d1868-1936.tNa dne.lEnglish.1 aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMerchant of Venice.1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.tDoctor and the devils.0 cGift;aJoseph D. Everingham;b77 Trowbridge St., Cambridge Massachusetts;d1969 January 17;e68M-81.5the1 aGift of Joseph D. Everingham, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 21201740ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100002200124245008300146300002700229351003900256545012800295520014900423555008700572555010800659524014900767546001600916600002200932650004500954650005500999650001701054655005001071656002901121700003101150541010001181561004401281506004201325852002301367009097893-520121128082942.0030325s1968 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm790904011 aMHAT03-A50 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aFletcher, Robert.10aRobert Fletcher papers concerning Peter Luke's Hadrian VII,f1968 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aFletcher (b. 1910) is an American theatrical and movie costume designer; Peter Luke was an English playwright and director. aIncludes carbon typescript costume notes and autograph manuscript of scenery and prop list for Peter Luke's play Hadrian VII, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-90. aRobert Fletcher Papers Concerning Peter Luke's Hadrian VII, 1968 (MS Thr 220). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFletcher, Robert. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy20th century. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and sceneryy20th century. 0aStage props. 7aCostume design drawingsy20th century.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2lcsh1 aLuke, Peter.tHadrian VII.0 cGift;aMr. Robert Fletcher;b388 Third Ave., New York NY 10016;d1969 January 13;e68M-90.5the1 aGift of Mr. Robert Fletcher, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 22002550ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245007200162300002700234351006800261545019900329520019600528520025700724524011100981555008701092555011401179544001601293600003901309600003801348600001901386600002201405600003001427600001701457600002101474600002101495600004101516651006201557651006401619651006301683655002401746700005401770541014201824561004001966506004202006852005602048009115128-720091222111342.0030530i18651867mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612770864 aMAHV03A234 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBuford, Mary Ann Greenwood Pierce.10aMary Ann Greenwood Pierce Buford letters to her cousin,f1865-1867. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by correspondent, then chronologically. aMary Ann Buford was the wife of Civil War general, Napoleon Bonaparte Buford and they were part of a large extended family including the family names of: Meatyard, Meteyard, Greenwood, and Lunt. aAutograph letters from Mary Ann Buford to an unidentified cousin, concerning family matters and life in the North during the post-Civil War years. Also include one letter from General Buford.8 aIncludes information on poet, editor, and politician, George Lunt, and on expatriate artist, Thomas Buford Meteyard, and others. Also includes information on the social life of Cambridge, Mass., Newburyport, Mass., Rock Island (Ill.), and other places. aMary Ann Greenwood Pierce Buford Letters to Her Cousin (MS Am 2310). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the the Houghton Accessions Records, 2000-2001, under *2000M-25. aIn English.10aBuford, Mary Ann Greenwood Pierce.10aBuford, Napoleon, B.,d1807-1883.30aBuford family.30aGreenwood family.10aLunt, George,d1803-1885.30aLunt family.30aMeatyard family.30aMeteyard family.10aMeteyard, Thomas Buford,d1865-1928. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aNewburyport (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aRock Island (Ill.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aBuford, Napoleon, B.,d1807-1883,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aRobert Meteyard;bDenby Croft, Leatherhead Road, Great Bookham, Leatherhead, Surrey KT23 4RR, U.K.;d2000 Oct. 13;e2000M-25.5HOU1 aGift of Robert Meteyard, 2000.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2310zShelved with bMS Am 2311, 2312.02573ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101110005600124245010200180300002700282545038900309520036100698555008701059555010801146524017901254546001601433610005601449650004201505650002801547655002901575656002201604700004001626700004401666700004101710700004601751700004601797700005101843541013301894561009602027506004202123852002202165009092561-020111220103857.0030318i19511962mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm792935131 aMHAT03-A10 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT2 aTexas Christian University.bDepartment of Theatre.10aTexas Christian University Dept. of Theatre papers concerning theatrical productions,f1951-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aTheatrical productions were first presented by the Dramatic Club at Texas Christian University in 1873 at their Thorp Springs campus and continued when the university moved to Waco in 1895. After a fire in 1910, the university moved to its present site at Fort Worth. Curriculum in Theatrical Studies was introduced in 1943; the Department of Theatre was formally established in 1958. aIncludes correspondence and other materials concerning the productions of The crown of shadows by Rodolpho Usigli, Marriage wheel by Joel Climenhaga, The legend of Madame Krasinska by Joel Turner and Roland von Weber, The Fishbeck tapestry by Manfred Haussmann, Joan of Arc by Max Mell, Phaedra by Roland von Weber, and The bulls of spring by Sam Harrison.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-65. aTexas Christian University Dept. of Theatre Papers Concerning Theatrical Productions, 1951-1962 (MS Thr 72). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aTexas Christian University.bDepartment of Theatre. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aCollege theaterzTexas. 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aClimenhaga, Joel.tMarriage wheels.1 aHaussmann, Manfred.tFishbeck tapestry.1 aMell, Max,d1882-1971.tJoan of Arc.1 aTurner, Joel.tLegend of Madame Krasinka.1 aUsigli, Rodolfo, 1905-tCrown of shadows.1 aWeber, Roland von.tLegend of Madame Krasinka.0 cGift;aDr. Walther R. Volbach, Director of Theatre, Texas Christian University;bFort Worth, Texas;d1962 Oct. 27;e62M-65.5the1 aGift of Dr. Walther R. Volbach, Director of Theatre, Texas Christian University, 1962.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 7201585ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245005300156300002700209351005500236545020700291520017200498555008700670524010300757546001600860600004400876650003900920655003800959655001600997655002201013700003201035541007001067561005701137506004201194852002301236009125460-420130131120827.0030418i18851893mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826945611 aMAHV03-A178 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904.10aLafcadio Hearn miscellaneous papers,f1885-1893. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent or title. aHearn was a writer, translator, and teacher who introduced the culture and literature of Japan to the West. His own writings included novels, short stories, and essays on history and literary criticism. aConsists chiefly of letters, including several written to H. Adzukizawa. Also includes two signed photographs, notes, a manuscript, and miscellaneous signed envelopes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01336 aLafcadio Hearn Miscellaneous Papers, 1885-1893 (MS Am 1213). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904vPortraits. 0aLiteraturexHistory and criticism. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aAdzukizawa, H.,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121301403ctcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003900123245005900162300002700221351004200248520020700290545013600497555008700633524010900720546001600829600003900845700004900884541007000933561005701003506004201060852002301102009125478-720130131121802.0030428i18711919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm814070801 aMAHV03-A213 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aWilliam Dean Howells miscellaneous papers,f1871-1919. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aWilliam Dean Howells was a novelist and man of letters. He served as United States consul in Venice (1861-1865), as editor of The Atlantic Monthly (1871-1881), and as editor of Cosmopolitan (1881-1892). aLetters written by William Dean Howells, including several to Henry Blake Fuller, and letters received from various correspondents.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01340 aWilliam Dean Howells Miscellaneous Papers, 1871-1919 (MS Am 1255). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.1 aFuller, Henry Blake,d1857-1929,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 125502706ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100004700123245007500170300002700245351002900272545004700301520061900348555008700967555010901054524015301163546001601316600003501332610002901367610003801396610003901434650003401473650005101507655002201558655002001580656001901600700004701619700005101666700006601717700005001783700007201833700005001905700005201955700003202007541008902039561004302128506004202171852002302213009092671-420120425083900.0030317i19261927mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm791522051 aMHAT03-A1 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aBallou, Ellen Bartlett,d1905-erecipient.10aEllen Bartlett Ballow letters from various correspondents,f1926-1927. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aBallou (1905-1995) was an American author. aLetters to Ballou address topics of theater and play production, including letters from the Poet's Theater discussing plays being produced at the Fogg Art Museum and potential parts that Ballou could act. Other solicitations for Ballou come from the Provincetown Playhouse asking her to act in plays, and several letters from casting directors informing Ballou that parts have already been filled. Letters from the Barnswallows Dramatic Association at Wellesley College advise Ballou on her acting career. Also included in the collection are two programs from the plays The Belt and The Centuries, and photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-222. aEllen Bartlett Ballou Letters from Various Correspondents, 1926-1927 (MS Thr 133). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBallou, Ellen Bartlett,d1905-20aNew Playwrights Theatre.20aPoets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.)20aBarnswallows Dramatic Association. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aWomen authors.1 aBasshe, Em Jo,d1899-1939,ecorrespondent.1 aMacgowan, Kenneth,d1888-1963,ecorrespondent.1 aBartlett, Dwight K.q(Dwight Kellogg),cMrs.,ecorrespondent.1 aCrothers, Rachel,d1878-1958,ecorrespondent.1 aFitzgerald, M. Eleanorq(Mary Eleanor),d1877-1955,ecorrespondent.1 aFlanagan, Hallie,d1890-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aMcClintic, Guthrie,d1893-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aSifton, Paul,d1897-tBelt.0 cGift;aMrs. Norman Ballou;b25 George St., Providence RI;d1965 Feb.;e64M-222.5the1 aGift of Mrs. Norman Ballou, 1965.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 13302546ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004000123245004600163300002700209351003900236545053400275520044400809524008601253555008701339651007101426650003301497600004001530600001801570651005501588651008301643610004001726655002601766655002001792655002401812655002201836700003701858541010501895561005302000506004202053852006502095009077163-X20091210080525.0030404i18631926mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612761442 aMAHV03A129 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJones, Thaddeus Asbury,d1828-1900.10aThaddeus Asbury Jones papers,f1863-1926. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aThaddeus Asbury Jones was born in East Washington, New Hampshire in 1828. As an adult, he moved to Nashua, New Hampshire, and worked for the Boston & Maine Railroad. During the Civil War he served as an engineer and was taken prisoner by the Confederates in West Virginia in 1863. He was sent to Richmond, Virginia and held for three years in Castle Thunder prison. In 1865 he was part of a prisoner exchange at Old Point Comfort. Jones secured a job as a chief engineer in Washington, a position he held until his death in 1900. aCollection includes letters from Jones to his wife, Emilie Magee Jones, and others while held prisoner at Castle Thunder and documents (especially military passes) from the Civil War. Many of the papers recount Jones' experience in prison. Also includes: letters from others, written on his behalf, to help Jones secure employment after the war, letters between Jones family members concerning the war, and genealogies on the Jones family. aThaddeus Asbury Jones Papers (bMS Am 2297). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00182 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 0aEmployment (Economic theory)10aJones, Thaddeus Asbury,d1828-1900.30aJones family. 0aNew HampshirexPolitics and governmenty1865-1950. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xPrisoners and prisonszVirginia.20aCastle Thunder (Confederate prison) 7aMilitary passes.2aat 7aDocuments.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aJones, Emilie Magee,erecipient.0 cDeposit;aWallace St. Clair Jones;b81 Washington Ave., Cambridge, MA;d1951 June 27;e50M-407.5HOU1 aDeposited by Wallace St. Clair Jones, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2297zShelved with bMS Am 2296 and bMS Am 229802092ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100005200124245007800176300002700254545009000281520036400371555008700735555010800822524011800930600004301048600005401091600004101145650003401186655003501220655001601255655002101271656001701292700003101309700003501340700005901375541017001434561004801604506004201652852002401694009077199-020090210093818.0021213i18351864mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127615211 aMAHV02-A301 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWhitmore, William Henry,d1836-1900,ecompiler.10aWilliam Henry Whitmore scrapbook on Winthrop Mackworth Praed,f1835-1864. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWhitmore was an American writer and editor. Praed was an English poet and politician. aIncludes disbound leaves from a scrapbook compiled by Whitmore of several editions of collected works of Praed. Also includes a signed portrait of Praed, the title page of volume 1 of Redfield, transcripts of poems in Whitmore's hand, a letter from Praed to Samuel Paget, a letter from Whitmore to a Boston printer, and a letter from Cyrus Powers to Whitmore.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-30. aWilliam Henry Whitmore Scrapbook on Winthrop Mackworth Praed (MS Eng 1374). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPraed, Winthrop Mackworth,d1802-1839.10aPraed, Winthrop Mackworth,d1802-1839vPortraits.10aWhitmore, William Henry,d1836-1900. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 7aDrawingsy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPoems.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aPaget, Samuel,erecipient.1 aPowers, Cyrus,ecorrespondent.1 aPraed, Winthrop Mackworth,d1802-1839,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aDavid J. Holmes Autographs;b230 S. Broad St., 3rd Fl. Philadelphia PA 19102 (cat. 21, item 142)d1988;e87M-30;h$185 (Bequest of Thomas Edward Hanley).5HOU1 aBequest of Thomas Edward Hanley, 1988.5HOU aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 137401536ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003400123245005400157300002700211351004200238545013500280520020200415555008700617524009300704546001600797600003400813650002800847650003800875655002000913656001900933700004600952700003600998541004201034561005701076506004201133852002301175009122363-620110209081306.0030429i18901933mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm817567871 aMAHV03-A216 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936.10aRudyard Kipling miscellaneous papers,f1890-1933. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aKipling was an English short-story writer, poet, and novelist, born in Bombay. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1907. aLetters from Kipling to various correspondents, including several to Frederick Harold Sunderland. Collection also includes a typescript, contract, and two letters written by Kipling family members.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00727 aRudyard Kipling Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 819). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aContracts.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aSunderland, Frederick Harold,erecipient.3 aKipling family,ecorrespondent.0 cVarious sources;dVarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 81901592ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003100121245003700152300002700189545007800216520021800294555008700512555010900599524008700708546001600795600003100811600003700842650003100879650003100910650004200941655001700983541015201000561004901152506004201201852002301243009077260-120130107142554.0030103i18971939mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm796620011 aMAHV03-A3 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950.10aBernard Shaw papers,f1897-1939. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aShaw was an Irish dramatist, literary critic, and Socialist propagandist. aIncludes correspondence and documents concerning the financing, liscensing, and performance rights of Shaw's plays. Also contains essays by Shaw, including his reminiscences of Sir Henry Irving, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-208. aBernard Shaw Papers, 1897-1939 (MS Eng 954). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950.10aIrving, Henry,cSir,d1838-1905. 0aIrish dramay19th century. 0aIrish dramay20th century. 0aTheaterzGreat Britainy20th century. 7aEssays.2aat0 cGift;aL. Richard Bamberger (purchased from Dr. J. Schwartz, London, 1955 May 5, $500);b65 Broadway, New York City;d1955 April 18;e54M-208.5HOU1 aGift of Mr. L. Richard Bamberger, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 95401889ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003700110245006900147300002700216545020800243520017300451555008700624555010900711524013600820546001600956544011100972600003701083650003401120650004201154655001601196655002201212656002201234541009301256561003901349506004601388506009401434852002301528009107990-X20091110103556.0030401i19641965mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612768502 aMH-MTcMH-MTedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams typescripts of Slapstick tragedy,f1964-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aIncludes seven typescript mimeographs (unsigned) and one typescript carbon (unsigned) copy of Slapstick tragedy, including various rehearsal versions and a prompt copy.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008988 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-210. aTennessee Williams Typescripts of Slapstick Tragedy (MS Thr 176). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh0 cGift;aCharles Bowden;b230 W. 41st St., New York, NY 10036;d1966 May 4;e65M-210.5the1 aGift of Charles Bowden, 1966.5the0 aCollection is open for research use.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 17601536ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100002700121245008500148300002700233351003900260545010100299520014200400524012800542555008700670555010800757546001600865600002700881600003100908655002000939655002900959655003800988655001601026541004401042561004401086506004201130852002601172008901900-820110105075923.0020425i19541957mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm821666371 aMAHV02A23 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGould, Elaine Westall.10aElain Westall Gould papers concerning Look behind you, Thomas Wolfe,f1954-1957. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aGould is the author of Look behind you, Thomas Wolfe: ghosts of a common tribal heritage (1976). aAutograph manuscript and drafts of Look behind you, Thomas Wolfe, as well as correspondence, notes, and clippings regarding Thomas Wolfe. aElaine Westall Gould Papers concerning Look behind you, Thomas Wolfe (MS Am 1883.11). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-57. aIn English.10aGould, Elaine Westall.10aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDrafts (documents).2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat0 cGift;aMr. Francis Russell;d1987.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Francis Russell, 1987.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883.1101472ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006300159300002700222351003900249545007600288520005700364555008700421524014700508530006200655500017200717546001600889600003700905730005800942541004201000561005701042506004201099852002901141009132852-720130311143252.0020826i18611917mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm823162751 aMAHV02-A67 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt miscellaneous compositions,f1861-1917. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aIncludes items by or relating to Theodore Roosevelt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc00031 aTheodore Roosevelt Miscellaneous Compositions, 1861-1917 (MS Am 1454.25). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;5hou1 aAcquired from various sources at various dates.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.2501745ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006500159300002700224351003900251545007600290520014700366555008700513524014600600530006200746500017200808546001600980600003700996700005401033700004801087700004701135730005801182541004201240561005701282506004201339852002601381009132853-520130311143118.0020826i18831970mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm845867071 aMAHV02-A66 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt miscellaneous correspondence,f1883-1970. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aCorrespondence by, to, or relating to Theodore Roosevelt, including his letters to John Joseph Leary, Régis Henri Post, and Lincoln Steffens.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc00030 aTheodore Roosevelt Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1883-1970 (MS Am 1454). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aLeary, John J.q(John Joseph),d1874-erecipient.1 aPost, Régis Henri,d1870-1944,erecipient.1 aSteffens, Lincoln,d1866-1936,erecipient.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aAcquired from various sources at various dates.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 145402020ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245009900159300002700258545017700285520021300462555008700675555016200762524015200924530006201076500017201138546001201310600002801322600003701350700002801387700004401415730005801459541005201517561004301569506004201612852002801654009132864-020130311114220.0020626i18841919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm789614931 aMAHV02-A44 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt letters to Ethel Roosevelt Derby,f1884-1919 (inclusive)g1896-1919 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEthel Carow (Roosevelt) Derby (1891-1977) was the daughter of American president Theodore Roosevelt and Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt, and wife of physician Richard Derby. aSome correspondence of Richard Derby is also included. For additional letters from Theodore Roosevelt to Ethel Derby see: Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919. Additional correspondence and compositions (008850620)0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000158 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-14. aTheodore Roosevelt Letters to Ethel Roosevelt Derby, 1884-1919 (MS Am 1541.2). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see; Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696)In English.10aDerby, Ethel Roosevelt.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aDerby, Ethel Roosevelt.1 aDerby, Richard,d1881-1963,erecipient.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aMrs. Richard Derby;d1970;e70M-14.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Richard Derby, 1970.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1541.201155ctcaa2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004800123245003800171300002700209351004200236545011100278520012600389555008700515524009200602600004800694656001700742700005900759561005700818852002600875009126947-420031119141007.0030428i19001934mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm840427061 aMAHV03-A214 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aYeats, W. B.q(William Butler),d1865-1939.00aMiscellaneous papers,f1900-1934. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aYeats was an Irish poet, dramatist, and prose writer, who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1923. aLetters from Yeats to various correspondents, including several to Arthur Henry Bullen and Miss Lister. Many are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00548 aW. B. Yeats Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 338.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aYeats, W. B.q(William Butler),d1865-1939. 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBullen, A. H.q(Arthur Henry),d1857-1920,erecipient. aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 338.1001861ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245005200154300002700206351004200233545021100275520034700486555008700833524009100920546001601011600003101027650002801058650003601086655001901122656002401141700004401165700004001209700004201249700004401291541004201335561005701377506004201434852002301476009126513-420110126080925.0030428i18821914mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm818662181 aMAHV03-A215 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915.10aWalter Crane miscellaneous letters,f1882-1914. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aCrane was an English illustrator, painter, and designer primarily known for his imaginative illustrations of children's books. He was also a political cartoonist and director of several English art schools. aLetters from Crane to various personal and business correspondents, including several to publisher John Lane and author Gleeson White, and magazine editors Hamilton Bell and Ross Sterling Turner, among others. Also includes several letters to unidentified correspondents, and one print in a collection of miscellaneous cards written by Crane.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00642 aWalter Crane Miscellaneous Letters (MS Eng 804). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aChildren's literature, English. 7aPrints.2gmgpc 7aIllustrators.2lcsh1 aBell, Hamilton,d1857-1929,erecipient.1 aLane, John,d1854-1925,erecipient.1 aTurner, Ross,d1847-1915,erecipient.1 aWhite, Gleeson,d1851-1898,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 80402269ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245006900155300002700224351014800251545023100399520037100630524012101001555008701122510017101209546002601380600003201406600003101438600003401469600004501503600002201548651004601570655002401616700004301640700005701683541004401740561004401784506004201828852002501870009151264-620130712115903.0030723i18591877mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612775710 aMAHV03A246 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aBowles, Samuel,d1826-1878.10aSamuel Bowles letters to Austin and Susan Dickinson,f1859-1877. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Bowles to the Dickinsons; II. Letters to the Dickinsons from others; and III. Miscellanea. aSamuel Bowles (1826-1878) was the editor of the Springfield, Mass. newspaper, The Republican. William Austin Dickinson was the older brother of American poet Emily Dickinson and his wife was Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson. aCollection is primarily letters from Bowles to Austin and Susan. Susan and Austin became acquainted with Bowles soon after their marriage (ca. 1858), and Bowles's letters show a long friendship with both parties. The materials also include other letters (1856-1878) to Austin and Susan Dickinson and compositions of "Reminiscences" concerning Emily Dickinson (1932). aSamuel Bowles Letters to Austin and Susan Dickinson, 1859-1877 (MS Am 1118.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002020 aAlfred Habegger with Nellie Habegger. "An annotated calendar of Samuel Bowles's Letters to Austin and Susan Dickinson," in The Emily Dickinson Journal, 11 : 2 (2002). aMaterials in English.10aBowles, Samuel,d1826-1878.10aDickinson, Austin,d-1895.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913.30aDickinson family. 0aAmherst (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aDickinson, Austin,d-1895,erecipient.1 aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913,erecipient.0 cGift;aGilbert H. Montague;d1950.5hou1 aGift of Gilbert H. Montague, 1950.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.802943ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100003300126245004700159300002700206351018300233545015000416520086900566555008701435555010801522524011401630546001601744600004401760650003401804651005001838655002201888656002201910700005001932700005201982700001802034700003102052700004702083700004902130700005202179700005302231700005002284541006402334561004602398506004202444852002302486009130677-920110126090539.0030401i18991959mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm825766571 aMHAT03-A72 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aSheldon, Edward,d1886-1946.10aEdward Sheldon correspondence,f1899-1959. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Edward Sheldon; II. Letters from Edward Sheldon; III. Other letters; IV. Compositions; and V. Photographs and printed material. aSheldon was an American playwright. He helped to bring social consciousness and seriousness of purpose into U.S. drama of the early 20th century. aIncludes correspondence of Sheldon, Van Wyck Brooks, Katherine Cornell, Helen Keller, Eugene O'Neill, Theodore Sheldon, John Hall Wheelock, and Thornton Wilder, among others. The correspondence is frequently personal in nature, discussing both English and American daily life and family matters. A looming awareness of WWII pervade many of the letters. Also discusses contemporary theatrical criticism and often reviews a large variety of productions. Correspondents frequently comment on their own experiences with plays they have written, produced, or acted in. Also includes compositions by Sheldon, Edgar Frank, Alice Kauser, and John Hall Wheelock, among others, as well as photographs of Sheldon, telegrams, and printed materials. Some materials compiled for a possible biography of Sheldon by Eric Barnes and another by Marion Meggs Woods are also included.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006678 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-95. aEdward Sheldon Correspondence (MS Thr 266). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSheldon, Edward,d1886-1946vPortraits. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyWorld War, 1939-1945. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBrooks, Van Wyck,d1886-1963,ecorrespondent.1 aCornell, Katharine,d1893-1974,ecorrespondent.1 aFrank, Edgar.1 aKauser, Alice,d1872-1945.1 aKeller, Helen,d1880-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aO'Neill, Eugene,d1888-1953,ecorrespondent.1 aSheldon, Theodore,d1884?-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aWheelock, John Hall,d1886-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aWilder, Thornton,d1897-1975,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Theodore Sheldon;d1970 August 3;e70M-95.5the1 aGift of Mrs. Theodore Sheldon, 1970.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 26601284ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004000123245006600163300002700229351003800256545005800294520010600352555008700458524011600545546001600661600004000677650003500717655002200752655001600774541007000790561005700860506004200917852002300959009126631-920130131121127.0030617i18221892mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm808305481 aMAHV03-A239 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.10aOliver Wendell Holmes miscellaneous compositions,f1822-1892. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aHolmes was an essayist, poet, and teacher of anatomy. aAutograph poems and other compositions by Holmes. Also includes a photograph of a portrait of Holmes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01338 aOliver Wendell Holmes Miscellaneous Compositions, 1822-1892 (MS Am 1234). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 123401541ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003400123245006500157300002700222351003900249545009900288520015600387555008700543555010900630524011400739600002200853600002100875650002900896655002100925655001800946700003300964541010800997561004501105506004201150852002301192009035883-X20130122091322.0021101i17841923mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813277951 aMAHV02-A203 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKennedy, Mildred,ecollector.10aMildred and Louise Kennedy autograph collection,f1784-1923. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aMildred and Louise Kennedy collected letters and other autographs of various literary figures. aLetters, notes, tickets and other autograph material from various literary figures, some of it addressed to the collectors, Mildred and Louise Kennedy.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012398 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-144. aMildred and Louis Kennedy Autograph Collection, 1784-1923 (MS Am 1596). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKennedy, Mildred.10aKennedy, Louise. 0aAutographsxCollections. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aTickets.2aat1 aKennedy, Louise,ecollector.0 cGift;aMiss Mildred Kennedy;b102 Beacon St., Boston 16 Massachusetts.d1960 February 5;e59M-144.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Mildred Kennedy, 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 159601538ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004400123245007000167300002700237351003000264545016400294520009700458555008700555555010900642524012000751546001600871600004400887600003400931656001900965700004600984710002901030541004801059561004001107506004201147852002301189008988096-X20121109122250.0021016i18371858mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm837160211 aMAHV02-A148 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPrescott, William Hickling,d1796-1859.10aWilliam Hickling Prescott letters to Richard Bentley,f1837-1858. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWilliam Hickling Prescott, born in Salem, Massachusetts, to a prominent family, wrote romantic and highly regarded works of Spanish and Latin American history. aLetters to publisher Richard Bentley, together with a few unidentified fragments of letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-384. aWilliam Hickling Prescott Letters to Richard Bentley, 1837-1858 (MS Am 1218). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPrescott, William Hickling,d1796-1859.10aBentley, Richard,d1794-1871. 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aBentley, Richard,d1794-1871,erecipient.2 aRichard Bentley and Son.0 cPurchased;aScribner;d1945;e44M-384.5HOU1 aPurchased from Scribner, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121801960ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003300122245005600155300002700211545004000238520022000278520006900498555008700567555010900654524010600763546001600869600003300885600004400918655002000962655002100982700002601003740002601029740001601055740002301071740001701094740001801111541026701129561011301396506004201509852002301551008923233-X20130204141516.0030910i19281949mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826307221 aMAHV03A263 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aJohn Masefield additional compositions,f1928-1949. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aJohn Masefield was an English poet. aTypescript manuscripts with autograph corrections in the hand of Masefield of: End and beginning; The coming of Christ; The Conway; The wanderer: the third speaker; The wanderer: the fourth speaker; and On the hill. aAlso includes woodcut print portrait of Masefield by Tom Hutton.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013748 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-210. aJohn Masefield Additional Compositions, 1928-1949 (MS Eng 866). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967vPortraits. 7aPortraits.2aat 7aWoodcuts.2gmgpc1 aHutton, Tom,eartist.4 aThe coming of Christ.4 aThe Conway.0 aEnd and beginning.0 aOn the hill.4 aThe wanderer.0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Lamont (23 Wall St., New York 8), Dr. Austin Lamont (8400 Spruce St., Philadelphia 4), Mr. Corliss Lamont (232 Madison Ave., New York), and Mrs. Charles C. Cunningham (75 Bloomfield Ave., Hartford 5);baddress;d31 Mar. 1953;e52M-210-216.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Thomas Lamont, Dr. Austin Lamont, Mr. Corliss Lamont, and Mrs. Charles C. Cunningham, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 86602147ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245009400156300002700250351003900277545058100316520016800897555008701065555010901152524014001261546001601401600003301417651005801450655002201508656002301530700003501553700004201588541006201630561005201692506004201744852002301786009030615-520130122095725.0021016i18621873mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm809276931 aMAHV02-A145 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aPapers concerning the 1872 resolution of condemnation against Charles Sumner,f1862-1873. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSumner was a U. S. Senator from Massachusetts. On 2 December 1872, Charles Sumner introduced in the U.S. Senate a bill "to regulate the Army Register and the regimental colors of the United States." This provided that Civil War victories should not be among those commemorated in regimental honors. Rabid Northerners in the Massachusetts House of representatives passed a vote of unqualified censure against Sumner for his act. Willard P. Phillips, John Greenleaf Whittier and others fought to have this resolution rescinded and annulled, which was accomplished early in 1873. aIncludes letters, primarily from Sumner and Whittier to Phillips, as well as manuscript drafts and printed copies of the censure against Sumner, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012498 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-396. aPapers regarding the 1872 resolution of condemnation against Charles Sumner, 1862-1873 (MS Am 1225). Houghton Library, Harvard Library. aIn English.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aResolutions.2aat 7aLegislators.2lcsh1 aPhillips, Willard,d1784-1873.1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.0 cGift;aJames Duncan Phillips, Esq.;d1951;e50M-396.5HOU1 aGift of James Duncan Phillips, Esq., 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 122501819ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004100123245007700164300002700241351003900268545025100307520021700558555008700775555010800862524012700970546001601097600004201113600004101155650003901196655002201235656001901257700003301276541005601309561005101365506004201416852002301458008923378-620130204141356.0021009s1925 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm842756731 aMAHV02-A129 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTinker, Edward Larocque,d1881-1968.10kEdward Larocque Tinker papers concerning George Washington Cable,f1925. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGeorge Washington Cable (1844-1925) was an American author famous for his fictional treatment of the Creoles of Louisiana. Tinker was a writer and a philanthropist, who was interested in Cable and his relationship with Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904). aIncludes correspondence between Tinker and other correspondents concerning Cable, research files assembled by Tinker on Cable, transcripts of Cable's letters to others, and typescripts by Lafcadio Hearn on Cable.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013728 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-90. aEdward Larocque Tinker Papers Concerning George Washington Cable, 1925 (MS Am 2196). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCable, George Washington,d1844-1925.10aTinker, Edward Larocque,d1881-1968. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904.0 cGift;aEdward Larocque Tinker;d1952;e52M-90.5HOU1 aGift of Mr. Edward Larocque Tinker, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 219601914ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004800123245004400171300002700215351004600242545004500288520025200333524009400585555008700679555010800766546001600874600002000890600004800910650003900958650003500997700003601032700004101068700004001109700004801149541014601197561006801343506011801411852002301529008977196-620130712094111.0021029i19101970mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm829489921 aMAHV02-A191 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot correspondence,f1910-1970. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aEliot was a poet, dramatist, and critic. aChiefly letters from T.S. Eliot to Eleanor Holmes Hinkley, Susan Stearns Hinkley, and Barbara Hinkley Welch Wolcott. Also includes Valerie Eliot's letters to Eleanor Holmes Hinkley, letters from others to T.S. Eliot, and a few third-party letters. aT. S. Eliot Correspondence, 1910-1970 (MS Am 2244). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-61. aIn English.30aElliott family.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aEliot, Valerie,ecorrespondent.1 aHinkley, Eleanor Holmes,erecipient.1 aHinkley, Susan Stearns,erecipient.1 aWolcott, Barbara Hinkley Welch,erecipient.0 cDeposit; Gift;aMrs. Theodore C. Sturtevant;b101 Indian Avenue, Middletown Rhode Island 02840;d1971 March; gift 1997 July 15;e70M-61.5HOU1 aDeposited by Mrs. Theodore C. Sturtevant, 1971; gift 1997.5HOU1 aManuscripts of unpublished T.S. Eliot material may be consulted only with the permission of Mrs. T.S. Eliot.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 224401737ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004300122245007400165300002700239351003900266545012800305520010600433555008700539555010900626524012400735546001600859600004300875600002200918611004900940610004900989651001801038651005601056655001801112700002201130541011301152561004501265506004201310852002301352009030894-820121218105125.0021101i18851886mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm796619821 aMAHV02A195 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHoward, William Lauriston,d1860-1930.10aWilliam Lauriston Howard Point Barrow Expedition Diaries,f1885-1886. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aHoward was an ensign who accompanied the U.S. Navy's Point Barrow expedition to Alaska, led by Lieutenant George M. Stoney. aDiaries by William Lauriston Howard and George M. Stoney concerning U.S. naval expeditions to Alaska.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-180. aWilliam Lauriston Howard Point Barrow Expedition Diaries, 1885-1886 (MS Am 1486). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHoward, William Lauriston,d1860-1930.10aStoney, George M.20aInternational Polar Expedition,d(1882-1883)10aUnited States.bNavyxHistoryy19th century. 0aBarrow, Cape. 0aPolar regionsxDiscovery and explorationzAmerican. 7aDiaries.2aat1 aStoney, George M.0 cGift;aMiss Louise H. Guyol;bc/o Monroe & Lemann Whitney Bldg., New Orleans 12;d1957 April;e56M-180.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Louise H. Guyol, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 148601617ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003500122245005600157300002700213351003000240545005900270520013600329555008700465555010900552524010600661546001600767600003500783600005100818650003500869655002400904700003200928700005100960541015801011561004501169506004201214852002301256009030944-820130107101418.0021101i18841885mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800946451 aMAHV02A198 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chapman letters to his family,f1884-1885. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aChapman was an American poet, essayist and playwright. aSeventy-four letters by John Jay Chapman to his family, including one [item (72)] which tells of a visit with Alfred Lord Tennyson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011908 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-136. aJohn Jay Chapman Letters to his Family, 1884-1885 (MS Am 1517). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aTennyson, Alfred Tennyson,cBaron,d1809-1892. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat3 aChapman family,erecipient.1 aTennyson, Alfred Tennyson,cBaron,d1809-1892.0 cGift;aEdward Pickman, Esq. (purchased from Gotham Book Mart, Inc., New York City);bDudley Farms, Bedford, Massachusetts;d1957 December;e57M-136.5HOU1 aGift of Edward Pickman, Esq., 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 151701679ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003400122245005800156300002700214351003000241545004200271520029500313555008700608555010800695524010800803546001600911600003400927650003500961651004300996656001601039700003601055700004801091541009201139561004501231506004201276852002301318009030988-X20130102085600.0021101i19301943mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782914881 aMAHV02A200 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aStevens, Wallace,d1879-1955.10aWallace Stevens letters to Philip S. May,f1930-1943. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWallace Stevens was an American poet. aConsists of twenty-seven letters from Wallace Stevens to Philip S. May, partially interpolated with carbons of May's replies, and two letters of Arthur Gray Powell to May. Letters chiefly concern details of daily life, frequently mentioning travel plans for Stevens and Powell to visit May.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011418 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-52. aWallace Stevens Letters to Philip S. May, 1930-1943 (MS Am 1543). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aStevens, Wallace,d1879-1955. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aUnited StatesxDescription and travel. 7aPoets.2aat1 aMay, Philip S.,ecorrespondent.1 aPowell, Arthur Grey,d1873-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aPhilip S. May;bRoute 6, Box 182, Jacksonville, FL;d1958 October;e58M-52.5HOU1 aGift of of Mr. Philip S. May, 1958.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 154301782ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004800123245005500171300002700226545012800253520016500381555008700546555010800633524010700741546001600848600004800864650003500912655002000947655001600967655001600983656001700999700004001016541013301056561005101189506017901240852002501419009038805-420130816190034.0021106i19401956mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826258311 aMAHV02-A210 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot letters to Mary Trevelyan,f1940-1956. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aEliot was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. Mary Trevelyan was a close friend of Eliot's during the 1940s and 1950s. aConsists of 221 letters from Eliot to Trevelyan, together with literary notes, two unpublished poems written for Trevelyan, two letters to Eliot, and clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-29. aT. S. Eliot Letters to Mary Trevelyan, 1940-1956 (MS Am 1691.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aTrevelyan, Mary,d1897-erecipient.0 cPurchase;aThe House of El Dieff, Inc.,b30 E. 62nd St., New York 21;d1966 Sept. 29;e66M-29;h$11,000.00 Amy Lowell Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1966.5HOU0 aPapers were restricted until Mary Trevelyan's death in 1983. Manuscripts of unpublished T.S. Eliot material may be consulted only with the permission of Mrs. T.S. Eliot.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.202745ctcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005000123245009500173300002700268351014900295545031200444520054100756555008701297555011101384524015201495546001601647600003801663600003101701600003901732600003901771600003801810600003801848610002901886610003301915630002401948630001901972650003901991700005302030700005402083541006302137561005102200506004202251852003002293009002510-520121218104129.0021025i18541880mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm840044121 aMAHV02-A182 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aWhite, Richard Grant,d1821-1885,erecipient.10aRichard Grant White letters from James Francis Child and Charles Eliot Norton,f1854-1880. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1430: Letters from James Francis Child; and II. bMS Am 1430.1: Letters from Charles Eliot Norton. aChild was a professor of rhetoric and English at Harvard, best known for his compilation The English and Scottish popular ballads. Charles Eliot Norton was a scholar, professor of art history at Harvard, and a founder of "The Nation." Richard Grant White was a journalist, writer, and Shakespearean scholar. aThe collection includes personal correspondence from Charles Eliot Norton and F.J. Child predominately discussing White's Shakespearean writings. The correspondence also discusses James Russell Lowell's critical articles on White as well as Child's essay on the language of Chaucer and his book War-songs for Freemen. White's contributions to The Spectator and Norton and Lowell's editorial contributions to the North American are mentioned. Also includes Norton's proposal to raise funds for a Shakespearean library at Harvard College.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-11-12. aRichard Grant White Letters from Francis James Child and Charles Eliot Norton, 1854-1880 (MS Am 1430-1430.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896.10aChaucer, Geoffrey,d-1400.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.10aWhite, Richard Grant,d1821-1885.20aHarvard College Library.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.40aThe North American.40aThe Spectator. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896ecorrespondent.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aLawrence Grant White, Esq.;d1956;e56M-11-12.5HOU1 aGift of Lawrence Grant White, Esq., 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1430-1430.102567ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245006400156300002700220545017000247520059900417555008701016555010901103524011401212546001601326650005101342600003301393610003101426650004201457650004201499650002201541651003601563651005001599651005801649655002001707655003801727656002501765656002001790656002101810700006001831700002901891541009201920561004402012506004202056852002302098009002513-X20130107142126.0021101i18471907mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782017131 aMAHV02-A194 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aCharles Sumner letters to Francis William Bird,f1847-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aSumner was a U.S. Senator from Massachusetts (1851-74) and noted abolitionist. Francis William Bird was a radical reformer and antislavery activist in Massachusetts. aIncludes 50 letters from Charles Sumner to Francis William Bird (including one dated the day before Sumner died) sent from Washington while serving as a Senator and while on two trips to Europe. The letters primarily concern the Whig party, the civil war, the rights of African Americans, and American politics. Several are marked "private" or "confidential". Other correspondence includes letters purporting to come from slaves in defense of slavery. Also includes statements about Sumner's marriage by Bird and funeral notice, program and newspapers clippings about Sumner, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012238 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-165. aCharles Sumner Letters to Francis William Bird, 1847-1907 (MS Am 1480). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aAfrican AmericansxCivil rightsy19th century.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.20aWhig Party (Boston, Mass.) 0aAntislavery movementszUnited States. 0aAntislavery movementszUnited States. 0aSlave narratives. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh 7aRadicals.2lcsh 7aReformers.2lcsh1 aBird, F. W.q(Francis William),d1809-1894,erecipient.1 aShurz, Carl,d1829-1906.0 cGift;aCharles Sumner Bird;bEndean, East Walpole, Massachusetts;d1957;e56M-165.5HOU1 aGift of Charles Sumner Bird, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 148001880ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003800124245007800162300002700240351003900267545007600306520013200382555008700514555011300601524012800714546001600842600003800858600003900896630002200935650003500957650003500992650002901027655001601056656001701072700003901089541027401128561003901402506004201441852002301483009002537-720121109120100.0021025i18811907mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127438511 aMAHV02-A183 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSill, Edward Rowland,d1841-1887.10aCompositions of Edward Rowland Sill and Edith Matilda Thomas,f1881-1907. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSill was a poet, teacher and essayist. Edith Matilda Thomas was a poet. aPoems and essays by Edward Rowland Sill, together with poems by Thomas, which were chiefly published in the "Atlantic Monthly."0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009898 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-56F-85F. aCompositions of Edward Rowland Sill and Edith Matilda Thomas, 1881-1907 (MS Am 1443). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSill, Edward Rowland,d1841-1887.10aThomas, Edith Matilda,d1854-1925.00aAtlantic monthly. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aWomen authors, American. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aThomas, Edith Matilda,d1854-1925.0 cGift;aTalbot Aldrich;d1943;e43M-57F; 43M-58; 43M-59; 43M-60; 43M-61; 43M-62; 43M-63; 43M-64; 43M-65; 43M-66; 43M-67; 43M-68; 43M-69; 43M-70; 43M-71; 43M-72; 43M-73; 43M-74; 43M-75; 43M-76; 43M-77; 43M-78; 43M-79; 43M-80; 43M-81; 43M-82; 43M-83; 43M-84; 43M-85F.5HOU1 aGift of Talbot Aldrich, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 144302250ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003800122245006300160300002700223351014800250545015200398520044100550555008700991555010901078524010401187600003801291600003901329650003801368650003801406655003801444655002001482700004001502700004601542700004301588740003701631541009801668561004201766506004201808852002601850009071372-920110128081349.0030228q18491913mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800932491 aMAHV03-A68 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aPeacock, Thomas Love,d1785-1866.10aPapers by and concerning Thomas Love Peacock,f1849?-1913. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Thomas Love Peacock; II. Letters to Richard Garnett; and III. Other letters and manuscripts. aPeacock was an English novelist; Garnett edited Peacock's letters, published in 1910; Wallis was an art historian of ceramics and Italian majolica. aIncludes autograph letters to Peacock, and to Richard Garnett from various correspondents concerning Peacock, as well as autograph letters and a telegram from Henry Wallis. Also contains an unsigned annotated paper, The works of Thomas Love Peacock by Edith Clarke (Mrs. Charles Clarke), an unsigned autograph manuscript of Peacock's notes for Memoirs of Percy Bysshe Shelley, a manuscript of Capture of Seringapatam, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007168 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-167. aPapers By and Concerning Thomas Love Peacock (MS Eng 1265.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPeacock, Thomas Love,d1785-1866.10aShelley, Percy Bysshe,d1792-1822. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat1 aClarke, Charles,cMrs.,d1844-1926.1 aGarnett, Richard,d1835-1906,erecipient.1 aWallis, Henry,d1830--ecorrespondent.0 aMemoirs of Percy Bysshe Shelley.0 cGift;aHamill & Barker;b230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago IL 60601;d1967 May 29;e66M-167.5HOU1 aGift of Hamill and Barker, 1967.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1265.102156ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005300123245007800176300002700254351003000281545013400311520046900445555008700914555010801001546001601109524011801125600005301243651005201296651005101348655003701399655001901436700006101455700003601516541013701552561005101689506004201740852002401782009077208-320090713041941.0030212i17561783mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127615731 aMAHV03-A45 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLyttelton, George Lyttelton,cBaron,d1709-1773.10aBaron George Lyttelton letters to Elizabeth Robinson Montagu,f1756-1783. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLyttelton was an English Whig statesman and writer. Montagu (1720-1800) was an English writer and one of the first Bluestockings. aConsists chiefly of letters from George Lord Lyttelton to Elizabeth Montagu. Letters discuss Lyttelton's travels and the countryside in the United Kingdom, and his daily life in England. Lyttelton also writes to Montagu of local news of friends and family, including his daughter's engagement. Letters discuss in detail Montagu's health. Included in the collection is a drawing of George Lord Lyttelton. Also includes two letters from Montagu to Charles Lyttelton.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1982-1983, under *82M-52. aIn English. aBaron George Lyttelton Letters to Elizabeth Robinson Montagu (MS Eng 1351). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLyttelton, George Lyttelton,cBaron,d1709-1773. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy18th century. 0aEnglandxDescription and travely18th century. 7aDrawingszEnglandy18th century. 7aPortaits.2aat1 aMontagu,cMrs.q(Elizabeth),d1720-1800,ecorrespondent.1 aLyttelton, Charles,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aHofmann & Freeman;b8 High St., Oxford, Sevenooks, Kent, TN14 5PQ;d1982 Sept.;e82M-52;h(2322.00) Amy Lowell fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1982.5HOU aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 135102332ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004300122245007100165300002700236351009700263545015100360520042600511555008700937555010801024524012101132546001601253600005501269600003101324650003801355650001701393655003801410656001801448656002201466700001701488700003101505740002601536740003701562740001501599541019201614561005101806506004201857852002301899009077187-720130107103904.0030212i19081937mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm834265461 aMAHV03-A44 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMartin-Harvey, John,cSir,d1863-1944.10aSir John Martin-Harvey papers concerning Bernard Shaw,f1908-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Sir John Martin-Harvey; II. Play scripts. aShaw was an Irish comic dramatist, literary critic, and Socialist propagandist. Martin-Harvey was an English actor, producer, and theatre manager. aIncludes 17 autograph and typescript letters from Shaw to Martin-Harvey. Also includes two copies of Hans Mueller's Tuberin 5 adapted by Peter Gray, a typescript and an unsigned autograph manuscript of The devil's disciple, six photographs of The devil's disciple performed by Martin-Harvey and his wife, a typescript of Shaw's The shewing-up of Blanco Posnet, and a portrait photograph of Martin-Harvey as Blanco Posnet.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-46. aSir John Martin-Harvey Papers Concerning Bernard Shaw, 1908-1937 (MS Eng 990). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMartin-Harvey, John,cSir,d1863-1944,vPortraits.10aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aPlaywriting. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aActors.2lcsh 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aGray, Peter.1 aMüller, Hans,d1882-1950.4 aThe devil's disciple.4 aThe shewing-up of Blanco Posnet.0 aTuberin 5.0 cGift;aL. Richard Bamberger, Esq., (purchased from I.K. Fletcher, 12 Landsown Rd., Wimbledon, London SW 20, 18 Nov. 1955);b65 Broadway, New York City;d1955 October;e55M-46;h$300;5HOU1 aGift of L. Richard Bamberger, Esq., 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 99001866ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005700123245008800180300002700268545014100295520029200436555008700728555011000815524013900925546001601064651005801080600005101138600005701189651005201246700006301298541007901361561004601440506004201486852002401528009071691-420121109114342.0021206i17881810mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782017141 aMAHV02-A275 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRosslyn, Alexander Wedderburn,cEarl of,d1733-1805.10aAlexander Wedderburn Rosslyn letters to Viscount Henry Dundas Melville,f1788-1810. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWedderburn was the first Earl of Rosslyn and a judge in Great Britain. Dundas was the first Viscount Melville and a Scottish politician. aIncludes letters from Wedderburn to Dundas, as well as correspondence among other British politicians concerning British government, politics, England's relations with Ireland, France, Spain, and other European countries, and crops in England. Also includes a copy of a letter in French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1945-1946, under *45M-433F. aAlexander Wedderburn Rosslyn Letters to Viscount Henry Dundas Melville, 1788-1810 (MS Eng 1327). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty18th century.10aMelville, Henry Dundas,cViscount,d1742-1811.10aRosslyn, Alexander Wedderburn,cEarl of,d1733-1805. 0aGreat BritainxForeign relationsy18th century.1 aMelville, Henry Dundas,cViscount,d1742-1811,erecipient.0 cGift;aLee Max Friedman, Esq.;bBoston, MA;d1945 Aug. 18;e45M-433F.5HOU1 aGift of Lee M. Friedman, Esq., 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 132701908ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245008300159300002700242545010700269520011700376530006200493555008700555555016300642524016700805500017200972546001601144600004301160600003701203700004301240700005201283730005801335541005801393561004801451506004201499852002901541009132869-120130311111214.0020617i18751919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm830881661 aMAHV02-A33 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt letters to Frances Theodora Smith Dana Parsons,f1875-1919. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aFrances Theodora (Smith) Dana Parsons was a childhood friend of American president Theodore Roosevelt. aAlso included are letters from Roosevelt to Parsons's husband, educator and civil servant James Russell Parsons. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *71M-103. aTheodore Roosevelt Letters to Frances Theodora Smith Dana Parsons, 1875-1919 (MS Am 1454.41). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aParsons, Frances Theodora,d1861-1952.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aParsons, Frances Theodora,d1861-1952.1 aParsons, James Russell,d1861-1905,erecipient.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cGift;aMrs. J. Russell Parsons;d1972;e71M-103.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. J. Russell Parsons, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.4102124ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100006000123245005700183300002700240351003900267545022700306520017600533555008700709555010800796524009900904546001601003530006201019600004101081600004801122600005801170650005101228655001701279655002001296700004101316700005301357700005501410541016001465561004801625506004201673852002301715009065260-620120502095320.0021115i19071930mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826936421 aMAHV02-A238 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRobinson, F. N.q(Fred Norris),d1871-1966.ecollector.10aF. N. (Fred Norris) Robinson collection,f1907-1930. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aFred Norris Robinson was a Chaucerian scholar and professor of medieval English at Harvard University, as was George Lyman Kittredge. John Strong Perry Tatlock taught medieval English at University of California, Berkeley. aIncludes a notebook by George Lyman Kittredge, letters from Theodore Roosevelt to Robinson, four essays by John Strong Perry Tatlock and a letter from Tatlock to Robinson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-92. aFred Norris Robinson Collection, 1907-1930 (MS Am 1795). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.10aRobinson, F. N.q(Fred Norris),d1871-1966.10aTatlock, John S. P.q(John Strong Perry),d1876-1948. 0aEnglish literaturexMiddle English, 1100-1500. 7aEssays.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.1 aTatlock, John Strong Perry,d1876-ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aFred Norris Robinson Estate;bFrancis H. Brooks, Esq., executor, State Street Bank and Trust, 111 Franklin St., Boston;d1966 Nov.;e66M-92.5HOU1 aBequest of Fred Norris Robinson, 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 179501816ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100003400123245005100157300002700208545007800235520028300313555008700596555010800683524012900791546001600920600003400936650004200970655002901012655002301041656002201064700007201086700002701158700007401185541009701259561004501356506004201401852002301443009092674-920121214101619.0030317i19651969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm849460501 aMHAT03-A2 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aTigar, Kenneth Leslie,d1942-10aKenneth Leslie Tigar compositions,f1965-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aTigar is an American actor who graduated from Harvard University in 1964. aIncludes an autograph manuscript translation by Tigar and by Clayton Talmage Koelb of Bertolt Brecht's Fear and misery of the Third Reich, an autograph manuscript draft of a script by Tigar for The proposition, which makes use of Nixon's inaugural address (transcript included).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-64. aKenneth Leslie Tigar Compositions, 1965-1969 (MS Thr 241). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aTigar, Kenneth Leslie,d1942- 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBrecht, Bertolt,d1898-1956.tFurcht und Elend des dritten Reiches.1 aKoelb, Clayton,d1942-1 aNixon, Richard M.q(Richard Milhous),d1913-1994.tInaugural address.0 cGift;aKenneth L. Tigar;bAdams B-22, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1969 March 5;e69M-64.5the1 aGift of Mr. Kenneth L. Tigar, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 24101752ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245005300156300002700209351004200236545017000278520023800448555008700686524009200773546001600865600003300881600004400914650003800958650003400996655001601030655001901046656001701065700005301082700003401135700004501169541004201214561005701256506004201313852002301355009122666-X20110209084946.0030429i19031967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm780802601 aMAHV03-A218 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aJohn Masefield miscellaneous papers,f1903-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aMasefield was an English poet, best known for his poems of the sea and for his long narrative poems. He was poet laureate of Great Britain from 1930 until his death. aLetters written by Masefield to various correspondents, including several to Thomas Stilwell Lamont, James B. Pinker, and Grant Richards. Also includes some manuscripts of poems and speeches, and one portrait photograph of Masefield.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00742 aJohn Masefield Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 849). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967vPortraits. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aLamont, Thomas Stilwell,d1899-1967,erecipient.1 aPinker, James B.,erecipient.1 aRichards, Grant,d1872-1948,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 84902822ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003600123245004200159300002700201351002900228545003800257520063800295555008700933555010901020524008101129546001601210600003601226650003801262650005401300655002401354655003801378655001601416700006401432700005001496700004501546700006901591700002801660700004801688740003501736007001401771843035201785852002802137541008602165561004702251506004202298852002402340009049190-420130517092123.0030129i17941904mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127508571 aMAHV03-A24 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDe Quincey, Thomas,d1785-1859.10aThomas De Quincey papers,f1794-1904. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aDe Quincey was an English author. aContains correspondence of Thomas De Quincey with James Hogg & Sons and other correspondents, as well as correspondence of Florence De Quincey Bairdsmith with Alexander Hay Japp and other publishers along with correspondence of Emily De Quincey with Alexander Hay Japp and Henry Stephens Salt. Also includes the correspondence of James Hogg & Sons and Alexander Hay Japp with other correspondents. Also contains compositions by Thomas De Quincey, including galley and page proofs of Confessions of an English opium eater, together with the last wills and testaments of Thomas De Quincey and Thomas Penson (d. 1835) among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-653. aThomas De Quincy Papers (MS Eng 1009). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDe Quincey, Thomas,d1785-1859. 0aEnglish literaturey18th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzEnglandy19th century. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aBairdsmith, Florence De Quincy,d1827-1904,ecorrespondent.1 aDe Quincy, Emily,d1831-1917,ecorrespondent.1 aHogg, James,d1770-1835,ecorrespondent.1 aJapp, Alexander H.q(Alexander Hay),d1839-1905,ecorrespondent.1 aPenson, Thomas,d-1835.1 aSalt, Henry S.,d1851-1939,ecorrespondent.0 aConfessions of an opium eater.hd|bfa012baap aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Imaging Services,d2007.e1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.nFilmed:bMS Eng 1009(116) - (273)only. De Quincey, Thomas, 1785-1859. [Autograph manuscript notes to James Hogg and sons relating to the proof-reading of his Selections grave and gay,] [1852-1859]. 157 pieces in 3 folders.7s2007 maun a8 bMMFcHDhFilm Mas H20570 cGift;aHorace Ainsworth Eaton;bSyracuse, New York;d1943 Mar. 24;e42M-653.5HOU1 aGift of Horace Ainsworth Eaton, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 100902038ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005000122245007300172300002700245351002900272545005100301520043400352555008700786555010800873524012600981546001601107600003801123650005201161650002301213650003701236655003001273655002201303656002001325700004301345700005301388541011001441561004501551506004201596852002601638009049214-520121127113358.0030129i19021911mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798430881 aMAHV03-A22 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945,erecipient.10aSir William Rothenstein letters from Moritz Rothenstein,f1902-1911. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aRothenstein was an English painter and writer. aIncludes eighty-seven letters from Moritz Rothenstein to his son, William, concerning various family matters, such as William's wife Alice and the health of William's brother Albert, William's paintings and drawings, finances such as Moritz sending William money for rent, and William's new house. This collection also contains exhibition catalogs and announcements, as well as invitations to private showings of William's works.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010548 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-40. aSir William Rothenstein Letters from Moritz Rothenstein, 1902-1911 (MS Eng 1148.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aPainting, Englishy20th century. 7aExhibition catalogs.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aPainters.2lcsh1 aRothenstein, Alice,cLady,erecipient.1 aRothenstein, Moritz,d1836-1914,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aSir John Rothenstein;bDept. of Fine Arts, Fordham Univ., Bronx NY 10458;d1968 Jul;e68M-40.5HOU1 aGift of Sir John Rothenstein, 1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1148.401679cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002100123245005000144300002700194545016300221520011000384500005900494555008700553555010800640524010100748546001600849600002100865600004500886651005400931655002400985655002201009655001801031655001601049655002201065541011901087561004501206506004201251852002401293009065501-X20130708075512.0021120i18631880mau | eng d0 aocm833173321 aMAHV02-A250 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aMelville family.10aMelville family photograph album,f1863-1880. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aThe Massachusetts-based Melville family included the author Herman Melville. Thomas Melvill (1776-1845), the author's uncle, was a farmer in Pittsfield, Mass. aA photograph album of family members, genealogical notes and memoirs, and a sketch of Thomas Melvill, Jr. aThere are variant spellings for the Melvill(e) family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004748 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-61. aMelville Family Photograph Album, 1863-1880 (MS Am 188.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aMelville family.10aMelvill, Thomas,d1776-1845,xPortraits. 0aMassachusettszPittsfieldxHistoryy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aMemoirs.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aMiss Jean F. Melvill;b690 S. Cairns Avenue, Richland Center, Wisconsin 53581;d1986 18 Dec.;e86M-61.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Jean F. Melvill, 1986.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 188.701671ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102041001300123100004600136245006700182300002700249351004200276545010100318520022500419546002700644555008700671524011600758600004600874600005700920655005000977655002201027700004601049700007401095541004201169561005701211506004201268852002301310009122746-120130311144955.0030512i18381861mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm834953271 aMAHV03-A230 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863.10aWilliam Makepeace Thackerary miscellaneous papers,f1838-1861. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aThackeray was an English novelist and short-story writer, most famous for the novel Vanity Fair. aLetters from Thackeray to various correspondents, including several to Charlotte Thackeray Ritchie and William Webb Follett Synge. Also includes photographs of portraits of Thackeray and drawings by Thackeray and others. aIn English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01463 aWilliam Makepeace Thackeray Miscellaneous Papers, 1838-1861 (MS Eng 881). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863.10aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863vPortraits. 7aDrawingszGreat Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aRitchie, Charlotte Thackeray,erecipient.1 aSynge, W. W. Follettq(William Webb Follett),d1826-1891,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 88101828ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245006700154300002700221351003900248545039400287520026100681555008700942524011701029546001601146600003101162600003001193610003201223700004101255700004601296541005001342561005701392506004201449852002301491009122763-120120425090250.0030429i16561700mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm814831361 aMAHV03-A219 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPepys, Samuel,d1633-1703.10aSamuel Pepys and John Evelyn miscellaneous papers,f1656-1700. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSamuel Pepys, English diarist and naval administrator, is also chiefly celebrated for his highly detailed and honest Diary, kept mostly between 1660 and 1669. John Evelyn (1620-1706) was an English country gentleman whose life-long diary is considered an invaluable source of information on life in 17th-century England. Evelyn and Pepys formed a lifelong friendship after the Restoration. aCorrespondence of John Evelyn with various people. Also includes one letter from Mary Evelyn to Samuel Pepys; letters written by Samuel Pepys to various correspondents, some on naval matters; as well as letters received by Pepys, including two from Evelyn.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00885 aSamuel Pepys and John Evelyn Miscellaneous Papers, 1656-1700 (MS Eng 991). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPepys, Samuel,d1633-1703.10aEvelyn, John,d1620-1706.10aGreat Britain.bRoyal Navy.1 aEvelyn, Mary Browne,ecorrespondent.1 aEvelyn, John,d1620-1706,ecorrespondent.0 cGifts;avarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 99101892ntcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001600123245003500139300002700174351003900201545019300240520034900433524007400782555008700856600001600943600003500959600003700994650002301031650001201054651004201066651004201108651002001150655003201170655002801202655002801230655002201258655002201280655001601302541005801318561004101376506004201417852002301459009074411-X20091210080420.0030402i17181916mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612760449 aMAHV03A126 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGay family.10aGay family papers,f1718-1916. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aErnest Lewis Gay was an American librarian and book collector in Boston, Mass. His ancester, John Gay (1685-1732) was an English writer, dramatist, and poet during the neoclassical period. aMaterials from the Gay family spanning 4 centuries including: photograph album of Ernest Lewis Gay (1874-1916) including photographs of his mother, Elizabeth Lewis Gay; printed materials relating to John Gay (1685-1732); and documents from the Massachusetts Bay Colony, a will, financial documents, and tax assesment records from Walpole, Mass. aGay Family Papers (MS Am 2293). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0018130aGay family.10aGay, Ernest Lewis,d1874-1916.10aGay, Elizabeth LewisvPortraits. 0aMaritime commerce. 0aSloops. 0aMassachusettsxHistoryy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy18th century. 0aWalpole (Mass.) 7aBonds (legal records).2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aPhotograph albums.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTax records.2aat 7aWills.2aat0 cGift;aErnest Lewis Gay;d1916 June 1;e50M-581.5HOU1 aGift of Ernest Lewis Gay, 1916.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 229302643npcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003500123245007600158300002700234351015800261520041600419520012800835555008700963524011401050546001601164610003501180610006101215610006301276610006101339610006101400610006401461610005501525610006801580610006201648651005001710655002601760655002301786655002401809655002001833655002701853655001901880655002301899655003201922541005601954561009802010506004202108852002302150009123084-520091222112944.0030612i18611865mau eng d0 aocn612772472 aMAHV03A237 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aConfederate States of America.10aConfederate States of America documents from the Civil War,f1861-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Confederate medical documents; II. Confederate muster rolls; and III. Other Confederate documents and miscellany. aBlank and filled-in forms and documents from the CSA government departments: Army, Dept. of the Treasury, Dept. of War, Quartermaster General's Office, and Surgeon-General's Office. Also includes CSA patriotic covers (illustrated envelopes), muster rolls, hospital records, medical forms, receipts, bills of sale, clippings, railroad coupons, call certificates, printed materials, and other miscellaneous items.8 aContains information on CSA regiments: Missouri Artillery, Missouri Cavalry, Virginia Cavalry, and the 4th Georgia Infanty.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00195 aConfederate States of America Documents from the Civil War (MS Am 2313). Houghton Library, Harvard Univesity. aIn English.10aConfederate States of America.10aConfederate States of America.bArmy.bGeorgia Infantry.10aConfederate States of America.bArmy.bMissouri Artillery.10aConfederate States of America.bArmy.bMissouri Cavalry.10aConfederate States of America.bArmy.bVirginia Cavalry.10aConfederate States of America.bDepartment of the Treasury.10aConfederate States of America.bDepartment of War.10aConfederate States of America.bQuartermaster General's Office.10aConfederate States of America.bSurgeon-General's Office. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aMedical records.2aat 7aMuster rolls.2aat 7aBills of sale.2aat 7aEnvelopes.2aat 7aMilitary records.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aRequisitions.2aat 7aPatriotic envelopes.2gmgpc0 cGift;aVarious donors.erecat. from US 6113.7.5hou1 aGift of various donors, various dates. See finding aid for full acquisition information.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 231301850ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004800123245006600171300002700237351003900264545005500303520021700358555008700575555010900662524011800771600004800889600003500937600005800972610002201030650003501052700003501087700005801122710003801180541011001218561010101328506004601429852002501475009060104-120121212143923.0021016i19461964mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798401971 aMAHV02-A151 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aT. S. Eliot correspondence with Houghton Library,f1946-1964. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEliot was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. aCorrespondence between T.S. and Theresa Garrett Eliot, and William Alexander Jackson of the Houghton Library, together with correspondence between Jackson and persons seeking to consult the T.S. Eliot collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-165. aT. S. Eliot Correspondence with Houghton Library, 1946-1964 (MS Am 1691.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aEliot, Theresa Garrett,d1884-10aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.20aHoughton Library. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aEliot, Theresa Garrett,d1884-1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.2 aHoughton Library,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;afiles of Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University;d1946-1964;e67M-165;5HOU1 aFrom the files of Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University, 1946-1964.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.501510ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100001800124245006300142300002700205545005600232520020200288555008700490555010800577524014100685546001600826650004200842610005400884600001800938655001600956656004600972541007301018561004001091506004201131852002301173009097786-620121126101539.0030331i19671968mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813139201 aMHAT03-A64 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBabe, Thomas.10aThomas Babe plays produced at Agassiz Theatre,f1967-1968. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aThomas Babe (1941-2000) was an American playwright. aDirector's working copies of plays with notes and directions by Babe as well as autograph manuscripts of adapted versions of several plays produced at the Agassiz Theater, Cambridge, Massachusetts.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-65. aThomas Babe Plays Produced at Agassiz Theater, 1967-1968 (MS Thr 243). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzMassachusettsy20th century.20aAgassiz Theater (Agassiz House, Cambridge, Mass.)10aBabe, Thomas. 7aPlays.2aat 7aTheatrical producers and directors.2lcsh0 cGift;aThomas Babe;b345 E. 81st, New York, NY;d1968;e69M-65.5the1 aGift of Mr. Thomas Babe, 1968.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 24301369ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004000123245006100163300002700224351004600251545013600297520010600433555008700539524011100626546001600737600004000753655001700793655002200810700004300832541007000875561005700945506004201002852002301044009121501-320130131120212.0030418i18571904mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm80881744 aMAHV03-A175 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.10aThomas Bailey Aldrich miscellaneous letters,f1857-1904. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aAldrich was a poet, novelist and short story writer, and editor of Every Saturday (1865-1874) and The Atlantic Monthly (1881-1890). aLetters from Aldrich to various correspondents, a photograph of Aldrich, and a check to Walt Whitman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01331 aThomas Bailey Aldrich Miscellaneous Letters, 1857-1904 (MS Am 1128). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907. 7aChecks.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aWhitman, Walt,d1819-1892,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 112802281ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100003200126245004200158300002700200351011100227545005300338520049100391555008700882555010800969524012001077546001601197600003201213650001701245650002701262655001601289655002401305655003201329656002201361700002801383700005901411700006601470700004801536700004901584740001401633740002801647541005901675561004801734506004201782852002301824009130728-720130124100834.0030421i19311941mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm787303141 aMHAT03-A85 aMH-ThredacscMH-Thr1 aClugston, Katharine,d1892-10aKatharine Clugston plays,f1931-1941. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Katharine Clugston material; and II. Radio plays by other authors. aClugston (1892-1985) was an American playwright. aIncludes unsigned typewritten manuscript of Clugston's plays: Finished and The head of the family, as well as two set designs by Spencer Davies in watercolor and pencil for The head of the family. Also includes mimeographed typescripts of the radio scripts: A matter of life an death by Leopold Atlas, The house that Jack didn't build by Alfred Kreymborg, Red-head baker by Albert Maltz, Supply and demand by Irwin Shaw, and an untitled play by Eleanor Troy Williams, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013008 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-48. aKatharine Clugston Plays, 1931-1941 (MS Thr 199). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aClugston, Katharine,d1892- 0aPlaywriting. 0aRadio plays, American. 7aPlays.2aat 7aRadio scripts.2aat 7aSet design drawings.2gmgpc 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aWilliams, Eleanor Troy.1 aAtlas, Leopold,d1907-1954.tMatter of life and death.1 aKreymborg, Alfred,d1883-1966.tHouse that Jack didn't build.1 aMaltz, Albert,d1908-1985.tRed head baker.1 aShaw, Irwin,d1913-1984.tSupply and demand.0 aFinished.4 aThe head of the family.0 cGift;aKatharine Clugston;d1967 August;e67M-48.5the1 aGift of Miss Katharine Clugston, 1967.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 19901477ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245006700154300002700221351003800248545004800286520012900334555008700463555010900550524011900659546001600778600003200794610002400826650003900850655003800889740002600927541009300953561003801046506004201084852002501126009206472-820130102085116.0030917i19071923mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm776988951 aMAHV03A286 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.13aWitter Bynner An immigrant and other compositions,f1907-1923. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aBynner was an American poet and translator. aCompositions by Bynner, including various drafts of An immigrant (at Harvard) delivered as a Phi Beta Kappa address in 1911.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011398 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-251. aWitter Bynner An Immigrant and Other Compositions, 1907-1968 (MS Am 1891.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.20aHarvard University. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat0 aImmigrant at Harvard.0 cGift;aWitter Bynner;b342 Buena Vista Rd., Santa Fe, NM;d1957 November;e57M-251.5hou1 aGift of Witter Bynner, 1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1891.903200ctcaa2200541 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004500122245004600167300002700213351020000240545013700440520077900577555008701356555010901443524008701552546001601639600004501655610001301700610003401713650002301747655002001770655001901790655002901809655001601838655002401854655002201878655005301900655001701953655002001970655005001990655001702040655002402057655002202081656002302103700003602126700003302162700007502195700007302270700004002343541013302383561007502516506004202591852002502633009214410-120121214081756.0030929i18721969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826284061 aMAHV03A307 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowe, E. W.q(Edgar Watson),d1853-1937.10aE. W. Howe additional papers,f1872-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Edgar Watson Howe; II. Letters from Edgar Watson Howe; III. Letters to Adelaide Howe; IV. Other letters; V. Compositions; and VI. Miscellaneous. aHowe was an American newspaper editor and author, best known for his grim portrayal of small town life, The Story of a Country Town. aIncludes letters written to Edward and Adeline Howe discussing Edward Howe's writing, the discontinuation of E.W. Howe's monthly magazine, solicitations for autographs, and a note from the Calumet Magazine asking him to write an article about his experiences writing The Story of a Country Town. Also discussed are personal finance issues, including tax returns and business papers, and researchers asking for information on E.W. Howe. Collection also contains last will of E.W. Howe, postcards, proof of shares in McCormick Distilling Company, various newspaper clippings, a manuscript entitled Disappearance of Old West, various photographs of the Howe family, postcards featuring E.W. Howe, and a decorative wall hanging. Also includes a drawing by Harold Tucker Webster.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007598 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-109. aE. W. Howe Additional Papers (MS Am 1877.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowe, E. W.q(Edgar Watson),d1853-1937.20aCalumet.20aMcCormick Distilling Company. 0aFinance, Personal. 7aPostcards.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aStock certificates.2aat 7aWills.2aat 7aWall hangings.2aat 7aTax returns.2aat 7aCariactureszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aChecks.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aEssays.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aJournalists.2lcsh1 aHowe, Adelaide,ecorrespondent.3 aHowe family,ecorrespondent.1 aHowe, E. W.q(Edgar Watson),d1853-1937.tThe Story of a Country Town.1 aHowe, E. W.q(Edgar Watson),d1853-1937.tDisappearance of Old West.1 aWebster, Harold Tucker,d1885-1952.0 cPurchase;aArthur B. Howe;bArt Howe & Co., 811 Kansas Ave., Atchison KS;d15 May 1972;e71M-109;h$370.00 Amy Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund from Mr. Arthur B. Howe, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1877.103026ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004000123245006500163300002700228351017100255545006500426520070000491555008701191555011301278524012501391546001601516600004001532600004901572600005101621610002101672610002101693650005701714650006901771650005201840651005801892655002001950655001501970655002001985656002402005700003502029700005502064700004502119700005502164541015802219561010402377506004202481852003302523009214389-X20120502110919.0030929i18441891mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127865921 aMAHV03A299 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.10aGeorge William Curtis additional correspondence,f1844-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1124.9: Letters to George William Curtis; and II. MS Am 1124.10: Letters from George William Curtis to Anna Shaw Curtis. aCurtis was an American author, orator, editor, and reformer. aCollection includes correspondence on such topics as abolitionists, President Garfield and the Republican Party, the purchasing and publishing of his essays, and suffrage. There are many letters from various correspondents congratulating Curtis for his "Gettysburgh Address", and also requesting copies from Curtis of the address. Letters also discuss a novel Curtis wrote titled Trumps, the death of Theodore Johnson, an article that Curtis wrote which was published in Harpers, and several letters from the Christian Union, which wanted to put his picture on the front page of their publication. Collection also includes newspaper clippings, poetry written by various authors, and a telegraph.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-199-200. aGeorge William Curtis Additional Correspondence, 1844-1891 (MS Am 1124.9-1124.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.10aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.tTrumps.10aGarfield, James A.q(James Abram),d1831-1881.20aHarper's bazaar.20aChristian union. 0aAbolitionistszUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aSuffragezUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aPems.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aAbolitinists.2lcsh1 aCurtis, Anna Shaw,erecipient.1 aHarper, Joseph Wesley,d1801-1870,ecorrespondent.1 aJohnson, Laura Winthrop,ecorrespondent.1 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897,ecorrespondent.0 cGift, purchase;aGift and purchase from the House of Whittemore;bWestborough, Mass.d29 Nov. 1949;e49M-199, 49M-200;hNo price given, Norton fund.5hou1 aGift of The House of Whittemore, 1949; and Purchased with the Charles Eliot Norton fund, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1124.9-1124.1002392ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004400122245007000166300002700236351002900263545012700292520062500419555008701044555010801131524011101239546001601350600003201366600004801398600005901446610002901505650003101534650002501565650003901590651005801629700003001687700006801717541010801785561004601893506004201939852002501981009214394-620110126081359.0030929i19361965mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm832998851 aMAHV03A302 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966,erecipient.10aLetters to Lewis Gannett from various correspondents,f1936-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aGannett was a journalist and author. For many years he wrote the daily book review column for the New York Herald Tribune. aCollection contains letters written to Lewis Gannett from various correspondents. Letters address Gannett's book reviews written in the New York Herald Tribune, and some letters voice disagreement with his opinions. There are several letters from Arthur Mann, professor at Smith college discussing United States history, Roosevelt and the New Deal, American literature, and Arthur Mann's La Guardia Comes to Power. Also included is a letter from Senator George Norris thanking Gannett for his support during the Senate race. There is also an anonymous letter with a terrible review of Jan Valtin's book Out of the Night.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006448 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-35. aLetters to Lewis Gannett from Various Correspondents (MS Am 1888.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.10aValtin, Jan,d1904-1951.tOut of the Night.10aRoosevelt, Franklin D.q(Franklin Delano),d1882-1945.20aNew York Herald Tribune. 0aJournalismzUnited States. 0aNew Deal, 1933-1939. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century.1 aMann, Arthur,erecipient.1 aNorris, George W.q(George William),d1861-1944ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Lewis S. Gannett;bCream Hill Rd., West Cornwall, CT 06796;dSept.-Oct. 1974;e74M-35.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Lewis S. Gannett, 1974.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1888.701865ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245007400154300002700228351018200255545012700437520017400564555008700738555010800825524011500933546001601048600003201064650003101096655001801127655002401145655002001169700004901189700006901238541009801307561004301405506004201448852002501490009214398-920110126083205.0030929i19061966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm777868641 aMAHV03A303 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.10aLewis Gannett additional correspondence and compositions,f1906-1966. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Lewis Stiles Gannett; II. Letters from Lewis Stiles Gannett; III. Other letters; and IV. Compositions by Lewis Stiles Gannett. aGannett was a journalist and author. For many years he wrote the daily book review column for the New York Herald Tribune. aIncludes professional correspondence as well as journals and notebooks of Gannett. Also includes 52 letters from Charlotte Katherine Gannett to William Channing Gannett.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-80. aLewis Gannett Additional Correspondence and Compositions (MS Am 1888.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGannett, Lewis,f1891-1966. 0aJournalismzUnited States. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat1 aGannett, Charlott Katherine,ecorrespondent.1 aGannett, William C.q(William Channing),d1840-1923,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Lewis Gannett;bCream Hill Rd., West Cornwall CT 06796;dJan. 1975;e74M-80.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Lewis Gannett, 1975.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1888.801810ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245006300154300002700217351018200244545012700426520013400553555008700687555010800774524010400882600003200986650003901018655002401057655003801081655001601119655001801135656002301153700002001176700004101196541010101237561004301338506004201381852002501423009214401-220110114104850.0030929i19571965mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm822110941 aMAHV03A301 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.10aLewis Gannett correspondence and compositions,f1957-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Lewis Stiles Gannett; II. Letters from Lewis Stiles Gannett; III. Other letters; and IV. Compositions by Lewis Stiles Gannett. aGannett was a journalist and author. For many years he wrote the daily book review column for the New York Herald Tribune. aProfessional and family correspondence as well as Gannett's introduction to Jack London's The sea wolf, a book review, and notes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-52. aLewis Gannett Correspondence and Compositions (MS Am 1888.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aReviews.2aat 7aJournalists.2lcsh3 aGannett family.1 aLondon, Jack,d1876-1916.tSea wolf.0 cGift;aMrs. Lewis Gannett;bCream Hill Rd., West Cornwall CT 06796;d17 Jan. 1974;e73M-52.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Lewis Gannett, 1974.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1888.602214ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245004600155300002700201351012000228545012700348520047500475555008700950555010801037524008701145600003201232600004301264600002901307630002001336651005801356651005801414655002001472656002301492700003701515700004501552710004901597541012201646561004701768852002501815009214404-720130919114910.0030929i19201965mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127866361 aMAHV03A304 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.10aLewis Gannett correspondence,f1920-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Lewis Stiles Gannett; and II. Letters from Lewis Stiles Gannett. aGannett was a journalist and author. For many years he wrote the daily book review column for the New York Herald Tribune. aCorrespondence on topics such as publishing books, a letter from John Merrick Hollister on difficulties arising from a novel Hollister wrote on Walt Disney, US politics, and a letter about Chicago. Letters written by Gannett include a letter to the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery about Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, and a response from the library. Collection also includes letter written by Gannett to the Editor of the New York Times, and newspaper clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003898 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-54. aLewis Gannett Correspondence (MS Am 1888.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.10aPeabody, Elizabeth Palmer,d1804-1894.10aDisney, Walt,d1901-196600aNew York times. 0aChicago (Il..)xDescription and travely20th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aJournalists.2lcsh1 aHohenberg, John,ecorrespondent.1 aHollister, John Merrick,ecorrespondent.2 aHenry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery. cGift;aMr. Michael R. Gannett;bBox 350, Old River Rd., West cornwall CT 06796;dJune, Oct., Dec. 1981;e81M-54.5hou aGift of Mr. Michael R. Gannett, 1981.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1888.903391ctcaa2200577 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002100122245004800143300002700191351004600218545017100264520083700435555008701272555011401359524009801473546001601571650004101587610001201628600002101640610002801661610002601689610003801715650001401753650001601767650006901783650005201852651005801904655002001962655002101982655001902003655001602022655002502038656001802063656002502081700005902106700005502165700006002220700005702280700005702337700006102394700005102455700005802506541014002564561004402704506004202748852002302790009206521-X20120502111417.0030917i18571919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm789511571 aMAHV03A289 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGarrison family.10aGarrison family correspondence,f1857-1919. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aWendell Phillips Garrison (1840-1907) was editor of The Nation. Francis Jackson Garrison (1848-1916) was associated with Riverside Press and Houghton Mifflin Company. aContains correspondence between various members of the Garrison family discussing topic such as religion, politics, real estate in Boston, the evils of liquor, and family matters such as weddings and funerals. Correspondence of Wendell Phillips Garrison also discusses issues with writers for The Nation, problems with the publication, and retirement from The Nation. Other letters discuss in detail the newspaper Journal of the Times, which William Lloyd Garrison started in Vermont to oppose slavery. Also discussed is the Massachusetts Historical Society, an editorial in the Springfield Republican, and a member of the Garrison family undergoing stomach surgery and subsequently dying. Collection also contains newspaper clippings on the Garrison family, obituaries, sketches, and poems written by various members of the family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-166, 188. aGarrison Family Correspondence, 1857-1919 (MS Am 1169). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesvPeriodicals.20aNation.30aGarrison family.20aSpringfield Republican.20aJournal of the Times.20aMassachusetts Historical Society. 0aReligion. 0aTemperance. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxAnti-slavery movements. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aObituaries.2aat 7aSketches.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aFamily records.2aat 7aEditors.2aat 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh1 aGarrison, Francis Jackson,d1848-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, Lloyd McKim,d1867-1900,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-1879,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1838-1909,ecorrespondent.1 aNorton, Katherine McKim Garrison,d1873-ecorrespondent.1 aPhillips, Wendell,d1811-1884,ecorrespondent.1 aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Alan Valentine;bPresident's House, 22 Berkeley St., Rochester 3 NY;d3 Apr. 1950, 2 May 1950;e49M-166 (items 1-135).5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Alan Valentine, 1950.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 116903280ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002100122245006100143300002700204351002900231545030600260520096000566555008701526555010801613524011301721546001601834600004001850600005401890600003201944610005101976650007102027650003602098651004502134651004502179651004402224651003802268655002202306700005902328700005702387700005702444700006402501541014002565561006202705506004202767852002502809009206522-820121214081215.0030917i18771919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm809233421 aMAHV03A290 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGarrison family.10aGarrison family letters to William H. Hills,f1877-1919. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aWilliam Lloyd Garrison, Jr., was his father's financial manager; his brother Francis Jackson Garrison, was his father's biographer. With his brother, Wendell, Frank published a four-volume biography entitled William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879: The Story of His Life as Told by His Children (1855-1894). aLetters from Garrison family members, including Francis Jackson Garrison and William Lloyd Garrison, Jr. to Hills. Also includes photographs of Francis Jackson Garrison, his family, and his home. Frank Garrison's letters outline his social connections to abolitionists and discuss his father's life and work. A large number of the letters discuss Frank's biography of his father, William Lloyd Garrison. The letters examine the social and political aspects of Boston daily life, particularly the suffrage movement and the Massachusetts Men's League for Women's Suffrage. Frank Garrison also comments on the presidency and the state of American politics. Many of the letters are personal in nature discussing the health and habits of colleagues, friends, and family.Letters from Garrison family members, including Francis Jackson Garrison and William Lloyd Garrison to Hills. Also includes photographs of Francis Jackson Garrison, his family, and his home.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-49. aGarrison Family Letters to William H. Hills, 1877-1919 (MS Am 1169.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-187910aGarrison, Francis Jackson,d1848-1916vPortraits.30aGarrison familyvPortraits.20aMassachusetts Men's League for Woman Suffrage. 0aAfrican AmericanszMassachusettszBostonxPolitics and government. 0aWomenxSuffragezMassachusetts. 0aBoston (Mass.)xPolitics and government. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and government. 0aUnited StatesxSocial conditions. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aGarrison, Francis Jackson,d1848-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1874-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1838-1909,ecorrespondent.1 aHills, William H.q(William Henry),d1859-1930,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aHamill and Barker;b230 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago Illinois 60601;d1967 December 11;e67M-49;h$165.00 Dearborn fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Frederick M. Dearborn fund, 1967.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1169.602835ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001800122245004800140300002700188351002900215545043700244520058300681555008701264555013401351524009801485650005501583650005301638600001801691650001801709651005901727651006201786651006101848655001801909655002401927656002101951700004901972700004302021700004902064700003602113700004802149541009502197561004402292506004202336852002302378009206621-620120813081233.0030918i18021865mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm815112161 aMAHV03A292 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aTudor family.10aTudor family additional papers,f1802-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aHenry James Tudor (1791-1864) and William Tudor (1779-1830) were brothers, the sons of William Tudor (1750-1819), a Boston lawyer and political figure. Henry James Tudor studied law and worked for a while in the ice business of his brother Frederic (1783-1864). William Tudor was a merchant, legislator, author, and diplomat. He was the American consul in Lima, Peru (1823-1827) and chargé d'affaires at Rio de Janeiro (1827-1830). aContains correspondence of the Tudor family, including letters to William Tudor from various personal and professional correspondents and the correspondence of Frederic Tudor and Henry James Tudor with their sister and mother. Also includes a few other Tudor family letters and typescripts of letters from Jeremiah Mason, United States Senator from New Hampshire, to his wife Mary Means Mason. Finally, there are journals of Henry James Tudor relating to travel to New Orleans, Annapolis and Marseille, France, as well as to his work in the ice business of his brother Frederic.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-340, 1946-1947, under *46M-6. aTudor Family Additional Papers, 1802-1865 (MS Am 1602). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, AmericanzBrazil. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, AmericanzPeru.30aTudor family. 0aIce industry. 0aAnnapolis (Md.)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aMarseille (France)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aNew Orleans (La.)xDescription and travely19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aDiplomats.2lcsh1 aMason, Jeremiah,d1768-1848,ecorrespondent.1 aMason, Mary Means,d-1858,erecipient.1 aTudor, Frederic,d1783-1864,ecorrespondent.1 aTudor, Henry James,d1791-1864.1 aTudor, William,d1779-1830,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Henry D. Tudor;b22 Larch Rd., Cambridge, Mass.;d22 June 1946;e45M-340.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Henry D. Tudor, 1946.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 160201566ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005100122245005700173300002700230351010300257545010800360520008700468555008700555555010800642524010900750600005100859610003300910650004600943656002300989541013401012561005101146506004201197852002501239009214432-220121214112506.0030929i17571845mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm841856211 aMAHV03A306 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWheeler, C. S.q(Charles Stearns),d1816-1843.10aC. S. Wheeler additional correspondence,f1757-1845. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Charles Stearns Wheeler; and II. Other letters. aWheeler, a classical scholar, was a tutor in Greek and an instructor in history at Harvard (1838-1842). aPrimarily letters to Wheeler pertaining to both personal and professional matters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-18. aC. S. Wheeler Additional Correspondence, 1757-1845 (MS Am 1884.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWheeler, C. S.q(Charles Stearns),d1816-1843.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aClassical lituraturexStudy and teaching. 7aClassicists.2lcsh0 cPurchase;aSeven Gables book Shop, Inc.;b3 West 46 St., New York NY 10036;d1 Nov. 1972;e72M-18;h$200.00 Amy Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1884.202181ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101110005300122245007100175300002700246351003900273520020900312555008700521555010900608524012300717546001600840544014200856610005300998650003501051650003501086655005001121655003801171655001601209656001701225700003501242700002601277700001601303700003501319700002001354700001701374700003601391700003801427541011101465561009201576506004201668852002501710009214433-020121126102414.0030929i18961967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm805236851 aMAHV03A309 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library).10aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library) poems,f1896-1967. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aAnnotated drafts of poems by various poets, mostly American. Poets include Elizabeth Bishop, Thom Gunn, Patrick Kavanagh, Keidrych Rhys, Jon Silkin, Jean P. Valentine, and Edward Weismiller, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010328 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-106. aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library) Poems, 1896-1967 (MS Am 1641.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. dThere is related material: Audiotapes of poets reading from their workaat the Woodberry Poetry Room, Lamont Library, Harvard University.20aWoodberry Poetry Room (Harvard College Library). 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979.1 aCooke, Barrie,d1931-1 aGunn, Thom.1 aKavanagh, Patrick,d1904-1967.1 aRhys, Keidrych.1 aSilkin, Jon.1 aValentine, Jean.tDream barker.1 aWeismiller, Edward Ronald,d1915-0 cTransfer;aThe Woodberry Poetry Room;bLamont Library, Harvard University;d1969 September;e69M-106.5hou1 aTransfer from The Woodberry Poetry Room, Lamont Library, Harvard University, 1969.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1641.101656ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245007500155300002700230545006400257520038000321524012700701555008700828546001600915600003200931655003800963655001701001650001601018700004701034740008001081541007101161561004101232506004201273852002701315009211598-520130910130842.0031009i19091925mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612786246 aMAHV03A324 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aWilliam James manuscripts for Some problems of philosophy,f1909-1925. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWilliam James was an American philosopher and psychologist. aAutograph manuscripts and other materials for the book eventually published as: James, William, 1842-1910. Some problems of philosophy: a beginning of an introduction to philosophy. New York: Longmans, Green and Co., 1911. James left this volume unfinished prior to his death in 1910. James' friend and pupil, Dr. Horace Meyer Kallen oversaw the publishing of the manuscript. aWilliam James Manuscripts for Some Problems of Philosophy, 1909-1925 (MS Am 1092.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00196 aIn English.10aJames, William,d1842-1910. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aProofs.2aat 0aPhilosophy.1 aKallen, Horace Meyer,d1882-1974,eeditor.02aSome problems of philosophy : a beginning of an introduction to philosophy.0 cGift;aMr. Henry James;d1925 Dec. 15;eRecat. from WJ 200.5.5hou1 aGift of Henry James, Jr., 1925.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1092.701811ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245004400159300002700203351002900230545007200259520037300331546001600704555008700720555010800807524009600915600003701011651004701048651004401095655001601139655002501155656002501180700006501205700004801270541007501318561004301393852002501436009217005-620120502095148.0030929i18221916mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm784350531 aMAHV03A310 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916.10aMary Tappan Wright letters,f1822-1916. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aMary Tappan Wright was an American novelist and short story writer. aLetters from Mary Tappan Wright to her husband John Henry Wright, and good friend Alicia Keyes. Letters to Alicia Keyes address social life in Massachusetts, issues with writing novels, an invitation to a lecture series, and a section of a poem by Mary Wright. Mary writes to her husband mostly about their children, and also of their move to Shelburne, New Hampshire. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-71. aMary Tappan Wright Letters, 1822-1916 (MS Am 1701.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916. 0aShelburne (N.H.)xSocial life and customs. 0aMassachusettsxSocial life and customs. 7aPoems.2aat 7aFamily records.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aKeyes, Alicia M.q(Alicia Mulliken),d1855-1924,erecipient.1 aWright, John Henry,d1852-1908,erecipient. cGift;aJohn K. Wright;bLyme, New Hampshire;dNov. 1966;e66M-71.5hou aGift of Mr. John K. Wright, 1966.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1701.301518ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003300121245004100154300002700195351003000222545003400252520012300286555008700409555010900496524009600605600003300701650003800734650003400772655002800806655003800834655002200872655001600894655002000910561006800930541010900998852007301107009213891-820040310115543.0040220i19181948mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm812121331 aMAHV04A15 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.00kAdditional compositions,f1918-1948. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aMasefield was a British poet. aPapers include typescript and autograph compositions and poems, a commonplace book (1918), postcards, and photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016938 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-153. aJohn Masefield Additional Compositions (MS Eng 1455). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aCommonplace books.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat aDeposited by the children of T.W. Lamont, 1956; gift 1978.5hou cDeposit;aChildren of T.W. Lamont;b23 Wall Street, NY, NY;d1956 Feb.; gift 1978 Jan. 1.e55M-153;5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1455zShelved together: MS Eng 1450, 1452, 1454, 145502204ctcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004400122245006600166300002700232545004800259520033700307530006200644555008700706555014800793524013600941600003201077600006101109650003401170650004901204655003801253655002201291655002001313655002101333656001801354656001701372700005001389700004001439700004201479700003301521541010501554561003801659506004201697852004301739009250348-920120813080754.0031112i18701918mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm837672301 aMAHV03A373 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968,ecollector.10aWitter Bynner collection of literary manuscripts,f1870-1918. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBynner was an American poet and translator. aIncludes compositions by D. H. Lawrence and Edna St. Vincent Millay, among others, a portrait photograph of Lawrence taken by Bynner, scrapbooks of photographs from a women's suffrage parade in New York in 1911 and 1912, and a scrapbook concerning a play performed by Bynner and Eleanor Wilson for Woodrow Wilson, among other items. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-115-122, and 1962-1963, under *62M-158-165. aWitter Bynner Collection of Literary Manuscripts, 1870-1918 (MS Am 1891.11-.18, 1891.21-.27). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930vPortraits. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aWomenxSuffragezNew York (State)zNew York. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aActors.2lcsh 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930.1 aMcAdoo, Eleanor Wilson,d1889-1967.1 aMillay, Edna St. Vincent,d1892-1950.1 aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924.0 cGift;aWitter Bynner;b342 Buena Vista Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico;d18 Dec. 1961;e61M-115-122.5hou1 aGift of Witter Bynner, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1891.11-.18, 1891.21-.2701287ctcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003500122245005500157300002700212351003900239520007000278555008700348555010800435524009400543655002100637700006300658700005400721541012300775561004600898506004200944852002300986009258895-620100412075111.0031204i19041921mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm820279781 aMAHV03A392 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSommers, Davidson,ecollector.10aDavidson Sommers autograph collection,f1904-1921. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aIncludes letters from Henry Louis Mencken and Alexander Woolcott.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-28. aDavidson Sommers Autograph Collection (MS Am 2043). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aAutographs.2aat1 aMencken, H. L.q(Henry Louis),d1880-1956,ecorrespondent.1 aWoollcott, Alexander,d1887-1943,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aDavidson Sommers;b2000 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 7400, Washington DC 20006;d16 Sept. 1988;e88M-28.5hou1 aGift of Davidson Sommers, '26, 1988.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 204301720ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245003800155300002700193351012200220545018800342520019100530555008700721555010700808524008600915546001601001600003201017610005701049610003201106651003701138655001601175656001801191541005601209561004801265506003701313852003201350009258898-020110114090324.0031204i17951895mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127965141 aMAHV03A391 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRipley, Samuel,d1783-1847.10aSamuel Ripley papers,f1795-1895. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1613.2: Samuel Ripley papers; and II. bMS Am 1613.3: Old Manse papers. aSamuel Ripley was minister of the First Parish in Waltham, Mass. His father, Ezra Ripley lived in the Old Manse while he was minister in Concord and Samuel Ripley moved there in 1846. aContains autograph letters and documents relating to Samuel Ripley's ministry in Waltham and papers concerning the real and personal property of the Old Manse, chiefly deeds and letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-8. aSamuel Ripley Papers (MS Am 1613.2-1613.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRipley, Samuel,d1783-1847.20aFirst Parish in Waltham (Unitarian) (Waltham, Mass.)20aOld Manse (Concord, Mass.). 0aWaltham (Mass.)xChurch history. 7aDeeds.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh0 cBequest;aJames Bradley Thayer;d1960;e60M-8.5hou1 aBequest of James Bradley Thayer, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1613.2-1613.302847ctcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001900122245004900141300002700190351010100217545015400318520067000472555008701142555010701229524009001336600001901426650003901445655001801484655002401502655003801526655002101564655005001585655005201635656002501687700003401712700003801746700005201784700002901836700003901865700003801904700006001942700007402002740001702076740001602093541011702109561007202226506004202298852002502340009241948-820110114110030.0031112i18201886mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798912991 aMAHV03A375 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aAlcott family.10aAlcott family additional papers,f1820-1886. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other papers. aThe Alcott family were based in Concord, Mass., and included the writer Louisa May Alcott, and the New England transcendentalist Amos Bronson Alcott. aIncludes the correspondence of Abigail (May) Alcott, Amos Bronson Alcott, and Louisa May Alcott. Also includes diaries of Abigail (May) Alcott and Abigail May Alcott Nieriker, compositions and a drawing by Amos Bronson Alcott, and drawings by Frank Thayer Merrill possibly for a book by Louisa May Alcott. Compositions by Louisa May Alcott include The inheritance and The olive leaf, and there is a scrapbook compiled by her. Finally, there are accounts and receipts of Amos Bronson Alcott and a group of 33 engravings from Octavio Van Veen's Amoris divini emblemata pasted on sheets and annotated by Edward Waldo Emerson and Ralph Waldo Emerson, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006398 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-6. aAlcott Family Additional Papers (MS Am 1817.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aAlcott family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aAlcott, Abba May,d1800-1877.1 aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888,ecorrespondent.1 aAlcott, May,d1840-1879.1 aEmerson, Edward Waldo,d1844-1930.1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.1 aMerrill, Frank T.q(Frank Thayer),d1848-eillustrator.1 aVeen, Otto van,d1556-1629.tAmorum emblemata, figuris aeneis incisa.02aInheritance.02aOlive leaf.0 cDeposit;aThe Louisa May Alcott Memorial Association;bOrchard House, Concord MA 01742;dJuly 1974;e74M-6.5hou1 aDeposited by The Louisa May Alcott Memorial Association, 1974.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1817.201231ctcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003000122245002700152300002700179545006200206520009100268555008700359555010700446524007700553600003000630610004500660650005200705651003700757656001800794541005600812561004800868852002500916009258934-020051208144906.0031204i17881799mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm845845731 aMAHV03A390 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRipley, Ezra,d1751-1841.00kDocuments,f1788-1799. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aRipley was minister of the First Parish in Concord, Mass. aDocuments relating to Ezra Ripley's tenure as minister of the First Parish in Concord.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005498 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-7. aEzra Ripley Papers (MS Am 1613.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRipley, Ezra,d1751-1841.20aFirst Parish in Concord (Concord, Mass.) 0aCongregational churcheszMassachusettsxClergy. 0aConcord (Mass.)xChurch history. 7aClergy.2lcsh cBequest;aJames Bradley Thayer;d1960;e60M-7.5hou aBequest of James Bradley Thayer, 1960.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1613.102471ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004000121245005800161300002700219351007200246520056200318555008700880555010900967524009701076651003601173655002001209655001701229655002001246700002701266700002901293700005301322700003001375700003201405700003401437700005301471700003101524700003601555700003801591700003201629700003601661700003601697700003601733710003201769541009101801561004401892506004201936852002301978009258941-320110114092516.0030205i17611834mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm819335811 aMAHV03A31 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGrew, Edward W.,cMrs.,ecollector.10aMrs. Edward W. Grew autograph collection,f1761-1834. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters; and II. Documents. aIncludes letters from Aaron Burr to Catharine Hawes, from Thomas Addis Emmet to Charles Smith, from Alexander Hamilton to John Bay, from William Jones to John Fisher, from Philip Milledge to John Fisher, from George Taylor to Archibald Stewart, and from John Woodside to Joseph Hardy, among other letters. Also includes a manuscript contract from Comfort, Sands, and company; an autograph manuscript by Robert Fulton; a manuscript lease for Powles Hook ferry; a passport for Aaron C. Burr; and a list of prisoners made at Powles Hook, among other documents.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-107. aMrs. Edward W. Grew Autograph Collection (MS Am 1929). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aPowles Hook (Jersey City, N.J.) 7aContracts.2aat 7aLeases.2aat 7aPassports.2aat1 aBay, John,erecipient.1 aBurr, Aaron,d1756-1836.1 aEmmet, Thomas Addis,d1764-1827,ecorrespondent.1 aFisher, John,erecipient.1 aFulton, Robert,d1765-1815.1 aHawes, Catherine,erecipient.1 aHamilton, Alexander,d1757-1804,ecorrespondent.1 aHardy, Joseph,erecipient.1 aJones, William,ecorrespondent.1 aMilledge, Philip,ecorrespondent.1 aSmith, Charles,erecipient.1 aStewart, Archibald,erecipient.1 aTaylor, George,ecorrespondent.1 aWoodside, John,ecorrespondent.2 aComfort, Sands and Company.0 cGift;aMrs. Edward W. Grew;b238 Marlborough St., Boston;d3 Mar. 1949;e75M-107.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Edward W. Grew, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192902011ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005000122245005500172300002700227351002900254545007000283520045300353555008700806555010800893524010801001546001601109600005001125650006901175650002801244655001501272656001701287700004101304700003001345700003701375710002101412710002901433740001101462541008601473561004001559852002601599009258952-920120813120317.0031211i19491961mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782803771 aMAHV03A393 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings letters to Alfred Rice,f1949-1961. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aCummings was an American poet. Alfred Rice was Cummings attorney. aLetters mostly address the dispute over the title of Cummings' collection of poetry entitled Xaipe. He wrote to Rice explaining the pressures he felt from the editor Vaudrin. Baumgarten worked at Brandt and Brandt, and Vandrin at Oxford University Press. Cummings also wrote about problems over the inheritance of land from his mother. Several letters dispute Cummings' title to the land, and there is also a hand-drawn map of the land in question.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005258 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-50. aE. E. Cummings Letters to Alfred Rice, 1949-1961 (MS Am 1892.16). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aMaps.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBaumgarten, Bernice,ecorrespondent.1 aRice, Alfred,erecipient.1 aVaudrin, Philip,ecorrespondent.2 aBrandt & Brandt.2 aOxford University Press.02aXaipe. cGift;aAlfred Rice;b40 W. 55th St., New York, NY 10019;dMay 1978;e77M-50.5hou aGift of Mr. Alfred Rice, 1978.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892.1602099ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003800122245005200160300002700212351010900239545006500348520033800413555008700751555010800838524009400946600003801040610003201078650005201110651005901162651005801221655002401279655003401303700005001337700002001387700001801407700001901425541010201444561005701546506008401603852002601687009227771-320110114104942.0031016i18251852mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806171521 aMAHV03A343 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPertz, Julia Garnett,d1793-1852.10aJulia Garnett Pertz correspondence,f1825-1852. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Miscellaneous letters; and II. Letters to Julia (Garnett) Pertz. aPertz was the wife of German historian Georg Heinrich Pertz. aCorrespondence to Pertz addresses sympathy for death of friends and family, inheritance of property, life in Paris, and contains many letters of introduction. Letters also discuss the evils of slavery, University College in London with sketch, news from friends of their family life, and politics and government of the United States.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006348 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-64. aJulia Garnett Pertz Correspondence (MS Eng 1304.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPertz, Julia Garnett,d1793-1852.20aUniversity College, London. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesyAnti-slavery movements. 0aParis (France)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aSketchesy19th century2gmgpc1 aPertz, Julia Garnett,d1793-1852,erecipient.3 aGarnett family.3 aPertz family.3 aWright family.0 cDeposit;aMrs. Katherine Haramundanis;bBedford Road, Carlisle, Mass.;d2 May 1973;e73M-64.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. Katherine Haramundanis, 1973.5hou0 aRestricted: Permission to publish must be obtained from Mrs. Haramundanis.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1304.102149ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101041002300122100004900145245008700194300002700281351011200308545005800420520032300478555008700801555010900888524014000997546006101137600003701198650004001235650003801275651004301313651005201356651005801408655001601466655002301482541013201505561006801637506004201705852002801747009227800-020120502095758.0031016i17981865mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797896971 aMAHV03A340 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengaiceaswealat1 aBowring, John,cSir,d1792-1872,erecipient.10aSir John Bowring letters from various correspondents and other papers,f1798-1865. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Sir John Bowring; and II. Other letters and manuscripts. aBowring was a British linguist, diplomat, and author. aContains letters to Bowring from British correspondents, including government figures and foreign correspondents. Letters pertain to diplomatic, commercial, and political matters, and to his travels and writings. Also includes manuscripts of poems in Icelandic, Swedish, and Latin; and translations of Icelandic poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-102. aSir John Bowring Letters From Various Correspondents and Other Papers, 1798-1865 (MS Eng 1247.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English, Icelandic, Swedish, and Latin.10aBowring, John,cSir,d1792-1872. 0aIcelandic literaturey19th century. 0aSwedish literaturey19th century. 0aGreat BritainxCommercey19th century. 0aGreat BritainxForeign relationsy19th century. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat0 cPurchase;aAlexander Hertz & Co.;b88-28 Forty-Third Ave., Elmhurst NY;d7 Feb. 1967;e66M-102;h$100.60 Robert H. Taylor.5hou1 aPurchased with assistance from Mr. Robert H. Taylor, 1967.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1247.102504ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004000122245006700162300002700229351014700256545006500403520069300468555008701161524012301248546001601371600004001387610003001427651006201457651004101519651006001560655002201620700005401642700005401696700005601750700004301806700006101849541007701910561005701987506004202044852003202086009233694-920130204140905.0031022i18521892mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm817930051 aMAHV03A345 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.10aGeorge Wiliam Curtis miscellaneous correspondence,f1852-1892. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1124.3: Letters from George William Curtis; and II. MS 1124.4: Letters to George William Curtis. aCurtis was an American author, orator, editor, and reformer. aIncludes letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Jay, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The majority of the letters written by Curtis concerning daily life and social meetings. Topics also include domestic travel for both business and pleasure; as well as accounts of familial relations and their general health. The letters received by Curtis are generally thank-you notes for lectures and other personal appearances, and requests for appointments. This series also includes the petition from Madison University that conferred an honorary L.L.D. on Curtis. The collection also includes letters and dinner invitations from Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Longfellow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01369 aGeorge William Curtis Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1852-1892 (MS Am 1124.3-.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCurtis, George William,d1824-1892.20aJames Madison University. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aNew EnglandxDescription and travel. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aInvitations.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aHawthorne, Nathaniel,d1804-1864,ecorrespondent.1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894,ecorrespondent.1 aJay, John,d1817-1894,ecorrespondent.1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1124.3-1124.402080ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004500122245005500167300002700222351003000249545003700279520046400316555008700780555010800867524012300975650004101098600004501139650003501184651005001219655003801269655002001307655001601327656001701343700006001360700003701420740001401457740002401471541012401495561004901619852002601668009241978-X20090713044041.0031112i18471877mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800530691 aMAHV03A371 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.00kLettersbto Emmeline Austin Wadsworth,f1847-1877. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLongfellow was an American poet. aContains letters from Longfellow to his sister Emmeline, addressing family news and the birth and the later tragic death of the daughter and how he coped. Letters also mention the civil war, and emancipation. There are also several letters from Longfellow's wife Fanny to Emmeline discussing the death of her daughter. Also included in the collection are two poems by Longfellow entitled "The Fire of Drift-Wood", and "Emmeline", and some newspaper clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005508 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-14. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Letters to Emmeline Austin Wadsworth (MS Am 1340.12). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aSlavesxEmancipationzUnited States.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aLongfellow, Fanny Appleton,d1817-1861,ecorrespondent.1 aWadsworth, Emmeline,erecipient.0 aEmmeline.0 aFire of drift-wood. cGift;aWilliam P. Wadsworth;b29 The Homestead, Geneseo, Livingston County New York, 14454;d4 Jan. 1979;e78M-14.5hou aGift of Mr. William P. Wadsworth, 1979.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1340.1201873ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245006000155300002700215351002900242545037200271520012900643555008700772524011200859546001600971600003200987610003301019650004501052656003301097656002101130700005601151700004901207700006601256541007701322561005701399506004201456852002501498009222047-920130102110923.0031008i19151954mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127887181 aMAHV03A322 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSarton, George,d1884-1956.10aGeorge Sarton miscellaneous correspondence,f1915-1954. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aSarton was a historian of science and professor at Harvard University. He was the founder (1912) and editor (1912-1952) of Isis, an international review devoted to the history and philosophy of science; studied Arabic and Islam in the Middle East; and lectured at many universities in the U.S. and Europe. Sarton was born in Belgium and emigrated to the U.S. in 1915. aIncludes letters to Sarton from scientists and inventors including Alexander Graham Bell, Emile Berliner, and Thomas Edison.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01172 aGeorge Sarton Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1915-1954 (MS Am 1803.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSarton, George,d1884-1956.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aInventionszUnited Statesy20th century. 7aHistorians of science.2lcsh 7aInventors.2lcsh1 aBell, Alexander Graham,d1847-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aBerliner, Emile,d1851-1929,ecorrespondent.1 aEdison, Thomas A.q(Thomas Alva),d1847-1931,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;avarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1803.701840ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006500159300002700224351004200251545010700293520033700400555008700737555010800824524011700932546001601049600003701065650002801102651005901130655002401189655001901213656002501232700004801257541007501305561004301380506004201423852002501465009242244-620120502095046.0031112i18681879mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm805629881 aMAHV03A374 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916.10aMary Tappan Wright letters to John Henry Wright,f1868-1879. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aMary Tappan Wright was an American novelist and short story writer. John Henry Wright was her husband. aContains letters written from Mary Tappan Wright to her husband John when they were living apart. Letters contain a daily description of Mary Wright's life and activities in Gambier, Ohio. Letters also discuss religion, news of the church, and new developments in the Wright family. Some letters contain simple pen and ink drawings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-85. aMary Tappan Wright Letters to John Henry Wright, 1868-1879 (MS Am 1701.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWright, Mary Tappan,d1851-1916. 0aReligionzUnited States 0aGambier (Ohio)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aSketches.2att 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aWright, John Henry,d1852-1908,erecipient.0 cGift;aJohn K. Wright;bLyme, New Hampshire;dDec. 1966;e66M-85.5hou1 aGift of Mr. John K. Wright, 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1701.401543ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003300122245005300155300002700208351004600235545021200281520015800493555008700651524010300738546001600841600003300857651004200890651005800932655002100990655001901011541007701030561005701107506004201164852002301206009233716-320130204140315.0031022i18331874mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm823029041 aMAHV03A348 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aCharles Sumner miscellaneous papers,f1833-1874. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aCharles Sumner was the U.S. Senator from Massachusetts for 23 years. He was a prominent abolitionist who was deeply involved in the legislation preceding the Civil War, as well as the Reconstruction process. aLetters from Charles Sumner to various correspondents. Also includes a few manuscripts of notes, speeches about legislative bills, as well as signatures.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01363 aCharles Sumner Miscellaneous Papers, 1833-1874 (MS Am 1739). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aMassachusettsxHistoryy19th century. 0aMassachusettsxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 173901383cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005000123245005300173300002700226351003900253545009300292520013600385555008700521524009300608600004900701650003800750650005300788650002800841700004700869541004200916561005700958506004201015852002401057009272651-820110209090254.0861029i19341937mau eng d0 aocn122590319 aMAHV86A624 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLawrence, T. E.q(Thomas Edward),d1888-1935.10aT. E. Lawrence miscellaneous papers,f1934-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLawrence, a British archaeologist, soldier, and writer, was known as Lawrence of Arabia. aIncludes a letter from Lawrence, accompanied by letters from Bruce Rogers dealing with the printing and sale of Lawrence's letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00747 aT. E. Lawrence Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 1251). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLawrence, T.E.q(Thomas Edward),d1888-1935. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xCampaignszArab countries. 0aAuthors and publishers.1 aRogers, Bruce,d1870-1957,ecorrespondent.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 125101241ctcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100001700121245002800138300002700166351003800193520013100231555008700362555010900449524008600558544008900644600001700733655005100750655001600801541008300817561003900900852002400939009311014-620080111101632.0040220q16uu16uumau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm788208881 aMAHV04A14 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aGell family.00kCommonplace book,f16-- a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aLeaves from a commonplace book of verse and prose in various unidentified hands, once part of a collection of the Gell family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-229. aGell Family Commonplace Book (MS Eng 1107). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aBulk of Gell papers are deposited in Derbyshire Record Office, Matlock, England, UK.30aGell family. 7aCommonplace bookszEnglandy17th century.2aat 7aPoems.2aat cGift;aRobert S Pirie;b14 Athens St., Cambridge, Mass.;d1959;e58M-229.5hou aGift of Robert S Pirie, 1959.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 110701461ntcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003200121245002500153300002700178545033900205520012100544555008700665555010900752524008000861600003200941655001800973656001800991710004401009541005901053561004601112852002501158009311018-920040310120725.0040219i17631773mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm781783211 aMAHV04A10 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWingate, Paine,d1739-1838.00kSermons,f1763-1773. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWingate, Congregational minister, legislator, and judge, was ordained pastor of the Congregational Church in Hampton Falls, N.H. in 1763, was a delegate to the New Hampshire constitutional convention in 1781, served in the state legislature and the U.S. House and Senate (1783-1797), and was a judge of the Superior Court (1798-1809). aAutograph manuscript sermons, prayers, and forms of service written by Wingate while minister at Hampton Falls, N.H.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016698 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-276. aPaine Wingate Sermons (MS Am 1198.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWingate, Paine,d1739-1838. 7aSermons.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh2 aCongregational Church (Hampton, N. H.). cGift;aC. E. L. Wingate;d1942 Mar. 19;e49M-276.5hou aPresented by C. E. L. Wingate, 1942.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1198.102304ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100003800120245003200158300002700190351003900217545010500256520053900361555008700900555010900987524009101096650004101187650004601228600003801274600002401312610003901336610004401375650004901419650004701468650004501515651003301560651006101593655004701654700005401701541008401755561004401839852002301883009311022-720090713044642.0040219i19141927mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm788242741 aMAHV04A9 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBeal, Boylston Adams,d1865-1944.00kCorrespondence,f1914-1927. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aBeal was a lawyer in Boston, Mass. Dresel was an American diplomat and U.S. Commissioner to Germany. aPrimarily correspondence between Beal and Ellis Loring Dresel concerning the First World War, politics in London, the care of prisoners in Germany, and the actions of the Red Cross. Letters also discuss questions about the Executive Polish Relief Committee and funding for the committee, a secret memorandum on the raid on Arcos, and the redecoration of the United States Embassy in London. Collection contains programs and photographs of the Sulgrave Manor Dedication and memorial service pamphlet and obituary for Walter Hines Page.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-283. aBoylston Adams Beal Correspondence (MS Am 1215). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aRed Cross and Red CrescentzGermany. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xDiplomatic history.10aBeal, Boylston Adams,d1865-1944.10aPage, Walter Hines.20aExecutive Polish Relief Committee.10aUnited States.bEmbassy (Great Britain) 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPrisoners and prisons. 0aRed Cross and Red CrescentxGreat Britain. 0aSulgrave Manor House, Sulgrave, England. 0aArcos de la frontera (Spain) 0aLondon (England)xPolitics and governmenty20th century. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aDresel, Ellis Loring,d1865-1925,ecorrespondent. cGift;aBoylston Adams Beal;b60 State St., Boston, Mass.;d1941;e49M-283.5hou aGift of Boylston Adams Beal, 1941.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121502060ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004100121245005500162300002700217351014400244545010900388520035100497555008700848555010900935524010801044546001601152600004101168610003101209610003801240655001601278656003401294700003401328700007401362700004901436541010201485561004301587506004201630852002601672009059711-720131125154439.0030214i19541966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm81327827 aMAHV03A56 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLamont, Thomas Stilwell,d1899-1967.10aThomas Stilwell Lamont correspondence,f1954-1966. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Thomas Stilwell Lamont; II. Letters from Thomas Stilwell Lamont; and III. Other letters. aLamont, son of the financier Thomas W. Lamont, was a banker and was a member of the Harvard Corporation. aConsists chiefly of letters from various correspondents to Thomas Stilwell Lamont, regarding John Masefield's proposed recording for the Academy of American Poets and Masefield's poem written as a tribute to Lamont's parents, Thomas William and Florence Lamont. Also includes correspondence between the Academy and Lamont regarding the recording.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-102. aThomas Stilwell Lamont Correspondence, 1954-1966 (MS Eng 1291.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLamont, Thomas Stilwell,d1899-1967.20aAcademy of American Poets.20aHarvard University.bCorporation. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets, Englishy20th century.1 aHayes, Ralph,ecorrespondent.1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMr. Corliss Lamont;b315 West 106th St., New York, NY 10025;d1972 June 12;e72M-102;5hou1 aGift of Mr. Corliss Lamont, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1291.101448ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245006400160300002700224351003800251545012900289520009500418555008700513524010300600546001600703600003800719650003900757650003500796650003600831655001600867655001700883541004900900561010800949506004201057852002301099009399163-020100302085629.0020710i18251876mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612824204 aMAHV04A46 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aRalph Waldo Emerson miscellaneous compositions,f1825-1876. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by title. aRalph Waldo Emerson was an American lecturer, poet, and essayist, and the leading exponent of New England Transcendentalism. a"Catch-all" collection consisting chiefly of poems, essays, and fragments of compositions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00237 aRalph Waldo Emerson Miscellaneous Compositions (MS Am 2336). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 7aPoems.2aat 7aEssays.2aat0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various donors at various times. Accession information is given with the item entry.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 233601801ntc a22003495a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041001300122100002000135245008900155300002700244351003000271545015300301520024100454546004400695555008700739555008600826524012500912546002701037610002001064600002001084650002201104650003801126700004601164541011501210561006101325506004201386852002301428009422029-820100304121542.0040729i19191929mau |||||||rus|d0 aocn612830118 aMHAT04A13 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 arusafre1 aNouvel, Walter.10aWalter Nouvel letters to Serge Diaghilev,f1919-1929 (inclusive),g1928-1929 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWalter Nouvel (1871-1949) was an amateur musician, music critic for Diaghilev's Mir iskusstva journal, and de facto administrator of Ballets Russes. aContains letters from Nouvel to Diaghilev concerning negotiations with theatre managers and agents, contracts with artists and dancers, advertising and ticket sales for the 1928-1929 seasons of Ballets Russes, and some personal matters. aIncludes letters in Russian and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002418 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aWalter Nouvel Letters to Serge Diaghilev (MS Thr 466). Harvard Theatre Collection. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn Russian and French.20aBallets russes.10aNouvel, Walter. 0aBallet companies. 0aBalletxProduction and direction.1 aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aDrouot-Richelieu;bParis, France;d1996 November 5;e*2003MT-361;h$5,000.00 (Rothschild fd.).5the1 aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild fund, 1996.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 46601541ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005100122245004600173300002700219351014500246545010800391520008700499555008700586555010800673524009800781600005100879610003300930650004600963656002301009541009301032561004701125506004201172852002501214009214430-620121214112604.0030929i18331843mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm790748121 aMAHV03A305 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWheeler, C. S.q(Charles Stearns),d1816-1843.10aC. S. Wheeler correspondence,f1833-1843. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Charles Stearns Wheeler; II. Letters to Charles Stearns Wheeler; and III. Other papers. aWheeler, a classical scholar, was a tutor in Greek and an instructor in history at Harvard (1838-1842). aPrimarily letters to Wheeler pertaining to both personal and professional matters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007668 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-13. aC. S. Wheeler Correspondence, 1833-1843 (MS Am 1884.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWheeler, C. S.q(Charles Stearns),d1816-1843.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aClassical literaturexStudy and teaching. 7aClassicists.2lcsh0 cGift;aKenneth W. Cameron;bTrinity College, Hartford 6 CT;d13 Oct. 1972;e72M-13.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Kenneth W. Cameron, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1884.101396ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245006500159300002700224545009500251520013800346555008700484524010400571600003700675650005000712650002100762656002400783700003300807700005500840541007700895561005700972506004201029852002301071009233673-620110114092806.0031022i18711885mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm796177211 aMAHV03A356 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886.10aRandolph Caldecott miscellaneous correspondence,f1871-1885. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCaldecott, an English artist, was a popular illustrator, especially of books for children. aLetters from Caldecott to personal and professional correspondents, including several to William Clough and Frederick Locker-Lampson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00595 aRandolph Caldecott Miscellaneous Correspondence (MS Eng 784). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886. 0aIllustration of bookszEnglandy19th century. 0aChidren's books. 7aIllustrators.2lcsh1 aClough, William,erecipient.1 aLocker-Lampson, Frederick,d1821-1895,erecipient.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 78401486ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004100122245006100163300002700224351003900251545004600290520015000336555008700486524011400573546001600687600004100703650003700744650004000781656002000821700006400841700005300905541007700958561005701035506004201092852002601134009233709-020120425095718.0031022i18171887mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813278221 aMAHV03A354 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHaydon, Benjamin Robert,d1786-1846.10aBenjamin Robert Haydon miscellaneous papers,f1817-1932. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHaydon was an English historical painter. aIncludes Haydon's letters, correspondence between Frank Scott Haydon and Harry Buxton Forman, and letters and exhibition lists of other painters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00894 aBenjamin Robert Haydon Miscellaneous Papers, 1817-1932 (MS Eng 1331.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHaydon, Benjamin Robert,d1786-1846. 0aPainting, Englishy19th century. 0aExhibitionszEnglandy19th century. 7aPainters.2lcsh1 aForeman, H. Buxton,q(Harry Buxton),d1842-ecorrespondent.1 aHaydon, Frank Scott,d1822-1887,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1331.701369ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245005000153300002700203545006600230520023500296555008700531524010200618546001600720600003100736650003500767655003800802655001600840656001700856541007000873561005700943506004201000852002501042009233712-020130131122523.0031022i19131969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800440571 aMAHV03A350 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.10aConrad Aiken miscellaneous poems,f1913-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAiken was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. aPrimarily autograph manuscript and typescripts of poems in various stages of progress. Among the poems included are John Deth, The Coming Forth by Day of Osiris Jones, Preludes for Memnon, and Priapus and the Pool and Other Poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01345 aConrad Aiken Miscellaneous Poems, 1913-1969 (MS Am 1422.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1422.101362ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004200122245006200164300002700226351004600253545005200299520013900351555008700490524011200577546001500689600004200704650001600746656001700762700003300779700004400812541007000856561005700926506004200983852002301025008755050-420130131120635.0031022i18311890mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm836567821 aMAHV03A349 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.10aJohn Greenleaf Whittier miscellaneous papers,f1831-1890. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aWhittier was an American poet and abolitionist. aIncludes letters from Whitter to Celia Laighton Thaxter, and Edwin Harriman, among others. Also includes an autograph manuscript poem.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01334 aJohn Greenleaf Whittier Miscellaneous Papers, 1831-1890 (MS Am 1211). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English10aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aHarriman, Edwin,erecipient.1 aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894,erecipient.0 aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121101925ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003000122245006400152300002700216351002900243545020300272520037200475555008700847555010800934524011601042546001601158600003001174610002801204610002201232650003901254655001701293656001801310700004001328541008501368561005501453506004201508852002501550009206526-020120111104846.0030918i19201943mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806161261 aMAHV03A296 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954.10aBliss Perry correspondence with Jerome Johnson,f1920-1943. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aPerry was a college professor, editor, and author. He taught English at Williams (1886-1893), Princeton (1893-1900), and Harvard (1907-1930). From 1899 to 1909 he was editor of The Atlantic Monthly. aCollection includes letters written from Johnson to Perry discussing literature, the Harvard club, Perry visiting Johnson in Montreal, death of friends, and dinner invitations. Perry writes Johnson of publishing articles in Atlantic Monthly, and declines an invitation to stay at Johnson's home. Perry's wife also wrote to Jerome Johnson about their trip to Montreal.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008498 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-74. aBliss Perry Correspondence with Jerome Johnson, 1920-1943 (MS Am 1343.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954.20aHarvard Club of Boston.20aAtlantic Monthly. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aInvitations. 7aEditors.2aat1 aJohnson, Jerome A.,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aVermont Historical Society;bMontpelier VT;d17 Sept. 1964;e64M-74.5hou1 aGift of The Vermont Historical Society, 1964.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1343.102364ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003500122245006700157300002700224351003000251545018800281520054400469555008701013555010801100524011701208546001601325600003501341600006901376650001801445650006001463700006901523700005201592700003601644710004501680710003701725541010801762561005501870506004201925852002301967009222040-120120502095628.0031008i19361966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm840116701 aMAHV03A323 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959.10aBernard Berenson letters to Margaret Scolari Barr,f1936-1966. a1 boxb(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aBerenson, an art historian and leading authority on Italian Renaissance painting, was born in Lithuania, grew up in Boston, and from 1900 lived in his Villa I Tatti, outside Florence. aChiefly photocopies of letters from Berenson to Barr concerning personal matters, mutual friends and social events, as well as discussions of art and art criticism/history. Some letters touch on political matters during the time of World War II. Other letters are copies of correspondence among Max Schuster of Simon and Schuster, Brandt and Brandt, Berenson's U.S. agents, and Nicky Mariano, Berenson's secretary, concerning the US publication of "Rumor and Reflection," which was complicated by passages regarded by some as anti-Semitic.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-97. aBernard Berenson Letters to Margaret Scolari Barr, 1936-1966 (MS Am 1801). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959.10aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959.tRumor and Reflection: 1941-1944. 0aArtxHistory. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited Statesy20th century.1 aSchuster, M. Lincolnq(Max Lincoln),d1897-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aBarr, Margaret Scolari,d1901-1987,erecipient.1 aMariano, Nicky,ecorrespondent.2 aSimon and Schuster, inc.ecorrespondent.2 aBrandt & Brandt,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Alfred Hamilton Barr, Jr.;b49 East 96th St., New York, NY 10028;dDec. 1966;e66M-97.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Alfred Hamilton Barr, Jr., 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 180101750nkcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101245004400122300002700166351005400193545023000247520017000477530006200647524008300709555008700792555010800879600004100987600004701028650003901075650001601114655002201130655002001152655001901172541011401191561004201305506004201347852002301389009178659-220130917155404.0030828i18581902mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm86143719 aMAHV03A251 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aPhotographs of Henry Adams,f1858-1902. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by photographer or title. aHenry Brooks Adams (1838-1918) was a graduate of Harvard College Class of 1858, the son of Charles Francis Adams and Abigail Brown Brooks Adams. He was an historian, man of letters, and author of The education of Henry Adams. aIncludes photographs and tintype of: Adams, Adams memorial ("Grief"), Adams in a group portrait, Mabel Hooper La Farge, and the Outing Club House on Quantico Island. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPhotographs of Henry Adams (MS Am 2327). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1989-1990, under *89M-44.10aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918vPortraits.10aLa Farge, Mabel Hooper,d1875-vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aHistorians. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aTintypes.2aat0 cGift;aMr. Benjamin La Farge;bStation Hill Road, Barrytown, New York 12507;d1989 November 19;e89M-44.5hou1 aGift of Benjamin La Farge, 1989.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 232702066ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003300122245006300155300002700218351003000245545011300275520035100388555008700739555010800826524010300934650004101037600003301078650005201111650005501163651005201218651006201270655001601332656002401348700005001372700004401422541010301466561005701569506004201626852002401668009227747-020110114104801.0031016i18201829mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm843174271 aMAHV03A342 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWright, Frances,d1795-1852.10aFrances Wright letters to Julia Garnett Pertz,f1820-1829. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWright was a Scottish-American social reformer. Pertz was the wife of German historian Georg Heinrich Pertz. aContains letters addressing such topics as the evils of slavery in the United States, the support of emancipation, details about the slave trade, and thoughts on the government in America. Letters also discuss life in England and Washington D.C., ideas on how to prevent seasickness on long voyages, overcoming various illnesses, and song lyrics.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006328 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-47. aFrances Wright Letters to Julia Garnett Pertz (MS Eng 1304). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aSlavesxEmancipationzUnited States.10aWright, Frances,d1795-1852. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxAnti-slavery movements. 0aSlave TradezUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aWashington (D.C.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aSongs.2aat 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh1 aPertz, Julia Garnett,d1793-1852,erecipient.1 aWhitby, Camilla Wright,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit;aMrs. Katherine Haramundanis;bBedford road, Carlisle, Mass.;d4 Mar. 1974;e73M-47.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. Katherine Haramundanis, 1974.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 130401812ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003200122245006200154300002700216545009500243520019500338555008700533555010900620524011400729546001600843600003200859600003100891650005100922650006300973650003901036655003801075656001701113656002001130700004601150541011101196561007601307506004201383852002501425009227784-520130117091844.0031015i19361939mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm782283331 aMAHV03A329 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aReavey, George,d1907-1976.10aGeorge Reavey papers concerning Dylan Thomas,f1936-1939. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aReavey was the owner and operator of Europa Press and a friend of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. aContains Reavey's correspondence with Dylan Thomas and others pertaining to the printing and publishing of Thomas's work as well as specimen pages from Thomas' short story, The burning baby.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-163. aGeorge Reavey Papers Concerning Dylan Thomas, 1936-1939 (MS Eng 943.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aReavey, George,d1907-1976.10aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953. 0aAuthors and publisherszEnglandy20th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzEnglandxHistoryy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturexWelsh authors. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh 7aPrinters.2lcsh1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.tBurning baby.0 cGift;aGeorge Reavey;b121 W. 15th St., New York, NY;d1956 March 12;e55M-163;h$250.00 Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from George Reavey, Esq., 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 943.902287ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100006900122245007500191300002700266351002900293545005500322520061600377555008700993555010801080524011601188600005701304610003401361650001401395651005801409651004901467655001601516655002001532655001901552655002201571656001601593656001701609700005401626541009901680561004301779506004201822852002501864009214405-520110114104307.0030929i18291903mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm831033031 aMAHV03A300 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGannett, William C.q(William Channing),d1840-1923,erecipient.10aLetters to William C. Gannett from various correspondents,f1829-1903. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aWilliam Channing Gannett was a Unitarian minister. aCollection contains letters to William Gannet, mainly from Ralph Waldo Emerson, on topics such as religion, and Emerson's travels in Sicily and Italy. Collection also contains various original poems written by Emerson called "Poem on Eloquence", "See the Calm Exit on the Aged Saint", and "Where is this Bark that Comes Over the Deep." Also included is an address at the ordination of Ralph Waldo Emerson at the Second Church in Boston, permission notes written to Gannett to publish extracts from Emerson's works, and an invitation to an unveiling of a Ralph Waldo Emerson statue at the Concord Public Library.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-21. aLetters to William C. Gannett From Various Correspondents (MS Am 1888.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGannett, William C.q(William Channing),d1840-1923.20aSecond Church (Boston, Mass.) 0aReligion. 0aSicily (Italy)xDescription and travely19th century. 0aItalyxDescription and travely19th century. 7aPoems.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aPoets.2aat 7aClergy.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Lewis Gannett;bCream Hill Rd., West Cornwall CT 06796;dSept. 1973;e73M-21.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Lewis Gannett, 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1888.502008ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004500121245006500166300002700231351003800258530005800296545003700354520018700391524011500578555008700693546001600780600004500796610003300841650003900874650003500913655003800948655001600986656001601002740003101018740001901049740001501068541007701083561005701160506004201217852002301259007001501282506002801297845009901325852001301424856012501437009381896-320130107105348.0040608i18401882mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm80093453 aMAHV04A38 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.10aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow miscellaneous papers,f1840-1882. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by title. aColor digital facsimiles available of selected items. aLongfellow was an American poet. aIncludes autograph manuscript draft poems and prose by Longfellow, and materials about Longfellow. Includes drafts of The wreck of the Hesperus, Twelfth-night, Excelsior, and others. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Miscellaneous Papers, 1840-1882 (MS Am 1370). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01207 aIn English.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2aat42aThe wreck of the Hesperus.02aTwelfth-night.02aExcelsior.0 cGift;avarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1370cr||n |||||||| aNo restrictions on use. aPermission to publish or reproduce should be obtained from the Curator, Houghton Library.5hou bNETcGEN40uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:10730323MS Am 1370zColor digital facsimile images available of selected items.01763ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245005800153300002700211351003800238545007500276520028000351555008700631555010700718524009500825546001600920600003200936650005000968650003801018655002301056655003801079740002701117740001901144541014201163561004201305506004201347852002401389009355399-420100304114105.0040505i19701977mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612816189 aMAHV04A32 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSharp, Margery,d1905-199110aMargery Sharp additional compositions,fca.1970-1977. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aMargery Sharp (1905-1991) was an English author of books for children. aContains incomplete autograph manuscript and typescript drafts of the novels Summer Visits and The Faithful Servants. These novels were for adults, not children. Also includes autograph manuscript and typescript drafts of observations, possibly drafts for chapters of a book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records 1995-1996, under *95M-11. aMargery Sharp Additional Compositions (MS Eng 1465). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSharp, Margery,d1905-1991. 0aChildren's literature, Englishy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat42aThe faithful servants.02aSummer visits.0 cGift;aMrs. M. E. Tucker;bSideways Cottage, 32 Main Street, Mursley, Near Milton Keynes, MK17 ORT, England;d1995 Oct. 13;e95M-11.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. M. E. Tucker, 1995.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 146502427ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100041001300121100006400134245005400198300002700252351003900279545005500318520042300373546003600796555008700832524010400919600005201023651004401075651004401119700004501163700005201208700004801260700004701308700005101355700010301406700004801509700005801557700005201615541013701667561014801804506004201952852002301994009301447-320130912082500.0040219i17661888mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800440731 aMAHV04-A2 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre1 aWashburne, E. B.q(Elihu Benjamin),d1816-1887,ecollector.10aE. B. Washburne autograph collection,f1766-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aWashburne was an American politician and diplomat. aContains autograph letters from various American and French historical figures, including John Adams, John Quincy Adams, John Hancock, Pierre Menard, Pierre François Tissot, and George Washington. Also includes a letter from the Marquis de Lafayette to Thomas Jefferson and a letter from Thomas Jefferson to Ben Franklin, as well as documents concerning the French Revolution and the Paris Commune, among other items. aMaterial in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01549 aE. B. Washburne Autograph Collection, 1766-1888 (MS Am 1583). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWashburne, E. B.q(Elihu Benjamin),d1816-1887. 0aFrancexHistoryyRevolution, 1789-1799. 0aParis (France)xHistoryyCommune, 1871.1 aAdams, John,d1735-1826,ecorrespondent.1 aAdams, John Quincy,d1767-1848,ecorrespondent.1 aFranklin, Benjamin,d1706-1790,erecipient.1 aHancock, John,d1737-1793,ecorrespondent.1 aJefferson, Thomas,d1743-1826,ecorrespondent.1 aLafayette, Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier,cmarquis de,d1757-1834,ecorrespondent.1 aMenard, Pierre,d1766-1844,ecorrespondent.1 aTissot, Pierre-François,d1768-1854,ecorrespondent.1 aWashington, George,d1732-1799,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Mary Washburne Fowler, and grandchildren Clarke, Gratiot, Hempstead, and Annette;d29 Dec. 1927;erecat fr. X5.13F.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Mary Washburne Fowler, and grandchildren Clarke, Gratiot, Hempstead, and Annette, in memory of Hon. Elihu B. Washburne, 1927.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 158302142ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003900121245005500160300002700215351003900242545033900281520024300620555008700863555010800950524011201058600002701170600003201197600003001229650002401259650001401283655001901297700005301316700004601369700004801415700005701463541010301520561006701623852002301690506005501713009505014-020041220105017.0041215i18951921mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793809401 aMAHV04A96 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRankin, Henry William,erecipient.00kLettersbfrom William and Henry James,f1895-1921. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aRev. Henry W. Rankin of E. Northfield, M.A., was the librarian at the Northfield Mount Hermon School. He corresponded with William James, the American philosopher and psychologist, concerning conversion, miracles, and demonic possession. William James's son Henry later edited the correspondence of his father and uncle (Henry James). aIncludes letters from Henry James and William James to Rankin, as well as two letters from Rankin to Harvard University's William Ernest Hocking, professor of philosophy. Also includes typescript of Josiah Royce's Lectures on Metaphysics.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016488 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-96. aWilliam and Henry James Letters to Henry William Rankin (MS Am 2355). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRankin, William Henry.10aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aJames, Henry,d1879-1947. 0aPhilosophy, Modern. 0aTheology. 7aLectures.2aat1 aHocking, William Ernest,d1873-1966,erecipient.1 aJames, Henry,d1879-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910,ecorrespondent.1 aRoyce, Josiah,d1855-1916.tLectures on Metaphysics. cDeposit, gift;aProfessor Richard Hocking;bMadison, N.H.;d28 Dec. 1967; 2004 Nov.;e67M-96.5hou aDeposited by Professor Richard Hocking, 1967; gift, 2004.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2355 aFormerly restricted; restriction removed 2004 Nov.01885ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004700121245005400168300002700222351003900249545010900288520036100397555008700758555010900845524011000954600003501064700006101099700005001160700004901210700005501259700006201314700005301376541005701429561004901486852002401535009504697-620041216120911.0041208i18511874mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390066 aMAHV04A87 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTwisleton, Edward,d1809-1874,erecipient.00kLettersbfrom various correspondents,f1851-1874. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEdward Turner Boyd Twisleton was a British public official who served on several government commissions. aPrimarly letters to Twisleton and his wife Ellen (Dwight) Twisleton from various correspondents, including Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Thomas Carlyle, Charles Elliot Norton, and William Makepeace Thackeray. Also includes a few letters by Edward and Ellen Twisleton and some third party correspondence, possibly collected by the Twisletons.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016588 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-181. aEdward Twisleton Letters from Various Correspondents (MS Eng 1475). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aTwisleton, Edward,d1809-1874.1 aBrowning, Elizabeth Barrett,d1806-1861,ecorrespondent.1 aBrowning, Robert,d1812-1889,ecorrespondent.1 aCarlyle, Thomas,d1795-1881,ecorrespondent.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908,ecorrespondent.1 aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863,ecorrespondent.1 aTwisleton, Ellen Dwight,d1828-1862,erecipient. cDeposit;aMrs. Langdon Marvin;d1964;e63M-181.5hou aDeposited by Mrs. Langdon Marvin, 1964.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 147502580ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104041001800125100002000143245002800163300002700191351007900218545085200297520025101149546004601400555008701446555011001533524007801643600002001721600002001741600003001761600005101791655002901842655002901871655002501900655002001925655001601945700003001961700005101991561005102042541006602093852002302159009513541-320090713050139.0050408i17701880mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793903511 aMAHV05-B10020 aMH-HcMH-Heappm0 aengafreager3 aVillard family.00kPapers,fca. 1770-1880. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Documents. aHenry Villard was a German-born American journalist, financier and railway promoter. His grandfather, Franz Moritz Joseph Pfeiffer (1772-1847), was the second youngest son of Johann Michael Pfeiffer (1730-180?) and Maria Magdalena (K?nig) Pfeiffer. Henry Villard's brothers were: Heinrich Anton Alois Pfeiffer (1767-18??), Lothar Ferdinand Datheus Pfeiffer (1769-1844), Bartholom?us Joseph Christian Pfeiffer (1777-1793); and his sisters were Anna Maria Antonia Pfeiffer (1764-1772), and Elisabeth Josepha Pfeiffer (born and died in 1771). Franz Pfeiffer's wife was Marie Anna (daughter of Heinrich Berchtoldt and Katharina Koch) and they had two children: Anna Marie ("Nannchen") (1809-18??), and Elisabeth Katharine Antonia ("Lisette") (1811-1859). Elisabeth Berchtoldt married Gustav Leonhard Hilgard and they were the parents of Henry Villard. aCorrespondence and documents of the Henry Villard family, in particular those of his grandfather Franz Moritz Joseph Pfeiffer, and his father Gustav Leonhard Hilgard. Documents include birth, death and military certificates, passports, and wills. aMaterials in English, French, and German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017218 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-228C. aVillard Family Papers (MS Am 2365). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aWillard family.30aWillard family.10aHilgard, Gustav Leonhard.10aPfeiffer, Franz Moritz Joseph von,d1772-1847. 7aBirth certificates.2aat 7aDeath certificates.2aat 7aFamily records.2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aHilgard, Gustav Leonhard.1 aPfeiffer, Franz Moritz Joseph von,d1772-1847. aBequest of Oswald Garrison Villard, 1949.5hou cBequest;aMr. Oswald Garrison Villard;d1949.e52M-228C.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236501625ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100110002200121245003200143300002700175351003900202545008900241520016500330555008700495524008900582610002200671651005500693700005100748700004900799700004500848700005100893700005300944700007100997541010101068561010701169852002301276009516537-120050206192735.0041210i18201838mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793901141 aMAHV04A94 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aWhig Party (N.H.)00kCorrespondence,f1820-1838. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe Whig Party was one of two major political parties in nineteenth-century America. aCorrespondence of politicians Ichabod Bartlett, Edward Everett, Isaac Hill, Thomas Jefferson, and the historians Jacob Bailey Moore and Robert Charles Winthrop.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01689 aWhig Party (N.H.) Correspondence (MS Am 1122). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aWhig Party (N.H.) 0aNew HampshirexPolitics and governmenty1775-1865.1 aBartlett, Ichabod,d1786-1853,ecorrespondent.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aHill, Isaac,d1789-1851,ecorrespondent.1 aJefferson, Thomas,d1743-1826,ecorrespondent.1 aMoore, Jacob Bailey,d1797-1853,ecorrespondent.1 aWinthrop, Robert C.q(Robert Charles),d1809-1894,ecorrespondent. cGift;aMrs. William W. Francis and John I. Coddington;d26 Feb. 1938;eNo accession number.5hou aGift of Mrs. William W. Francis and John I. Coddington, in memory of Edward Goodwin Wesson, 1938.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 112201664ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104090001500125100006700140245003200207300002700239351003900266545015900305520019500464555008700659555010900746524008500855600005500940600001900995651005001014655002401064655004501088700003801133561004201171541010201213852002301315009512334-220050411093837.0050408i16801900mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793903391 aMAHV05-B10018 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aMS Am 23611 aForbes, W. Cameronq(William Cameron),d1870-1959,ecollector.00kMiscellany,fca. 1680-1900. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aForbes was an American business and government executive. He served as governor-general of the Philippines, 1909-1913, and ambassador to Japan, 1930-1932. aThis collection appears to be a random assortment of Forbes family letters and historical documents collected over the years. Also includes two signed autograph poems by Ralph Waldo Emerson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-539. aW. Cameron Forbes Miscellany (MS Am 2361). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aForbes, W. Cameronq(William Cameron),d1870-1959.30aForbes family. 0aJapanxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. aGift of W. Cameron Forbes, 1951.5hou cGift;aMr. W. Cameron Forbes;b614 Sears Building, Boston, Mass.;d1951;e50M-454 - 50M-539.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236101472ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100004000120245006900160300002700229351003000256520025900286555008700545524011900632610002200751600004000773600001800813610002200831650006500853651004100918655002400959656002000983700003701003541003701040561004601077852002301123009527425-120130912084855.0050107i18451847mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390261 aMAHV05A4 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMinot, Samuel Lawrence,d1826-1853.10aSamuel Lawrence Minot letters to John Sherman Minot,f1845-1847. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSamuel Minot's letters to his brother John chiefly describe his studies at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. He also discusses travels in New England, and his political support of the Whig Party and of the abolition of slavery in New Hampshire.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01600 aSamuel Lawrence Minot Letters to John Sherman Minot, 1845-1847 (MS Am 1106). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aWhig Party (N.H.)10aMinot, Samuel Lawrence,d1826-1853.30aMinot family.20aPhillips Academy. 0aAntislavery movementszNew HampshirexHistoryy19th century. 0aNew EnglandxDescription and travel. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aStudents.2lcsh1 aMinot, John Sherman,erecipient. cGift;eRecat. from C1 9886.5hou aBequest of Mrs. G. Reed Kelly, 1938.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 110601715ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086090001500107100005100122245004900173300002700222351003900249545015200288520020100440555008700641555011600728561004000844524010900884600003900993600003101032655004501063655003801108700004501146700003101191561004501222541009901267852002301366009512432-220050505151107.0050407i19141922mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm79390317 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aMS Am 23621 aFicke, Arthur Davison,d1883-1945,ecollector.00kPapersbconcerning Donald Evans,f1914-1922. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aDonald Evans (1884-1921) was an American journalist, publisher, and poet. Arthur Davison Ficke (1883-1945) was a lawyer and poet (AB Harvard 1904). aCorrespondence between Donald Evans and Arthur Ficke; typescripts of several newspaper articles, with poems, by Evans; and typescript letters from Amy Lowell, among other correspondents, to Evans.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-358 (1-65). aGift of Arthur Davison Ficke, 1942. aArthur Davison Ficke Papers Concerning Donald Evans (MS Am 2362). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aFicke, Arthur Davison,d1883-1945.10aEvans, Donald,d1884-1921. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925,ecorrespondent.1 aEvans, Donald,d1884-1921. aGift of Arthur Davison Ficke, 1942.5hou cGift;aMr. Arthur Davison Ficke;bHardhack, Hillsdale, New York;d1942 July 28;e47M-358.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236201411ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245007400164300002700238545007000265520020900335524011800544555008700662546001600749600004200765610002100807650003500828650003500863655001900898541008200917561004500999506004201044852002301086009513148-520100304142331.0041207s1912 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612844136 aMAHV04A80 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.10aGeorge Edward Woodberry lectures delivered at Bowdoin College,f1912. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aWoodberry (1855-1930) was an American poet, critic, and educator. aAutograph manuscript and typescript drafts of lectures delivered in 1912 by Woodberry while a guest lecturer at Bowdoin College, in Brunswick, Maine. Lectures are on broad topics of poetry and philosophy. aGeorge Edward Woodberry Lectures Delivered at Bowdoin College (MS Am 2364). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00271 aIn English.10aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.20aBowdoin College. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aLectures.2aat0 cGift;aMr. Charles D. Woodberry;bBoston, Mass.;d1942 Apr. 6;e48M-293.5hou1 aGift of Charles D. Woodberry, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236401947ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104041001300125100003500138245005700173300002700230351003900257520040100296546003700697555008700734555010900821524008400930600002201014600003501036650004301071650006201114655002301176656002201199656001701221700007201238700003401310710002701344710003701371561004601408541008401454852002301538009512544-220050505150708.0050407i18951906mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793903281 aMAHV05-B10017 aMH-HcMH-Heappm0 aengafre1 aBritton, Henry C.,ecollector.10aHenry C. Britton collection,f1895-1906 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aPrimarily concerns the publication by Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.) of the translations by Katharine Prescott Wormeley (1830-1908), of the writings of Honor? de Balzac. With typescript letters of the publishing firm Boussod Valadin & Co. to Roberts Brothers. Also includes correspondence of Arcturus Zodiac Conrad (1855-1937) attempting to secure employment as a minister, and other materials. aMaterials in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-350. aHenry C. Britton Collection (MS Am 2363). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBritton, Henry C.10aBalzac, Honor? de,d1799-1850. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited States. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxCorrespondence. 7aTranslations.2aat 7aTranslators.2aat 7aClergy.2aat1 aConrad, Arcturus Z.q(Arcturus Zodiac),d1855-1937,ecorrespondent.1 aWormeley, Katharine Prescott.2 aBoussod, Valadon & Co.2 aRoberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.) aGift of Henry C. Britton, Jr., 1942.5hou cGift;aMr. Henry C. Britton, Jr.;bMalden, Mass.;d1942 July 14;e47M-350.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236301633ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100003900120245006800159300002700227351003000254545023400284520015000518555008700668524012000755546001600875610002200891600003900913600001800952650006500970651005501035700003701090541006701127561004601194506004201240852002501282009527784-620130912082324.0050107i18451848mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390268 aMAHV05A5 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMinot, George Hubbard,d1818-1849.10aGeorge Hubbard Minot letters to John Sherman Minot,f1845-1848. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aGeorge Hubbard Minot and John Sherman Minot were brothers. George was a businessman in Manchester, N.H., who later moved to St. Louis for a business venture; John Sherman Minot attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. aLetters to his brother John Sherman Minot concern his business travels, politics in New Hampshire, in particular the Whig party and abolitionism.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01548 aGeorge Hubbard Minot Letters to John Sherman Minot, 1845-1848 (MS Am 1106.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aWhig Party (N.H.)10aMinot, George Hubbard,d1818-1849.30aMinot family. 0aAntislavery movementszNew HampshirexHistoryy19th century. 0aNew HampshirexPolitics and governmenty1775-1865.1 aMinot, John Sherman,erecipient.0 cBequest;aMrs. G. Reed Kelly;erecataloged from C1 9887F.5hou1 aBequest of Mrs. G. Reed Kelly, 1938.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1106.102083ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003300121245009900154300002700253351018500280545010700465520021700572555008700789524014900876600002101025600004201046650003401088650003501122650003701157655003001194655002001224655004601244655002001290655001901310655002201329655002001351655002201371655001601393655002001409655002701429700004201456561003901498541008901537852002301626009523774-720130930113958.0020710i18341930mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn122386414 aMAHV05A0 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aCartland family,ecollector.10aCartland family collection of photographs and ephemera of John Greenleaf Whittier,f1834-1930. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Photographs; II. Whittier miscellany; III. Materials concerning the death of John Greenleaf Whittier; and IV. Printed materials on Whittier. aWhittier was an American poet and abolitionist. The Cartlands of Lee, New Hampshire, were his cousins. aIncludes pamphlets, calendars, cabinet photographs, genealogies, cartes-de-visite photographs, clippings, Whittier printed ephemera, and other material. Also includes a Whittier 1834 autograph fragment of a poem.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01751 aCartland Family Collection of Photographs and Ephemera of John Greenleaf Whittier, 1834-1930 (MS Am 2367). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aCartland family.10aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. 0aAbolitionistszUnited States. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCalendars.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPrinted ephemera.2aat1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. aGift of Amasa C. Gould, 1946.5hou cGift;aAmasa C. Gould;b248 Newbury St., Boston, Mass.;d1946 Nov. 1;e46M-358.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236702826ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003900121245006700160300002700227351004200254545034900296520056800645555008801213555020001301524011901501546001601620600003901636600001901675651005001694655002401744700003101768541006501799561004001864506004201904852002501946541010801971541006302079541013402142561005302276561004502329561005402374009541260-320130625075717.0050120i18281891mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793901471 aMAHV05A11 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell letters to the Lowell family,f1828-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by recipient. aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited the Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, the North American Review (1860s); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880), and to England (1880-1885). aLetters by Lowell to his family, chiefly written while he was traveling in Europe. Includes letters to his mother and his brothers, but consists primarily of letters written to Lowell's daughter, Mabel Lowell Burnett, over the course of her childhood and into her adult life. Letters concern family relationships, the births and childhoods of Mabel's children, and the health of Lowell's second wife, Frances Dunlap Lowell. Collection also includes newspaper clippings from London papers concerning Lowell's recall as ambassador to England by President Cleveland.8 aElectronic finding aids availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-621 (173-187); 1943-1944, under *43M-775 and *43M-862; and 1947-1948, under *47M-347 (264-342). aJames Russell Lowell Letters to the Lowell Family, 1828-1891 (MS Am 1239.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.30aLowell family. 0aEuropexDescription and travely19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat3 aLowell family,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Pierre Jay;dNov. 1942;e42M-621 (173-187).5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Pierre Jay, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1239.10 cDeposit;aMrs. Lois Burnett Rantoul;b153 Crafts Road, Chestnut Hill, Mass.;dJune 1944;e43M-775.5hou0 cGift;aJames Burnett Lowell;d23 June 1944;e43M-862.5hou0 cDeposit, gift;aMrs. Esther Lowell Cunningham;b241 Canton Ave., Milton, Mass.;d2 Mar. 1948, Nov. 1969;e47M-347 (264-342).5hou1 aDeposit of Mrs. Lois Burnett Rantoul, 1944.5hou1 aGift of James Burnett Lowell, 1944.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Esther Lowell Cunningham, 1969.5hou02097ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003100121245006100152300002700213351014700240545017300387520037300560555008700933555010801020524011201128600003101240650004301271650004601314650003701360655002801397655003801425656002401463700004501487710005101532740003001583541005301613561004601666852002301712009502773-420050206192643.0041208i19471966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79390075 aMAHV04A88 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974.00kPapersbconcerning Jonathan and the rainbow,f1947-1966. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Jonathan and the rainbow; and II. Correspondence and other items relating to Jonathan and the rainbow. aBlanck was a bibliographer and author. He was editor of the Bibliography of American Literature. His Jonathan and the rainbow was published in 1958 by Houghton Mifflin. aIncludes typescript drafts with autograph revisions and corrections of Jonathan and the rainbow, as well as correspondence between Blanck and Houghton Mifflin. There is also correspondence between Blanck and the book's illustrator Louis Slobodkin, and between Houghton Mifflin and Slobodkin, as well as royalty accounts and other business records relating to the book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016598 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-16. aJacob Blanck Papers Concerning Jonathan and the Rainbow (MS Am 2353). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited States. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 0aChildren's booksxIllustrations. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aIllustrators.2lcsh1 aSlobodkin, Louis,d1903-ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,ecorrespondent.02aJonathan and the rainbow. cDeposit;aMr. Jacob Blanck;d1974;e72M-16.5hou aDeposited by Mr. Jacob Blanck, 1972.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 235301816ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100041001800121100004000139245007500179300002700254351005400281545011400335520027800449546004400727555008700771555012300858524011500981600004001096610003301136651004201169700007201211700004801283541009001331561004501421852002401466009504698-420080514145330.0041208i16551834mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793900261 aMAHV04A83 aMH-HcMH-Heappm0 aengafrealat1 aSherburn, George Wiley,d1884-1962.10aGeorge Wiley Sherburn collection of letters and documents,f1655-1834. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized by original accession number groupings. aSherburn (1884-1962) taught English at Harvard and was known primarily for his scholarship on Alexander Pope. aThis is a mixed collection of manuscript materials, and primarily concerns England in the 18th century. Includes letters from Henry Saint-John Bolingbroke and George Colman to various correspondents. There are also manuscripts by unidentified authors in English and French. aMaterials in English, French and Latin.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016508 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-178; *51M-181-182. aGeorge Wiley Sherburn Collection of Letters and Documents (MS Eng 1476). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSherburn, George Wiley,d1884-1962.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aGreat BritainxHistoryy18th century.1 aBolingbroke, Henry St. John,cViscount,d1678-1751,ecorrespondent.1 aColman, George,d1762-1836,ecorrespondent. cDeposit;aGeorge Sherburn;bWidener 117;dJan. 1952;e51M-178, 51M-181, 51M-182.5hou aDeposited by George Sherburn, 1952.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 147601552ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245005600166300002700222545016000249520019000409524009500599555008700694546001600781600002900797600004800826655002200874700005100896740002900947740004100976541011101017561004501128506004201173852002301215009511464-520100304142142.0041202i19461947mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612843386 aMAHV04A79 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHolzapfel, Rudolf Melander,d1900-1982.10aRudolf Melander Holzapfel compositions,f1946-1947. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aRudolf Melander Holzapfel (1900-1982) was a Shakespearean scholar, expert on Old Master paintings and an art dealer. He used the pseudonym Rudolf Melander. aTypescripts of his books, New Shakespearean notes and The teaching of St. John the divine. Materials are inscribed to Hyder Edward Rollins and include letters to Rollins from Holzapfel. aRudolf Melander Holzapfel Compositions (MS Am 2358). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00270 aIn English.10aHolzapfel, Rudolf, 1900-10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tSonnets. 7aTypescripts.2aat1 aRollins, Hyder Edward,d1889-1958,erecipient.02aNew Shakespearean notes.42aThe teaching of St. John the divine.0 cGift;aMr. Hyder Edward Rollins;b1 Waterhouse St., Cambridge, Mass.;d1947 Nov. 19;e47M-49, 47M-50.5hou1 aGift of Hyder Edward Rollins, 1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 235801515ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100004000125245009000165300002700255351004300282545011400325520008800439555008700527555010900614524012500723600004000848610003300888650002200921655003900943655003900982655003901021541007101060561004501131852002501176009514715-220050722114111.0050408i17001850mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793903471 aMAHV05-B10019 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSherburn, George Wiley,d1884-1962.10aGeorge Wiley Sherburn collection of English ballads, songs and poems,fca. 1700-1850. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by first line. aSherburn (1884-1962) taught English at Harvard and was known primarily for his scholarship on Alexander Pope. aIncludes manuscripts in unidentified hands of 80 English ballads, songs, and poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017188 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-180. aGeorge Wiley Sherburn Collection of English Ballads, Songs and Poems (MS Eng 834). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSherburn, George Wiley,d1884-1962.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aBallads, English. 7aPoemszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aSongszEnglandy19th century.2aat cDeposit;aGeorge Sherburn;bWidener 117d1952 Jan.;e51M-180.5hou aDeposited by George Sherburn, 1952.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 83401377ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100004400125245002400169300002700193351003000220545005400250520010900304555008700413555012300500524008900623600004400712655003800756655002200794655002400816656002500840740001100865561005000876541011400926852002301040009511848-920050411091933.0050407i19011922mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793903111 aMAHV05-B10015 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.00kProofs,f1901-1922. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aJosephine Preston Peabody was an author and poet. aContains galleys and page proofs of eight compositions, including her best known verse drama, The Piper.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016518 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-1789 to *45M-1799. aJosephine Preston Peabody Proofs (MS Am 2360). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh02aPiper. aGift of Professor Lionel S. Marks, 1942.5hou cGift;aProfessor Lionel S. Marks;bHarvard University, Cambridge, Mass.;d1942 Jun-Sept.;e45-1789-1799.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236001476ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003700125245003600162300002700198545006900225520021500294581009600509555008700605524008300692600003700775610003300812650003400845655001700879655003800896655003900934656004000973700003701013541003701050561003901087852002401126009611102-X20050505144057.0050425i18491859mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793904871 aMAHV05-B10031 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aClough, Arthur Hugh,d1819-1861.00kPapers,f1849-1859 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArthur Hugh Clough was an English poet, who lectured at Harvard. aContains autograph manuscript poems and essays (some in the hand of his wife, Blanche Smith Clough), most of which were later printed in his Letters and Remains. Also includes letters to various correspondents. aArthur Hugh Clough, Letters and remains of Arthur Hugh Clough (London: Spottiswoode, 1865).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01732 aArthur Hugh Clough Papers (MS Eng 1036). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aClough, Arthur Hugh,d1819-1861.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 7aEssays.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aPoets, Englishy19th century.2lcsh1 aClough, Blanche Smith,ecopyist. cGift;erecat. fr. Nor 1011.5hou aGift of Charles Eliot Norton.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 103603315ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103100003200124245005100156300002700207351003700234545071800271520028800989520030901277555008701586555011501673524010301788544016601891600003202057600003402089600003602123600003402159650003302193650002502226650003602251650002402287655002102311655002802332655002202360710005202382710004602434740002202480740002702502541012002529561003802649506014502687852002502832009705409-720130213133542.0050630i19641965mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm79463909 aMAHV05B10050 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCopland, Aaron,d1900-1990.00kTranscriptsbfor Music in the 20s,f1964-1965. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged in chronological order. aAaron Copland (1900-1990) was an American composer. During the years 1964 and 1965 Copland wrote, conducted, narrated, and hosted a series of twelve television programs entitled "Music in the 20s." The typscripts described in this collection were transcribed from filmed interviews that were recorded live at the WGBH studios in Boston, Mass. between 1964 Nov. 11 and 1965 Jan. 26. These unedited, preliminary interviews later formed the basis of the series of twelve half-hour television shows created by WGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.). The shows were broadcast during 1965-1966, over the National Educational Television network of more than 90 affiliated educational TV stations in the United States. aTypescript mimeograph copies of transcripts of twelve informal, unedited, script conference interviews with Aaron Copland, held at the WGBH TV studios in Boston, Massachusetts. These transcripts include what is called "Copland's text," as well as pre- and post-session conversations. aThe topics of the transcripts concern all variety of issues and personalities in the field of western music in the decade of the 1920s. Prominent persons discussed are: Igor Stravinsky, Arnold Schoenberg, Arthur Honegger, George Gershwin, and many others. Included in this discussion is the role of jazz.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-94 (1-12). aAaron Copland Transcripts for Music in the 20s (MS Am 2377). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe final WGBH broadcast program tapes are available in the Library of Congress TV and Motion Picture Reading Room (viewing copies VBM 5704-8, 6409-10, 6869-73).10aCopland, Aaron,d1900-1990.10aHonegger, Arthur,d1892-1955.10aSchoenberg, Arnold,d1874-1951.10aStravinsky, Igor,d1882-1971. 0aJazzxHistory and criticism. 0aMusicy20th century. 0aMusical analysisy20th century. 0aMusic appreciation. 7aInterviews.2aat 7aMimeograph copies.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat2 aNational Education Television and Radio Center.2 aWGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.)02aMusic in the 20s.02aMusic in the Twenties.0 cGift;aMr. Aaron Copland;bR.F.D. 1, Peekskill, New York 10566;d1965 Dec. 23;e65M-94 (1-12); 65M-94 (13-39).5hou1 aGift of Aaron Copland, 1965.5hou0 aFormerly restricted from use or publication during the lifetime of the composer. Restriction removed upon the death of Copland in 1990.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 237702039ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245007700129300002700206351001700233545025400250520036200504524012700866546001600993600002101009600002101030600002101051650004201072655002701114655002001141655002201161700003701183700003701220700003701257700006401294700005201358700003701410541008401447561005701531506004201588852002301630009601599-320121214082453.0020710i19411952mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612872498 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTempest, Edward.10aEdward Tempest round-robin letters with the Richards family,f1941-1952. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aEdward Tempest was a British policeman who lived in Yorkshire, England, and was married to Martha Tempest. Their home was called "Vermont." The Richards family lived in Gardiner, Maine and were descendents of Samuel Gridley Howe and Julia Ward Howe. aRound-robin letters between Ted and Martha Tempest and the Richards family of Gardiner, Maine. Richards family members include: Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards (the daughter of Julia Ward Howe), Rosalind Richards, Henry Richards, and Mr. and Mrs. Wiggins. Also includes photographs, clippings, and other materials. Much of this material concerns World War II. aEdward Tempest Round Robin Letters with the Richards Family, 1941-1952 (MS Eng 953). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aTempest, Edward.10aTempest, Martha.30aRichards family. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945vCorrespondence. 7aCircular letters.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aTempest, Martha,ecorrespondent.3 aRichards family,ecorrespondent.1 aRichards, Henry,ecorrespondent.1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943,ecorrespondent.1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aTempest, Martha,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit, then gift;aRosalind Richards;bGardiner, Maine;d1953;e53M-189.5hou1 aDeposit, then gift, of Rosalind Richards, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 95301714ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105100002900126245004500155300002700200545005200227520025000279555008700529555010900616581006800725524008400793546001600877600002900893655001700922655004500939655003800984700004901022700003901071740002201110541007801132561008901210506004201299852002301341009596610-220100305083415.0050406i18401880mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6128700241 aMAHV05-B10013 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aVery, Jones,d1813-1880.10aJones Very poems and essays,f1840-1880. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aVery was a Transcendentalist poet and essayist. a458 sheets of manuscript verse, preface, and biographical note, assembled for the volume: Jones Very. Poems and essays (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1886). Includes a preface by Cyrus Augustus Bartol and a biographic notice by James Freeman Clark.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002838 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-180. aJones Very. Poems and essays (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1886). aJones Very Poems and Essays (MS Am 1405). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aVery, Jones,d1813-1880. 7aEssays.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aBartol, C. A.q(Cyrus Augustus),d1813-1900.1 aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888.02aPoems and essays.0 cTransfer;aAndover-Harvard Divinity School;d1956 Mar. 28;e55M-180.5hou1 aTransferred from the Andover-Harvard Divinity School, Harvard University, 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 140501924ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003000125245003600155246002100191300002700212351003700239545014600276520031100422555008700733555010900820524007600929600003001005600001801035655003901053700006401092700006701156700004001223700004801263700003901311541015201350561004801502852002401550009675105-320050701123705.0050520i18181889mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm794638961 aMAHV05-B10045 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aKeats, Fanny,d1803-1889.00kPapers,f1818-1889 and undated.13aParadinas papers a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name. aFanny Keats Llanos was the younger sister of the poet John Keats. In 1826, Fanny married the Spanish poet Valentin Maria Llanos y Guieterrez. aChiefly correspondence of Fanny Keats, including letters received from George Keats, George's daughter Emma Frances Keats Speed, Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, Harry Buxton Forman and Joseph Severn. Some letters are addressed to Fanny's daughter Rosa Keats de Llanos. Also includes two poems by George Keats.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-297. aFanny Keats Papers (MS Eng 1509). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKeats, Fanny,d1803-1889.30aKeats family. 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat1 aDilke, Charles Wentworth,cSir,d1843-1911,ecorrespondent.1 aForman, H. Buxtonq(Harry Buxton),d1842-1917,ecorrespondent.1 aLlanos, Rosa Keats,ecorrespondent.1 aSevern, Joseph,d1793-1879,ecorrespondent.1 aSpeed, Emma Keats,ecorrespondent. cGift;aArthur Armory Houghton, Jr., purchased from Dr. Ernesto Paradinas, Brockmann Hospital, Provincial Avila, Spain;d1953 June 5;e52M-297.5hou aGift of Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., 1952.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 150902039ckcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105100001700126245003800143300002700181351003000208545005200238520038200290555008700672555011100759524011600870546001600986650004101002650004001043650002901083650002001112650001201132610003501144600004501179600004401224600001701268600003201285610002901317610003101346610001801377655002001395656002401415541005401439561003501493506004201528852002301570009719372-020130912083729.0050727i19631985mau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocn6127392961 aMHAT-05F10015 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSmith, Arks.10aArks Smith negatives,f1963-1985. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSmith is a photographer based in Massachusetts. aPrimarily photographic negatives of the performances of various ballet companies, including American Ballet Theatre, Bolshoi Ballet, Royal Ballet, and National Ballet. Also includes photographs of Daniel Pinkham from the musical Oklahoma! at Lincoln Center, rehearsals of the American Ballet Theatre, and of a dressing room birthday party for Rudolf Nureyev, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015658 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, 2003-2004, under *2003MT-151. aArks Smith Negatives, 1963-1985 (MS Thr 450). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aBalletzRussia (Federation)zMoscow. 0aBalletzNew York (State)zNew York. 0aBalletzEnglandzLondon. 0aBalletzCanada. 0aBallet.20aBolʹshoĭ teatr SSSR.bBalet.10aRodgers, Richard,d1902-1979.tOklahoma!10aNureyev, Rudolf,d1938-1993vPortraits.10aSmith, Arks.10aPinkham, DanielvPortraits.20aAmerican Ballet Theatre.20aNational Ballet of Canada.20aRoyal Ballet. 7aNegatives.2aat 7aPhotographers.2aat0 cGift;aArks Smith (Ms.);d1986;e2003MT-151.5the1 aGift of Arks Smith, 1986.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 45001908npcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089040001700105040002100122100005200143245006000195300002700255545012500282520037300407555008700780524012300867651003800990600005201028650004601080650003301126655003001159655003601189655003801225655002301263656002501286740003701311561007001348541011701418852002301535009736068-620051121170249.0k|||||||||||||||||050813s1948 mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm79463876 aMAHV05A10008 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGrant, Blanche C.q(Blanche Chloe),d1874-1948.00kPapersbfor The forty seventh star - New Mexico,f1948. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aBlanch Chloe Grant (1874-1948) was an artist and an author and editor of books on Taos and other areas of the Southwest. aIncludes a corrected typescript of an unpublished history of New Mexico, a letter concerning her research, as well as visual materials she assembled for use in illustration of the text, including photographs, cabinet photographs, postcards, a stereograph, photographs of paintings, and printed images. Includes extensive photographs of Pueblo Indians and reservations.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01786 aBlanche Chloe Grant Papers for the Forty Seventh Star - New Mexico (MS Am 2381). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aNew MexicoxHistoryvPhotographs.10aGrant, Blanche C.q(Blanche Chloe),d1874-1948. 0aIndians of North AmericazSouthwest, New. 0aPueblo IndiansvPhotographs. 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPhotographszNew Mexico.2gmgpc 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aStereographs.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh0 aForty seventh star - New Mexico. aGift of Rev. George E. Cary and Mrs. Ethel Grant Cary, 1950.5hou cGift;aRev. George E. Cary and Mrs. Ethel Grant Cary;b6 Church St., Bradford, MA;d1950 Mar. 20;e49M-165.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 238101704ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100002000125245009200145300002700237351003700264545007500301520031800376555008700694555012800781524011400909600002001023600003401043650003001077655001601107700004401123700001901167700002201186541008401208561006301292852002301355009725132-120051121170033.0050729i16871927mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm794639321 aMAHV05-B10054 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPotter, George.00kNotes and lettersbconcerning Thomas Britton,f1687-1927 (inclusive),g1877-1927(bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged chiefly alphabetically. aThomas Britton was a London coal dealer, book collector, and musician. aIncludes correspondence addressed to George Potter and the Arts and Crafts furniture designer Sir Ambrose Heal from Philip James, the librarian of the Victoria and Albert Museum, and Julian Marshall. Also includes notes concerning the library of Britton and one land deed for property near that of Thomas Britton.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou018088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-637 and under *42M-638. aGeorge Potter Notes and Letters Concerning Thomas Britton (MS Eng 850). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPotter, George.10aBritton, Thomas,d1654?-1714. 0aBook collectingzEngland. 7aDeeds.2aat1 aHeal, Ambrose,cSir,d1872-erecipient.1 aJames, Philip.1 aMarshall, Julian. cPurchase;aUnknown source;d1943 Apr. 2;e42M-637, 42M-638;hFriends fund.5hou aPurchased with the Friends of the Library fund, 1943.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 85000984ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245004000108300002700148500007600175520017200251500003100423524008000454600003000534655002400564700003000588700003000618541008100648852002500729009782542-520051107140755.0051021nuuuuuuuuxx |||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612772447 aMH-HcMH-Heappm00kPapers :bon Thomas Gray,fundated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aPhotostatic copies of manuscripts written by or concerning Thomas Gray. aContains copies of commonplace books, journals, notes, travel notebooks, and other materials chiefly from Pembroke College (Cambridge) and the Pierpont Morgan Library. aCollection is unprocessed. aPapers on Thomas Gray (MS Eng 116.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGray, Thomas,d1716-1771. 7aStats (copies)2aat1 aGray, Thomas,d1716-1771.1 aGray, Thomas,d1716-1771. cUnknown;ano source;dno date;erecat. from Ph M 68 to 81 and 17462.60.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 116.603041ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100004400121245008800165300002700253351016500280545049700445520065900942530005601601555008701657524013701744546002701881600003401908650003101942600004401973650003802017700004602055700005602101700005502157700005002212700005202262700004702314710006602361541007902427561004102506506007402547852002202621009846436-120110804165713.0060112i17951817mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612788439 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengager1 aEbeling, Christophe Daniel,d1741-1817.10aChristophe Daniel Ebeling letters to William Bentley and other letters,f1795-1817. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Christophe Daniel Ebeling letters to William Bentley; II. Letters to Christophe Daniel Ebeling; and III. Other material. aChristophe Daniel Ebeling (1741-1817) was librarian of the Stadtsbibliothek and professor at the University of Hamburg. Part of his personal collection of Americana was bought by Israel Thorndike and presented to Harvard College in 1818. William Bentley (1759-1819) was an American Unitarian minister, scholar, columnist, and diarist. He received an AB from Harvard College in 1777. Bentley amassed a library of over 4,000 volumes, one of the largest private libraries in America at the time. a42 autograph manuscript letters, in English, (signed by Ebeling) to William Bentley; also with 3 letters to Ebeling from Nathaniel Silsbee, Van Staphorst & Co., and John Robison. The letters concern the exchange between Ebeling (in Hamburg, Germany) and Bentley (in Salem, Massachusetts) of parcels containing books, newspapers, and manuscripts. The letters to Ebeling concern Silsbee, Robison, and Van Staphorts & Co. couriering or shipping books to or from Bentley. The letters have been disbound and the boards from the bound volume and the 1844 donor letter (from William Bentley Fowle to John Langdon Sibley) are housed at the end of the collection. aColor digital facsimile available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02157 aChristophe Daniel Ebeling Letters to William Bentley and Other Letters, 1795-1817 (MS Am 576). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German.10aBentley, William,d1759-1819. 0aBooks and readingzEurope.10aEbeling, Christophe Daniel,d1741-1817. 0aBooks and readingzMassachusetts.1 aBentley, William,d1759-1819,erecipient.1 aEbeling, Christophe Daniel,d1741-1817,erecipient.1 aFowle, William Bentley,d1795-1865, correspondent.1 aSibley, John Langdon,d1804-1885,erecipient.1 aSilsbee, Nathaniel,d1773-1850,ecorrespondent.1 aRobison, John,d1739-1805,ecorrespondent.2 aVan Staphorst & Co. (Amsterdam, Netherlands),ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aWilliam B. Fowle;bBoston;d1844 July 3;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of William B. Fowle, 1844.5hou1 aRestricted because of fragility. Permission of curator required.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 57601182ntm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006400108300002700172520029900199500003100498524010100529600003200630600003700662600003400699600004700733651002100780651002000801700002000821541006500841852002200906009835201-620130910113122.0051219i17241901xxu|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612784149 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMiscellaneous American manuscripts,f1724-1901 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aContains accounts; land surveys; tax levies; town plans for Lunenburg, Vt. and Gilmanton, N.H.; a list of the publications of George Whitney; manuscripts concerning Jonathan Mayhew and Simeon Howard, ministers of the West Church, Boston; a survey record by Henry Harding; and other manuscripts. aCollection is unprocessed. aMiscellaneous American Manuscripts, 1724-1901 (MS Am 511). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHoward, Simeon,d1733-1804.17aHoward, Simeon,d1733-1804.2eac10aMayhew, Jonathan,d1720-1766.10aWhitney, George,d1804-1842vBibliography. 0aGilmanton (N.H.) 0aLunenburg (Vt.)1 aHarding, Henry. cGift;aVarious donors;dvarious dates;eno acc. number.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 51101219ntc a2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110002500108245005800133300002700191500003100218500005600249545014500305524011000450650004000560600001800600610002500618650002700643650002900670650002900699651002400728655002700752656002100779541005900800561002100859852002500880009876916-220130910121744.0060224i18331866vtu|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612801650 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aJoel Beaman and Son.10aJoel Beaman and Son business records,fca. 1833-1866. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aBills, receipts, legal documents and other records. aJoel Beaman and Son was the general store in West Poultney, Vt. The business also ran a stage-coach line and acted as the local post office. aJoel Beaman and Son Business Records, ca. 1833-1866 (MS Am 800.49). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aCoaching (Transportation)zVermont.10aBeaman, Joel.20aJoel Beaman and Son. 0aRetail tradezVermont. 0aGeneral storeszVermont. 0aPostal servicezVermont. 0aWest Poultney (Vt.) 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aMerchants.2lcsh0 cGift;aAnonymous;d30 Oct. 1916;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift, 1916.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.4902582ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245005100140300002700191351004600218545075800264520039301022524010001415555008701515600003201602600003401634600003101668610003401699650003001733655002301763700005001786700004601836700004001882506004601922506012301968541007602091561004202167852002302209009872004-X20130910121016.0060216i17661804mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612800322 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrosby, Mary Taylor,d1745-10aMary Taylor Crosby correspondence,f1766-1804. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aMary Taylor Crosby was born in Grafton, Massachusetts in 1745. She married Aaron Crosby in 1774 and joined him in his missionary work at the Oneida mission. Aaron Crosby (1744-1824) was born in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts in 1745. He was a Harvard College A.B. 1770, A.M. 1773, a school master at Brookfield in 1771, and a missionary with the Oneida mission on the Susquehannah River, set out on 1771 August 21. While at Harvard College, he had roomed with Mary's brother, Hezekiah Taylor. Hezekiah Taylor, was born in 1748 and he was a Harvard A.B. 1770, A.M. 1797. For several years after graduation he kept school in Westborough and Shrewsbury. He later became the first minister of the First Congregational Church of Newfane, Vermont and died in 1814. aPersonal correspondence of Mary Taylor Crosby, with her brother Hezekiah Taylor, courting letters with her soon-to-be-husband Aaron Crosby, and between Mary and various friends. Some letters exchanged while Aaron Crosby and Hezekiah Taylor were students at Harvard College. Also includes a few autograph manuscript notes concerning the collection, written by the donor, Fred W. Dickinson. aMary Taylor Crosby Correspondence, 1766-1804 (MS Am 768). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0197010aCrosby, Mary Taylor,d1745-10aTaylor, Hezekiah,d1748-1814.10aCrosby, Aaron,d1744-1824.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aCourtshipzUnited States. 7aLove letters.2aat1 aTaylor, Hezekiah,d1748-1814,ecorrespondent.1 aCrosby, Aaron, 1744-1824,ecorrespondent.1 aDickinson, Fred. W.,eformer owner. aCollection is open for research use.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 cGift;aFred W. Dickinson;d1915 February 15;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Fred W. Dickinson, 1915.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 76801577ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003000125245004200155300002700197351003000224545007200254520028900326530006700615555008700682524009800769600003000867600003200897655003900929656001600968700004900984700004701033700005001080541004801130561004801178852002501226009719212-020110727104826.0050729i18021807mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm794639281 aMAHV05-B10053 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aRobinson, Thomas,d-1810.00kLettersbto Thomas Percy,f1802-1807. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aThomas Robinson was the son of the engraver Thomas Romney Robinson. aLetters to the English antiquary Thomas Percy, including some poems by Robinson. Includes Thomas Romney Robinson's essay on the death of the painter George Romney as well as a letter from the poet William Hayley concerning an engraved portrait for Hayley's biography of George Romney. aColor digital images available of collection; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01807 aThomas Robinson Letters to Thomas Percy (MS Eng 734.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRobinson, Thomas,d-1810.10aRomney, George,d1734-1802. 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aHayley, William,d1745-1820,ecorrespondent.1 aPercy, Thomas,d1729-1811,ecorrespondent.1 aRobinson, T. R.q(Thomas Romney),d1792-1882. cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918.5hou aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 734.300930ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002200108245004100130300002700171500003100198520010600229524009300335600001900428600002000447655003700467700004600504541006500550561004800615852002500663009902539-620130910123558.0060329i19001903xxu|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612813215 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDutcher, Frank J.10aFrank J. Dutcher papers,f1900-1903. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aPapers and correspondence of Dutcher and Henry Whittemore concerning the Dutcher and Benson families. aFrank J. Dutcher Papers, 1900-1903 (MS Am 889.85). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aBenson family.30aDutcher family. 7aGenealogieszUnited states.2aat1 aWhittemore, Henry,d1833-ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno acc. number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 889.8501427ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005500108245004200163300002600205500001700231520005900248520008100307545017300388524009500561610004400656600005500700610004700755650005200802655004700854655004700901700003800948541006500986561004801051852002601099009919282-920130910124113.0060411i18521912mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612817898 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSeymour, George F.q(George Franklin),d1829-1906.10aGeorge F. Seymour papers,f1852-1912. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aContains sermons, correspondence, and other materials. aAlso includes some correspondence, unrelated to Seymour, of Edwin S. Gorham. aSeymour was the bishop of the Diocese of Springfield. The Episcopal Diocese of Springfield was formed in 1877, after being a part of the Diocese of Illinois since 1835. aGeorge F. Seymour Papers, 1852-1912 (MS Am 889.287). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aEpiscopal Church.bDiocese of Illinois.10aSeymour, George F.q(George Franklin),d1829-1906.10aEpiscopal Church.bDiocese of Springfield. 0aPastoral theologyzUnited Statesy19th century. 7aSermonszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aSermonszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aGorham, Edwin S.,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno acc. number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 889.28701225ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003300125245006500158300002700223351004600250545003200296520011600328555008700444524012000531600003300651650003400684650003400718655001600752700003700768700003600805541003200841561002500873852002500898009718724-020050805155319.0050727i17761817mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm794639241 aMAHV-05B10052 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHayley, William,d1745-1820.00kAdditional lettersbfrom various correspondents,f1776-1817. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aHayley was an English poet. aLetters to Hayley from various correspondents, chiefly Marianna Stark and Thomas Steele, with occasional verse.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01804 aWilliam Hayley Additional Letters From Various Correspondents (MS Eng 734.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHayley, William,d1745-1820. 0aEnglish poetryy18th century. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 7aPoems.2aat1 aStark, Marianna,ecorrespondent.1 aSteele, Thomas,ecorrespondent. cGift;aUnknown source.5hou aSource unknown.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 734.202913ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108100003300126245005100159300002700210351009100237545096500328520038001293555008701673524008801760546003401848544011701882600003301999610004002032650004602072655003802118655001902156655001902175610004602194700005002240710004002290541009402330561005102424506004202475852002202517009814876-120131009112419.0020710i18291855mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612778807 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengalatagre1 aFolsom, Charles,d1794-1872.10aCharles Folsom papers,f1829-1855 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Lectures and speeches; and II. Other material. aCharles Folsom (1794-1872), classical scholar, librarian, and editor, was born in Exeter, New Hampshire, the son of James Folsom and Sarah Gilman Folsom. He prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy and received an AB from Harvard College in 1813. He served as librarian of Harvard College from 1823-1826 and was also instructor in Italian. In 1824 he married Susanne Sarah McKean, daughter of the Rev. Dr. Joseph McKean. He engaged in a variety of work, including editor at the University Press (Cambridge, Mass.), the running of a school for young women, serving as librarian of the Boston Athenaeum, and was an active member of the Overseers Visiting Committee of the Harvard College Library. Folsom was also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and of the Massachusetts Historical Society, he served on the council of the American Antiquarian Society. Source: Kenneth E. Carpenter. "Folsom, Charles" American National Biography Online Feb, 2000. aIncludes: an autograph manuscript list of letters written by Folsom, primarily concerning the publishing of materials by the University Press (Cambridge, Mass.), 1840-1841; Folsom's autograph manuscript lectures and speeches, mostly delivered in Michigan and Illinois, 1841-1855; and miscellaneous notes, a galley proof, and an 1829 letter from Folsom to John Gorham Palfrey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02464 aCharles Folsom Papers, 1829-1855 (MS Am 782). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, Latin, and Greek. aAdditional papers of Charles Folsom are held by: Massachusetts Historical Society and the Boston Public Library.10aFolsom, Charles,d1794-1872.20aUniversity Press (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aPublishers and publishingzMassachusetts. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aLectures.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat20aHarvard UniversityxLibrariesxEmployees.1 aPalfrey, John Gorham,d1796-1881,erecipient.2 aUniversity Press (Cambridge, Mass.)0 cGift;aMr. Charles H. Taylor;bBoston;d1923 and 1925 July 11.eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor, 1923 and 1925.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 78202043ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003900121245004400160300002700204351009600231545065600327520015900983555008701142524010401229600003901333650002301372650004001395655004701435655004901482655004501531541009901576561004201675852002401717009808122-520060613102046.0060613i19001926mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm85169047 aMAHV06B42 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTolman, Albert Harris,d1856-1928.10aPapers on American ballads,f1900-1926. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Ballads; and III. Other papers. aAlbert Harris Tolman (1856-1928) received an A.B. from Williams College in 1877 and a Ph.D. from the University of Strassburg in 1889. He was a principal of Chicopee Falls High School, Massachusetts (1878-1882) and a professor of English at Ripon College (1884-1893) and at the University of Chicago (1893-1925). He was a widely published Shakespearean authority and held a special interest in ballad and epic poetry. His publications on American ballads included: "Some songs traditional in the United States" (1916) and "Traditional texts and tunes" (1922; with Mary O. Eddy) both from The journal of American folklore. He died on December 25, 1928. aIncludes correspondence, texts of ballads, notes, programs, clippings, and partial drafts of Tolman's writings concerning American folk songs and ballads.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01903 aAlbert Harris Tolman Papers on American Ballads (MS Am 2419). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aTolman, Albert Harris,d1856-1928. 0aBallads, American. 0aSongszUnited Statesy19th century. 7aBalladszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aClippingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aSongszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat cGift;aJ. Stevens Tolman;b6641 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, Ill.;d1929 Jan. 12;e25241.46.5.5hou aGift of J. Stevens Tolman, 1929.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 241903002ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245006400156300002700220351010700247545039600354520072200750555008701472524011401559544008501673600002201758600005201780600003501832600003401867610002501901610004201926650003001968650002301998650002602021650003902047650001902086655002502105655001802130656002502148700005202173740003202225541005802257561004002315506004202355506012302397852002402520009979983-920130109081350.0060628i19521992mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612831831 aMAHV06B46 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSchlein, Stephen,ecollector.10aStephen Schlein Erik Erikson additional papers,f1952-1992. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions and printed material. aGerman born (as Erik Homburger), Erik Erikson (1902-1994) was an American psychoanalyst, educator and author. In 1930 he married Joan Mowat Serson, a Canadian dancer and artist. They emigrated from Vienna to the U.S. in 1933. He was best known for his work in child development and life-span studies, coining the phrase "identity crisis", and in the field that became known as psychohistory. aPrimarily additional manuscript and printed materials given to psychologist Stephen Schlein (SS) by Erik Erikson (EHE) or assembled by Schlein for his research. Some papers used for Schlein's editorial work on Erikson's A way of looking at things: selected papers from 1930 to 1980. Includes: correspondence with Schlein about EHE; a few autograph, typescript, and photocopy compositions by EHE, and others by SS; biographical material such as EHE bibliographies, resumes, copies of images; materials concerning the history of the Erik H. and Joan M. Erikson Center at the Cambridge Hospital; much printed material about EHE; and other papers. Also includes a memorandum by EHE concerning Norman Rockwell, item (20a).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01916 aStephen Schlein Erik Erikson Additional Papers, 1952-1992 (MS Am 2447). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also related papers of EHE collected by Stephen Schlein in HOLLIS and OASIS.10aSchlein, Stephen.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aErikson, Joan M.q(Joan Mowat)10aRockwell, Norman,d1894-1978.20aAusten Riggs Center.20aCambridge Hospital (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aDevelopmental psychology. 0aLife cycle, Human. 0aIdentity (Psychology) 0aPlay assessment (Child psychology) 0aPsychohistory. 7aBibliographies.2aat 7aResumes.2aat 7aPsychoanalysts.2aat1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.22aA way of looking at things.0 cGift;aStephen Schlein;d2006 May 31;e2005M-56.5hou1 aGift of Stephen Schlein, 2006.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 244703630ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004600121245004900167300002600216351005000242545090500292545048701197520066301684544013602347555008702483524009802570600003402668650002302702651004002725651004502765651003802810651005202848651007002900655002802970655001602998655001803014655002203032656002203054656002103076561004903097541005203146852002203198009998301-X20130910114052.0060622i17601825mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm84835306 aMAHV06B45 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aChalmers, George,d1742-1825,ecollector.10aGeorge Chalmers manuscripts,fca. 1760-1825. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by title of document. aGeorge Chalmers (1742-1825) was a British historian, civil servant, antiquarian, and author. He was born at Fochabers, Moray, Scotland, educated at the parish school at Fochabers and at King's College, Aberdeen. He went on to study law in Edinburgh and moved to Maryland in 1763 to practice law in Baltimore. As a devout loyalist, he returned to London in September of 1775 when revolutionary discontent grew in the American colonies. He was appointed chief clerk of the committee of the Privy Council for trade and foreign plantations. He held this post for 40 years, a position that allowed for abundant leisure time to spend on his studies, writings, and antiquary interests. He devoted his life to writing books about Ireland, affairs of America, and the British monarchy. He collected a vast library of books, original manuscripts, notes, and manuscript copies of documents used in his research. aChalmers never married. When he died in London in 1825, his extensive library was bequeathed to his nephew. Upon the nephew's death in 1841, the library was sold in three parts between September 1841 and November 1842. For additional information concerning the library of George Chalmers, see: Messrs. Evans (Firm). Catalogue of the very curious, valuable and extensive library of the late George Chalmers...which will be sold by auction by Messrs.Evans... London: Evans, 1841-1842. aCollection is predominantly Chalmers's notes and his manuscript transcriptions of documents. Some material is in the hand of George Chalmers, but not all. Types of materials included are copies of letters, financial records, reports, lists, as well as original research notes. Documents primarily concern exploration of North America, British relations with her colonies (especially America), trade and mercantilism, plantation life, the American Revolution and British loyalists claims, Irish concerns, and many other topics. Time period covered in these materials is 1507 through 1816, but the manuscript transcripts were probably produced circa 1760-1825. aThere are papers of George Chalmers in the Jared Sparks Papers at the Houghton Library. See finding aid for additional information.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01914 aGeorge Chalmers Manuscripts, ca. 1760-1825 (MS Am 624). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aChalmers, George,d1742-1825. 0aColonieszAmerica. 0aAmericaxDiscovery and exploration. 0aGreat BritainxColoniesxAdministration. 0aGreat BritainxColonieszAmerica. 0aGreat BritainxCommercexHistoryy18th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyColonial period, approximately 1600-1775. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aReports.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aAntiquaries.2aat 7aHistorians.2aat aPurchased with the Donation fund, 1847.5hou cPurchased;d1847 Sept. 20;hDonation fund.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 62403098ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001400106040002300120100002100143245007100164300002600235351011300261545046400374520054600838555008701384555009401471524010701565546001601672600003801688600003901726600002101765600003401786650004101820651005901861655004501920700005201965700005002017700006502067700006302132700005802195700005702253700006002310506014802370541006602518561004402584852002402628010001518-220061027092656.0k|||||||||||||||in060623k19201932mau|||| |||| ||||ideng d0 aocn6128367001 aMHAT06B13 aMH-HTeappmcMH-HT3 aWorsdell family.10aWorsdell family papers,f1905-1936 (inclusive),g1920-1932 (bulk). a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Letters to Henry Munroe Rogers and Clara Kathleen Rogers; and II. Photographs. aIn 1905, Florence Emily Stow (b. 1882) married Frederick Ernest Worsdell (1878-1930), an assistant sales manager for a construction company in Blackheath (London, England). They had three children: Gwendolyn Mary Worsdell (1907-1992), who married Harry Vander Jr. in 1929; Florence Joan Worsdell (1908-1999), who did not marry; and Edward Stow Willard Worsdell (1915-1998). Florence Emily Stow Worsdell was the niece of actor Edward Smith Willard (1853-1915). aThis collection consists primarily of letters written by Florence Emily Stow Worsdell, her husband, and their three children to family friend Henry Munroe Rogers of Boston. Some letters are addressed jointly to Henry Munroe Rogers and his wife Clara Kathleen Rogers. The letters contain mostly routine family news from a middle-class English family. Some letters discuss the family's famous uncle Edward Smith Willard, the General Strike of 1926, and a 1930 tour of William Shakespeare sites. The collection also includes family photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou019118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aWorsdell Family Papers (MS Thr 471). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.10aWillard, Edward Smith,d1853-1915.30aWorsdell family.30aWorsdell familyvPhotographs. 0aGeneral Strike, Great Britain, 1926. 0aBlackheath (London, England)xSocial life and customs. 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century.2aat1 aRogers, Clara Kathleen,d1844-1931,erecipient.1 aRogers, Henry Munroe,d1839-1937,erecipient.1 aVander, Gwendolyn Mary Worsdell,d1907-1992,ecorrespondent.1 aWorsdell, Edward Stow Willard,d1915-1998,ecorrespondent.1 aWorsdell, Florence Emily Stow,d1882-ecorrespondent.1 aWorsdell, Florence Joan,d1908-1999,ecorrespondent.1 aWorsdell, Frederick Ernest,d1878-1930,ecorrespondent. aCollection open for research. This collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff. cGift;aHenry Munroe Rogers;d1932;eno accession number.5hou aGift of Henry Munroe Rogers, 1932.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 47103000ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089035001400105040002100119100005300140245006100193300002600254545043900280520074700719555008701466524013001553600004101683650003201724650004401756650004001800650002601840650002601866650002701892650003201919650002701951650002901978655003302007655004602040655002202086700003902108700004002147700007002187700003202257740004102289740006602330541006702396561005602463852002302519010088035-520080612144814.0d|||||||||||||||||060823i19251925mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm85190287 aMAHV06B53 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941,ecollector.10aPapers on American songs and ballads,f1925 and undated. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aKittredge was born in Boston in 1860 and received his Harvard A.B. in 1882. He eventually became Francis James Child's successor to the Boylston Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory and later was appointed Harvard's first Gurney Professor of English (1917). Kittredge was a noted authority on the English language, Shakespeare, and Chaucer, as well as continuing the field pioneered by Child - the study of folklore and folk history. aAn eclectic group of ballad-related papers, collected by Kittredge for use in his ballad and folklore studies. Includes compilations of American ballad and song texts by Arthur Palmer Hudson, George Pullen Jackson, and Franz Rickaby, and includes ballads from the geographical areas of Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Wisconsin, and others. Materials include both texts of songs, manuscript music, and some photographs. Also includes an historical document by Frederick W. C. Lieder concerning the involvement of his family in the publishing of Henry De Marsan's new comic and sentimental singer's journal. New York, N.Y., and some unidentified papers, indexes, and lists concerning ballads and printed broadsides.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01933 aGeorge Lyman Kittredge Collection of Papers on American Songs and Ballads (MS Am 2498). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941. 0aLumbermenvSongs and music. 0aBallads, EnglishzUnited StatesxTexts. 0aFolk songs, EnglishzUnited States. 0aFolk songszMissouri. 0aFolk songszMichigan. 0aFolk songszMinnesota. 0aFolk songszNorth Carolina. 0aFolk songszWisconsin. 0aFolk songszMississippi. 7aBalladszUnited States.2aat 7aScoreszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aHudson, Arthur Palmer,d1892-1978.1 aJackson, George Pullen,d1874-1953.1 aLieder, Frederick W. C.q(Frederick William Charles),d1881-1953.1 aRickaby, Franz,d1889-1925.02aBallads and songs of the shanty-boy.02aHenry De Marsan's new comic and sentimental singer's journal. cGift;aProf. George Lyman Kittredge;d1926?;e27256.29.2.5hou aGift of George Lyman Kittredge, probably 1926.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 249801706nkcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100004200120245007700162300002600239351002900265520019800294555008700492524011200579600003000691655002800721655002100749655001900770655003200789655002200821655002100843655002900864655002600893541038900919561004801308852002401356009954179-320060711085628.0060503i15801917mau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocm85033894 aMAHV06F1 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aField, William B. Osgood,ecollector.10aWilliam B. Osgood Field collection of additional prints,fca. 1580-1917. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aIncludes political cartoons, chromolithographs, colored engravings, colored fashion plates, engravings, etchings, lithographs, mezzotints, photographs of drawings, posters, and wood engravings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01845 aWilliam B. Osgood Field Collection of Additional Prints (MS Am 2399). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aField, William B. Osgood. 7aChromolithographs.2aat 7aEngravings.2aat 7aEtchings.2aat 7aFashion illustrations.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat 7aMezzotints.2aat 7aPolitical cartoons.2aat 7aWood engravings.2aat cGift;aMr. William B. Osgood Field;bLake Mohegan, Westfield, New York;d1942;e42M-1395, 42M-1585, 42M-1600, 42M-1601, 42M-1602, 42M-1603, 42M-1605, 42M-1608, 42M-1609, 42M-1619, 42M-1620, 42M-1621, 42M-1622, 42M-1623, 42M-1624, 42M-1630, 42M-1631, 42M-1632, 42M-1633, 42M-1634, 42M-1635, 42M-1636, 42M-1637, 42M-1638, 42M-1639, 42M-1642, 42M-1644, 42M-1731, 42M-1735, 42M-1736.5hou aGift of William B. Osgood Field, 1942.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 239901643nkcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100004000120245004100160300002700201351004800228545013600276520016000412555008700572524009000659600002100749600005000770600003900820655004600859655004500905655002200950655002000972655001900992541022101011561006201232852002301294009933226-420130930113619.0060427i18521907mau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocm84670222 aMAHV06F0 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.00kPhotographs,f1852-1908 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author or title. aAldrich was a poet, novelist and short story writer, and editor of Every Saturday (1865-1874) and The Atlantic Monthly (1881-1890). aPhotographs concerning Thomas Bailey Aldrich and the Aldrich family. Includes portraits, cabinet photographs, cartes-de-visite, engravings, and a tin-type.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01687 aThomas Bailey Aldrich Photographs (MS Am 2396). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aAldridge family.10aAldrich,Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907vPortraits.10aAldrich,Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aEngravings, Americany19th century.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aTintypes.2aat cDeposit and gift;aMr. Talbot Aldrich;d1942; 1948 and 1952;e42M-1906, 42M-1907, 42M-1908, 42M-1909, 42M-1910, 42M-1911, 42M-1913, 42M-1914, 42M-1915, 42M-1916, 42M-1917, 42M-1918, 42M-1919, 42M-1920, 42M-1560.5hou aDeposit of Talbot Aldrich, 1942; gift 1948 and 1952.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 239601861nkcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100004200121245007000163300002600233351002900259545020700288520028700495555008700782555011500869524010500984600003001089651002001119655004501139655002001184655005301204655005301257700005401310541009701364561005101461852002301512009956190-520060728123530.0060505i18301880mau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocn612824535 aMAHV06F2 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLord, Mabel Delano Clapp,ecollector.00aMabel Delano Clapp Lord collection of miscellany,fca. 1830-1880. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aMabel Delano Clapp Lord was the wife of the Boston physician Frederick Taylor Lord (1875-1941). Frederick Lord received an AB from Harvard College in 1897, and an MD from Harvard Medical School in 1900. aMiscellaneous visual materials from the estate of Mabel Delano Clapp Lord. Includes an 1846 manuscript newspaper from the Lake Superior area (probable juvenilia), with watercolor illustrations; engravings by David Claypoole Johnston; two full-length silhouettes; and other material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou019018 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-1895-1898. aMabel Delano Clapp Lord Collection of Miscellany (MS Am 2400). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLord, Mabel Delano Clapp. 0aSuperior, Lake. 7aEngravingszBostony19th century.2gmgpc 7aJuvenilia.2aat 7aSilhouetteszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc1 aJohnston, David Claypoole,d1799-1865,eengraver. cBequest;aMrs. Mabel Delano Clapp Lord;d1942;e42M-1895, 42M-1896, 42M-1897, 42M-1898.5hou aBequest of Mabel Delano Clapp Lord, 1942.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 240003254ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245008200129300002600211351008900237545026800326520052300594520066901117555008701786524013201873546001602005600002102021600004102042600003302083600004302116651004702159651005802206651005802264655003402322655002002356655004502376541014002421561011802561506004202679506012302721852002402844010000957-320110801072308.0060622i18691916mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612836522 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCarpenter, Park.10aPark Carpenter research papers concerning the Dominican Republic,f1869-1916. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Notes and clippings. aPark Carpenter (1890-1967) was born in Northfield, Minnesota on May 5, 1890, the son of Clarence P. Carpenter and Lulu Mcelruth Carpenter. Carpenter earned an AM at Harvard College in 1917 and his LLB in 1922. He died in Plymouth, Massachusetts in August of 1967. aAll materials concern the affairs of what is now the Dominican Republic, located on part of the island of Hispaniola, in the Caribbean region. Materials were assembled by Harvard University graduate student Park Carpenter, possibly for Carpenter's Harvard AM dissertation in history in 1917. Subjects in the materials span from ca.1844-1874, and primarily relate to the history of relations between the United States and the Dominican region, especially concerning the movement for the United States to annex the area.8 aCollection includes: typescript letters sent to Carpenter from various persons in response to his research inquiries to them; 1 letter from Carpenter; 5 autograph manuscript notebooks containing mostly chronologically arranged notes on the history of the Dominican area; and newsclippings from ca. 1869-1873. Carpenter appears to have been soliciting information from others concerning various persons involved in the annexation movement, especially information on William Leslie Cazneau, Senator Cornelius Cole, and many others who were prominent in Dominican affairs from 1844-1871. Some letters mention Harvard Professor Frederick Jackson Turner as a reference.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02187 aPark Carpenter Research Papers Concerning the Dominican Republic, 1869-1916 (MS Am 2736). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCarpenter, Park.10aCazneau, William Leslie,d1807-1876.10aCole, Cornelius,d1822-1924.10aTurner, Frederick Jackson,d1861-1932. 0aDominican RepublicxHistoryy19th century. 0aDominican RepublicxForeign relationszUnited States. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationszDominican Republic. 7aClippingsy19th century.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aNoteszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aPark Carpenter through the Harvard Commission on Western History;d1916;eno accession number; recataloged from SA 2305.3*.5hou1 aGift of Park Carpenter through the Harvard Commission on Western History, 1916; recataloged from SA 2305.3*.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 273601092ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002900108245006600137300002600203500010700229500006700336524005400403600006800457600005800525600003400583700005500617541010000672561005500772852002300827010124539-420061113140112.0061010i19501958vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612864093 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aJohnson, Thomas Herbert.00kCorrespondence :bwith Theodora Van Wagenen Ward,f1950-1958. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aAutograph manuscript and typescript (original and carbon) letters, signed and dated at various places. aConcerns their 1958 edition of the letters of Emily Dickinson. aMS Am 2513. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWard, Theodora Van Wagenen,d1890-tLetters of Emily Dickinson.10aJohnson, Thomas Herbert.tLetters of Emily Dickinson.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.1 aWard, Theodora Van Wagenen,d1890-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Theodora Van Wagenen Ward;b34 Healey St., Cambridge, MA;d1970 July;e70M-21.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Theodora Van Wagenen Ward, 1970.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 251300960ntc a2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245009400148300002700242500003100269545008800300524014400388610003400532655005400566541005600620561004300676852002300719010140010-120131206114856.0061030s19uu xxu|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612868810 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWinship, George Parker,d1871-1952.10aGeorge Parker Winship bibliographical notes, compositions, and other papers,fcirca 19--. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aWinship (A.B. 1893) was the first Librarian of the Harry Elkins Widener Collection. aGeorge Parker Winship Bibliographical Notes, Compositions, and Other Papers, circa 19-- (MS Am 1538). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHarvard University.bLibrary. 7aBibliographieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aWinship Estate;d1952;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of the Winship Estate, 1952.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 153801038ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003600108245004500144300002600189500003100215520012800246524008800374600003600462600005200498650006300550655001900613541010200632561003900734852002300773010169835-620061207105338.0061207i19081910dcu|||| |||| 000|0 eng d0 aocn612879043 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aTaft, Helen Herron,d1861-1943.10aPaid invoices :kmanuscript,f1908-1910. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aReceipted bills (ca. 500 pieces) rendered Mrs. Taft for the White House and personal accounts; Washington, D.C., 1908-1910. aHelen Herron Taft Paid invoices (MS Am 1692). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aTaft, Helen Herron,d1861-1943.10aTaft, William H.q(William Howard),d1857-1930. 0aPresidents' spouseszUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aInvoices.2aat0 cGift;aHerman W. Kapp, CBM, USCGR;b1212 16th St., NW, Washington, DC;d1943 Oct 7;e43-416.5hou1 aGift of Herman W. Kapp, 1943.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 169201421ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245006200131300002600193545035500219520019500574524010300769600002300872700004700895700003600942541009200978561004201070506004201112852002501154010164925-820090629110221.0061130i19471964vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612877935 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aReyher, Ferdinand.10aFerdinand Reyher letters to Beaumont Newhall,f1947-1964. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aFerdinand Reyher (1889?-1967) was a novelist, newspaper correspondent, and playwright. Newhall (1908-1993) was an art historian, writer and photographer and curator, 1948-1958, then director, 1958-1971, of the International Museum of Photography at the George Eastman House in Rochester, N.Y., and a visiting professor of art at various universities. a55 autograph manuscript letters, with some typescript copies, dating 1947-1964. Includes one typescript letter from Beaumont Newhall to Ernst Halberstadt, dated 1971, concerning his letters. aFerdinand Reyher Letters to Beaumont Newhall (MS Am 1857.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aReyher, Ferdinand.1 aNewhall, Beaumont,d1908-1993,erecipient.1 aHalberstadt, Ernst,erecipient.0 cGift;aErnst Halberstadt;bSunset Island, Onset, MA 02558;d1971 Oct. 22;e71M-34.5hou1 aGift of Ernst Halberstadt, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1857.104038ntc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100006200108245007600170300002700246351010200273545132700375545011001702520069001812555008702502524012602589546001602715500016202731544009802893600003302991600005103024600003903075600003303114651004003147655004703187655002203234610004903256700003303305700002103338700003303359700003903392541007403431561004403505506004203549852002503591010163052-220130320074850.0061128i18141914mau|||| |||| ||||0deng d0 aocn612876522 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPorter, V. Mottq(Valentine Mott),d1870-1915,ecompiler.10aV. Mott Porter papers concerning the U.S. Army in the West,f1814-1914. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized in the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other materials. aValentine Mott Porter (1870-1915) was born in Illinois in 1870, the son of Samuel Smith Porter, M.D., and Helen Van Zandt Porter. Porter prepared for college at Smith Academy in St. Louis, received an AB from Harvard College in 1892, received an L.L.B. from Washington University in St. Louis in 1894, and then entered the practice of law. In 1907 Valentine married Susan Creighton Williams (1877-1963), daughter of Meade Creighton Williams and Elizabeth Brown Riddle Williams. They had one child, Valentine Mott Porter Jr. (1915-2005). In August 1907, Valentine Sr. was taken seriously ill with septic pneumonia, which developed into tubercular trouble, and he was hurried to California where, with infrequent visits to the East and one trip abroad, he spent the rest of his life. Porter was a member of a variety of civic groups including: involvement as secretary of the Universal Congress of Lawyers and Jurists held in St. Louis in 1904; member of Associated Harvard Clubs of Indianapolis, University Club of St. Louis, Light Battery "A" Missouri Volunteers, and the Harvard Club of Santa Barbara. He edited the 1820 journal of Stephen Watts Kearny (1908) and wrote many other historical accounts. He died in Los Angeles, California in 1915 at age 44. [Source: The Harvard Graduates' Magazine, Volume 23, March 1915]. aSee finding aid for additional information about Stephen Watts Kearny, Henry Atkinson and James Kennerly. aThis collection chiefly concerns Stephen Watts Kearny (1794-1848), Henry Atkinson (1782–1842), James Kennerly (1892-1840), and V. Mott Porter's writings about these central figures of the U. S. military in the American West. Also concerns the Missouri River Expedition of 1825. Collection contains: a transcript of the diary of James Kennerly from 1823-1826, and one of the diary of Henry Atkinson, from 1825; autograph manuscript notes by Porter; typescript transcripts by Porter of documents relating to his research; correspondence relating to these papers and to the three central figures; engravings, clippings, and photographs; and other materials concerning the American West.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02412 aV. Mott Porter Papers Concerning the U.S. Army in the West, 1814-1914 (MS AmW 107). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History. aAdditional papers of V. Mott (Valentine Mott) Porter are held by the Missouri History Museum.10aAtkinson, Henry,d1782-1842.10aPorter, V. Mottq(Valentine Mott),d1870-1915,10aKearny, Stephen Watts,d1794-1848.10aKennerly, James,d1792-1840. 0aMiddle WestxHistoryy19th century. 7aDiaries2aatzUnited Statesy19th century. 7aTranscripts.2aat10aUnited States.bArmyxHistoryy19th century.1 aAtkinson, Henry,d1782-1842.1 aKennerly, James.1 aKennerly, James,d1792-1840.1 aKearny, Stephen Watts,d1794-1848.0 cGift;aMrs. V. Mott Porter;d1918 April 6;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. V. Mott Porter, 1918.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 10701798ntc a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245007400139300002600213500006600239545006600305505036500371520012600736524011300862600003100975600002401006655004501030700004101075541018801116506012601304561006501430852002501495010195753-X20061220160939.0061220i19261937vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612884978 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.00kCorrespondence :bwith Clarissa Lorenz Aiken,f1926-1937 and undated. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aAutograph letters, signed at various places; some with poems. aAiken was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer.2 aNo. 13 includes poem, Think--when a starry night of bitter frost -- no. 25 includes Broad on the sunburnt hill the bright moon comes -- no. 28 includes What music's devious voice can say beguiling -- no. 32 includes My love, I have betrayed you many times ... and Inprimis: I forgot all day your face -- no. 59 includes Here lies one whose heart was fract- ... aContains 200 letters to Clarissa Lorenz Aiken (1-200) and 55 letters from Clarissa Lorenz Aiken to Conrad Aiken (201-255) aConrad Aiken Correspondence with Clarissa Lorenz Aiken (MS Am 1800.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.10aLorenz, Clarissa M. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aLorenz, Clarissa M.,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aMrs. Clarissa Lorenz Aiken, 290 Marlborough St., Boston;bthrough C.A. Stonehill Inc., 282 York St., New Haven, Conn.;d1967 Mar. 15;e66M-142;h$4,500 duplicate fund.5hou aCollection was formerly restricted until Clarissa Aiken's death (d. 16 May 1992); restriction was lifted on 20 Dec. 2006.1 aPurchased with funds from the sale of duplicates, 1967.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1800.101027ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245005100141300002600192500002700218520018600245581003300431524005400464650005100518655006700569541009400636561004400730852002300774010194209-520061219100518.0061219nuuuuuuuuxxu|||| |||| 000|| eng d0 aocn612883132 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFollett, Wilson,d1887-1963.10aModern American usage :ktypescript,fundated. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aTypescript (photocopy) aUnfinished typescript and notes as they were at the time of Follett's death; includes newsclipping critical of the posthumous publication by Jacques Barzun and Carlos Baker in 1966. aNew York: Hill & Wang, 1966. aMS Am 1789. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aEnglish languagezUnited StatesxDictionaries. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Wilson Follett;bR.D. Box 31A, Norwich VT 05055;d1966 Oct. 12;e66M-33.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Wilson Follett, 1966.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 178902752ntc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041002300108100003800131245006900169300002700238351012900265545028800394520041500682520019001097555008701287524011901374546006801493600003801561650002501599600007301624610003301697655003601730655002201766700005101788700004901839700004901888700007201937700005202009700005402061700005402115541006202169561003402231506004202265852002302307010176463-420120111143917.0061215i19001945mau|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612881980 aMH-HedacscMH-H0 aengafreageralat1 aRand, Edward Kennard,d1871-1945.10aEdward Kennard Rand correspondence and other papers,f1900-1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Edward Kennard Rand correspondence; II. Other correspondence; and III. Other papers. aRand was an American classicist and medievalist. Educated at Harvard (B.S. 1894) and the University of Munich (Ph.D. 1900), he taught at Harvard (1901-1942), where he was Pope Professor of Latin (1931-1942). He founded the Medieval Academy of America (1925) and the journal Speculum. aIncludes letters sent to Rand from various correspondents and typescript carbon copies of letters sent by Rand to various recipients. Topics involve Rand's research interests and writings. Also includes: autograph manuscript and typescript carbons of Rand's reviews of E. A. Lowe's Codices Latini antiquiores, parts I and II, written for the Nation; a few third party letters; and other papers and photographs.8 aCorrespondents include: John Jay Chapman, Etienne Gilson, Leslie Webber Jones, Frederick Paul Keppel, Benno Linderbauer, David Ansell Slater, and Hugh Fraser Stewart, among many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02259 aEdward Kennard Rand Correspondence and Other Papers, 1900-1945 (MS Am 1663). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English, French, German, and Latin.10aRand, Edward Kennard,d1871-1945. 0aAmerican literature.10aLowe, E. A.q(Elias Avery),d1879-1969.tCodices Latini antiquiores.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933,ecorrespondent.1 aGilson, Etienne,d1884-1978,ecorrespondent.1 aJones, Leslie Webber,d1900-ecorrespondent.1 aKeppel, Frederick P.q(Frederick Paul),d1875-1943,ecorrespondent.1 aLinderbauer, Benno,d1863-1928,ecorrespondent.1 aSlater, David Ansell,d1866-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aStewart, Hugh Fraser,d1863-1948,ecorrespondent.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aSource and date unknown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 166301946npcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002500110245003600135300002600171351003900197546001600236545017400252520021300426524010300639555008700742600004200829600004100871600002500912600003700937600004200974600004501016600003901061655004501100700005101145700005001196700004601246700005001292852002301342506003301365541012601398561003601524010128100-520120601130315.0061013i19261983mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612865441 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aDolin, Anton,d1904-10aAnton Dolin papers,f1926-1983. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aIn English. aAnton Dolin was an English ballet dancer and choreographer, who started his carrer with Ballets Russes and later became instrumental in creating English National Ballet. aLetters and photographs of friends sent to Anton Dolin. Includes materials from or about: Charlie Chaplin, Noel Coward, Yvette Chauvire, Garson Greer, Beatrice Lillie, Ruth Page, Elizabeth Taylor, and others. aAnton Dolin Papers (MS Thr 523). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0197410aChauviré, Yvette,d1917-vPortraits.10aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973vPortraits.10aDolin, Anton,d1904-10aDolin, Anton,d1904-vPortraits.10aGarson, Greer,d1904-1996vPortraits.10aLillie, Beatrice,d1894-1989vPortraits.10aPage, Ruth,d1899-1991vPortraits. 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century.2aat1 aTaylor, Elizabeth,d1932-2011,ecorrespondent.1 aChaplin, Charlie,d1889-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aCoward, Noel,d1899-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aLillie, Beatrice,d1894-1989,ecorrespondent.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 523 aCollection open to research.0 cGift;aLewis Lloyd;b85 Cottage St., Brookline, MA 02146;d1994 Aug. 9;e2006MT-67r; HTC accession number: 94-95.19.5the1 aGift of Lewis Lloyd, 1994.5the01268ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100005300121245005000174300002600224500007900250545022200329546003700551524005400588600005300642650002600695650004000721656002200761700003700783541010000820561004700920852002300967010142918-520061101144018.0061101i19171928vp |||| |||| 000|iaeng d0 aocn612869793 aMH-HcMH-Heappm0 aengafre1 aCabot, Richard C.q(Richard Clarke),d1868-1939.00kLetters :bto Faith Cabot Pigors,f1917-1928. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) a21 autograph letters, signed; nos. 5, 7, 8, 12 are typescript transcripts. aCabot was affiliated with Harvard Medical School (1899–1932) and Massachusetts General Hospital (1898–1921). He was an army doctor at a base hospital in France during World War I. Faith Cabot Pigors was his niece. aChiefly in English, some French. aMS Am 2045. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCabot, Richard C.q(Richard Clarke),d1868-1939. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xMedical care. 7aPhysicians.2lcsh1 aPigors, Faith Cabot,erecipient.0 cGift;aMiss Elizabeth Osborne;b9 Chauney St., no. 52, Cambridge MA 02138;d1987;e86M-60.5hou1 aGift of Miss Elizabeth Osborne, 1987.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 204501558ntc a2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245007500148300003400223351003500257545011100292520013100403555009800534524011300632546001600745600004000761650002500801655004600826655004500872740003100917740001200948740002300960541013800983561004601121506004201167852002301209010137355-420131206113933.0061026i18841916mau|||| |||| ||||p eng d0 aocn612868507 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923.10aWilliam Roscoe Thayer additional compositions,f1884-1916 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear feet total) aBeing processed December 2013. aThayer was a biographer and historian. From 1892 to 1915 he was editor of the Harvard Graduates' Magazine. aContains autograph manuscripts of The confessions of Hermes, Hesper, Poems new and old, and drafts of various poems and verse.0 aElectronic finding aid available IN PROCESSuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02481 aWilliam Roscoe Thayer Additional Compositions, 1884-1916 (MS Am 1528). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923. 0aAmerican literature. 7aPoemszUnited States.2aaty19th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat42aThe confessions of Hermes.02aHesper.02aPoems new and old.0 cGift;aGoodspeed's Book Shop;b18 Beacon St., Boston;d23 June 1942;e42M-1816, 42M-1817, 42M-1818, 42M-1819, 42-1820, 42M-1821.5hou1 aGift of Goodspeed's Book Shop, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 152802390ntcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005100108245008500159300002700244351004600271545058900317520039100906520022601297555008701523524009301610546003001703600003901733610004401772610005501816650004201871541011901913561004502032852002302077010283189-020080417102230.0020710i19271946mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612788911 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRollins, Hyder Edward,d1889-1958,erecipient.10aLetters sent to Hyder Edward Rollins,f1927-1946 (inclusive),g1944-1946 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aHyder Edward Rollins (1889-1958) was born in Abilene, Texas. In 1910 he received a B.A. from Southwestern University, an M.A. from the University of Texas in 1912, and a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1917. In 1919 he went to Europe on a Harvard Sheldon Traveling Fellowship and in 1920 he was appointed assistant professor at New York University, becoming a full professor four years later. In 1926 he returned to Harvard, later succeeding George Lyman Kittredge as the Gurney Professor of English (1939-1956). Rollins never married, died in 1958, and was buried in Abilene, Texas. aThe bulk of these letters are from Harvard men who were taught by Rollins as undergraduates or doctoral students. Most of these students moved on to other universities to pursue academic careers in the field of literature. The bulk of letters are from the World War II time period (ca. 1944-1946) and primarily span topics of the war, military service, as well as their career concerns. aSome folders were marked "From Harvard servicemen" and contain letters specifically about World War II military service. This designation was retained in the notes below. A few items have autograph annotations by Rollins.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01871 aLetters sent to Hyder Edward Rollins (MS Am 2531). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aRollins, Hyder Edward,d1889-1958.20aHarvard UniversityxAlumni and alumnae.20aHarvard UniversityxHistoryyWorld War, 1939-1945. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945vCorrespondence. cGift;aMr. Hyder Edward Rollins;b1 Waterhouse Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1946 November 4;e46M-422F.5hou aGift of Hyder Edward Rollins, 1946.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 253104501ntcaa2200481 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245008200121300002700203351011300230545087100343545108201214520031302296555008702609524012102696546004202817544023002859600004403089600004503133600002903178600004203207610004603249651003003295651003403325655003403359655004203393655002203435655003003457656002203487700004503509700002903554700004403583740001703627740001503644541012403659561004703783506012303830506004203953852002403995010683704-420070727074941.0020710i19031945mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612805736 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengachi10aHarley Farnsworth MacNair and Florence Wheelock Ayscough diaries,f1903-1945. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Harley Farnsworth MacNair diaries; and II. Florence Wheelock Ayscough diaries. aHarley Farnsworth MacNair (1891-1947) (HFM) was a Far East historian, the son of Douglad Evander MacNair and Nettie Adelia Farnsworth MacNair. He graduated from the University of Redlands with a Ph.B. degree in 1912. He went to Shanghai, China immediately after graduation and taught history at St. John's University. He stayed there until 1927, becoming professor of history and government in 1916, and head of the department in 1919. During this period he completed his MA at Columbia University in 1916 and received a Ph.D. in 1922 from the University of California at Berkeley. In 1927-1928 he returned to the United States and taught at the University of Seattle, then moved to the University of Chicago where he remained for the rest of his career teaching Far Eastern history. MacNair published voluminously, but he was especially known as a talented teacher. aFlorence Wheelock Ayscough (1878-1942) (FWA) was born in Shanghai, China, the daughter of a Canadian business-man father and an American mother. She lived in China until she was eleven, when her parents returned to the United States. In her early twenties, she returned to China and eventually married Francis Ayscough, a British importer living in Shanghai. They periodically visited the U.S., while residing in China. FWA developed as a writer and a translator of Chinese poetry and eventually became a friend of the American poet, Amy Lowell, who she had first met in Boston when they were both girls. They worked together on various publishing projects, especially: Fir-flower tablets : poems translated from the Chinese / by Florence Asycough ; English versions by Amy Lowell. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1921. Francis Ayscough died in 1935 while they were living in Chicago. FWA married Harley MacNair shortly after, having originally met him in China in 1916. After their marriage, their home in Chicago became the gathering place for persons concerned with China. aPrimarily autograph manuscript diaries concerning various time periods in both lives, but also includes loose materials such as letters, photographs, clippings, articles, pamphlets, and leaflets. Also includes photographs of Amy Lowell and autograph manuscript poems by Amy Lowell, Monadnock and Before dawn.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01886 aHarley Farnsworth MacNair and Florence Wheelock Ayscough Diaries (MS Am 2549). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English and Chinese. aOther papers concerning Harley Farnsworth MacNair and Florence Wheelock Ayscough can be found at: University of Redlands Library, Redlands, California; and the Department of Special Collections, University of Chicago Library.10aMacNair, Harley Farnsworth,d1891-1947.10aAyscough, Florence Wheelock,d1878-1942.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925xPhotographs.20aSt. John’s University (Shanghai, China) 0aChinaxForeign relations. 0aChinaxHistoryy20th century. 7aDiarieszChinay20th century. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesz20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoemsy20th century.2aat 7aTranslators.2aat1 aAyscough, Florence Wheelock,d1878-1942.1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.1 aMacNair, Harley Farnsworth,d1891-1947.02aBefore dawn.02aMonadnock.0 cGift;aMrs. Gerald J. Steiner;b5656 Dorchester Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois;d1950 January 15.e49M-119, 49M-120.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Gerald J. Steiner, 1950.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 254901528ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245005000142300002700192351003000219545007100249520023200320555008700552524009000639546003000729600003400759610004300793655002700836655003600863541007600899561006100975506004201036506012301078852002501201010734230-820070802110357.0020710i18051811mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612808827 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDuckworth, John Thomas,cSir.10aSir John Thomas Duckworth papers,f1805-1811. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSir John Thomas Duckworth (1748-1817) was a British naval officer. aLetters, orders (military records), printed document forms, transcripts, lists of government reports, and naval squadron disposition papers, concerning the naval affairs of Vice Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth from 1805-1811.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01889 aSir John Thomas Duckworth Papers (MS Eng 1626). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aDuckworth, John Thomas,cSir.10aGreat Britain.bRoyal Navyy1793-1815. 7aMilitary records.2aat 7aOrders (military records).2aat0 cTransfer;aHarvard Law School Library;d1947 December 1;e47M-95F.5hou1 aTransfer from the Harvard Law School Library, 1947.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 162602883ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002600108245008900134300002700223351004800250545036300298545048800661545024901149520027701398555008701675524012801762546003001890544006301920600002601983600002302009610002802032650002002060650002202080655004202102700002202144541011002166561004402276506004202320506012302362852002402485011418782-720080331081717.0020710i19521953mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612812419 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChurchill, S. Garton.10aS. Garton Churchill papers on Churchill-Hoffman U.P.U. stamp collection,f1952-1953. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author or title. aSeymour Garton Churchill was born in Bellefontaine, Ohio in 1900 and graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University (B.A. 1922) and Harvard Law School (1926). He spent most of his legal career at the firm of Loeb, Churchill & Lawther in Manhattan. He began playing competitive bridge in 1928 and became one of the great American bridge players and bridge theorists. aIn the introduction to these papers, Churchill states that for over twenty years he had been collecting United States commemorative stamps for his two children, through an invalid friend of his, Lester L. Hoffman of Brooklyn, New York. In 1949, at Hoffman's urging, Churchill began collecting foreign Universal Postal Union stamps issued to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the forming of the U.P.U. Churchill gifted this stamp collection to Houghton in November of 1952. aUniversal Postal Union (Union générale de postes) was founded in 1874. It became a specialized agency of the United Nations in 1947. U.P.U. stamps were issued in 1949 to commemorate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the formation of the U.P.U. aIncludes appraisal documents compiled by Walter A. Warner of the philatelic dealer Frank Warner (New York), letters, and transmittal forms, mostly in typescript format. Also includes a document written by S. Garton Churchill explaining the history of the stamp collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01959 aS. Garton Churchill Papers on Churchill-Hoffman U.P.U. Stamp Collection (MS Am 2599). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.1 aThe 23 volume stamp collection is cataloged as MS Am 2601.10aChurchill, S. Garton.10aHoffman, Lester F.20aUniversal Postal Union. 0aPostage stamps. 0aStamp collecting. 7aFinancial recordsy20th century.2aat1 aWarner, Walter A.0 cGift;aMr. S. Garton Churchill;b11 Broadway, New York, New York;d1952 October 29;e52M-75; 52M-79.5hou1 aGift of S. Garton Churchill, 1952.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 259903035ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004100108245004700149300002700196351003000223545070800253520052900961555008701490524008601577546003001663544018601693600001901879600002201898600004101920600005501961651004002016651003602056650003902092655004702131700005302178700003502231700005502266541011702321561004902438506004202487506008502529852002302614011532395-320090417045819.0020710i18461866mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612828870 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeirce, John Batchelder,d1803-1889.10aJohn Batchelder Peirce papers,f1846-1866. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aJohn Batchelder Peirce was born November 26, 1803 in Danvers (then a part of Salem) and later lived in Lynn, Massachusetts. His father was Andrew Batchelder (1772-1845), mother was Ruth Putnam Batchelder (1779-1805), his grandfather was Ezra Batchelder (1747-), and his grandmother was Mary Woodberry Batchelder (b. ca. 1738). His wife was Sarah Ann "Kitty" Hallowell Peirce (m. October 25, 1831) and his sister (sister-in-law?) was Martha Hallowell. It is recorded in Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts documents that Peirce changed his name in 1824 from John Peirce Batchelder (of Danvers) to John Batchelder Peirce. Peirce died on September 2, 1889. Some records spell his name as Pierce. aAutograph manuscript letters from John Batchelder Peirce to his wife and another group sent to his sister. Details pleasure trip taken from Massachusetts to New York City, Philadelphia, and Albany (New York) (1846), and one for business from Massachusetts across Panama and on to California and back (1850-1852). Also includes: an 1866 memoir by Peirce describing some of his family history; a transcript letter to an unidentified aunt; and folders with historical manuscript notes apparently not related to this collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01989 aJohn Batchelder Peirce Papers (MS Am 2622). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aAdditional manuscript material of the donor, Philip Putnam Chase, is available in the Special Collections of the Harvard Law School Library and the Massachusetts Historical Society.30aPierce family.30aBatchelor family.10aPeirce, John Batchelder,d1803-1889.10aPeirce, Sarah Ann Kitty Hallowell,ecorrespondent. 0aCaliforniaxDescription and travel. 0aPanamaxDescription and travel. 0aVoyages and travelsy19th century. 7aMemoirszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aChase, Philip Putnam,d1878-1978,eformer owner.1 aHallowell, Martha,erecipient.1 aPeirce, Sarah Ann Kitty Hallowell,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit;aPhilip Putnam Chase;b241 Highland Street, Milton 86, Massachusetts;d1951 November 20;e51M-79F.5hou1 aDeposited by Philip Putnam Chase, 1951.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aFormerly restricted access without permission of donor. Donor died in 1978.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 262202088ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005800108245010800166300002700274351005400301545020700355520039200562555008700954524014701041546003001188600004601218600003401264650003301298740005001331740006401381541008501445561005501530506004201585506012301627852002401750011417079-720090417034445.0020710i19191943mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612811662 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-erecipient.10aAdditional letters sent to Flora Virginia Milner Livingston concerning Kipling collections,f1919-1943. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston was, for many years, the Curator of the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Collection in the Harvard College Library. Rudyard Kipling was one of her many scholarly interests. aLetters to Livingston from various librarians, publishers, scholars, and bibliophiles, concerning Kipling collections. Especially concerns information for her books: Bibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling (1927); and Supplement to the Bibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling (1938). Also includes typescript transcript copies of Rudyard Kipling's letters to Mr. Vallentin[e?].0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01957 aAdditional Letters Sent to Flora Virginia Milner Livingston Concerning Kipling Collections (MS Am 2597). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936. 0aWomen authorsy20th century.02aBibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling.02aSupplement to Bibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling.0 cTransfer;aWidener Memorial Room, Harvard College Library;d1957;e57M-272.5hou1 aTransferred from Widener Memorial Room, 1957.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 259702691ntcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002800108245008400136300002700220351003000247545033300277520033800610520043600948555008701384524011101471546003001582600002801612600002801640600001701668650004601685650003901731651004701770651005101817651005001868655002201918700004001940541009601980561004002076506004202116506012302158852002402281011417619-120080326111219.0020710i18791885mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612812230 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRichmond, Grace Hooker.10aGrace Hooker Richmond letters to Gertrude Hooker Brown,f1879-1885 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aGrace Hooker Richmond of Cleveland, Ohio, embarked on her first voyage to England and France in 1879 and sent letters home to her younger sister, Gertrude Hooker Brown (Mrs. William Fayette Brown), also from Cleveland. Another voyage to England was undertaken by Grace in 1884-1885 and more letters were sent home to her sister. aAutograph manuscript letters, with typescript transcipts of every letter. It is no longer known whether these transcripts arrived with the collection or were made later. Letters are very faint and transcripts are useful to read script. Many letters include envelopes. Letters are primarily about family affairs and travel commentary. aIncludes information about shipboard life, Ireland, Liverpool, London, and Paris, and life as a tourist in all these locations during 1879 and 1884 and 1885. Mentions plays, lectures, concerts, dinners, historical locations, illnesses, and many other topics concerning her travels in England and France. Much discussion of life back home in Cleveland. Especially mentions her "cousin Clara" who seemed to have relatives in England.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01958 aGrace Hooker Richmond Letters to Gertrude Hooker Brown (MS Am 2598). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aBrown, Gertrude Hooker.10aRichmond, Grace Hooker.30aHook family. 0aWomen travelerszEnglandvCorrespondence. 0aVoyages and travelsy19th century. 0aCleveland (Ohio)xSocial life and customs. 0aEnglandxDescription and travely19th century. 0aFrancexDescription and travely19th century. 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aBrown, Gertrude Hooker,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. John Cooke;bR.F.D. 2, Rehoboth, Massachusetts;d1954 February;e53M-117F.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. John Cooke, 1954.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 259801811ntm a2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108100003300126245004500159300002700204351009800231545010800329520015200437546006200589544008000651544006600731524008400797555008700881600003300968650002701001610003701028651003901065651005801104700005401162852002301216506004201239561006601281541011401347011467615-120080701145041.0021010i18271872mau|||| |||| ||||0deng d0 aocn612817572 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengalatafre1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aCharles Sumner compositions,f1827-1872. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged in a single series in approximate chronological order. Undated items are at the end. aSumner was a Republican senator from Massachusetts and a principal figure in the anti-slavery movement. aMiscellaneous compositions of Charles Sumner, including texts of speeches and speaking-notes, and other notes, chiefly quotations from his reading. aChiefly in English, with some items in French, and Latin. aFurther quotations copied by Sumner are in his commonplace book MS Am 1.50. aCorrespondence with Sumner is a separate collection, MS Am 1. aCharles Sumner Compositions (MS Am 1.60). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0197310aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aAntislavery movements.20aRepublican Party (U.S. : 1854- ) 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1849-1877. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century.1 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897,eformer owner.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1.60 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aGift of the family of Edward L. Pierce, chiefly in 1918.5hou0 cGift;aFamily of Edward L. Pierce;d1897, 1918, 1942;eSome items formerly MS Am 1.50; one item 42M-565.5hou02031ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245002700158300002700185351003800212545005600250520030100306520026500607524008300872555008700955555010501042600003501147600001901182600002901201651005001230655002101280655001701301655001601318655002101334656001701355650003401372561006701406541013701473852004701610009263502-420040109120446.0031223i18171849mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn122563955 aMAHV03A400 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBailey, Benjamin,d1791?-1853.00kScrapbook,f1817-1849. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged as bound into scrapbook. aBailey was a friend of the English poet John Keats. aIncludes autograph compositions by Benjamin Bailey (including sermons, poems, essays), letters to Bailey, correspondence between various others, Bailey family miscellany, and compositions by various others. Some of the material concerns John Keats. Includes autograph lists of contents of volume. aSpine title: M.S.S. autographs, &c. Fly leaf signed: B. Bailey Colombo. 1844. Titlepage Part I: Manuscripts, Autographs, and other Papers. No.1. Collected in 1842-48-50. Titlepage Part II: Manuscripts, Autographs, and other Papers. No.2 Collected in 1842-1844. aBenjamin Bailey Scrapbook (MS Eng 1461). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016478 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accession Records 1951-1952, under *51M-8.10aBailey, Benjamin,d1791?-1853.30aBailey family.10aKeats, John,d1795-1821. 0aIndiaxSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aAutographs.2aat 7aClergy.2aat 0aEnglish poetryy19th century.1 aDeposited by Arthur Amory Houghton, Jr., 1951; gift 1970.5hou0 cDeposit, then gift;aMr. Arthur Amory Houghton, Jr.,bWye Plantation, Queenstown, Maryland;d1951 July 20; 1970 Dec. 7;e51M-8.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1461zShelved in Keats Room02886ntcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245006400142300002700206351010300233545039600336520067100732546001601403555007701419544008501496524011401581600005201695600002201747650003001769650002301799650002001822655002001842656002501862700005201887700005201939700004201991700006802033700004802101541009802149561004002247506004202287506012302329852002402452012164999-720100706134512.0091222i19351991mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn631658984 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aSchlein, Stephen,ecollector.10aStephen Schlein Erik Erikson additional papers,f1935-1991. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Other material. aGerman born (as Erik Homburger), Erik Erikson (1902-1994) was an American psychoanalyst, educator and author. In 1930 he married Joan Mowat Serson, a Canadian dancer and artist. They emigrated from Vienna to the U.S. in 1933. He was best known for his work in child development and life-span studies, coining the phrase "identity crisis", and in the field that became known as psychohistory. aPrimarily additional correspondence, manuscript, and printed materials given to psychologist Stephen Schlein by Erik Erikson or assembled by Schlein for his research. Many items are duplicate copies of original manuscripts contained in the Erik H. and Joan M. Erikson papers (MS Am 2031). Includes correspondence between Erikson and Anna Freud Bernays, Peter Heller, Robert Palmer Knight, Margaret Mead, and many others. Also includes clippings concerning Erikson, autograph manuscript compositions by Erikson and many copies, psychotherapy notes [these were restricted and removed, see finding aid], and materials concerning Stephen Schlein and his work on Erikson. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aiduhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02054 aSee also related papers of EHE collected by Stephen Schlein in HOLLIS and OASIS. aStephen Schlein Erik Erikson Additional Papers, 1935-1991 (MS Am 2672). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aSchlein, Stephen. 0aDevelopmental psychology. 0aLife cycle, Human. 0aPsychoanalysis. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPsychoanalysts.2aat1 aBernays, Anna Freud,d1858-1955,ecorresondent.1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.1 aHeller, Peter,d1920-ecorrespondent.1 aKnight, Robert P.q(Robert Palmer),d1902-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aMead, Margaret,d1901-1978,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aStephen Schlein;b4 Longfellow Road, Lexington, MA;d2009 December 21;e2009M-57.5hou1 aGift of Stephen Schlein, 2009.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 267201923ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101110003600122245006500158300002700223351003900250545015600289520018200445555008700627555016200714524014900876500017201025546001601197600005301213610003601266710003601302730005801338541006701396561006401463506004201527852002801569009132855-120130311142621.0020819i19541962mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797896791 aMAHV02-A64 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aTheodore Roosevelt Association.10aTheodore Roosevelt Association letters received,f1954-1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe Theodore Roosevelt Association was founded in 1919 and chartered by Congress in 1920, being known until 1956 as the Roosevelt Memorial Association. aConsists of letters received by the association from prominent persons, chiefly relating to invitations to its annual dinner and the awarding of its Distinguished Service Medal.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-71. aTheodore Roosevelt Association Letters Received, 1954-1962 (MS Am 1834.5). Theo dore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xSocieties, etc.10aTheodore Roosevelt Association.1 aRoosevelt Memorial Association.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cDeposit;aTheodore Roosevelt Association;d1968;e68M-71.5hou1 aDeposited by the Theodore Roosevelt Association, 1968.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1834.501542ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003500123245005800158300002700216545010600243520010700349555008700456555010700543524009700650546001600747650001300763600003500776650003500811655002000846655001600866656001700882700003800899541013300937561006901070506004201139852002301181009035794-920110105074545.0021113i19711978mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm842740741 aMAHV02-A221 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979.10aElizabeth Bishop letters to Frank Bidart,f1971-1978. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aElizabeth Bishop was an American poet and translator of Brazilian poetry. Bidart is an American poet. aIncludes 47 letters to Bidart, along with several drafts of poems, and a cookbook inscribed to Bidart.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-3. aElizabeth Bishop Letters to Frank Bidart (MS Am 2036). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aCooking.10aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aCookbooks.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aBidart, Frank,d1939-erecipient.0 cPurchase;awith the Amy Lowell fund from Frank Bidart;b63 Sparks St., no. 3, Cambridge MA 02138d1988;e88M-3;h$4,000.00.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund from Frank Bidart, 1988.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 203602653ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002500102110002600127245005300153300002700206351003900233545023400272520076500506555008701271555010801358524012001466544006301586610002601649650005801675655002001733655002001753655002501773655002701798656002201825656004601847700005101893700004901944700004601993700004902039541006502088561002502153506004202178852002302220009097694-020090203100920.0030331i19121924mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127653201 aMHAT03-A57 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm2 aProvincetown Players.10aProvincetown Players correspondence,f1912-1924. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe Provincetown Players was a theatrical organization founded in 1915 in Provincetown, Massachusetts, by a group of writers and artists for the purpose of producing new and experimental plays. It ceased productions in Dec. 1929. aCorrespondents include George Cram Cook, Edna Kenton, Susan Glaspell and Eugene O'Neill. Correspondence discusses travel arrangements for various theatrical meetings. Also discusses critical revisions of various scripts considered for production and some produced by the Players. Much of the correspondence discusses literary and theatrical criticism in general, specifically within New York and Chicago social circles. The collection includes typewritten signed document by members of the Provincetown Players concerning the use of the name Provincetown Playhouse and a draft agreement for the formation of the Experimental Theatre. Drafts of the articles of incorporation, summaries of meetings, some clippings, programs, and press releases are also present.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-53. aProvincetown Players Correspondence (MS Thr 367). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aClips and programs removed to Regional Theatre collection.20aProvincetown Players. 0aTheaterszUnited StateszMassachusettsy20th century. 7aDocuments.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPress Releases.2aat 7aTheater Programs.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh 7aTheatrical producers and directors.2lcsh1 aCook, George Cram,d1873-1924,ecorrespondent.1 aGlaspell, Susan,d1876-1948,ecorrespondent.1 aKenton, Edna,d1876-1954,ecorrespondent.1 aO'Neill, Eugene,d1888-1953,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aSource unknown;dDate received unknown;e79M-53.5the1 aSource unknown.5the aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 36701770ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005100122245007400173300002700247351003900274545016300313520014600476555008700622524012400709546001600833600003900849600003300888651005500921656001900976700005600995700006901051700006101120700004601181541006901227561005901296506004201355852002301397008964994-X20130312090316.0040426i18541897mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127383071 aMAHV04A26 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897,erecipient.10aEdward Lillie Pierce letters from various correspondents,f1854-1897. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aPierce, a lawyer, held many civil offices in Massachusetts, was active in Republican politics, and was the official biographer and executor of Charles Sumner. aIncludes letters to Pierce from Charles Francis Adams, Salmon Portland Chase, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Carl Schurz, among many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01482 aEdward Lillie Pierce Letters From Various Correspondents, 1854-1897 (MS Am 1.65). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1849-1877. 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1835-1915,ecorrespondent.1 aChase, Salmon P.q(Salmon Portland),d1808-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aSchurz, Carl,d1829-1906,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFamily of E. L. Pierce;d1918;eNo accession number.5HOU1 aGift of the family of Edward Lillie Pierce, 1918.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1.6501487cpcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101245006300122300002700185351003900212545016500251520017200416555008700588555010100675524011300776546001600889600004100905610002500946650002900971700003801000541004601038561003601084506004201120852002301162000601749-520130122085419.0851211s1938 mau eng d0 aocn1226560131 aMAHV85A36 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aLetters of sympathy on the death of Edgar H. Wells,f1938. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aEdgar Huidekoper Wells (1875-1938) was a rare book dealer and educator. He operated Edgar H. Wells and Company, a book shop in New York City, from 1921 to 1938. aThirty letters from various book dealers to the rare book firm of Edgar H. Wells and Company, New York City, on the death of the firm's founder Edgar Huidekoper Wells.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012328 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions, 1952-1953, under *52M-182. aLetters of Sympathy on the Death of Edgar H. Wells, 1938 (MS Am 1292). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938.20aEdgar H. Wells & Co. 0aAntiquarian booksellers.2 aEdgar H. Wells & Co.,erecipient.0 cGift;aG. L. Gomme;d1953;e52M-182.5HOU1 aGift of G. L. Gomme, 1953.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 129201340cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245005000153300002700203545006600230520016200296555008700458524010200545546001600647600003100663650003900694655001700733655003800750655001800788655002400806541007000830561005700900506004200957852002700999000601771-120130131122439.0851218i19131969mau eng d0 aocn1225057901 aMAHV85a55 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.10aConrad Aiken miscellaneous prose,f1913-1969. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aAiken was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. aAutograph manuscripts and typescripts of various prose works, including short stories, essays on various authors and other literary topics, and book reviews.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01346 aConrad Aiken Miscellaneous Prose, 1913-1969 (MS Am 1422.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aEssays.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aReviews.2aat 7aShort stories.2aat0 aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1422.201847cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004000122245004600162300002700208351003900235545013400274520023300408555008700641555010900728524009600837546001600933600004000949610003300989650003001022650002801052700004101080700003001121700004801151700003101199700002901230700004301259541005201302561004201354506004201396852002301438000601915-320120502110813.0860107i19161944mau eng d0 aocn1226092541 aMAHV86A21 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowes, John Livingston,d1867-1945.10aJohn Livingston Lowes papers,f1916-1944. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLowes was a literary scholar and professor of English at Washington University, St. Louis (1909-1918) and at Harvard (1918-1939). aLetters to Lowes from various correspondents, chiefly concerning his writings and other academic activities. Includes letters from Robert Bridges, Alice Brown, T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Amy Lowell, and Edwin Arlington Robinson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009238 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-162. aJohn Livingston Lowes Papers, 1916-1944 (MS Am 1493). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowes, John Livingston,d1867-1945.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aCriticismzUnited States. 0aCriticszUnited States.1 aBridges, Robert Seymour,d1844-1930.1 aBrown, Alice,d1857-1948.1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963.1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.0 cGift;aJohn Wilber Lowes;d1945;e45M-162.5HOU1 aGift of John Wilber Lowes, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 149302086cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100004900136245007800185300002700263545020700290520034100497524011700838555008700955555010901042546004601151600003601197600004901233650003001282650003701312655002001349655002201369655002301391700005201414700007501466541005801541561004801599506004201647852002301689000601934-X20100329101807.0860509i18891892mau fre d0 aocn6123676231 aMAHV86A226 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs afreaeng1 aDay, F. Hollandq(Fred Holland),d1864-1933.10aFred Holland Day correspondence with Spoelberch de Lovenjoul,f1889-1892. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aFred Holland Day was an American publisher, "art" photographer, and leader of the aesthetic movement in fin-de-siècle Boston. Spoelberch de Lovenjoul was a Belgian-born aristocrat and literary scholar. aChiefly letters relating to Honoré de Balzac from Spoelberch de Lovenjoul to Day, together with drafts of letters by Day and translations of them into French by Louise Imogen Guiney. Also includes a few other papers and memorabilia such as a beaded cross from the grave of Balzac and an inscribed photograph of Spoelberch de Lovenjoul. aFred Holland Day Correspondence with Spoelberch de Lovenjoul (MS Am 1378). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-619. aIncludes materials in French and English.10aBalzac, Honoré de,d1799-1850.10aDay, F. Hollandq(Fred Holland),d1864-1933. 0aAestheticism (Literature) 0aFrench literaturey19th century. 7aArtifacts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat1 aGuiney, Louise Imogen,d1861-1920,etranslator.1 aSpoelberch de Lovenjoul, Charles,cvicomte de,d1836-1907,erecipient.0 cGift;aCharles Eliot Goodspeed;d1941;e42M-619.5hou1 aGift of Charles Eliot Goodspeed, 1941.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 137802176cpc a2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100001700124245007800141300002700219351006200246545012800308520030900436555008700745555010800832524008600940600001701026600001701043650003201060650003601092650003801128650002301166650001401189651006801203651007001271655002001341655001601361655002401377655002101401655002001422541011901442561012801561506004201689852002301731000601947-120110114095156.0860513i16621839mau eng d0 aocn1223359511 aMAHV86-A239 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aHowe family.10aHowe family additional papers,f1662-1839 (inclusive),g1694-1797 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Letters; and II. Documents. aThe How family, later the Howe family, lived in Massachusetts and Connecticut. The original homestead was in Ipswich, Mass. aConsists of 35 documents and letters concerning property rights and inheritance, family births and deaths, taxes, court cases, and other legal matters. Includes petitions, contracts, permits, deeds, court summonses and warrants, receipts, town tax records, military orders, genealogies, and a death book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-56. aHowe Family Additional Papers (MS Am 1920). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aHowe family.30aHowe family. 0aInheritance and succession. 0aLegal instrumentszConnecticut. 0aLegal instrumentszMassachusetts. 0aRight of property. 0aTaxation. 0aConnecticutxHistoryyColonial period, approximately 1600-1775. 0aMassachusettsxHistoryyColonial period, approximately 1600-1775. 7aContracts.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aGenealogies2aat 7aPetitions.2aat0 cGift;aHowe, Fisher, David Leavitt, Lawrence, and Richard Warren, and Anna Shippen Delafield;d1975;e75M-56.5HOU1 aGift of Gift of Anna Shippen Delafield, Fisher Howe, David Leavitt Howe, Lawrence Howe, and Richard Warren Howe, 1975.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 192001447ctm a2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245006000160300002600220520020100246524010600447545011700553600002600670600003700696650003900733650003500772655004500807700003500852700003800887561004400925541016500969852002301134000601973-020080227152904.0860520i19551957mau || | eng d0 aocn6123679211 aMAHV86A262 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.10aLetters to Walter Jacob Kaiser,f1955-1957 and undated. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aConsists of 18 letters to Walter Jacob Kaiser, including one letter by Ada MacLeish. Many of the letters concern poems by Kaiser. There is one typescript poem by Kaiser with revisions by MacLeish. aArchibald MacLeish Letters to Walter Jacob Kaiser (MS Am 2000). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aArchibald MacLeish (1892-1982) was an American poet. Kaiser is a professor of comparative literature at Harvard.10aKaiser, Walter Jacob.10aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aMacLeish, Ada,ecorrespondent.1 aKaiser, Walter Jacob,erecipient. aGift of Walter Jacob Kaiser, 1982.5hou cGift;aProfessor Walter Jacob Kaiser;bDept. of Comparative Literature, 401 Boylston Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138;d1982 Nov. 23;e82M-26.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 200001396cpcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245006200153300002700215351003000242545007900272520014400351555008700495555009700582524010300679546001600782600003000798600001800828650003900846700004000885541005000925561004100975506004201016852002401058000602307-X20100318080031.0860821i18991915mau eng d0 aocn6123730921 aMAHV86A491 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James letters to Margaret James Porter,f1899-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aJames was an American novelist, short story writer, critic, and dramatist. aConsists of 62 letters from James to his niece Margaret James Porter discussing family matters, his literary work, and his life in England.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003328 aUnpublished finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-333. aHenry James Letters to Margaret James Porter (bMS Eng 1070). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aPorter, Margaret James,erecipient.0 cDeposit;aJames family;d1942;e55M-333.5hou1 aGift of the James family, 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 107002046cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245006700160300002700227351003900254545007800293520029000371555008700661555010900748524011700857546001600974581013000990600005301120600002501173651003601198651003901234651005501273700005201328700004901380700008601429541005101515561004101566506004201607852002301649000602336-320120813081648.0860908i17881805mau eng d0 aocn1225057651 aMAHV86A517 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aSneyd, John,d-1835,erecipient.10aLetters from various correspondents to John Sneyd,f1788-1805. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSneyd was a British clergyman and friend of the statesman George Canning. aConsists chiefly of letters to Sneyd from various correpondents, including Charles Arbuthnot, George Canning, and Harriet Mary Amyand Harris, Countess of Malmesbury, among others. These letters concern politics in England, travels throughout England and Europe, and Napoleon Bonaparte.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009548 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-259. aLetters from Various Correspondents to John Sneyd, 1788-1805 (MS Eng 742). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSome of the letters have been printed in George Canning and His Friends, ed. Josceline Bagot. 2 v. London: John Murray, 1909.10aNapoleonbI,cEmperor of the French,d1769-1821.10aSneyd, John,d-1835. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aGreat BritainxHistoryy1789-1820. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty1789-1820.1 aArbuthnot, Charles,d1767-1850,ecorrespondent.1 aCanning, George,d1770-1827,ecorrespondent.1 aMalmesbury, Harriet Mary Amyand Harris,ccountess of,d1761-1830,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aThomas S. Lamont;d1949;e48M-259.5HOU1 aGift of Thomas S. Lamont, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 74202727cpcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004200124245004800166300002700214351003900241545007600280520081600356555008701172555010801259524009901367546001601466600004201482600003101524610002401555650002501579650003301604650003801637650004501675650002301720650004001743651005101783651003601834655002901870656002201899700006401921700005001985700006602035541005302101561004902154506004202203852002402245000602385-120130107140350.0860915i18771937mau eng d0 aocn1224688751 aMAHV86-A530 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGranville-Barker, Harley,d1877-1946.10aHarley Granville-Barker papers,f1877-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGranville-Barker was an English actor, producer, dramatist, and critic. aConsists chiefly of correspondence of Harley Granville-Barker, including letters from J. M. Barrie, John Galsworthy, and T. E. Lawrence, as well as letters written by Granville-Barker to Barrie. Correspondence with Barrie concerns the staging of Barrie's play The Boy David and also discusses finances and the political situation in France. Galsworthy's letters discuss literary matters, travels in Europe, and the establishment of a PEN Club. Lawrence's letters discuss the composition and publication of his books among other topics. Also included in the collection are other correspondence, Granville-Barker's birth certificate, wife Helen Granville-Barker's manuscript essays on Thomas Hardy, and several form letters urging the abolition of the Office of Dramatic Censor, each signed by a different person.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-95. aHarley Granville-Barker Papers, 1877-1937 (MS Eng 1020). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGranville-Barker, Harley,d1877-1946.10aHardy, Thomas,c1752-1832.20aPEN (Organization). 0aCensorshipzEngland. 0aEnglish dramay20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy20th century. 0aCensorshipvDrama. 0aTheatrical producers and directors. 0aFrancexPolitics and governmenty20th century. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 7aBirth Certificates.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBarrie, J. M.q(James Matthew),d1860-1937,ecorrespondent.1 aGalsworthy, John,d1867-1933,ecorrespondent.1 aLawrence, T. E.q(Thomas Edward),d1888-1935,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aConstant Huntington;d1957;e56M-95.5HOU1 aGift of Constant Huntington Esq., 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 102001790ckcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245005400160300002700214545009500241520016500336555008700501510018600588524010600774544006200880546001600942600003700958650005700995650004101052655004401093656002301137740001801160740002601178740002301204541007701227561005701304506004201361852002501403000602434-320130312074901.0860922s1874 mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn1225750791 aMAHV86A575 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886.10aRandolph Caldecott miscellaneous drawings,f1874. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCaldecott, an English artist, was a popular illustrator, especially of books for children. aInk and watercolor illustrations for various books and nursery rhymes. Includes drawings for: Hey-diddle-diddle, Baby bunting, Come lasses and lads, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014653 aNancy Finlay, "Randolph Caldecott: A Checklist of the Caroline Miller Parker Collection in the Houghton Library" (Cambridge, Mass., Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, 1986). aRandolph Caldecott Miscellaneous Drawings, 1874 (MS Eng 784.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also: Randolph Caldecott Drawings (MS Typ 690-690.8). aIn English.10aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886. 0aIllustrated children's bookszEnglandy19th century. 0aIllustration of booksy19th century. 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aIllustrators.2aat0 aBaby bunting.0 aCome lasses and lads.0 aHey-diddle-diddle.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 784.601943cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004900123245004100172300002700213545012900240520032300369555008700692555010800779510014100887524009201028546001601120600004901136650003801185650006301223655002101286655002801307655001601335656002801351700003301379541005601412561004701468506004201515852002401557000602452-120130124101542.0860926i17521795mau eng d0 aocn6123752931 aMAHV86A591 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aLennox, Charlotte,dapproximately 1729-1804.10aCharlotte Lennox papers,f1752-1795. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCharlotte Ramsay Lennox was an English novelist, who also made the first comparative study of Shakespeare's source material. aContains correspondence, mostly professional letters to Lennox from prominent literary figures who took an interest in her work. Both the creative and the practical aspects of writing and publishing are discussed. Also includes a few poems, most about Lennox, one possibly by her; financial documents; and a broadside.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013038 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-84.4 aDuncan Isles, "The Lennox Collection," Harvard Library Bulletin, 18 (1970), pp. 317-344, and 19 (1971), pp. 36-60, 165-186, and 416-435. aCharlotte Lennox Papers, 1752-1795 (MS Eng 1269). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLennox, Charlotte,dapproximately 1729-1804. 0aEnglish literaturey18th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzEnglandxHistoryy18th century. 7aBroadsides.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aWomen authors, English.1 aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784.0 cGift;aArthur A. Houghton Jr.;d1968;e67M-84.5HOU1 aGift of Arthur A. Houghton Jr., 1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 126902081cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005500122245006500177300002700242351004200269545007800311520028400389524010000673555008700773555010400860546001600964581021400980600005501194650004201249651005801291650003001349655001901379655002401398656001801422700004501440700004801485541005301533561004401586506004201630852002301672007528994-620100412075458.0970718i19191928mau eng d0 aocn6121982011 aMAHV97A15 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPerkins, Maxwell E.q(Maxwell Evarts),d1884-1947.10aMaxwell Evarts Perkins letters to his daughters,f1919-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by recipient. aPerkins was an editor with Charles Scribner's Sons for over thirty years. aIncludes letters, poems, and drawings from Perkins to his daughters: 84 holograph letters to Louise Perkins King, and 7 letters (photocopies) to Jane Perkins Owen. Also includes holograh and typescript manuscripts by Perkins: The complete commuter, and Buttoning and unbuttoning. aMaxwell E. Perkins Letters to his Daughters (MS Am 2051). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004388 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-32. aIn English. aPortions published in: Father to daughter : The family letters of Maxwell Perkins, edited by Bertha Perkins Frothingham, Louise Perkins King, and Ruth King Porter. Port Townsend, Washington : Empty Bowl, 1995.10aPerkins, Maxwell E.q(Maxwell Evarts),d1884-1947. 0aEditorszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aUnited StatesxSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aWit and humor, Pictorial. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aIllustrations.2aat 7aEditors.2aat1 aKing, Louise Perkins,d1915-erecipient.1 aOwen, Jane Perkins,d1918-1979,erecipient.0 cGift;aLouise Perkins King;d1989;e88M-32.5hou1 aGift of Louise Perkins King, 1989.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 205102263nkm a2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100001800107245004800125246010000173260001100273300002700284500031200311500024100623500004200864500010000906520009201006524005301098500016201151600004301313610003701356610003601393611005801429650005501487651003601542651004101578655003701619655001901656655001901675655001901694655002201713710004301735852002401778561005101802008737093-X20050506100204.0010925s1893 xx ||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocm81330297 aMH-HcMH-Hegihc1 aBrowne, Carl.14aThe builders of California Stateh[graphic]10aCartoons illustrating the conception and completion of the Union and Central Pacific railroads. a[1893] a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aMain body forms 2 booklets. Booklet 1 is autograph manuscript text: "Lecture on Carl Browne's illuminated scroll of the builders of California State. Written and illustrated for exhibition in the California exhibit of the world's Columbian Exposition Historical Department by Carl Browne of Calistoga, Cal." aBooklet 2 consists illustrations for lecture with note: "Turn down pages from here as you read lecture on opposite page." Includes cartoon drawings (watercolor, ink and pencil), printed illustrations pasted-in to form collage, and text. aAlso includes loose fragment of text. aTitle from text booklet title page; alternate title from typed title page now in internal file. aEspecially concerns tribute to C.P. Huntington and his Central Pacific Railway Company. aMS AmW 75. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aForms part of the collection of Western Americana manuscripts at Houghton Library, collected under the auspices of the Harvard Commission on Western History.10aHuntington, Collis Potter,d1821-1900.20aCentral Pacific Railway Company.20aUnion Pacific Railroad Company.20aWorld's Columbian Expositiond(1893 :cChicago, Ill.) 0aRailroadszUnited StatesxDesign and construction. 0aCaliforniaxHistoryy1850-1950. 0aWest (U.S.)xDescription and travel. 7aCartoons (humorous images).2aat 7aCollages.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat2 aHarvard Commission on Western History.8 bHOUcGENhMS AmW 75 aGift of Mrs. Ella Sterling Mighels, 1920.5hou02547ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008003900029035001700068035001400085040002100099100004000120245008500160300002700245351003900272545021200311520036900523520029200892524012701184555008701311555011301398600003801511600003601549600001901585600004101604600002101645650003901666650002801705651004601733655002801779655001801807700005501825700004301880541008001923561006602003506004202069852002602111008257853-220090109121826.0991213i18771908mau|||||||||||||| ||eng0 aocn6122348741 aMAHV99A34 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPratt, Frederic Alcott,d1862-1910.10aFrederic Alcott Pratt papers on Louisa May Alcott's literary estate,f1877-1908. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aPratt was the nephew of the writer Louisa May Alcott and the son of her sister Anna Bronson Alcott Pratt. Under Louisa May Alcott's will, he became the trustee of her literary estate after her death in 1888. aPapers include: letters from publishers, law firms, and investment agencies regarding the finances and property of the Louisa May Alcott literary estate; receipts and invoices regarding investments and mortgages held under the estate; and personal letters written to FAP regarding the Alcott family. Includes one letter regarding the estate of Amos Bronson Alcott. aAlso included are letters to Thomas Niles and John Sewall Pratt Alcott from various agencies. Some of the letters regard legal action taken by FAP against the investment broker William U. Swan, who in 1890 defaulted on his payments to FAP. Most of the letters have been annotated by FAP. aFrederic Alcott Pratt Papers on Louisa May Alcott's Literary Estate (MS Am 1130.17). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000108 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-310 (150).10aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.10aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.30aAlcott family.10aPratt, Frederick Alcott,d1863-1910.10aSwan, William U. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aLetters.2aat1 aAlcott, John Sewall Pratt,d1865-1923,erecipient.1 aNiles, Thomas,d1825-1894,erecipient.0 cDeposit; purchase;aMrs. F. Wolsey Pratt;d1960; 1992.e59M-310 (150).5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. F. Wolsey Pratt, 1960; purchase, 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1130.1701892nkcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002300123245004200146300002700188545005300215520018400268530006200452524008400514555008700598600002300685600005600708655001900764655002200783655001900805655004600824655002000870541011000890561008701000506004201087852002601129845039901155009125098-620130930115327.0030616i18631864mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn612772729 aMAHV03A238 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aLongfellow family.10aLongfellow family images,f1863-1864. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow was an American poet. aImages of Longfellow, members of his family, people associated with him, and other related images. Includes tintypes, carte-de-visite, negative, photographs, and a pencil drawing. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aLongfellow Family Images (MS Am 1340.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0019830aLongfellow family.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882vPortraits. 7aTintypes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aNegatives.2aat0 cDeposit, then purchase;aThe Trustees of the Longfellow House Trust;d1959; purchase 1976;e59M-293.5hou1 aDeposited by The Trustees of the Longfellow House Trust, 1959; purchase 1976.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1340.10 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01705ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005000122245006200172300002700234545003500261520012300296555008700419555010800506524010300614600005000717600006100767650003500828655002000863655005000883655001900933655001600952655002200968655005900990655002501049656001701074541008801091561008401179506004201263852002601305009030828-X20120813120144.0021025i19221955mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813601501 aMAHV02A190 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings additional papers,f1922-1955 and undated. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCummings was an American poet. aContains autograph manuscript notes and poems, drawings, self-portrait sketches, photographs, ephemera, and clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-66. aE. E. Cummings Additional Papers, 1922-1955 (MS Am 1892.17). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962vPortraits. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aEphemera.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortrait drawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aSelf-portraits.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cPurchase;afrom Mrs. Edward Estlin Cummings;d1972;e77M-66;hAmy Lowell Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from Mrs. Edward Estlin Cummings, 1972.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892.1701912ckcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087100004000102245005700142300002700199351003000226545007000256520043200326555008700758555010800845524009900953600004001052651003501092655002201127655004501149655005501194655005301249656002501302700004601327541009501373561004301468506003701511852002601548009087649-020090520141935.0030307i18671903mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn6127638991 aMAHV03-A761 aLongfellow, Harriet Spelman,d1852-10aHarriet Spelman Longfellow sketch books,f1867-1903. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLongfellow was the daughter-in-law of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. aIncludes ten sketch books (396 drawings in white chalk, pencil, crayon, ink, and watercolor) by Longfellow containing portrait and flower drawings in pen, pencils, watercolor, and wash, as well as landscape drawings of England, Europe, Japan, and some of her hometown Cambridge, Mass. Also includes sketches by Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow, who was Harriet Spelman Longfellow's husband and the son of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-32. aHarriet Spelman Longfellow Sketch Books (MS Am 1340.11). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLongfellow, Harriet Spelman,d1852- 0aJapanxDescription and travel. 7aSketchbooks.2aat 7aDrawingszAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aLandscape drawingszAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWomen artists.2lcsh1 aLongfellow, Ernest Wadsworth,d1845-1921.0 cGift;aMrs. Howard Turner;b409 Nahant Rd., Nahant, MA 01908;d1977 Dec. 29;e77M-32;5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Howard Turner, 1977.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1340.1101587ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102041001300123245005400136300002700190351003900217520023300256546003900489555008700528524010700615546002700722650002100749650003000770650002900800650003600829656002700865700005800892700005700950700005501007541005001062561005701112506004201169852002601211009126415-420120502094715.0030429i16491937mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797522541 aMAHV03-A227 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre00aBook collectors miscellaneous papers,f1649-1937. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aChiefly letters dealing with book or manuscript acquisitions, by American, English, and French book collectors, including over 30 letters of Evert Jansen Wendell and letters from Sir Alexander Boswell and Thomas Frognall Dibdin. aLetters are in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00907 aBook Collectors Miscellaneous Papers, 1649-1937 (MS Eng 1106.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and French. 0aBook collecting. 0aBook collectorszEngland. 0aBook collectorszFrance. 0aBook collectorszUnited States. 7aBook collectors.2lcsh1 aBoswell, Alexander,cSir,d1775-1822,ecorrespondent.1 aDibdin, Thomas Frognall,d1776-1847,ecorrespondent.1 aWendell, Evert Jansen,d1860-1917,ecorrespondent.0 cGifts;aVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1106.101094ctcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102041001300123245004700136300002700183351004300210520010200253546003700355555008700392524009800479650002100577650002000598655001600618656001700634541008400651561005700735852002400792009126637-820120502100457.0030429i16771929mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797897771 aMAHV03-A220 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafre10aMiscellaneous anonymous verse,f1677-1929. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by first line. aMiscellaneous anonymous poems and songs chiefly in English, some with identified places or dates. aPoems are in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00918 aMiscellaneous Anonymous Verse, 1677-1929 (MS Eng 1143). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAmerican poetry. 0aEnglish poetry. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cGift;aVarious;dVarious;e93M-116, 44M-107, 44M-361F, Gay 1701. 656.638F.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 114302527ctcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245005400145300002600199351003800225545020800263520055200471555008701023546004101110524010401151544018701255544020101442600002401643600003701667650002801704655005901732700002401791740002301815740004601838740002801884506004201912561005401954852002302008541013402031010009102-420091026113206.0060710i19641967mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612838474 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams additional papers,f1964-1967. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aCollection includes: typescript (signed) letters (1965-1967) from Williams to his friend and collaborator, James Roose-Evans, discussing in detail both personal and professional concerns; compositions by Williams including a typescript of the poem The harp of Wales, 1964 Secker & Warburg printed version (with numerous revisions) of The milk train doesn't stop here anymore, typescript and autograph revisions for Milk train from 1965, and a typescript mimeograph script for The two-character play with autograph annotations by James Roose-Evans.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01993 aCollection materials are in English. aTennessee Williams Additional Papers, 1964-1967 (MS Am 2627). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aHoughton Library holds other important collections of Tennesse Williams papers such as MS Thr 91-91.4, bMS Thr 176, bMS Thr 397, and others. Search HOLLIS and OASIS for full details. aOther collections of Tennessee Williams papers can also be found at Columbia University; the University of California, Los Angeles; the University of Delaware; and the University of Texas, Austin.10aRoose-Evans, James.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 0aTheaterzUnited States. 7aScripts (documents)zUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aRoose-Evans, James.42aThe harp of Wales.42aThe milk train doesn't stop here anymore.42aThe two-character play. aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aPurchased with the Douglass Roby fund, 2006.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 26270 cPurchase;aDiana J. Rendell, Inc.;b177 Collins Road, Waban, MA 02468;d2006 July 5;e2006M-1;h$22,500 (Douglass Roby fd.).5hou01755ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003300107245008900140300002600229351005000255545012700305520029100432555008700723555010900810524014100919600003301060600003201093650004301125650003601168650003001204651004801234655003401282541005801316561004201374852002501416009815179-720130912085207.0060426i18881938mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm85033881 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.10aSamuel Henshaw correspondence with booksellers concerning Gilbert White,f1888-1938. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by bookseller's name. aHenshaw was an entomologist and served as director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University (1912-1927). aConsists chiefly of invoices and letters from various booksellers in relation to Henshaw's interest in the works of the British naturalist, Gilbert White, in particular White's The Natural History of Selbourne. Also includes some book inventories from both booksellers and estate sales.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou018428 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-860. aSamuel Henshaw Correspondence with Booksellers Concerning Gilbert White, 1888-1938 (MS Am 1134.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793. 0aBooksellers and book sellingzEngland. 0aBook collectingzUnited States. 0aNatural historyzEngland. 0aSelborne (England)xDescription and travel. 7aMerchandise inventories.2aat cBequest;aSamuel Henshaw;d1942 June;e43M-860F.5hou aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, 1942.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1134.201361ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004200108245004300150300002700193545008600220500003100306520013800337520008000475524012100555600002000676600003200696600003300728655002400761655002200785700002000807700003300827541012500860561005200985852002201037009814790-020130910120753.0020710i17001900mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612778784 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDunster, Samuel, b. 1803,ecollector.10aDunster family papers,fca. 1700-1900. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHenry Dunster was the first President of Harvard College, serving from 1640-1654. aCollection is unprocessed. aLetters, genealogy materials, and other items relating to the descendents of Henry Dunster, collected by Samuel Dunster of Attleboro. aIncludes materials by and about Rev. Isaiah Dunster (1720-1791) and others. aSamuel Dunster Collection of Dunster Family Papers, ca. 1700-1900 (MS Am 777). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aDunster family.10aDunster, Henry,d1609-1659?10aDunster, Isaiah,d1720-1791. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aDunster family.1 aDunster, Isaiah,d1720-1791. cPurchase;d1920 Dec. 31 and 1921 Mar. 14;eOne vol. recat. from: HU 337.41.8.2 (formerly HU 294.1.3);hBright Fund.5hou aPurchased with the Bright Fund, 1920-1921.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 77702234ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100001900122245006100141300002700202351003700229545020900266520044800475524011000923555008701033546001601120610002901136600001901165600002101184600002101205600003101226651004501257651006201302651005801364655002801422655002701450655003601477700003401513700002101547700002101568700003101589541007201620561004401692506004201736852002201778009440151-920130910113542.0040825i17441764mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612833016 aMAHV04A65 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aBourne family.10aBourne family Massachusetts military papers,f1744-1764. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged in chronological order. aBourne (Bourn) family was primarily of Barnstable, Massachusetts. Silvanus Bourn (1694-1763) was a colonel in the militia and his son, Melatiah Bourn (1722-1778) was also an officer and a Boston merchant. aMilitary papers relating to the Bourn family of Massachusetts concerning colonial expeditions to capture the Fortress of Louisbourg and other French colonial lands in Canada during the French and Indian Wars in North America. Includes military orders, commissions, muster rolls, letters, financial records, and other military documents. Documents are by and about Melatiah Bourn, Silvanus Bourn, William Shirley, Silvanus Cobb and many others. aBourne Family Massachusetts Military Papers, 1744-1764 (MS Am 589). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00243 aIn English.10aMassachusetts.bMilitia.30aBourne family.10aBourn, Melatiah.10aBourn, Silvanus.10aCobb, Silvanus, 1710-1762. 0aLouisbourg (N.S.)xHistoryySiege, 1745. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyFrench and Indian War, 1755-1763. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyKing George's War, 1744-1748. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aMilitary records.2aat 7aOrders (military records).2aat1 aShirley, William,d1694-1771.1 aBourn, Melatiah.1 aBourn, Silvanus.1 aCobb, Silvanus, 1710-1762.0 cGift;aJudge Joseph M. Day;bBarnstable, Mass.;d1896 Apr. 29.5hou1 aGift of Judge Joseph M. Day, 1896.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 58901633ntcaa22003375a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101245006500122300002700187351003900214520011200253524010500365530006200470555008700532546001600619650005200635651005200687700005000739700004400789700003100833700004400864700003800908852002500946541018800971561007001159506004201229852002401271009500180-820120926124220.0020710i17471820mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn122560133 aMAHV04A77 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMiscellaneous eighteenth-century British papers,f1747-1820. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author.3 aContains letters and documents of British writers, publishers, and others active in the eighteenth century. aMiscellaneous Eighteenth-century British Papers (MS Eng 1473). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00262 aIn English. 0aAuthors, Englishy18th centuryxCorrespondence. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy18th century.1 aCadell, T.q(Thomas),d1742-1802,erecipient.1 aDodsley, James,d1724-1797,erecipient.1 aJago, Richard,d1715-1781.1 aLysons, Samuel,d1763-1819,erecipient.1 aPiozzi, Hester Lynch,d1741-1821.8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 14730 cPurchase;aChristopher Edwards;bHatch Gate Farmhouse, Lines Road, Hurst, Berkshire RG10 0SP, UK;d2004 Nov. 9;e2004M-69, 2004M-70, 2004M-71, 2004M-72;h$10716.75 (Kilgour fd.).5hou1 aPurchased and received from various donors at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 147301667ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100245005500121300002700176545025900203520017300462555008700635524010400722546001600826600006800842650002400910656001900934700004800953700003801001541008701039561004901126506004201175852002201217541006701239561004701306008963892-120130312090548.0040505i18791906mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798431971 aMAHV04A31 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPapers concerning Shakespeare's works,f1879-1906. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aJohn Buttrick Noyes (1838-1908) was a colonel in the 28th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the Civil War. He was a graduate of Harvard College, A.B. 1868. Henry Norman Hudson (1814-1886) was a Shakespearean scholar and literary critic from Vermont. aThese papers contain: (1) Emendations on corrupt passage in Shakespeare's plays by John Buttrick Noyes; and (2) Letters to Henry Norman Hudson on Shakespearean matters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01484 aPapers Concerning Shakespeare's Works, 1879-1906 (MS Am 773). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616xCriticism and Interpretation. 0aEnglish literature. 7aCritics.2lcsh1 aHudson, Henry Norman,d1814-1886,recipient.1 aNoyes, John Buttrick,d1838-1908.0 cGift;aGeorge R. Noyes;bNorwich, Conn.;d1916 June 10;eNo accession number.5hou1 aItem (1) gift of George R. Noyes, 1916.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 7730 cGift;aR. H. Georges;d9 July 1916;eNo accession number.5hou1 aItem (2) gift of R. H. Georges, 1916.5HOU01768ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004600122245004300168300002700211351007100238545004700309520035800356555008700714555010900801524009400910546001601004600004601020600001701066650006001083655003401143655002201177655002401199656002301223541005301246561002601299506004201325852005101367008915928-420110818090007.0030910i17901884mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm785575561 aMAHV03A277 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHall, S. C.q(Samuel Carter),d1800-1889.10aSamuel Carter Hall papers,f1790-1884. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Miscellanea. aHall was an English editor and journalist. aContains several letters written to S. C. Hall from various correspondents concerning publishing, marriage, and thank you notes for books written by several people and the Addlestone Church School. Collection also includes a marriage certificate, a membership certificate from the Manchester Athenaeum, dinner invitations, and a burial and baptism list.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014038 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-362. aSamuel Carter Hall Papers, 1790-1884 (MS Eng 1430). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHall, S. C.q(Samuel Carter),d1800-1889.30aHall family. 0aPublishers and publishingzGreat Britainy19th century. 7aMarriage certificates.2ftamc 7aInvitations.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aJournalists.2lcsh0 cPurchase;aUnknown source;d1940;e47M-362.5hou1 aPurchased, 1940.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1430zShelved with bMS Eng 143201730ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003000123245006300153300002700216351004100243545019200284520019500476555008700671555011300758524011300871600003000984656001901014700003401033700005001067700005001117541006601167561004701233506007701280852005901357008922158-320130204141919.0021009i18121863mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm799733411 aMAHV02-A127 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839.10aSamuel Ward letters to various correspondents,f1812-1863. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bAranged alphabetically by recipient. aSamuel Ward was an American author. His daughter, Julia Ward Howe, was the author of the "Battle hymn of the Republic" and other works and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer. aLetters written by Samuel Ward to John W. Francis, Mary Elizabeth Cutler Francis, Julia Ward Howe and others. Also includes 19 letters from Julia Ward Howe to Maria Elizabeth Cutler Francis.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1953-1954, under *53M-148-149. aSamuel Ward Letters to Various Correspondents, 1812-1863 (MS Am 2194). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839. 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aFrancis, John W.,erecipient.1 aFrancis, Maria Elizabeth Cutler,ecrecipient.1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richards;d1954;e53M-148, 53M-149.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1954.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research. Restrictions removed in June 2001.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2194zShelved in 1 box: bMS Am 2191-219401085ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004700108245005300155300002600208500007100234545004500305520010100350524010500451600004700556650003400603700004000637541009500677561004600772852002500818010164497-320061130121025.0061130i19211964vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612877773 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.),d1904-1965.00kLetters :bto George Anthony Palmer,f1921-1964. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aAutograph manuscript letters, signed at various places, 1921-1964. aBlackmur was a poet and literary critic. aConcerns his writing and submission of poems, and other poets and essayists, among other topics. aR.P. Blackmur Letters to George Anthony Palmer (MS Am 1880.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBlackmur, R. P.q(Richard P.),d1904-1965. 0aPoetry, Moderny20th century.1 aPalmer, George Anthony,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. George A. Palmer;b14 Ash St., Cambridge MA 02138;d1979 Mar. 7;e78M-13.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. George A. Palmer, 1979.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1880.102550ctcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003000110245004100140300002600181545025100207520083300458520018201291546001601473544005601489600002801545600003001573600004001603600002001643650004601663655002201709655004101731655004401772700005601816700003201872700005301904541011801957561004702075506004202122852002402164012049548-120120417082039.0090805i19521963mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn787843407 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aPhillips, Bradley,d1929-10aBradley Phillips papers,f1952-1963. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aBradley Sawyer Phillips (1929-1991) was an artist and a producer and was, for a short time before her death, the husband of poet and playwright V. R. Lang [Violet Ranney "Bunny" Lang]. He was associated with the Poets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.). aCollection primarily relates to Bradley Phillips' material collected in his capacity as producer of plays. The scrapbook includes a variety of items concerning these plays: Katherine Anne Porter's Pale horse, pale rider, produced by Bradley Phillips and David Wheeler in 1957, held at the Jan Hus Auditorium in New York City; the Phillips and Wheeler production of V.R. Lang's I too have lived in Arcadia, which played at the Pyramid Theatre and at Poetry Center of the 92nd Street YM-YWHA (New York, N.Y.), both in New York City in 1957; and productions by the Poets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.) especially concerning V. R. Lang's I too have lived in Arcadia [1952] and Fire Exit [1954]. Scrapbook contains: clippings, articles, programs, reviews, cast photographs, tickets, advertisements, posters, press releases, and reviews.8 aCollection also contains letters, telegrams and postcards from Katherine Anne Porter to Bradley Phillips, 1957-1963; and a note from Tennessee Williams to David Wheeler in 1957. aIn English. aSome Poets' Theatre material removed to MS Thr 833.10aLang, V.R.,d1924-1956.10aPhillips, Bradley,d1929-10aPorter, Katherine Anne,d1890-1980.10aWheeler, David. 0aTheaterxProduction and directionvDrama. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTheater programsy20th century.2aat 7aScrapbooksxTheatery20th century.2aat1 aPorter, Katherine Anne,d1890-1980,ecorrespondent.1 aWheeler, David,erecipient.1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aSayre Phillips Sheldon;b14 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139;d2009 July 29;e2009MT-9.5the1 aGift of Sayre Phillips Sheldon, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 84402083npcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100001900122245003800141300002700179351002900206545040100235520027800636546001600914555008700930555010401017524007701121600001901198655002801217655002201245655003801267655002001305655002201325700003301347700003301380700003601413541010201449561009301551506004201644852002301686007529023-520100318081009.0970717i17931890mau eng d0 aocn6121982671 aMAHV97A14 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aCoffin family.10aCoffin family papers,f1793-1890. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aThe Coffin family was based in Newbury and Newburyport, Mass. Charles Coffin (1741-1821) was a Harvard College graduate and physician in Newburyport, Mass. His son, Charles Coffin (1775-1853), also graduated from Harvard College. He became a Presbyterian minister and served as president of Greeneville College in Greeneville, Tenn. and as president of East Tennessee College, in Knoxville, Tenn. aFamily papers of the Coffin family especially those of: Charles Coffin (1741-1821), Charles Coffin (1775-1853), and James Ayer Coffin (1806-1871). Includes correspondence, financial records, holograph manuscripts, genealogies, notebooks, photographs, and printed materials. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003378 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-62. aCoffin Family Papers (MS Am 2046). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aCoffin family. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aCoffin, Charles,d1741-1821.1 aCoffin, Charles,d1775-1853.1 aCoffin, James Ayer,d1806-1871.0 cGift;aMrs. Clifford V. Brokaw, Jr., in memory of Nannie Coffin Inman Brown;d1987;e86M-62.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Clifford V. Brokaw, Jr., 1987, in memory of Nannie Coffin Inman Brown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 204602175ntcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245004200139300002700181530006200208545056300270520032600833555008701159524008101246546003001327600003101357610006901388651001701457651007101474655004501545541005701590561002501647506004201672506012301714852002401837012345481-620110419120401.0020710i18681905mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn631109459 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPlummer, Warren C.,d1834-10aWarren C. Plummer papers,f1868-1905. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aWarren C. Plummer was born in 1834 in Damariscotta Mills, Maine to Harrison Plummer and Caroline Crosby Plummer. About 1846 or 1847 his family moved to Bangor, Maine. He apprenticed as a printer with the Bangor Democrat and later was an officer with Company C of the 15th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the Civil War. He married Nancy C. Haines (1840-1878) in 1861 and they had two children: Evangeline P. Plummer Haines and Beulah Plummer Hoyt. Plummer was an editor with various newspapers in Maine, Pennsylvania, New York City, and South Dakota. aManuscript volume recording detailed information on Warren C. Plummer's life. It is unclear if Plummer wrote this himself or if the information was compiled by another. The text includes portions taken from Plummer's journal. Along with this volume were clippings relating to Plummer's life, a deed, and a partial letter.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02068 aWarren C. Plummer Papers (MS Am 2685). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aPlummer, Warren C.,d1834-10aUnited States.bArmy.bMaine Infantry Regiment, 15th (1862-1866) 0aBangor (Me.) 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 7aDeedszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cGift;aSource unknown;dDate unknown;e65M-223.5hou1 aSource unknown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 268503134ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110100003100123245003700154300002600191545081000217520092001027555008701947524011502034546004002149650004402189600003102233600003802264600004402302650002602346650003602372700004202408700006002450541006002510561002502570506004202595506012302637852002402760012361653-020110708191042.0020710i19111956mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn733998080 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre1 aNovello, Ivor,d1893-1951.10aIvor Novello papers,f1911-1956. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) aIvor Novello (1893-1951) was born in Cardiff, Wales, to David Davies and Clare Novello Davies, a vocal teacher. Musically active as a child, he learned songs from his mother’s many famous clients and showed an early talent for writing songs, having his first work published at age 15. He moved to London in 1913, and quickly became a favorite of Sir Edward Marsh, a well-known patron of the arts. He spent the first several years of his career working as a composer, but eventually added acting, both stage and film, to his repertoire. In the 1930s he composed and wrote a number of successful musicals, often partnering with Christopher Hassall. His work was immensely popular and his circle of friends included many famous film and stage actors, managers, and producers. Novello died at the age of 58. aThe papers consist mostly of manuscript and typescript letters, with some manuscript and typescript compositions; including two letters in the hand of Ivor Novello. The bulk of the letters are to Ivor Novello from friends and fans, especially fellow theater performers, concerning Novello's shows and social events. The correspondence of Edward Marsh, Novello's long-time patron, includes letters concerning Novello's assignment to do performance propaganda for England in Stockholm and general personal letters which often mention Novello. Christopher Hassall's correspondence is chiefly about his inheritance from the Novello estate and royalties on work created with Novello. The compositions are largely about Novello, except for one piece, in French, about John Hassall. The papers also include further material about Novello's estate, including a list of borrowed artwork and notes from a meeting of trustees.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02177 aIvor Novello Papers, 1911-1956 (MS Thr 695). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English with one item in French. 0aTheaterzEnglandzLondony20th century.10aNovello, Ivor,d1893-1951.10aHassall, Christopher,d1912-1963.10aMarsh, Edward Howard,cSir,d1872-1953. 0aCopyrightxRoyalties. 0aEstate planningzGreat Britain.1 aHassell, Christopher,ecorrespondent.1 aMarsh, Edward Howard,cSir,d1872-1953,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aDavid Drummond;d1998;e2003MT-170 (b).5the1 aPurchase, 1998.5the1 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 69502373ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245004200140300002700182351018500209545039200394520056300786555008701349524009201436546001601528600003201544650002501576610004401601600002801645600002401673655002201697700002801719700002401747740003301771541010001804561005001904506004601954852002302000012591515-220121206114722.0020710i19671977mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn820632798 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aLeary, Timothy,d1920-1996.10aTimothy Leary papers,f1967-ca. 1977. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Composition; II. Letters to Timothy Leary; III. Letters from Timothy Leary; IV. Correspondence of others; V. Documents; and VI. Photographs. aTimothy Leary (1920-1996) was an American psychologist and author, well-known for his experiments on the use of psychodelic drugs. In January 1970, Leary was sentenced to 20 years in a California state prison. In September of that year, with the help of the Weatherman, Leary escaped from prison and fled the country on a fake passport. He was apprehended and returned to prison in 1973. aThis collection contains a composition written by Timothy Leary during his initial time in prison and letters to and from Leary while in prison and after his escape from prison. The correspondence concerns family matters, publishing issues, and some legal matters and includes some letters to or from Leary's wives, Rosemary Woodruff and Joanna Harcourt-Smith. Some envelopes show marks of having been inspected by prison officials. Also in the collection are some documents from Leary's time in prison and photographs of Leary, Woodruff, and Harcourt-Smith.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02384 aTimothy Leary Papers, 1967-ca. 1977 (MS Am 2880). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLeary, Timothy,d1920-1996. 0aAmerican literature.10aCalifornia.bDepartment of Corrections.10aHarcourt-Smith, Joanna.10aWoodruff, Rosemary. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aHarcourt-Smith, Joanna.1 aWoodruff, Rosemary.02aConfessions of a hope fiend.0 cPurchase;aCharles Apfelbaum;baddress;d1992 July 29;e92M-23;hAmy Lowell Fund ($3,510).5hou1 aPurchase with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1992.5hou1 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 288003788nkcaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100006200110245008500172246003100257300002700288351008700315545048900402520044100891520050801332555008701840524014801927546002702075600006202102600005402164600004402218600005602262600006402318600004302382600006302425600005302488600004002541600003902581600003802620610003902658610005402697650004202751650004402793655004202837655004302879655003502922655004202957655004302999655004403042656001703086541008803103561005603191852002303247012635573-820110114191915.0020710s1768 mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn693666943 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1778.10aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch portraits of actors and actresses,fca. 1760-1778.13aJean Louis Fesch drawings. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged as originally numbered in case. A few at end were found loose in folders. aFäsch was a Swiss painter, illustrator, miniaturist, and portraitist, born in Basel ca. 1738 and died in Paris in 1778. Fäsch studied law but soon became a painter. He later moved to Paris and also completed portraits in London. He was known under a number of names including: Jean Louis Fesch and Johann Ludwig Wernhard Faesch, as well as de Fesch, Foech, and Foesch. Fäsch is the first artist to be said with certainty to have drawn his subjects directly from actual performance. a14 watercolor and graphite miniature drawings on paper or vellum. Some include additional mediums added, such as gold paint and possibly varnish. All are unsigned and have no location specified on the items, but all are from performances at theaters in Paris or London. Each drawing is pasted onto another sheet of paper. All include manuscript annotations on recto and verso in variant hands, some are on drawing itself, some on mount.8 aSubjects of the drawings are actors in various roles from the Comédie-Française, Comédie-Italienne (Paris, France), and others. Full name of actor is supplied. Includes portraits of: Carlo Antonio Bertinazzo, Claire Joséphe Hippolyte Legris de Latude Clairon, Francoise-Marie-Jeanne-Elisabeth Gaultier Drouin, Mlle (Marie-Françoise) Dumesnil, David Garrick, Marie-Thérèse Villette Laruette, Barthélemy Larochelle, Henri Louis Cain Lekain, François René Molé, and Pierre Louis Dubus Préville.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02131 aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch Portraits of Actors and Actresses (MS Thr 644). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French and English.10aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1773.10aBertinazzo, Carlo Antonio,d1713-1783vPortraits.10aClairon,cMlle.,d1723-1803vPortraits.10aDrouin, Françoise Gaultier,d1720-1803vPortraits.10aDumesnil,cMlleq(Marie-Françoise),d1713-1803vPortraits.10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779vPortraits.10aLaruette, Marie-Thérèse Villette,d1744-1837vPortraits.10aLekain, Henri Louis Cain,d1728-1778vPortraits.10aLarochelle, BarthélemyvPortraits.10aMolé, François RenévPortraits.10aPréville,d1721-1799vPortraits.20aComédie-Françaisey18th century.20aComédie-Italienne (Paris, France)y18th century. 0aTheaterzFrancezParisy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandzLondony18th century. 7aDrawings.zFrancey18th century.2aat 7aDrawings.zEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aMiniaturesy18th century.2aat 7aPortraitszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aPortraitszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aWatercolorszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aActors.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number; recat. from Thr 410.20.5.5the1 aSource unknown; recataloged from Thr 410.20.5.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 64403783nkcaa2200505 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110100006200123245008000185300002700265351015500292545048900447520063300936520044701569555008702016524011502103546002702218600003902245600007302284600004302357600003802400600005402438600003602492600003202528600003202560600004302592600006302635600005302698610003902751610005402790650004202844650003602886655004202922655004102964655003503005655004303040655004203083541006203125561002503187506004203212852002303254012635662-920110114191922.0020710i17601778mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn693666954 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT afreaeng1 aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1778.10aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch volumes of portrait drawings,fca. 1760-1778. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized by bound volume into the following series: I. Volume I; II. Volume II; III. Volume III; IV. Volume IV; V. Volume V; and VI. Volume bindings. aFäsch was a Swiss painter, illustrator, miniaturist, and portraitist, born in Basel ca. 1738 and died in Paris in 1778. Fäsch studied law but soon became a painter. He later moved to Paris and also completed portraits in London. He was known under a number of names including: Jean Louis Fesch and Johann Ludwig Wernhard Faesch, as well as de Fesch, Foech, and Foesch. Fäsch is the first artist to be said with certainty to have drawn his subjects directly from actual performance. a32 miniature drawings in graphite and watercolor. Some include additional mediums added, such as gold paint, gouache, and possibly varnish. All images are drawn on vellum, and mounted on board. Many drawings have an attached title page and tissue paper barrier. Some are signed, most are not. Locations are not specified on drawings but all are are from performances at theaters in Paris or London. Most items have manuscript annotations on image itself and/or on title page. Drawings were found already removed from bindings at time of cataloging; empty leather bindings have been retained and are listed at end of finding aid.8 aSubjects of the drawings are actors and actresses in various roles from the Comédie-Française, Comédie-Italienne (Paris, France), and the Drury Lane Theatre (London). Full name of actor is supplied when known. Collection includes portraits of: François Augé, Bellecour, Carlo Antonio Bertinazzo, Brizard, Joseph Caillot, Mlle. Doligny, David Garrick, Marie-Thérèse Villette Laruette, Henri Louis Cain Lekain, and François René Molé.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02132 aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch Volumes of Portrait Drawings (MS Thr 645). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French and English.10aMolé, François RenévPortraits.10aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1773vPortraits.10aAuge, Francois,d1733-1783vPortraits.10aBellecour,d1725-1778vPortraits.10aBertinazzo, Carlo Antonio,d1713-1783vPortraits.10aBrizard,d1721-1791vPortraits.10aCaillot, JosephvPortraits.10aDoligny,cMlle.vPortraits.10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779vPortraits.10aLaruette, Marie-Thérèse Villette,d1744-1837vPortraits.10aLekain, Henri Louis Cain,d1728-1778vPortraits.20aComédie-Françaisey18th century.20aComédie-Italienne (Paris, France)y18th century. 0aTheaterzFrancezParisy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy18th century. 7aDrawingszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aDrawingszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aMiniaturesy18th century.2aat 7aPortraitszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aPortraitszFrancey18th century.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 64501891ntm a2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245009800110300002700208520039700235520009000632520011600722524008200838546001600920600004100936600005000977600003601027610003301063650005001096655002001146655002201166700004501188700005001233710003301283541006201316561003401378506011701412852002401529012671523-820110204192503.0020710i18941895mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn700707090 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aCollection concerning "Trilby" performed at the Park Theatre, Boston (Mass.),f1895 April 10. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aPrinted volume of Trilby, a novel by George Du Maurier...with illustrations by the author. New York, Harper & brothers, 1894. Volume includes pasted in photograph and photomechanical prints of actors and actresses, with manuscript annotations, concerning original performance of Trilby at the Park Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts on April 10, 1895. Includes manuscript list of original cast.8 aDramatized by Paul Meredith Potter and presented by Albert Marshman Palmer's Company.8 aLoose material removed to folder, inlcuding additional clippings and photomechanical prints relating to Trilby. aMS Thr 650. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPalmer, Albert Marshman,d1838-1905.10aPotter, Paul M.q(Paul Meredith),d1853-1921.10aDu Maurier, George,d1834-1896.20aPark Theatre (Boston, Mass.) 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBostony19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aDu Maurier, George,d1834-1896.tTrilby.1 aPotter, Paul M.q(Paul Meredith),d1853-1921.2 aPark Theatre (Boston, Mass.)0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the1 aThis item is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 65002890nkcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100006200110245007500172246003100247300002700278351003800305545048900343520040800832520021701240555008701457524014701544546001501691600006201706610003901768610005401807610005301861650004201914655004201956655003501998655004202033655004402075656001702119541025202136561005102388506004202439852002302481012631960-X20110114191804.0020710s1768 mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn691916557 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1778.10aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch drawings of actors and actresses,f1768.13aJean Louis Fesch drawings. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aFäsch was a Swiss painter, illustrator, miniaturist, and portraitist, born in Basel ca. 1738 and died in Paris in 1778. Fäsch studied law but soon became a painter. He later moved to Paris and also completed portraits in London. He was known under a number of names including: Jean Louis Fesch and Johann Ludwig Wernhard Faesch, as well as de Fesch, Foech, and Foesch. Fäsch is the first artist to be said with certainty to have drawn his subjects directly from actual performance. a27 watercolor and graphite miniature drawings on vellum from 1768. Some appear to also include gouache and varnish. All are unsigned and have no location specified on the items, but all are from performances at theaters in Paris, France. Each drawing is pasted onto a board, some are matted. All include manuscript labels (on vellum) either pasted onto verso of board or pasted onto separate pressboard.8 aSubjects of the drawings are actors and actresses in various roles from the Comédie-Française, Comédie-Italienne (Paris, France), and Théâtre-Italien (Paris, France). Full name of actor is supplied if known.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02128 aJohann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch Drawings of Actors and Actresses (MS Thr 641). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French.10aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1773.20aComédie-Françaisey18th century.20aComédie-Italienne (Paris, France)y18th century.20aThéâtre-Italien (Paris, France)y18th century. 0aTheaterzFrancezParisy18th century. 7aDrawings.zFrancey18th century.2aat 7aMiniaturesy18th century.2aat 7aPortraitszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aWatercolorszFrancey18th century.2aat 7aActors.2aat0 cPurchase;aThomas Agnew & Sons, Ltd.; and William H. Schab Gallery, Inc.;b43 Old Bond Street, London WIX 4BA, England; and 37 West 57th Street, New York, New York 10019;d1976 July 13; and November 15;e76M-67;hF. E. Chase fund ($2,207.00).5the1 aPurchase with the F. E. Chase fund, 1976.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 64101974ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106100001800129245005200147300002700199351016800226545014700394520040300541555008700944524011901031546001601150600001801166650003101184655002201215655003401237655002901271655002701300541007001327561005001397506004201447506012301489852002401612012602120-120101029092513.0k|||||||||||||||||020710i18911922mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn680433646 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs3 aEmery family.10aEmery family vaudeville collection,f1891-1922. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Clippings; II. Photographs; III. Letterhead samples and tickets; IV. Letters and documents; V. Playbills; and VI. Programs. aThe Emerys were a family of entertainers who performed in vaudeville shows in the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. aCollection includes: business cards, clippings, photographs, letterhead samples and ticket stubs, letters and documents, and playbills and programs. Includes materials on performers Emery Coulter, Harry Emery, Jay Emery, Mae Emery, Ray Emery, the Emery Brothers, the Emerys, Jay Emery and Harry Patzig, and many others. Also includes items about vaudeville that are not related to the Emery family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02115 aEmery Family Vaudeville Collection (MS Thr 625). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aEmery family. 0aVaudevillezUnited States. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybillsy20th century.2aat 7aPlaybillsy19th century. 7aTheater programs.2aat0 cPurchase;d1984 May;eno accession number;hBilly Rose fund.5the1 aPurchase with the Billy Rose fund, 1984.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 62502745ntcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004900110245006300159300002700222545030400249520033300553520017100886555008701057524013001144546001601274600003701290650002801327650003101355650004301386656002101429700004801450700006001498700003501558700003501593700005601628700005001684700004701734710009201781541013101873561014202004506012302146506004202269852002402311012730995-020120830105430.0020710i18981944mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aJackson, Herbert I.,d1870-1955,erecipient.10aTheatrical letters sent to Herbert I. Jackson,f1898-1944. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aHerbert I. Jackson (1870-1955) was a Boston, Massachusetts collector of theatrical materials. His father was Charles E. Jackson and mother was Caroline A. Kerman. He was married on October 6, 1898 to Grace M. Greenough Jackson and they had a child, Emily C. Jackson. They lived in Hyde Park, Boston. aLetters to Herbert I. Jackson from actresses, actors and other theatrically-related persons. Some letters are responses to requests from Jackson for autographs, many include information about current theatrical productions. Most, but not all letters are from Boston-based persons. Also includes 1 draft of a letter from Jackson.8 aCorrespondents include Edith Barrett, Charles Townsend Copeland, Henry Jewett, Anna Proctor, Cornelia Otis Skinner, Maud Dubin Skinner, Otis Skinner, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02058 aTheatrical Letters Sent to Herbert I. Jackson (MS Thr 671). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJackson, Herbert I.,d1870-1955. 0aActorsvCorrespondence. 0aActressesvCorrespondence. 0aTheaterzBoston (Mass.)y20th century. 7aCollectors.2aat1 aBarrett, Edith,d1906-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aCopeland, Charles Townsend,d1860-1952,ecorrespondent.1 aJewett, Henry,ecorrespondent.1 aProctor, Anna,ecorrespondent.1 aSkinner, Cornelia Otis,d1901-1979,ecorrespondent.1 aSkinner, Maud Durbin,d-1936,ecorrespondent.1 aSkinner, Otis,d1858-1942,ecorrespondent.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of the Boston Theatre (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Boston Theatre (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 67103227ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002900110245007900139300002700218351013000245545116900375520034001544524012501884510010402009546002602113555008702139600004402226600004502270600002902315650004102344655004602385655004302431656002402474541013902498561005202637506004102689506012302730852002402853009826455-920110506190958.0051206i18601992mau ||||||eng|d0 aocn715066529 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aFarjeon, Joan Jefferson.10aJoan Jefferson Farjeon papers,f1860-1992, (inclusive),g1950-1992 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Photographs; III. Programs; IV. Clippings; and V. Other material. aJoan Frances Farjeon was born in 1913 in London. As an adolescent she attended the Lindores School in Bexhill-on-Sea and the Westminster School of Art. In 1939 she illustrated a collection of plays called Granny Gray, for her aunt, Eleanor Farjeon. She also designed the sets and costumes for all the plays by her friend, Nicholas Stuart Gray throughout her career. In the 1950s she designed sets and costumes at the Arts Theatre in Cambridge (England), the Pitlochry Festival and did many set designs in London including Agatha Christie's The Hollow (Fortune, 1951) and Verdict (Strand, 1958), Vernon Sylvaine's comedy starring Robertson Hare, Will Any Gentleman? (Strand, 1950), and Lock Up Your Daughters! (Mermaid, 1959). Sometime after 1955, she acted as amanuensis, officially titled "manager", for the TV cooks Johnnie and Fanny Cradock, suffered severe shock and burns when there was an explosion on the Cradocks' boat in Monte Carlo. In 1968 she became resident designer at the Webber Douglas School of Dramatic Art, creating memorable sets for productions in the tiny Chanticleer Theatre into the 1990s. She died in Northwood, Middlesex on 2006 August 8. aIncludes: letters written by various British actors to Joan Jefferson Farjeon; photographs of her sets and a portrait photograph of her aunt, Eleanor Farjeon; programs from various productions and theaters including the Chanticleer Theatre at the Webber Douglas School of Dramatic Arts; clippings sorted by subject; and other material. aJoan Jefferson Farjeon Papers, 1860-1992 (MS Thr 666). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.3 aHarvey, Anne. "Joan Jefferson Farjeon: Inventive scenic designer." The Independent. August 14 2006. aMaterials in English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0215210aWebber Douglas School of Dramatic Arts.10aFarjeon, Eleanor,d1881-1965vPortraits.10aFarjeon, Joan Jefferson. 0aTheatersxstage-setting and scenery. 7aPhotographsy20th century.zEngland.2aat 7aProgramsy20th century.zEngland.2aat 7aScenographers.2aat0 cPurchase;aRichard M. Ford Ltd.;b70 Chaucer Road, London, W3 6DP, UK;d2005 October 12;e2005MT-37;h($527.40) F. E. Chase fund.5the1 aPurchased with the F. E. Chase Fund, 2005.5the0 aCollection is open for research5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 66600886nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245004700121300002700168351003100195520007900226524012500305546002800430650002600458655001900484655002200503541006200525561003400587852002300621012810424-420110621111547.0020710i19301973mau||| | |||||||rus|d0 aocn733095085 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 arusaeng00aRussian circus collection,fca. 1930-1973. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aPrimarily photographs, but also a few programs and other printed material. aRussian Circus Collection, ca. 1930-1973 (MS Thr 691). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn Russian and English. 0aCircuszSoviet Union. 7aPrograms.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 69101867nacaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245004100123300002700164351029200191545011700483520017300600555008700773524011900860546005400979600003201033610004101065610003001106610002901136650002901165650002701194650001401221650001701235655003801252655002101290655002001311541006201331561003401393506004201427852002401469012821973-420130116142947.0020710i18271895mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn741450154 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengager00aWaxworks advertisements,f1827-1895. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: 1. Madame Tussaud and Sons' Exhibition; 2. Meech's Royal Exhibition (London, England); 3. Springthorpe / Major's 1843 waxworks competition, in Hull; 4. Waxworks in Great Britain (general folder); and 5. Waxworks in the United States (general folder). aA wax museum (or waxworks) contains a collection of wax sculptures representing famous people in lifelike poses. aIncludes advertisements in various formats, including broadsides (or playbills), clippings, and posters. Items are primarily British, but also a few of American origin.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02183 aWaxworks Advertisements, 1827-1895 (MS Thr 699). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPrimarily in English; a few in French and German.10aTussaud, Marie,d1761-1850.20aMadame Tussaud and Sons' Exhibition.20aMeech's Royal Exhibition.20aSpringthorpe's Waxworks. 0aCuriosities and wonders. 0aTraveling exhibitions. 0aWaxworks. 0aWax figures. 7aAdvertisementsxWaxworks.2rbgenr 7aBroadsides.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 69901847nkcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245004700123300002700170351012200197545023300319520019800552555008700750524012500837546002700962600002900989600005001018600003201068650001501100650001001115655002001125655002201145655002101167655002201188541005201210561003401262506004201296506012301338852002401461012811389-820110708193525.0020710i18181960mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn733095973 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre00aPantomime and mime collection,f1818-1960. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Images of pantomime and mime; and II. Printed material on pantomime and mime. aPantomime is a type of musical-comedy theatrical production traditionally found in the United Kingdom. Mime artists are performers who use "miming," which is the acting out of a story through body motions, without use of speech. aCollection includes lithographs, engravings, photographs, photomechanical prints, and clippings. Performers depicted include Jean Gaspard Deburau, Marcel Marceau, Ravel family, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02174 aPantomime and Mime Collection, 1818-1960 (MS Thr 692). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and French.30aRavel familyvPortraits.10aDeburau, Jean Gaspard,d1796-1846vPortraits.10aMarceau, MarcelvPortraits. 0aPantomime. 0aMime. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aEngravings.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat0 cNo source;dno date;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 69202500ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245007100129300002700200545058400227520033900811520023901150520010001389520002901489520003001518520002901548500011201577524010601689546001601795600002101811650003501832655005401867655002601921655003801947541010501985561004702090852002502137012838781-520110728104954.0020710i19461952mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn743411393 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWard, Lauriston.10aLauriston Ward notebooks on "Imaginative fiction,"fca. 1946-1952. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aLauriston Ward (1882-1960) received his BA from Harvard College in 1903 and his AM from Harvard University in 1934. Ward was Curator of Asiatic Archaeology at Harvard from 1937-1960 and served as President and Founder of the Council for World Archaeology from 1953-1960 and Chairman of the American School of Prehistoric Research from 1954-1960. Ward became one of the "keepers" of the science fiction books donated to Harvard College. Along with G. William Cottrell, they added to the collection from their personal libraries and by seeking out donors and sellers for additions. aFour autograph manuscript loose-leaf notebooks (20 x 13 cm.) including lists of science fiction books. Some entries were books included in Ward's personal library, some included in the Harvard Science Fiction collection, and others were not yet obtained. Entries include extensive annotations and include occasional printed clippings.8 aEntire set titled: Imaginative fiction. Including sceince fiction, time & space stories, Superman theme, utopias, etc, etc. Volumes contained calendars for the years: 1949-1950 (I); 1946-1947 (II); 1948-1949 (III); and 1951-1952 (IV).8 aVolume I: A. Bibliographies, Collections, Science Fiction magazines, etc.; B. Other literature.8 aVolume II: Authors, A-G.8 aVolume III: Authors, H-Q.8 aVolume IV: Authors, R-Z. aTitle of entire set and sub-titles of volumes were assigned by Ward, taken from title pages of each volume. aLauriston Ward Notebooks on "Imaginative Fiction" (MS Am 2741). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWard, Lauriston. 0aScience fictionvBibliography. 7aBibliographieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aScience fiction.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local0 cGift;aLauriston Ward;dno date;eno accession number; removed from Science Fiction collection.5hou1 aGift of Lauriston Ward, date unknown.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 274102459ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245004300108300002700151351004800178545046400226520036600690555008701056524009401143546002701237544025301264650002901517600004101546650003501587650001601622655001701638655001601655655001801671655001601689700005601705700004101761541014201802561008801944506004202032852002302074012987062-520120703083403.0020710i17771940mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn766537338 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aSong and ballad collection,f1777-1940 a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author or title. aGeorge Lyman Kittredge was born in Boston in 1860 and received his Harvard A.B. in 1882. He became Francis James Child's successor to the Harvard Boylston Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory and later was appointed Harvard's first Gurney Professor of English (1917). Kittredge was a noted authority on the English language, Shakespeare, and Chaucer, and he also continued scholarship in the field pioneered by Child - the study of folklore and folk history. aPrimarily papers for ballad and folk song studies. Papers were mostly assembled by Harvard professor George Lyman Kittredge. Includes: manuscript texts and manuscript transcripts of ballads and songs; manuscript music of ballads and songs; poems and verses; letters to Kittredge concerning ballad manuscripts; and letters giving Kittredge permission to publish.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02235 aSong and Ballad Collection, 1777-1940 (MS Am 2784). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German. aThere is related material in the George Lyman Kittredge Papers at the Harvard University Archives, at the Child Memorial Library, Harvard, as well as additional papers at Houghton on both Kittredge and Child as well as other ballad and song papers. 0aBallads, EnglishvTexts.10aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941. 0aBallads, United StatesxTexts. 0aFolk songs. 7aScores.2aat 7aSongs.2aat 7aBallads.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896,eassociated name.1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.0 cSource unknown;afound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5hou1 aFound with: MS Storage 281. Collection materials assembled by Carolyn Jakeman.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 278402565nkcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007800110300002700188351021300215545038700428520038900815555008701204524015201291546001601443600005201459600003401511650004201545650003601587655003301623655002001656710009401676700002001770541023601790561014802026506004202174852002302216013002613-120121212144402.0020710i18802000mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn768584872 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan photographic postcards,fca. 1880-2000. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bOrganized into the following series: I. Portrait photographic postcards by subject name; II. Photographic postcards by opera title; III. Photographic postcards by image title; and IV. Anthony Dyson postcards. aArthur Sullivan (1842-1900) was an English composer and conductor. W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert (1836-1911) was a English dramatist and librettist. They formed a Victorian-era theatrical partnership, collaborating on fourteen comic operas between 1871 and 1896, of which H. M. S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado, or, The town of Titipu are among the best known. aIncludes photographic postcard portrait images of actors and actresses in costumes in G & S productions and in street clothes; images of scenes with multiple actors from various productions of G & S; images of places related to G & S; and multiple copies of 3 postcard images of Anthony Dyson's designs for The Mikado at St. Francis' Church Choir & Friends. Some postcards are signed.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02252 aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan Photographic Postcards, 1880-2000 (MS Thr 752). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGilbert, W. S.q(William Schwenck),d1836-1911.10aSullivan, Arthur,d1842-1900. 0aTheaterzGreat Britainy19th century. 0aMusical theaterzGreat Britain. 7aPhotographic postcards.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aDyson, Anthony.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 75202685nkcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004900110300002600159351005200185545035100237520031600588555008700904524012700991546004101118600004201159600004201201600004901243600004001292600004701332600005101379600006001430610003701490650001201527650003601539655002201575655003001597655004601627655002001673710009801693506012301791506004201914541013101956561015202087852002402239013109571-420120302093726.0020710i18871888mau||| ||||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT00aPhotographs of Sir Henry Irving,f1887-1888. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by photographic studio. aSir Henry Irving (1838-1905) was a British stage actor and theater manager. Irving rose to fame in the 1870s with roles in Two roses, The bells, and Hamlet, among others. Irving became manager of the Lyceum Theatre (London, England) in 1878 after the death of Hezekiah Linthicum Bateman and the theatre remained under his management for 23 years. aThis collection contains portraits and theatrical photographs of 19th century British actor Sir Henry Irving. Notable theatrical productions include Becket, Henry VIII, The bells, and Pickwick. Most photographs are cabinet photographs, some are cartes-de-visite (card photographs). Many photographs are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02285 aPhotographs of Sir Henry Irving, 1887-1888 (MS Thr 823). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aAlbery, James,d1838-1889.tPickwick.10aAlbery, James.d1838-1889tTwo roses.10aIrving, Henry,cSir,d1838-1905.vPortraits.10aLewis, Leopold,d-1890.tThe bells.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tHamlet.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tHenry VIII.10aTennyson, Alfred Tennyson,cBaron,d1809-1892.tBecket.20aLyceum Theatre (London, England) 0aActors. 0aTheaterxEnglandy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 82301983ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003900121245003500160300002700195351002900222545035000251520024300601555008700844555011300931524010601044600003901150650003501189655001601224700004601240700005101286700005001337700005801387541010101445561005301546852005801599009506186-X20041217162302.0041213i18401886mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793809341 aMAHV04A95 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.00kAdditional papers,f1840-1886. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited the Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, the North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886), succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aContains letters from Lowell to Ralph Waldo Emerson and Mabel Lowell Burnett, as well as autograph manuscript poems by Lowell in loose sheets and in a notebook. Also includes letters to Lowell from Henry Adams and John Greenleaf Whittier.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-119-125. aJames Russell Lowell Additional Papers, 1840-1886 (MS Am 2357). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoems.2aat1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aBurnett, Mabel Lowell,d1847-1898,erecipient.1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,erecipient.1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892,ecorrespondent. cDeposit;aMrs. Stanley Cunningham;b3 Cambridge St., Salem, MA;d1 Feb. 1956;e55M-119-125.5hou aDeposited by Mrs. Stanley Cunningham, 1956.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2357zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2356-235702769ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003600107245010800143300002700251351015200278545036900430545037800799520023201177555008701409524015801496546001601654600003101670610005601701611010701757651005401864655002701918655002001945655002201965655001701987710005602004541010202060561004402162506004202206506012302248852002402371004020087-620120706113725.0940310i19371938mau 000 0 eng d0 aocm77860830 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSalvemini, Gaetano,d1873-1957.10aGaetano Salvemini papers concerning the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky,f1937-1938. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Papers from the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky; and III. Clippings. aGaetano Salvemini (1873-1957) was an Italian anti-Fascist politician, historian, and writer. In 1934, Harvard University awarded Salvemini the Lauro de Bosis chair in the history of Italian civilization. During this period, he led the American anti-Fascist movement and founded the Mazzini Society in New York in 1939. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1940. aThe American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky was a pseudo-judicial process set up by American Trotskyists as a front organization following the first of the Moscow trials. It was composed of historians, sociologists, journalists, authors, and other notable figures, including Edmund Wilson, Suzanne LaFollette, John Dos Passos, Gaetano Salvemini, and many others. aIncludes correspondence with Gaetano Salvemini while he was a lecturer at Harvard University, circular letters, newsletters, a poster, and clippings, relating to the defense of Leon Trotsky in connection with the Moscow trials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02331 aGaetano Salvemini Papers Concerning the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky, 1937-1938 (MS Am 2809). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aTrotsky, Leon,d1879-1940.20aAmerican Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky.20aCommission of Inquiry into the Charges Made Against Leon Trotsky in the Moscow Trials, New York, 1937. 0aSoviet UnionxPolitics and governmenty1917-1936. 7aCircular letters.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aNewsletters.2aat 7aPoster.2aat2 aAmerican Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky.0 cTransfer;aWidener Library;ddate unknown;erecataloged from Slav 1729.37.14*f.hand fund $.5hou1 aRecataloged from Slav 1729.37.14*.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 280901890nkcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110002400108245006100132300002700193351009600220545031400316520036600630555008700996524011101083546001601194610002401210655005301234655006501287655001901352700003801371541006601409561004701475506004201522852002401564013335033-920120827111550.0020710i18821887mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn808232090 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aTicknor and Fields.10aTicknor and Fields designs for publications,f1882-1887. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Drawings by title; and II. Drawings without titles. aTicknor and Fields (1854-1889) was an American publishing company based in Boston, Massachusetts. Other company names used included: James R. Osgood & Co., Ticknor & Company, Ticknor & Fields, Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, Fields, Osgood & Co., Houghton, Osgood, and Co., and later Houghton, Mifflin and Company. aDrawings are primarily for covers and spines of books published by Ticknor and Fields, but also include some for sheet music and serials. Media includes ink, graphite, watercolor, and gilt paint. One cover is a complete painting. Most drawings do not indicate the artist, but some items are by Henry Balon?, Harley, J. A. Schweinfurth?, and Sidney Lawton Smith.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02348 aTicknor and Fields Designs for Publications, 1882-1887 (MS Am 2822). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aTicknor and Fields. 7aBook coverszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aBook designers' mock-ups (Publishing)zUnited States.2rbpub 7aDrawings.2aat1 aSmith, Sidney Lawton,d1845-1929.0 cGift;aGoodspeed's Book Store;bBoston;d1949;e50M-586.5hou1 aGift of Goodspeed's Book Store, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 282202437nkcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245006500121300002700186351002900213545029100242520025300533520049800786555008701284524011501371546002701486600005001513600005501563600003801618600001901656600003001675600002201705655002901727700001901756700002701775700002201802541007101824561005301895506004201948852007301990013337890-X20120828091713.0020710i17891888mau||| | |||||||ger|d0 aocn808960160 aMH-HedacscMH-H aengager00aRamberger and Hertzog family birth certificates,f1789-1888. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aJacob Ramberger (b. 1806) was the direct ancestor of American President Dwight David Eisenhower, Senator John Bricker, and Walter Sylvester Hertzog (b. 1881). Walter Sylvester Hertzog (b. 1881; Harvard AB 1905) was an educator, radio lecturer, and motion picture producer in California. aIncludes the baptismal and birth certificate of Jacob Ramberger (born June 19, 1806 in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania) which is said to be (by the donor) the earliest Eisenhower family document. This document was written and decorated by Karl Münch.8 aAlso includes 8 other Pennsylvania German illustrated baptismal and birth certificates of the Hertzog family dating from 1789-1888. The verso of each document includes extensive manuscript annotations in English by Walter Sylvester Hertzog. Documents are for: Margaret Conrad (b. 1810), Sadie Roselle Dinger (b.1886), Adam Herb (b. 1789), Allen Isiah Hertzog (b. 1888), Fayetta von Schminkl Hertzog (b. 1852), Steven Hertzog (b. 1814), Nicolaus Herzog (b. 1789), and Magdalena Spatz (b. 1792).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02352 aRamberger and Hertzog Family Birth Certificates, 1789-1888 (MS Am 2824). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn German and English.10aBricker, John W.q(John William),d1893-1986.10aEisenhower, Dwight D.q(Dwight David),d1890-1969.10aHertzog, Walter Sylvester,d1881-30aHerzog family.10aRamberger, Jacob,d1806--30aRumbarger family. 7aBirth certificates.2aat3 aHerzog family.1 aMünch, Karl,eartist.3 aRumbarger family.0 cGift;aDr. Walter Sylvester Hertzog;d1957 March 4;e56M-187.5hou1 aGift of Dr. Walter Sylvester Hertzog, 1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 2824zShelved together: pfMS Am 2817, 2819-2821, 282401912cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245004400160300002700204351014300231545005700374520035400431555008700785555010900872524010100981546001601082600003801098650004001136655002001176655002401196655003801220656002401258700003201282541012701314561004901441506004201490852003001532000601788-620130107104821.0851231i18601928mau eng d0 aocn1223726331 aMAHV85A70 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBlood, Benjamin Paul,d1832-1919.10aBenjamin Paul Blood papers,f1860-1928. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1452: Letters to Benjamin Paul Blood; and II. MS Am 1452.1: Correspondence and compositions. aBlood was an American philosopher, mystic, and poet. aContains letters, mostly to Blood, often in response to his writings; a few letters and typescript manuscripts by him; a galley proof of an article by William James, A Pluralistic Mystic, about Blood; and many clippings of Blood's articles, interviews, poems, and letters to the editor that appeared in local newspapers in his native Amsterdam, N.Y.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-269. aBenjamin Paul Blood Papers, 1860-1928 (MS Am 1452-1452.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBlood, Benjamin Paul,d1832-1919. 0aPhilosophy, Americany19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhilosophers.2lcsh1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.0 cGift;aHorace Meyer Kallen;b66 W. 12th St., New York 11, New York;d1955 May 24, 1954 November 8;e55M-269, 55M-299.5hou1 aGift of Horace Meyer Kallen, 1954-1955.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1452-1452.101861cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005600123245007100179300002700250351003000277545015200307520029500459530006200754524012200816555008700938555010901025546001601134600005601150650003301206650002501239656002101264700005301285541008001338561003901418506004201457852002401499000602338-X20130917164626.0860908i19191930mau eng d0 aocn1225057661 aMAHV86A519 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFortescue, J. W.q(John William),cSir,d1859-1933.10aSir J. W. Fortescue letters to Edgar Huidekoper Wells,f1919-1930. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aFortescue was an English military historian. He served as librarian at Windsor Castle from 1905 to 1926. Wells was a rare book dealer and educator. aConsists of 38 letters from Fortescue to Wells about personal matters, current world affairs, as well as business dealings for the Royal Library concerning purchase and sale of rare materials. Also includes many envelopes and an essay by Fortescue on the Holbein drawings at Windsor Castle. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aSir J. W. Fortescue Letters to Edgar Huidekoper Wells, 1919-1930 (MS Eng 1200). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011668 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accession Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-216, 217. aIn English.10aFortescue, J. W.q(John William),cSir,d1859-1933. 0aBooksellers and bookselling. 0aHistorianszEngland. 7aLibrarians.2aat10aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938,erecipient.0 cGift;aWells, Edgar H.;d1945 February 20;e45M-216; 45M-217.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Edgar H. Wells, 1945.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 120002323ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245006800156300002700224351003000251545019700281520047700478555008700955555010901042524011801151546001601269600004301285600003301328600002901361600003501390651005801425650001601483650004301499651004901542651004801591656002201639700005501661541007901716561006501795506004201860852002301902008988066-820120813083121.0021009i18391873mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806015651 aMAHV02-A134 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aCharles Sumner letters to George Washington Greene,f1839-1873. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aCharles Sumner was an U.S. statesman of the American Civil War period dedicated to human equality and to the abolition of slavery. George Washington Greene was an American author and educator. aLetters mention a range of topics including Sumner's travels in Italy, mutual acquaintances, literature, politics and political appointments, philosophy, and Sumner's lectures. Sumner also discusses the correspondence of John Adams and General Nathanael Greene, Greene's grandfather, and requests Greene's help regarding an unspecified building and statue being built in Boston. Several letters mention Sumner and Greene's articles and political tracts and Greene's books.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009638 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-192. aCharles Sumner Letters to George Washington Greene, 1839-1873 (MS Am 1107). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGreene, George Washington,d1811-1883.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.10aAdams, John,d1735-1826.10aGreene, Nathanael,d1742-1786. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 0aPhilosophy. 0aLectures and lecturingzUnited States. 0aItalyxDescription and travely19th century. 0aBoston (Mass.)xBuildings, structures, etc. 7aPoliticians.2aat1 aGreene, George Washington,d1811-1883,erecipient.0 cPurchased;aF.G. Sweet with the Friends Fund;d1949;e48M-192;h$100.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Friends Fund from F. G. Sweet, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 110701779ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003900123245006500162300002700227351003800254545034900292520012500641555008700766524011700853546001600970600005000986650003901036650003501075655001701110655002201127655002201149655001601171655001901187656001701206541007001223561005701293506004201350852002501392009122415-220130131121644.0030418i18481891mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm779907421 aMAHV03-A176 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell miscellaneous compositions,f1848-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited The Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, The North American Review (1864- ); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aPrimarily manuscripts of Lowell's poems. Also manuscripts of essays and speeches, memoranda, and a photograph of Lowell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01339 aJames Russell Lowell Miscellaneous Compositions, 1848-1891 (MS Am 1236.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aEssays.2aat 7aMemorandums.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1236.201923ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101110002900122245004800151300002700199545007600226520020800302555008700510555016200597524013200759500017200891546001601063600005801079600006301137610002901200700003701229700004201266730005801308541007601366561007201442506004201514852002901556009132870-520130311110940.0020617i18741875mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm776988931 aMAHV02-A32 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aNatural History Society.10aNatural History Society papers,f1874-1875. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aRoosevelt was joined at the age of fifteen by cousin William Emlen Roosevelt and various friends as the Natural History Society, to record observations on natural history as preserved in this collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-59. aNatural History Society Papers, 1874-1875 (MS Am 1454.40). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xChildhood and youth.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xViews on natural history.20aNatural History Society.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aRoosevelt, William Emlen,d1857-1930.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cPurchase;d1971;e70M-59;hFriends of the Harvard College Library.5hou1 aPurchased by the Friends of the Harvard College Library, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1454.4001794ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003900123245006700162300002700229351004600256545023500302520021000537555008700747524011900834546001600953600003900969610003301008656001901041700005001060700004901110700005001159700004801209541007601257561005601333506004201389852002501431009122692-920130124130515.0030418i18491908mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm834264491 aMAHV03-A177 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aCharles Eliot Norton miscellaneous correspondence,f1849-1908. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aNorton was an American author, editor, and teacher. He was co-editor of the North American Review from 1864 to 1868 and helped found the political review The Nation in 1865. He was professor of the History of Fine Arts at Harvard. aLetters from Norton to various correspondents, including several to Nathan Haskell Dole, Sir Arthur Helps, and John Henry Wright. Also includes one typescript and one letter to Norton from Francis Parkman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01330 aCharles Eliot Norton Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1849-1908 (MS Am 1088.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aDole, Nathan Haskell,d1852-1935,erecipient.1 aHelps, Arthur,cSir,d1813-1875,erecipient.1 aParkman, Francis,d1823-1893,ecorrespondent.1 aWright, John Henry,d1852-1908,erecipient.0 cGift;avarious donors;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various donors at various times.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.801143nkcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001800108245004700126300002700173351008400200520013300284555008700417524009800504546003500602655003300637655002400670710002500694541004800719561004400767506004200811852002400853013781331-720130930080045.0020710i17771905mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn858732557 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafreager00aBoard games and playing cards,f1777-1905. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Board games; and II. Playing cards. aNine playing card games and sixteen board games from 1777-1905 originating from England, France, Germany, and the United States.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02457 aBoard Games and Playing Cards, 1777-1905 (MS Eng 1749). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, French and German. 7aBoard games (game sets)2aat 7aPlaying cards.2aat2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cGift;avarious donors;d1941;e57Z-14.5hou1 aGift of various donors, 1926-1958.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Eng 174902848cpcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103110003600124245005100160300002900211351010500240545056600345520038400911555008701295555010901382524010101491546001601592650004001608600005101648600003001699610003601729610005601765650004001821650003301861650004801894650003301942650003301975650003502008650003602043651004402079655002702123655002002150656002302170700002902193541005102222561004002273506004202313852002302355000601861-020120813084651.0860415i19621962mau eng d0 aocn1225209091 aMAHV86-A161 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aArtists and Writers for Hughes.10aArtists and Writers for Hughes records,f1962. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.) . aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Walter Grossmann; and II. Miscellaneous material. aH. Stuart Hughes ran as the independent candidate in the U.S. Senate race in Massachusetts in 1962 against Democrat Edward M. Kennedy and Republican George Cabot Lodge. A Harvard professor, Hughes sought the peace and progressive vote and was called the "spokesman for a humane and positive approach to our national and international problems" by his supporters. Walter Grossmann, Librarian at Widener Library, was chairman of the auction of artists' and writers' works which was held on Oct. 19th in Cambridge, Mass. and raised $10,000 for the Hughes campaign. aConsists of the letters Grossmann received from painters, poets, and composers from around the country in response to his request for donations of drawings and manuscripts for the auction. Most responses were positive, though a few declined participation. Also includes form letters and postcards sent out by Grossmann for the committee, the auction catalog, and a few clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009778 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-149. aArtists and Writers for Hughes Records, 1962 (MS Am 1842). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aPolitical campaignszMassachusetts.10aHughes, H. Stuartq(Henry Stuart),d1916-1999.10aGrossmann, Walter,d1918-20aArtists and Writers for Hughes.10aUnited States.bCongress.bSenatexElections, 1962. 0aAuctionszMassachusettszCambridge. 0aFund raisingzMassachusetts. 0aPolitical action committeeszMassachusetts. 0aArtistsxPolitical activity. 0aAuthorsxPolitical activity. 0aComposersxPolitical activity. 0aLibrariansxPolitical activity. 0aMassachusettsxPolitics and government. 7aAuction catalogs.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPoliticians.2lcsh1 aGrossman, Walter,d1918-0 cGift;aWalter Grossmann;d1969;e68M-149.5HOU1 aGift of Walter Grossmann, 19695HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 184204878ckcaa2200925z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002300101041001300124100004400137245008800181300005800269351004200327545022000369520016800589520035900757555011501116524016601231546002701397510015401424600004001578600003701618600003101655600003201686600002101718600002301739600003301762600004601795600005801841600004101899600003301940600004401973600005702017600005002074600006402124600006302188600006302251600005802314600006102372600005702433600005302490600007002543600003202613600005602645600003202701600004202733600005602775600002102831600004702852600005902899600006302958600005403021600005403075600003003129600002903159600003003188600005703218600004203275600003503317600004303352600003003395600005503425610004003480650002003520650002003540650002203560650002203582650004103604655002603645655003303671655002203704656002503726700003003751541005003781561005603831506004203887852002303929000603140-420110419071640.0851108i19031934mau||| | || ||ger d0 aocn6123779371 aMHAT85A31 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengager1 aReinhardt, Max,d1873-1943,ecollector.10aMax Reinhardt collection of costume and set designs by various artists,f1903-1934. a1 box (.5 linear ft.) processed; pf cases unprocessed aArranged in HTC drawing number order. aAustrian actor, manager, and director, Reinhardt was a creative innovator in scenery and staging. He produced plays and spectacles in Germany, Austria, England and the U.S. and founded the Salzburg Festival in 1920. aThe full collection consists of ca. 240 original costume and set designs by various artists associated with Reinhardt for productions in Berlin, Munich and Vienna.8 aThe portion processed includes 9 costume design drawings by designer Ernst Stern (1876-1954) for Max Reinhardt productions at the Kammerspiele of the Deutsches Theater in Berlin, Germany. Plays are the 1907 production of Friedrich Hebbel's Gyges und sien Ring and a 1908 production of Johann Nestroy's Revolution in Krähwinkel = Freiheit in Krähwinkel.0 aElectronic finding aid available for part of this collectionuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01823 aMax Reinhardt Collection of Costume and Set Designs by Various Artists, 1903-1934 (MS Thr 678). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German.4 aMaske and Kothurn, 19. Jahrgang/1973, Heft 3,c"Bühnenbild- und Kostümentwürfe für das Theater Max Reinhardts," by Otto G. Schindler, p. 202-242.10aWilde, Oscar,d1854-1900.tSalomé.10aHofmann, Ludwig von,d1861-1945.00aAristophanes.tLysistrata.10aCorinth, Lovis,d1858-1925.10aDworský, Franz.00aEuripides.tMedea.10aFreska, Friedrich.tSumurun.10aGalsworthy, John,d1867-1933.tLoyalties.10aGogolʹ, Nikolaĭ Vasilʹevich,d1809-1852.tRevizor.10aGozzi, Carlo,d1720-1806.tTurandot.10aGreiner, Leo.tLeibeskönig.10aGrillparzer, Franz,d1791-1872.tMedea.10aHebbel, Friedrich,d1813-1863.tGyges und sein Ring.10aHofmannsthal, Hugo von,d1874-1929.tElektra.10aLessing, Gotthold Ephraim,d1729-1781.tMinna von Barnhelm.10aMaeterlinck, Maurice,d1862-1949.tAglavaine et Selysette.10aMaeterlinck, Maurice,d1862-1949.tPelléas et Mélisande.10aMaeterlinck, Maurice,d1862-1949.tSchwester Beatrix.10aNestroy, Johann,d1801-1862.tRevolution in Krähwinkel.10aOffenbach, Jacques,d1819-1880.tOrphée aux enfers.10aOffenbach, Jacques,d1819-1880.tBelle Hélène.10aPirandello, Luigi,d1867-1936.tSei personaggi in cerca d'autore.10aReinhardt, Max,d1873-1943.10aRivoire, André,d1872-1930.tGute König Dagobert.10aRoller, Alfred,d1864-1935.10aRuederer, Josef.tWolkenkuckucksheim.10aSchiller, Friedrich,d1759-1805.tKabale und Liebe.10aSchulz, Wilhelm.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tHamlet.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMerchant of Venice.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMerry wives of Windsor.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tTwelfth night.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tWinter's tale.10aSlevogt, Max,d1868-1932.00aSophocles.tOedipus Rex.10aStern, Ernst,d1876-1954.10aStrauss, Richard,d1864-1949.tRosenkavalier (Opera)10aTakeda, Izumo,d1691-1756.tTerakoya.10aVollmoeller, Karl.tCatharina.10aVollmoeller, Karl.tGraf von Armagnac.10aWalser, Karl,d1877-1943.10aWedekind, Frank,d1864-1918.tFrühlings Erwachen.20aDeutsches Theater (Berlin, Germany) 0aCostume design. 0aScene painting. 0aTheaterzAustria. 0aTheaterzGermany. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and scenery. 7aCostume designs.2aat 7aDrawingsy20th century.2aat 7aSet designs.2aat 7aSet designers.2lcsh1 aStern, Ernst,d1876-1954.0 cPurchase;aHelene Thimig (widow);d1951.5the1 aPurchased from his widow, Helene Thimig, 1951.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 67801855cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005600122245007900178300002800257351003900285545006200324520029500386555008700681555010900768524012900877546001601006600004401022650003901066650003501105700003201140700004401172700003101216700003401247700003901281541005901320561004901379506004201428852002301470000601766-520130122082154.0851217i19041915mau eng d0 aocn1225749891 aMAHV85A50 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRobbins, Reginald Chauncey,d1871-1955,erecipient.10aReginald Chauncey Robbins letters from various correspondents,f1904-1915. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aRobbins was an American author, composer, and naturalist. aConsists of 44 letters to Robbins from various persons, chiefly acknowledging receipt of gifts of Robbins' privately printed books of poetry and commenting on his poems. Includes letters from William James, Francis Greenwood Peabody, Josiah Royce, Barrett Wendell, and Andrew Dickson White.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-199. aReginald Chauncey Robbins Letters from Various Correspondents, 1904-1915 (MS Am 1426). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRobbins, Reginald Chauncey,d1871-1955. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.1 aPeabody, Francis Greenwood,d1847-1936.1 aRoyce, Josiah,d1855-1916.1 aWendell, Barrett,d1855-1921.1 aWhite, Andrew Dickson,d1832-1918.0 cGift;aMrs. Reginald C. Robbins;d1956;e55M-199.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Reginald C. Robbins, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 142601521cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005800122245007700180300002800257351003900285545005200324520021200376555008700588555010900675524009600784546001600880600005800896650004800954651003301002656001901035541004901054561003901103506004201142852002301184000601779-720130122101228.0851220i18211919mau eng d0 aocn1224049941 aMAHV85A62 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aWingate, Charles E. L.q(Charles Edgar Lewis),d1861-10aCharles E. L. Wingate papers,f1821-1919 (inclusive),g1892-1898 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aWingate was a newspaper editor in Boston, Mass. aConsists of professional correspondence pertaining especially to Wingate's tenure as managing editor of the Boston Journal in the 1890s, but also including his later work as editor of the Boston Sunday Post.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012598 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1955-1956, under *55M-198. aCharles E. L. Wingate Papers, 1821-1919 (MS Am 1410). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWingate, Charles E. L.q(Charles Edgar Lewis),d1861- 0aJournalismzMassachusettszBostonxEditing. 0aBoston (Mass.)xPeriodicals. 7aEditors.2lcsh0 cGift;aOriana Wingate;d1956;e55M-198.5HOU1 aGift of Oriana Wingate, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 141001523cpcaa2200301za 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003800123245006700161300002800228520012400256524010700380545020800487555008700695555010400782546001600886600003800902650003900940650003600979700004901015541004601064561004601110506004201156852002301198000601799-120100317145041.0860311i18451875mau eng d0 aocn6123657001 aMAHV86A105 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aRalph Waldo Emerson letters to James Elliot Cabot,f1845-1875. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). aConsists of 55 letters including comments on books and reading, social activities, and activities of the Saturday Club. aRalph Waldo Emerson Letters to James Elliot Cabot (bMS Am 1718). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aEmerson was an American essayist and poet. James Elliot Cabot (1821-1903) was a long time friend of Emerson's and acted for a while as his secretary. He published A Memoir of Ralph Waldo Emerson in 1887.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accession Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-341. aIn English.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aTranscendentalism (New England)1 aCabot, James Elliot,d1821-1903,erecipient.0 cBequest;aJames Elliot Cabot;d1942.5hou1 aBequest of James Elliot Cabot, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 171801965cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245005200160300002800212351003900240545009400279520036300373555008700736555010900823524010200932544011801034546001601152600003801168651005801206656002201264700003301286700005201319541010101371561009001472506004201562852002301604000601848-320130107105154.0860106i19351954mau eng d0 aocn1225058041 aMAHV86A15 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLichtenstein, Walter,d1880-1964.10aWalter Lichtenstein correspondence,f1935-1954. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aLichtenstein was an economist and banker with First National Bank of Chicago (1918-1945). aLetters to Walter Lichtenstein from various persons together with carbon copies of some of Lichtenstein's replies. Includes 30 letters from Herbert Hoover and 5 letters from Adlai Stevenson. The letters to Lichtenstein are mostly short and largely personal. Lichtenstein's letters are generally longer and include commentary on political and economic issues.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012068 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-275. aWalter Lichtenstein Correspondence, 1935-1954 (MS Am 1479). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aAdditional papers of Walter Lichtenstein are in Manuscripts and Archives, Baker Library, Harvard Business School. aIn English.10aLichtenstein, Walter,d1880-1964. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 7aEconomists.2lcsh1 aHoover, Herbert,d1874-1964.1 aStevenson, Adlai E.q(Adlai Ewing),d1900-1965.0 cGift, Transfer;aWalter Lichtenstein, through Harvard University Archives;d1955;e55M-275.5HOU1 aGift of Walter Lichtenstein, transferred from Harvard University Archives, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 147902214cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003300123245008200156300002800238351017000266545015200436520028700588524009100875555008700966555010701053610003401160610003301194650001401227650004701241655003701288655002401325700003101349700004401380700004601424700003001470700002701500700003401527700001801561700003201579541006001611561005601671506004201727852002301769000601873-420110404125243.0860417i19641972mau eng d0 aocn1225901091 aMAHV86A172 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell-Adams House Printers.10aLowell-Adams House Printers papers,f1964-1972 (inclusive)g1964-1966 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). aOrganized into the following series: I. Materials associated with the Lowell-Adams House Printers; II. Letters to Lowell-Adams House Printers; and III. Compositions. aThe Lowell-Adams House Printers were a group of Harvard College students interested in handprinting limited edition broadsides of poems and essays. aCorrespondence with authors, together with manuscripts and proofs of pieces printed by the Lowell-Adams House Printers. Authors represented include Conrad Aiken, W. H. Auden, James Vincent Cunningham, Richard Eberhart, James Merrill, William Saroyan, John Updike, and Edmund Wilson. aLowell-Adams House Printers Papers (MS Am 1881). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007658 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-7.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents.20aLowell-Adams House Printers. 0aPrinters. 0aPrivate presseszMassachusettszCambridge. 7aManuscripts for publication2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.1 aAuden, W.H.q(Wystan Hugh),d1907-1973.1 aCunningham, J.V.q(James Vincent),d1911-1 aEberhart, Richard,d1904-1 aMerrill, James Ingram.1 aSaroyan, William,d1908-1981.1 aUpdike, John.1 aWilson, Edmund,d1895-1972.0 cGift;aLowell-Adams House Printers;d1972;e72M-7.5hou1 aGift of the Lowell-Adams House Printers, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 188101580cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245004800164300002800212351003900240545004300279520030200322555008700624555010900711524009700820546001600917600004200933600004400975650001601019656001901035700003301054541005601087561004601143506004201189852002301231000601892-020130107104344.0860106i18301876mau eng d0 aocn1226560211 aMAHV86A19 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGardiner, William Howard,d1797-1882.10aWilliam Howard Gardiner papers,f1830-1876. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aGardiner was a lawyer of Boston, Mass. aConsists of 14 letters by Gardiner, chiefly to various family members; and 40 letters to Gardiner, including 30 letters from George Ticknor relating chiefly to his work on a biography of the historian William Hickling Prescott. Gardiner was a close friend of Prescott's and executor of his estate.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-256. aWilliam Howard Gardiner Papers, 1830-187 (MS Am 1431). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGardiner, William Howard,d1797-1882.10aPrescott, William Hickling,d1796-1859. 0aHistorians. 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aTicknor, George,d1791-1871.0 cGift;aMrs. William R. Cabot;d1955;e55M-256.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. William R. Cabot, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 143101511cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004300122245010600165300002800271351003000299545003500329520011700364555008700481555010900568524012500677546001600802600004300818650003900861650003500900655002200935700004000957541006500997561005801062506004201120852002301162000602532-320120502112424.0860103i18881936mau eng d0 aocn1225058781 aMAHV86-A9 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.10aEdwin Arlington Robinson letters to Harry de Forest Smith,f1888-1936 (inclusive),g1890-1900 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged chronologically. aRobinson was an American poet. aContains Robinson's letters to his friend, Smith, together with one photograph of Robinson while in high school.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-355. aEdwin Arlington Robinson Letters to Harry de Forest Smith, 1888-1936 (MS Am 1512). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aSmith, Harry de Forest,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aMrs. Harry de Forest Smith;d1943;e43M-355.5HOU1 aPurchased from Mrs. Harry de Forest Smith, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 151202177cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101245005700122300002800179545029400207520028300501555008700784555011300871524010700984546001601091600005501107600002701162650003901189650005201228650005101280655001901331655002001350655002001370655002001390655002901410656002201439700001801461700006701479700002701546740000801573541006101581561004801642506004201690852002301732000601904-820121109122407.0860107i19091910mau eng d0 aocn1224688251 aMAHV86A16 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPapers relating to Lo, a musical comedy,f1909-1910. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). aThe two-act musical comedy 'Lo,' written by O. Henry (william Sydney Porter) and Franklin P. Adams, premiered in Aurora, Ill. on 25 August 1909. The production toured the midwest and far west for 14 weeks. The last performance was at the Tootle Theatre, St. Joseph, Mo. on 5 December 1909. aIncludes contract, scenario, script, playbills, box-office reports, clippings, and correspondence concerning the writing, production, and performances of Lo. Nearly all the correspondence is to Franklin P. Adams, and the bulk of it is from Harry Askin, the production's manager.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010008 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-412-432. aPapers Relating to Lo, a Musical Comedy, 1909-1910 (MS Am 1477). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAdams, Franklin P.q(Franklin Pierce),d1881-1960.10aHenry, O.,d1862-1910. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aMusicalszUnited StatesxHistory and criticism. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aAccounts.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aContracts.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aAskin, Harry.1 aAdams, Franklin P.q(Franklin Pierce),d1881-1960,erecepient.1 aHenry, O.,d1862-1910.0 aLo.0 cPurchase;aArthur Pforzheimer;d1945;e44M-412-432.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Wendell fund, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 147701572cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100006500122245006000187300002800247351003900275545017600314520010500490555008700595555010900682524011000791546001600901600005300917651005500970656002501025656002101050541007101071561005101142506004201193852002301235000601927-720130107104704.0860107i18601893mau eng d0 aocn1225601591 aMAHV86A12 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSanborn, F. B.q(Franklin Benjamin),d1831-1917,erecipient.10aF. B. Sanborn letters from various persons,f1860-1893. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aSanborn was an author, journalist, and philanthropist of Concord, Mass. He was an ardent abolitionist and champion of reforms in charity work, prisons, and insane asylums. aContains 21 letters to Sanborn from various persons, chiefly concerning political and social issues.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012048 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-268. aF. B. Sanborn Letters from Various Persons, 1860-1893 (MS Am 1487). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSanborn, F. B.q(Franklin Benjamin),d1831-1917. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1865-1900. 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh 7aReformers.2lcsh0 cPurchase;aAbe Brayer;d1956;e55M-268;hThe Duplicates Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Duplicates Fund, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 148701927cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041002300122100003900145245005900184300002800243351003900271520022400310546006100534555008700595555010900682524010900791600003900900600003500939600002900974600003501003600004401038600003501082600004001117650003301157650003301190650001501223655002101238655002001259655001701279541005801296561008601354506004201440852002301482000602533-120121109122735.0860225i16831879mau eng d0 aocn6123767641 aMAHV86A90 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafreaitaager1 aWeston, George Benson,ecollector.10aGeorge Benson Weston autograph collection,f1683-1879. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aThis autograph collection focuses on European music in the 18th and 19th centuries. It contains letters by various composers, pianists, singers, poets, and European aristocrats; musical scores; and an engraved portrait. aThe letters are in English, French, Italian, and German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-152. aGeorge Benson Weston Autograph Collection, 1683-1879 (MS Am 1652). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWeston, George Benson,ecollector.10aAllegri, Gregorio,d1582-1652.10aNormand-Smith, Gertrude.10aPorsile, Giuseppe,d1680-1750.10aRossini, Giocchino Antonio,d1792-1868.10aTartini, Guiseppe,d1692-1770.10aZelenka, Johann Dismas,d1679-1745. 0aMusiczEuropey18th century. 0aMusiczEuropey19th century. 0aMusicians. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aScores.2aat0 cBequest;aGeorge Benson Weston;d1957;e61M-152.5HOU1 aBequeathed by George Benson Weston in memory of Meriel Dimmick Weston, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 165202099cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005000122245006600172300002800238351003900266545019200305520042000497555008700917555010801004524011601112546001601228600003801244630001601282650003901298656001801337700003901355700004401394700004101438700004001479541009101519561006201610506004201672852002301714000601959-520111220102719.0860128i18621898mau eng d0 aocn1224688321 aMAHV86A25 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFay, Hercules Warren,d1841-1899,erecipient.10aHercules Warren Fay letters from various persons,f1862-1898. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aFay was an Episcopal clergyman. He left the ministry because of poor health, but was a regular contributor of notes and reviews to The Nation and other papers. He lived in Westboro, Mass. aLetters to Hercules Warren Fay from various correspondents on subjects personal and professional. There are 51 letters from Wendell Phillips Garrison, chiefly concerning Fay's contributions to The Nation. Also included are long runs of letters from Thomas Sergeant Perry; John Richard Dennet, a classmate of Fay's at Harvard and an assistant editor of The Nation; and Henry Ainsworth Parker, an Episcopal clergyman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-86. aHercules Warren Fay Letters from Various Persons, 1862-1898 (MS Am 1647). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFay, Hercules Warren,d1841-1899.40aThe Nation. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aClergy.2lcsh1 aDennett, John Richard,d1838-1874.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907.1 aParker, Henry Ainsworth,d1841-1919.1 aPerry, Thomas Sergeant,d1845-1928.0 cPurchase;aE. R. Smith Book Service;d1961;e61M-86;hKeller Fund and Bemis Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Keller fund and Bemis fund, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 164701573cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003300122245005000155300002800205545005000233520029200283555008700575555010900662524010000771546001600871600003300887600005100920655003800971655001901009700002601028700004001054541004901094561003901143506004201182852002301224000602025-920130107092312.0860129i18011852mau eng d0 aocn1224051111 aMAHV86A31 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852.10aDaniel Webster additional papers,f1801-1852. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). aWebster was an American statesman and lawyer. aMostly personal correspondence between Webster and family members, especially Harriette Story White Paige and James William Paige. Also drafts of the dedications to three volumes of his collected works, notes for a speech by Webster, and material about him, particularly about his death.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-186. aDaniel Webster Additional Papers, 1801-1852 (MS Am 1558). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852.10aWebster, Daniel,d1782-1852xDeath and burial. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat1 aPaige, James William.1 aPaige, Harriette Story,d1809-1863.0 cGift;aMrs. R. D. Fay;d1959;e58M-186.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. R. D. Fay, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 155801630cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003700122245004300159300002800202351003900230545004700269520020700316555008700523555010900610524009300719546001600812600003700828650001900865650003100884655004500915655004500960656001901005656001901024700004001043541006201083561005801145506004201203852002301245000602095-X20130107094251.0860129i18151842mau eng d0 aocn1222976041 aMAHV86A37 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAllston, Washington,d1779-1843.10aWashington Allston papers,f1815-1842. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aAllston was an American artist and author. aContains correspondence between Allston and his friends, chiefly pertaining to his art and writings. Includes ten letters from the artist Charles Robert Leslie. Also two poems by Allston and a pew deed.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011848 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-121. aWashington Allston Papers, 1815-1842 (MS Am 1588). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAllston, Washington,d1779-1843. 0aArt, American. 0aArt, Moderny19th century. 7aDeedszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aArtists.2lcsh1 aLeslie, Charles Robert,d1794-1859.0 cDeposit;aWashington Allston Trust;d1960;e59M-121.5HOU1 aDeposited by the Washington Allston Trust, 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 158801944cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041001800122100003000140245005100170300002800221351003900249545009900288520030000387546009400687555008700781555010800868524010100976600003001077650003401107650003401141650002601175650004001201656002101241656002101262700003001283700004601313700003701359541006001396561002501456506004201481852002301523000602272-320130212103527.0860131i17881891mau ger d0 aocn1223359531 aMAHV86A46 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs ageraengafre1 aDresel, Otto,d1826-1890.10aOtto Dresel papers and autographs,f1788-1891. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aDresel was a concert pianist and composer who was born in Germany and settled in Boston, Mass. aContains letters to Dresel as well as letters of recommendation about him from German musicians and others. Includes letters to him from Franz Liszt, and from American authors concerning their collaborative work with him. Also contains correspondence between C. G. Körner and J. C. F. Schiller. aMuch of the correspondence is in German; some is in English; a few letters are in French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014168 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-88. aOtto Dresel Papers and Autographs, 1788-1891 (MS Am 1548). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDresel, Otto,d1826-1890. 0aMusiczGermanyy18th century. 0aMusiczGermanyy19th century. 0aMusic and literature. 0aMusiczUnited Statesy19th century. 7aComposers.2lcsh 7aMusicians.2lcsh1 aLiszt, Franz,d1811-1886.1 aKörner, Christian Gottfried,d1756-1831.1 aSchiller, Friedrich,d1759-1805.0 cPurchase;aMrs. F. Stanton Cawley;d1958;e58M-88.5HOU1 aPurchase, 1958.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 154801981cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245005500158300002900213351013400242545012300376520039700499555008700896555010800983524008101091600003501172650001401207651005001221651005501271655001901326655002201345656002101367656002301388700004101411700004701452541005301499561004401552852002301596000601878-520021220120430.0860421i18351935mau eng d0 aocn1224687711 aMAHV86A177 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aStevens, Thaddeus,d1792-1868.00kPapers,f1835-1935 (inclusive),g1853-1872 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5flinear ft.). aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence of Thaddeus Stevens; II. Other correspondence; and III. Other manuscripts. aStevens was a lawyer, businessman, abolitionist, congressman from Pennsylvania, and a founder of the Republican Party. aContains correspondence of Thaddeus Stevens concerning politics, legal affairs, and his iron business; correspondence of his nephews, Thaddeus Stevens Jr. and Alanson J. Stevens, both soldiers in the Civil War; and some third party correspondence. Most of the letters by T. Stevens Sr. are to his nephews. Also includes accounts, photographs, printed material, and a few miscellaneous papers.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-21. aThaddeus Stevens Papers (bMS Am 1979). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aStevens, Thaddeus,d1792-1868. 0aSoldiers. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1865-1869. 7aAccounts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aMerchants.2lcsh 7aPoliticians.2lcsh1 aStevens, Alanson J.,ecorrespondent.1 aStevens, Thaddeus,d-1874,ecorrespondent. cGift;aWilliam A. McKibben;d1979;e78M-21;5HOU aGift of William A. McKibben, 1979.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 197901806cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245003900156300002800195545012100223520027200344555008700616555010800703524008900811546001600900600003300916610003600949650003200985650003701017655002601054655003801080655002501118655001801143655002001161656001801181700003301199541006301232561006001295506004201355852002301397000602008-920121109122522.0860609i16331643mau eng d0 aocn1226092691 aMAHV86A295 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShepard, Thomas,d1605-1649.10aThomas Shepard papers,f1633-1643. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). aShepard was a Congregational minister. He was pastor of the First Church and Parish in Cambridge, Mass. (1636-1649). aConsists of Shepard's autobiography, sermons, and other papers including the New Testament and Psalms in shorthand. There is a negative photostat of the text of Shepard's autobiography as well as a copy of the edition prepared by Nehemiah Adams and published in 1832.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010068 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-94. aThomas Shepard Papers, 1633-1643 (MS Am 1671). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShepard, Thomas,d1605-1649.20aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aChristianityy17th century. 0aCongregational churchesxClergy. 7aAutobiographies.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aStats (copies).2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aShorthand.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh1 aAdams, Nehemiah,d1806-1878.0 cDeposit;aShepard Historical Society;d1961;e61M-94.5HOU1 aDeposited by the Shepard Historical Society, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 167102339cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245008800156300002800244351003900272545030600311520047200617555008701089555010901176524013801285546001601423650004701439600003401486650004801520650003701568651005501605656002101660656002601681656003801707700003401745700002101779541004901800561003901849506004201888852002301930000602439-420130122091208.0860218i18311856mau eng d0 aocn1224120651 aMAHV86A58 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAppleton, Nathan,d1779-1861.10aNathan Appleton correspondence with and material about Abbott Lawrence,f1831-1856. a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aAppleton, a manufacturer, banker, and Massachusetts congressman, was a founder of the city of Lowell, Mass., and helped build up Lawrence, Mass. and Manchester, N.H. He wrote a memoir of Abbott Lawrence, fellow textile manufacturer, founder of Lawrence, Mass., Massachusetts congressman, and diplomat. aThe bulk of the collection is 65 letters, 1831-1854, from Lawrence to Appleton that reflect Lawrence's career as a textile manufacturer and congressman, his interest in the tariff bill, and later his service as U.S. minister to England. Also letters to Appleton from Lawrence family members and others thanking him for his memoir on Lawrence; and a few letters to Appleton containing information about Lawrence, assembled in preparation for the writing of the memoir.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012388 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-185. aNathan Appleton Correspondence with and Material about Abbott Lawrence, 1831-1856 (MS Am 1557). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, American.10aAppleton, Nathan,d1779-1861. 0aTariffxLaw and legislationzUnited States. 0aTextile industryzMassachusetts. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1815-1861. 7aDiplomats.2lcsh 7aIndustrialists.2lcsh 7aLegislatorszUnited States.2lcsh1 aLawrence, Abbott,d1792-1855.3 aLawrence family.0 cGift;aMrs. R. D. Fay;d1959;e58M-185.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. R. D. Fay, 1959.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 155701812cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245010400160300002800264351003900292545005100331520031300382555008700695555010900782524012300891546001601014600002501030610006001055650003201115651002501147656001901172656002001191700004201211700004201253541005001295561004001345506004201385852002301427000602048-820130107140808.0860129i18611920mau eng d0 aocn1226560271 aMAHV86A33 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMackintosh, Henry S.,erecipient.10aHenry S. Mackintosh letters from various correspondents,f1861-1920 (inclusive),g1892-1918 (bulk). a1 boxa(.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aMackintosh was an American teacher and author. aContains letters to Mackintosh from various correspondents. Topics include education and his work with organizations such as the Anti-Imperialist League and the Harvard Club of Keene, N.H. The largest section of correspondence is from the artist Abbott Handerson Thayer. Also includes letters to John Tetlow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012218 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-131. aHenry S. Mackintosh Letters from Various Correspondents, 1861-1920 (MS Am 1466). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMackintosh, Henry S.20aHarvard UniversityxAlumni and alumnaexSocieties, etc. 0aAnti-imperialist movements. 0aKeene (N.H.)xClubs. 7aArtists.2lcsh 7aTeachers.2lcsh1 aTetlow, John,d1843-1911,erecipient.1 aThayer, Abbott Handerson,d1849-1921.0 cGift;aHelen I. Tetlow;d1956;e56M-131.5HOU1 aGift of Helen I. Tetlow, 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 146602053ntc a2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245004300121300002200164520013200186505113800318546004701456524007201503600005001575541013301625561005101758852002601809010160658-320061122160829.0061122m19251976xx |||| |||| 000|m eng d0 aocn612876275 aMH-HcMH-Heappm0 aengafre00aCummingsiana :f1925-1976 and undated. a1 box (.5 linear) aPrinted articles concerning e.e. cummings and his poetry removed from *67M-150 and *67M-150A and other material received hence.0 aContemporary reminiscences / Burton Rascoe (Arts & Decoration, Mar. 1925, p. 38) -- Poetry Corner (Scholastic, 8 Dec. 1934, p. 11) -- Algebra of the heart : a review of E. E. Cummings' One times one / Lloyd Frankenberg (The compass, XII, 1945) -- [Gaston Lachaise] / e. e. cummings (The dial, Feb. 1920; excerpt printed in exhibition program, M. Knoedler & Co., New York, 1947) -- Personality (Time, 3 Nov. 1952, p. 67) -- A birthday for 'Poetry' (Life, 24 Nov. 1952, p. 104) -- Homme de vigie / Saint-John Perse (Cahiers du Sud, no. 352) -- Cummings' Buffalo Bill's defunct / Louis J. Budd (The explicator, June 1953) -- The poetic mask of E. E. Cummings / Norman Friedman (The literary review, Autumn 1958) -- E. E. Cummings and the modernist tradition / Norman Friedman (Forum, spring-summer 1962, p. 39) -- Cummings 'anyone' and 'noone' / David R. Clark (Arizona quarterly, spring 1969) -- An exhibition of paintings and drawings by e.e. cummings / Louise E. Thorne Memorial Art Gallery, Keene State College (N.H.), 1976 -- him and the critic : a collection of opinions on e.e. cummings' play at the Provincetown playhouse (n.d.) aChiefly in English; one article in French. aCummingsiana (MS Am 1892.15). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962. cPurchase;aMrs. Edward Estlin Cummings;b4 Patchin Place, New York, NY 10011;d1966-1971;e67M-150a;h$60,000, Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1966.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892.1502236ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100002700121245006000148300002700208351008200235545044200317520021600759524010000975546005001075555008701125600004901212600002701261650003701288655004901325655002301374700004901397740002401446740002601470740001301496852006001509541018901569561007001758506004601828009199395-420131206185812.0020710i19942000mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612783942 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aengager1 aHulse, Michael,d1955-10aMichael Hulse translations of W. G. Sebald,f1994-2000. a1 boxa(.6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions. aNovelist and academic W. G. "Max" Sebald wrote Die Ausgewanderten, Die Ringe des Saturn, and Vertigo, parts of which are represented in this collection, with English translations by Michael Hulse. Although Sebald wrote in German, he lived in England for most of his adult life and taught at the University of East Anglia. He collaborated extensively on English translations of his literary works with Hulse, along with other translators. aIncludes Sebald's corrections and annotations of Michael Hulse's English translations of the former's works The emigrants, The rings of Saturn, and Vertigo. Also includes correspondence between Sebald and Hulse. aMichael Hulse Translations of W. G. Sebald (MS Eng 1632). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials chiefly in English; some in German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0198210aSebald, W. G.q(Winfried Georg),d1944-2001.10aHulse, Michael,d1955- 0aGerman literaturey20th century. 7aLetters (correspondence)y20th century.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat1 aSebald, W. G.q(Winfried Georg),d1944-2001.4 aDie Ausgewanderten.4 aDie Ringe des Saturn.0 aVertigo.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1632zShelved in 1 box: MS Eng 1632-16330 cPurchase;aMichael Hulse;bDepartment of English & Comparative Literary Studies, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK;d2003 Sept. 23;e2003M-20;h$20,000 (Amy Lowell fd.).5hou1 aPurchased from Michael Hulse with the Amy Lowell fund, 2003.5hou aCollection is open for research use.5hou01983ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003400123245008300157300002700240545030200267520016000569555008700729555011300816524013300929546001601062600006401078650001101142651005001153655002101203655002401224656001701248541013701265561019001402506004201592852002301634008922358-620130204141618.0021009i18971906mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807815261 aMAHV02-A128 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.10aJulia Ward Howe papers concerning the Battle hymn of the republic,f1897-1906. a1 boxa(.7 linear ft.) aJulia Ward Howe was the author of the Battle hymn of the republic and other works and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer. In Feb. 1862, the Atlantic Monthly published her poem "Battle Hymn of the Republic," which she wrote during a visit to an army camp near Washington, D.C. in 1861. aIncludes manuscripts in the hand of Julia Ward Howe, a facsimile of her first draft, notes, letters, radio scripts, and printed matter concerning the hymn.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-115-119. aJulia Ward Howe Papers Concerning the Battle Hymn of the Republic, 1897-1906 (MS Am 2195). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.tBattle hymn of the republic. 0aPeace. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryxCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aFacsimiles.2aat 7aRadio scripts.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cGift;aHenry Howe Richards, John Richards, Rosalind Richards, Julia Ward Shaw, and Laura Elizabeth Wiggin;d1959;e59M-115-119.5HOU1 aGift of the children of Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards and Henry Richards: Henry Howe Richards, John Richards, Rosalind Richards, Julia Ward Shaw, and Laura Elizabeth Wiggins, 1959.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 219502361cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245007200162300002600234351008100260545011700341520051400458555008700972555010701059524012901166600004801295600003901343600002901382600004001411600004001451650003901491655002001530655003801550655002201588656001601610700004701626700002901673700003601702700003701738541005401775561004501829506004201874852002301916000601894-720111220093438.0860430i18991958mau eng d0 aocn6123672161 aMAHV86A191 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFoster, Jeanne Robert,d1879-1970.10aJeanne Robert letters from Ezra Pound and other papers,f1899-1958. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Manuscripts. aFoster (1879-1970) was an American poet, journalist and social reformer. Pound (1885-1972) was an American poet. aContains letters from Ezra Pound to Jeanne Robert Foster, some relating to T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot, and from Pound to H. L. (Henry Louis) Mencken and others. Also includes letters from Dorothy Pound and Homer L. Pound to Foster, and letters to her from various others. There is a typescript prospectus for a new monthly review, with manuscript corrections in the hand of Pound, and photographs of Pound and others, and clippings concerning him. Also includes a group photograph of Eric Satie with others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-1. aJeanne Robert Foster Letters From Ezra Pound and Other Papers, 1899-1958 (MS Am 1635). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aFoster, Jeanne Robert,d1879-1970.10aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.10aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972vPortraits.10aSatie, Erik,d1866-1925vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturex20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aEliot, T.S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.1 aPound, Dorothy,ecorrespondent.1 aPound, Homer L.,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFoster, Jeanne Robert;d1961;e61M-1.5hou1 aGift of Jeanne Robert Foster, 1961.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163501851ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003400121245004600155300002600201351003800227545007400265520034000339555008700679555011000766524008500876600003400961600004700995600003601042610001801078650004001096650001601136655002401152655002201176656002301198710001801221700002201239541009801261561004101359506004201400852002301442009019558-220091023133312.0020710i19641971mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612747320 aMAHV03A6 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMarcuse, Herbert,d1898-1979.10aHerbert Marcuse compositions,f1964-1971. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aMarcuse (1898-1979) was a German-born American political philosopher. aCollection consists primarily of manuscripts of Marcuse's books published by the Beacon Press, including galley proofs. Includes Marcuse's notes and correspondence concerning publication of these books. Arnold C. Tovell, a Beacon Press editor, has annotated many of the manuscripts. Also contains two photographs of Marcuse and Tovell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 2001-2002, under *2001M-67. aHerbert Marcuse Compositions (MS Am 2257). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aMarcuse, Herbert,d1898-1979.10aMarcuse, Herbert,d1898-1979vPhotographs.10aTovell, Arnold C.vPhotographs.20aBeacon Press. 0aCivilization, Moderny20th century. 0aRadicalism. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPhilosophers.2aat2 aBeacon Press.1 aTovell, Arnold C.0 cGift;aArnold C. Tovell;b2 Meadow Trail, Chappaqua, NY 10514;d2002 Apr. 18;e2001M-67.5HOU1 aGift of Arnold C. Tovell, 2002.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 225702358ckcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101245005800124300002600182351010900208545023500317520025800552555008700810555013800897524012501035650003501160655005001195655002201245655004801267655004601315655004701361656002801408656002301436700003301459700005101492700002001543700002301563700002101586700002301607541016001630561004101790506004201831852002401873561003901897009103093-520130116141453.0030321i19181976mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm825766441 aMHAT03-A32 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCostume designs and drawings for ballets,f1918-1976. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Watercolors and silhouettes; and II. Drawings by Julie Schwolow. aGeorge Barbier (1882-1932) was a French painter and illustrator; Nicolai Remisoff (1884-1975) was a Russian theatrical designer and painter; Julie Schwolon was an artist who designed for the Dancer Center at Harvard Summer School. aIncludes watercolors of costume designs and ballets by George Barbier, Nicolai Remisoff and Sergei Yurievich Soudeikin; silhouettes by H. Gumppenberg and Lottie Reiner; and signed watercolor, ink and pencil costume designs for ballets by Julie Schwolow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005738 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-168, and 1976-1977, under *76M-8. aCostume Designs and Drawings for Ballets (MS Thr 191). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aBalletxCostumey20th century. 7aCostume design drawingsy20th century.2gmgpc 7aSilhouettes.2aat 7aWatercolorsxAmericany20th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorsxFrenchy20th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorsxRussiany20th century.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2aat 7aIllustrators.2aat1 aBarbier, George,d1882-1932.1 aGumppenberg, Hanns,cFreiherr von,d1866-1928.1 aReiner, Lottie.1 aRemisoff, Nicolas.1 aSchwolow, Julie.1 aSoudeikine, Serge.0 cGift;aHamil and Barker; Julie Schwolow;b230 N. Washington Av., Chicago IL 60601; 87 Hicks St., Brooklyn NY 11201;d1967 May 29; 1976 Aug. 2;e76M-8.5the1 aGift of Hamil and Barker, 1967.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 1911 aGift of Julie Schwolow, 1976.5the01398ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245005100153300002600204545002800230520019200258555008700450524009200537546001600629600003100645655002300676655003800699656001700737700003300754700003900787700004500826541007700871561005700948506004201005852002501047009233711-220120208101657.0031022i19421967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm824454661 aMAHV03A352 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.10aDylan Thomas miscellaneous papers,f1942-1967. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aThomas was a Welsh poet aIncludes16 letters from Thomas to Oscar Williams, an autograph first draft and notes for A story, and some notes about Thomas after his death by Terence Fytton Armstrong (John Gawsworth).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00852 aDylan Thomas Miscellaneous Papers (MS Eng 943.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953. 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aGawsworth, John,d1912-1970.1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.tStory.1 aWilliams, Oscar,d1900-1964,erecipient.0 cGift;aVarious sources;dVarious dates;eVarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 943.101121ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100001900093245004100112300002500153351001700178545007900195520023500274500004600509546001600555600001900571610003600590610004200626506004600668541014100714852002400855013011034-520120203154421.0111219i19261987mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aLogan, Joshua.10aJoshua Logan papers,fca. 1926-1987. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aJoshua Lockwood Logan (1908-1988) was an American stage and film director. aChiefly material from his career at Princeton University, including correspondence, a scrapbook covering Princeton's Triangle Club and University Players, compositions, financial records, and books; with later telegrams and books. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aLogan, Joshua.20aPrinceton UniversityxStudents.20aPrinceton University.bTriangle Club.1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aExtant Americana;bP.O. Box 275, New York, NY 10044;d2011 December 19;e2011MT-26;h$4000.00 (Billy Rose Theatre Fund).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 81202854ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245008300160300002600243545128700269520007401556555008701630555010901717524012201826546001601948600003801964600003902002600004402041600002302085610001702108610006102125655002202186700005502208541011702263561005702380506004202437852002502479009978710-520121214111926.0060531i19271932mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612831469 aMAHV06B40 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSolloway, J.q(John),d1860-1946.10aJ. Solloway papers concerning The English Washingtons,f1927-1932 and undated. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aThe Rev. Canon John Solloway (1860-1946) was born in Chorley in Lancashire, England, where, in a church in a neighboring mansion, are arms of the Washington family. Solloway found this of great interest espcially when he later became a Canon of Yorkshire Cathedral, and then Vicar of Selby Abbey. At Selby Abbey he found a glass panel with arms that he recognized as Washington arms. Solloway then began a study of the Washingtons in England. According to Harvard historian A.B. Hart, as of 1931, Solloway "had the widest knowledge of any man in the world on that subject." Albert Bushnell Hart (1854-1943) was an American historian and professor at Harvard University. He worked as the official historian of the United States Commission for the Celebration of the Two Hundredth Anniversary of the Birth of George Washington in the 1920s and 1930s. Hart spent years making automobile tours through England in search of places connected with the English Washingtons. It was on one such tour where he met Solloway, acquired the manuscript of Solloway's The English Washingtons, which Hart describes as: "a very careful genealogy of the ancestors of George Washington in England." Hart proceeded to attempt to have this volume published, though it appears to have remained unpublished. aIncludes autograph manuscripts (in notebook form) and correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou019028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-367. aJ. Solloway Papers Concerning The English Washingtons, 1927-1932 (MS Eng 1589). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSolloway, J.q(John),d1860-1946.10aHart, Albert Bushnell,d1854-1943.10aWashington, George,d1732-1799xFamily.30aWashington family.20aSelby Abbey.20aUnited States George Washington Bicentennial Commission. 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aHart, Albert Bushnell,d1854-1943,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit;aRev. J. (John) Solloway;bThe Abbey Vicarage, Selly, Yorkshire, England;d1945 Apr. 20;e44M-367.5hou1 aDeposited by the Rev. J. (John) Solloway, 1945.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 158902813ntcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003000110245004400140300002500184351012800209545044000337520055800777546002601335524012101361555008701482544013001569650004301699600003001742610002401772650004501796700004301841700005701884700004901941700004401990700006702034700006602101700007702167541006702244561005102311506004202362852002302404010588914-820120406185920.0070703i17911836mau |||||i|eng|d0 aocn782124546 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aKean, Edmund,d1787-1833.10aEdmund Kean correspondence,f1791-1836. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Edmund Kean correspondence; and II. Third-party correspondence and other materials. aEdmund Kean (1787-1833) was an English actor associated with the Drury Lane Theatre. An affair with Charlotte Cox, the wife of prominent alderman Robert Cox, led to an adultery trial against Kean in 1825 and his subsequent travel outside of England. Kean returned to the English stage in 1827 and remained acting until shortly before his death in May 1833. With Mary (Chambers) Kean he was the father of actor Charles Kean (1811-1868). aIncludes Kean's correspondence dated 1810-1832, about half of which is dated 1827, the year Kean returned to acting at Drury Lane Theatre. Many of the letters written by members of the public are congratulatory or are requests for charity; a few others are between Kean and notable colleagues or patrons such as his wife Mary Kean, actor Charles Kemble, and Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex. Also includes a small number of third-party letters (1791-1836) mentioning Kean or related to his life, as well as some research materials and ephemera. aMaterials in English. aEdmund Kean Correspondence 1791-1836 (MS Thr 834). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou022951 aAdditional information concerning this collection is available in the curatorial file. Consult reading room staff for access. 0aActorszGreat BritainvCorrespondence.10aKean, Edmund,d1787-1833.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy19th century.1 aWynne, George,d-1846,ecorrespondent.1 aKenneth, William,dactive 1825-1835,ecorrespondent.1 aKemble, Charles,d1775-1854,ecorrespondent.1 aKean, Mary,d1779-1849,ecorrespondent.1 aFrancis, John W. (John Wakefield),d1789-1861,ecorrespondent.1 aElliston, R. W. (Robert William),d1774-1831,ecorrespondent.0 aAugustus Frederick,cPrince, Duke of Sussex,d1773-1843,ecorrespondent.0 cOld gifts;asources unknown;dca. 1932-1934;e2007MT-10r.5the1 aGift from unknown sources, ca. 1932-1934.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 83402123ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100005100122245003500173300002600208351012000234545036800354520047700722555008701199524010201286600005101388650003701439650002801476650006201504650003801566650002301604655002401627655001601651541005901667561004601726852002501772009808222-120060921150309.0060607i18771907mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612778432 aMAHV06B41 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCholmondeley-Pennell, H.q(Henry),d1837-1915.10aPapers on fishing,f1877-1907. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I.Correspondence with Henry Cholmondeley-Pennell; and II. Other materials. aCholmondeley-Pennell (1837-1915) was a British naturalist and editor who published poetry and many volumes on coarse-fly and deep-sea fishing. Two of his most well know books were: Badminton library of sports and pastimes: Fishing. With contributions from other authors and The modern practical angler : a complete guide to fly-fishing, bottom-fishing & trolling. aEarly letters concern his various writings on fishing. Correspondence circa 1902-1905 concerns the revision for a new edition of a volume in the Badminton Library of: Fishing. With contributions from other authors: Pike and other coarse fish. Includes letters to and from printers, publishers, writers of articles within this volume, fishing experts, fishing equipment suppliers, and fishing enthusiasts. Also includes samples of fishing line and artificail fishing flies.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01904 aHenry Cholmondeley-Pennell Papers on Fishing (MS Eng 1591). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCholmondeley-Pennell, H.q(Henry),d1837-1915. 0aAuthors and publishingzEngland. 0aFishingzGreat Britain. 0aFishingxEquipment and suppliesvHandbooks, manuals, etc. 0aFishingxHandbooks, manuals, etc. 0aFlies, Artificial. 0aFishing lines.2aat 0aLures.2aat cPurchase;d1918 Nov. 14;eF 5.14.25;hMinot fund.5hou aPurchased with the Minot fund, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 159102637ckcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100003400087245007000121300002600191545061500217545043900832520024601271555008701517524011001604544010001714600003401814600005001848650004501898655005001943700007601993541015602069561005102225506004602276852002502322012559466-620100901080110.0030212i19251926maunnn||||||||||| a|eng d0 aocn6633949891 aRoberts, William,d1895-1980.10aWilliam Roberts drawings for Seven pillars of wisdom,f1925-1926. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aWilliam Roberts was originally trained as a commercial artist. During his apprenticeship, he attended classes at various art schools in London and traveled to France and Italy, where he was influenced by Post-impressionism and Cubism. For a time he was a member of the Omega Workshops, a design enterprise associated with the Bloomsbury group, and was involved in the British school of Futurism known as Vorticism. After serving in the First World War, his work dealt with the horrors of combat and social criticism in general. In his latter years, he turned to the documentation of urban life and portraiture. aThe drawings that make up this collection were commissioned by T. E. Lawrence during 1925 and 1926, when an abridged version of Seven pillars of wisdom, entitled Revolt in the desert, proved financially successful, thus allowing work on a subscribers' edition of the original work to continue. None of the drawings in this collection were ultimately included; however, different illustrations by Roberts, chiefly portraits, were used. aCollection includes original drawings in pen and ink, charcoal, chalk, and pencil. Many pieces have autograph manuscript annotations by Roberts. Some titles were given by Roberts; those supplied by the cataloger are given in square brackets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02095 aWilliam Roberts Drawings for Seven Pillars of Wisdom (MS Eng 1653). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThis material was cataloged separately, but is part of the T. E. Lawrence Papers (MS Eng 1252).10aRoberts, William,d1895-1980.10aLawrence, T. E.q(Thomas Edward),d1888-1935. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918zArabian Peninsula. 7aDrawingszGreat Britainy20th century.2gmgpc1 aLawrence, T. E.q(Thomas Edward),d1888-1935.tSeven pillars of wisdom.0 cGift;aBayard L. Kilgour, Jr.;b225 E. 4th St., Cincinnati Ohio 45202;d1966 April (presented 1958-1966);e65M-177; recataloged from bMS Eng 1252.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Bayard L. Kilgour, Jr., 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 165301127ctcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003200093245004200125300002500167351001700192545015900209520015700368500004600525546001600571600003200587655002200619655002100641506004600662541015300708852002400861012620305-920101214155240.0101122i19031961mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWatson, Lucile,d1879-1962.10aLucile Watson papers,fca. 1903-1961. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLucile Watson was a Canadian-born stage and screen actress. Her second husband was playwright Louis E. Shipman whom she married in 1928 (he died in 1933). aIncludes scrapbooks, photographs, clippings, printed theatrical ephemera, correspondence, poems, speeches, and her unpublished memoir, The dear theatre. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aWatson, Lucile,d1879-1962. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aRichard Stoddard;b43 East 10th St, Suite 6-D, New York, NY 10003;d2010 November 22;e2010MT-9;h$3750.00 (Frank E. Chase Bequest).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 64602281ctcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003300110245009000143300002500233351010400258545062800362520024700990546001601237555008701253524016701340600003301507610004101540610004301581610004701624655003801671655002201709655002101731541010201752561004101854506003701895852002301932012740881-920110413115415.0110412i18781925mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn715102580 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aScott, Henry Edwards,d1900-10aHenry Edwards Scott papers relating to theater at Harvard University,fca. 1878-1925. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aArranged in four series: I. Correspondence; II. Printed material; III. Scrapbooks; IV. Photographs. aHenry Edwards Scott Jr. was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts on August 22, 1900 and died October 24, 1990 in Chilmark, Massachusetts. He graduated from Harvard University in 1922 with a degree in Engineering, and did graduate work in fine arts at Harvard from 1922-1924. From 1924-1926, Scott worked as a tutor for the Fine Arts Department, later becoming head tutor in Venetian Painting at Harvard. He eloped with Margaret (Peggy) Gustin in 1926, and went on to teach at many institutions, including Rochester University (1927-1928) and the University of Pittsburgh (1928-1933). He served in the U.S. Navy in World War II. aIncludes material relating to Scott's undergraduate years at Harvard University including scrapbooks, primarily of theater and musical events, many of the Pi Eta Society and Pierian Sodality; correspondence; printed material; and photographs. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02154 aHenry Edwards Scott Papers Relating to Theater at Harvard University ca. 1878-1925 (MS Thr 676). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aScott, Henry Edwards,d1900-20aHarvard University.bPi Eta Society.20aHarvard University.bPierian Sodality.20aHarvard UniversityxTheatery20th century. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat0 cGift;aSarah Scott Cook;b4 Humboldt Street, Cambridge, MA 02140;d2011 April 7;e2010MT-19.5the1 aGift of Sarah Scott Cook, 2011.5the0 aCollection is open for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 67602504ntcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245009000123300002600213351011800239520055300357545029200910555008701202524015701289546002701446600005801473600006201531600005901593600005601652600005501708650001601763650003001779650001901809650001901828655003201847655002601879655002201905655002001927655001901947655002101966541004201987506004202029852002302071012996141-820130830113155.0020710i16951937mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn767961803 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT0 aengafre00aHuman curiosity prints, playbills, broadsides and other printed material,f1695-1937. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Prints and images; II. Playbills and broadsides; and III. Other material. aThe collection consists of images, chiefly prints, but also some photographs; broadsides and playbills of shows; and other materials concerning human curiosities. Most of the human curiosities are medical anomalies, giants, dwarfs, etc., such as Józef Borusławski and Patrick Cotter, but collection also contains images of people known for unusual activities or feats, such as Captain Robert Barclay, who walked 1000 miles in 1000 days; André Garnerin, inventor of the frameless parachute; and Laura Dewey Bridgman, an educated deaf-blind woman. aHuman curiosities, usually referred to as "freaks," are persons with something extraordinary about their appearance or behavior. A "freak show" is an exhibition of such persons. Changes in popular culture and entertainment led to the decline of the freak show as a form of entertainment.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02245 aHuman Curiosity Prints, Playbills, Broadsides and Other Printed Material (MS Thr 736). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and French.10aCotter, Patrick,d1759 or 1760-1806vPictorial works.10aBarclay,cCaptainq(Robert),d1779-1854vPictorial works.10aGarnerin, André Jacques,d1769-1823vPictorial works.10aBridgman, Laura Dewey,d1829-1889vPictorial works.10aBorusławski, Józef,d1739-1837vPictorial works. 0aFreak shows 7aHuman curiosities.2gmgpc 7aDwarfs.2gmgpc 7aGiants.2gmgpc 7aPrints (visual works).2aat 7aIntaglio prints.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aBroadsides.2aat0 cNo source;eno accession number.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 73601716nrcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006700093300002600160351003800186520026600224555008700490524013300577546001600710610002700726610003200753655001700785655003600802655001700838710009800855740002200953541024000975561014601215506004201361852002301403013064846-920120830101511.0020710i19081986mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aRealia relating to Harvard University,f1908-1986 and undated. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aIncludes Harvard University connected objects, including button badges for theatrical productions, a lantern slide for the 1926 film Brown of Harvard, items relating to the Harvard Dramatic Club and to the 1936 Harvard Tercentenary celebration, and other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02262 aRealia Relating to Harvard University, 1908-1986 (MS Thr 771). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aHarvard Dramatic Club.20aHarvard UniversityvRealia. 7aBadges.2aat 7aLantern slidesy1900-1920.2aat 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)02aBrown of Harvard.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 77101976ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100002000106245011300126300002500239351001700264545031400281545024400595520060200839546002701441600002001468600003301488700002801521700001901549700001701568506002301585541006601608852002401674013142467-X20120330152417.0120330i19681985mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager1 aPoor, Harold L.10aHarold Poor and Lou Golden papers concerning theatrical productions based on Kurt Tucholsky,fca. 1968-1985. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aKurt Tucholsky (1890-1935) was a German writer for Berlin cabaret in the 1920s and 1930s who wrote under four pseudonyms (Peter Panter, Theobald Tiger, Ignaz Wrobel, and Kaspar Hauser). His works were banned and burned and his citizenship revoked by the Nazis; living in exile in Sweden, he committed suicide. aHarold Poor was a Rutgers University professor and author of the biography, Kurt Tucholsky and the ordeal of Germany, 1914-1935. Louis Golden held an M.F.A. from Brandeis University where their production about Tucholsky premiered in 1971. aCollection includes: typescript scripts, some with manuscript corrections, for Tickles by Tucholsky, Tucholsky!, Tucholsky's Berlin Kabarett, and Follow Schmidt; song lyrics and translations from the German; correspondence with investors and others including Harry Zohn, Moni Yakim, Robert Dolby, Henry Turner, Lucy Coolidge, Kermit Bloomgarden, and Eileen Fallon; contracts and copyright documents including arrangements made with Mary Tucholsky; one audiocassette of a lecture on Tucholsky; clippings, reviews, and a press kit; and photographs and postcards, some from the Kurt Tucholsky Archiv. aIn English and German.10aPoor, Harold L.10aTucholsky, Kurt,d1890-1935.1 aGerold-Tucholsky, Mary.1 aGolden, Louis.1 aYakim, Moni.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aPhilip J. Greven Jr.;d2012 March 15;e2011MT-31.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 83800789ngcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070110003300093245006200126300002500188351001700213500006300230546001600293610003300309655002500342541010400367506002300471845005300494852002400547013666997-220130425142020.0130425i19731982mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aHarvard Summer Dance Center.10aHarvard Summer Dance Center performances,fca. 1973-1982. a1 box (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: videocassettes. aIn English.20aHarvard Summer Dance Center. 7aVideocassettes.2aat0 cGift;aMartha Armstrong Gray;b45 Georgian Road, Weston, MA 02493;d2013 March 27;e2012MT-38.5the0 aOpen for research. aSurrogate required; consult Houghton staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 96001838ctcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002500091245006900116300004600185351001700231545034600248520014600594500007000740500008200810546001600892555009600908600002901004610002301033610003401056610005201090655002501142655001801167655002101185700002601206506002301232541011101255845011001366852002401476013077235-620130905165806.0120125i19962011mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSanderson, Edward L.10aEdward L. Sanderson papers on James Trimble III,fca. 1996-2011. a1 boxa(1 linear ft.) +eCD-ROM (4700 MB) aUnprocessed. aJames (Jimmie) Trimble III was born October 10, 1925, and died March 1, 1945, at Iwo Jima (Volcano Islands, Japan) as a member of the United States Marine Corps. He attended St. Albans School in Washington (D.C.) with Gore Vidal and was a member of the Washington Senators (Baseball team : 1886-1960)(also known as the Washington Nationals). aResearch files and completed biography of James (Jimmie) Trimble, Gore Vidal's childhood friend and dedicatee of Vidal's City and the Pillar. aCollection comprised primarily of photocopies of primary sources. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: CD-ROM, audiocassette, videotapes. aIn English.0 aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0227410aVidal, Gore,d1925-2012.20aSt. Albans School.20aUnited States.bMarine Corps.20aWashington Senators (Baseball team : 1886-1960) 7aAudiocassettes.2aat 7aCD-ROMs.2aat 7aVideotapes.2aat1 aTrimble, James,bIII.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aEdward L. Sanderson;b823 North Racine Avenue, Chicago, IL 60642;d2012 January 12;e2011M-71.5hou aSpecial equipment or surrogate required; consult Houghton staff (CD-ROM, audiocassette, videotapes).5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 278802598cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110002900123245008300152300002900235545017200264520060800436546005501044555008701099555010501186524012201291546001601413600003401429600002101463610002901484650003801513650002801551650003101579655002201610655001901632655002001651656002701671710003401698700002101732541017501753561005901928506004201987506012302029852002402152000602296-020100304122323.0860820i19011946mau eng d0 aocn612372934 aMAHV86A482 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aJames B. Pinker and Son.10aJames B. Pinker and Son correspondence concerning John Galsworthy,f1901-1946. a1 boxa(1.25 linear ft.) aThe Pinker firm, founded by James Brand Pinker (1863-1922), was a firm of literary agents in London. John Galsworthy (1867-1933) was an English novelist and dramatist. aCorrespondence, chiefly with book and periodical publishers, concerning publication, translation, or adaptation of works by John Galsworthy. Includes correspondence written to authors or other firms, including Galsworthy and publishers Duckworth (Firm), which was forwarded on to James B. Pinker and Son. Some of the correspondence also concerns other writers such as Arnold Bennett, Joseph Conrad, St. John G. (St. John Greer) Ervine, Aldous Huxley, W. Somerset (William Somerset) Maugham, Sir Hugh Walpole, and others represented by the Pinker firm. Also includes receipts, telegrams, and photographs. aIncludes materials in English, French, and German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002468 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-130. aJames B. Pinker and Son Correspondence Concerning John Galsworthy (MS Eng 796). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGalsworthy, John,d1867-1933.10aPinker, James B.20aJames B. Pinker and Son. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aLiterary agents.2lcsh2 aDuckworth (Firm),erecipient.1 aPinker, James B.0 c(Lot 194, Sotheby, 26 June 1950), Purchase.aMaggs Brothers, Ltd.;b50 Berkeley Square, London W1, England;d1950 Sept. 1;e50M-130;hFrank Brewer Bemis fund (£36).5hou1 aPurchased with the Frank Brewer Bemis fund, 1950.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 79601963ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003000122245009400152300002800246545049100274520013700765555008700902555010900989524014501098546001601243600003001259650001701289655003801306656002301344541005201367561004101419506004201460506012301502852002401625008860739-920121218100159.0020925s1942 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm813304141 aMAHV02-A86 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHunter, Dard,d1883-1966.10aDard Hunter papers for Papermaking: the history and technique of an ancient craft,f1942. a1 boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aHunter was part of the American Arts and Crafts Movement, and a member of Elbert Hubbard's Roycrofters in East Aurora, NY, in 1904. He devoted his life to research, collecting, writing, and publishing the history of hand papermaking and printing. He published books at his Mountain House Press and established Lime Rock Mill, a paper mill in Connecticut. In 1939 he established the Dard Hunter Paper Museum at MIT, which later moved to the American Museum of Papermaking in Atlanta, Ga. aCollection includes typescript printer's copy for 1943 Knopf edition, typescript (carbon), and note cards for the index to the book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011048 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-216. aDard Hunter Papers for Papermaking : the History and Technique of an Ancient Craft, 1942 (MS Am 2129). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHunter, Dard,d1883-1966. 0aPapermaking. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPapermakers.2lcsh0 cGift;aDard Hunter, Esq.;d1950;e49M-216.5hou1 aGift of Dard Hunter, Esq., 19505hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 212902865ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103041001300124100004000137245005000177300002800227351028400255545029600539520055700835555008701392524010201479546002701581600004001608600004001648650002801688650003801716650005401754650002101808655002001829655002801849656002701877655002401904700004001928700004201968700004302010740002502053541015802078561012802236506004202364852002502406009594785-X20130719120006.0020710i19031927mau |||||||eng|d0 aocm79390273 aMAHV05B10010 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengager1 aHewlett, Maurice Henry,d1861-1923.10aMaruice Henry Hewlett collection,f1903-1927. a1 boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Maurice Henry Hewlett letters to Harold Monro and Alida Klemantaski Monro; and II. William Morris Colles papers concerning Maurice Henry Hewlett (A. Correspondence, B. Compositions and miscellany, C. Business papers and financial records). aHewlett was a British novelist, poet, and essayist. William Morris Colles (1855-1926) was Hewlett's literary agent and founder and managing director of the Authors' Syndicate. Harold Monro (1879-1932) was a British poet and anthologist and Alida Klemantaski Monro became his wife in 1920. aIncludes correspondence of Maurice Henry Hewlett with William Morris Colles, Harold Monro, and Alida Klemantaski Monro; but primarily the bulk is correspondence of Colles with many others (especially publishers) concerning the publishing and movie rights to Hewlett's work. Also includes a few Hewlett compositions: a typescript of his short story, Brazenhead in Milan, scenarios, etc ... ; and business papers assembled on Hewlett by William Morris Colles and the Authors' Syndicate, including contracts, some lists of expenses, and other material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01734 aMaurice Henry Hewlett Collection, 1903-1927 (MS Eng 985.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German.10aColles, William Morris,d1855-1926.10aHewlett, Maurice Henry,d1861-1923. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzEnglandy20th century. 7aLiterary agents. 7aContracts.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aLiterary agents.2lcsh 7aShort stories.2aat1 aColles, William Morris,d1855-1926.1 aMonro, Alida Klemantaski,erecipient.1 aMonro, Harold,d1879-1932,erecipient.02aBrazenhead in Milan.0 cPurchases;asee finding aid for details;d1956-1957;e55M-101F, 56M-40, 57M-44.hCharles Eliot Norton fund, the Amy Lowell fund, and the Bemis fund.5hou1 aPurchased from various sources with the Charles Eliot Norton fund, the Amy Lowell fund, and the Bemis fund, 1956-1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 985.103763ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004900121245012000170300002700290351050900317545108500826520040901911530006202320555008702382524019302469600003802662600004102700600003802741610003102779650003202810650002802842650003502870655004202905655002202947700004102969710003103010740006703041541006803108506012103176561004403297852002403341009997849-020110523142639.0060630i19161917mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm84672358 aMAHV06B47 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBelden, Henry Marvin,d1865-1954,ecompiler.10aMissouri Folk-Lore Society ballads, songs, rimes, games, riddles, etc. collected between 1903 and 1917,f1916-1917. a1 box (1.5 linear ft.) aArranged in the following series: I. Ballads included in Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads; II. Ballads and songs, British and American; III. Ballads and songs, Irish; IV. Ballads and songs, French and Yiddish; V. Ballads and songs illustrative of American history and social conditions; VI. The Negro; VII. Ballads and songs, biblical, religious, and homiletic; VIII. Folk lyric; IX. Nursery rimes, games, riddles, and play-party songs; X. Festivals; and the Master outline of the collection. aHenry Marvin Belden (1865-1954) was a professor of English at the University of Missouri in Columbia and a scholar of American ballads and folk songs. He was one of the founders of the Missouri Folklore Society organized in 1906 and helped them collect ballad text and music. In 1916-1917 he took a leave of absence to study at Harvard University, where he produced a complete copy of the Missouri ballad collection (prior to publication) to give to George Lyman Kittredge, Gurney Professor of English Literature, for placement in the Harvard Library. A comparison of this typescript (which forms the described collection in this finding aid) and Belden's later published 1940 ballad volume, shows "few major changes in arrangement ... [but] many versions of songs included in the 1917 collection were not published in 1940 ..." The actual publication of the entire set by Belden was delayed for various reasons until 1940 when he finally published: Ballads and songs collected by the Missouri folk-lore society, edited by H. M. Belden. Columbia: The University of Missouri, 1940. aIncludes typescripts (some with manuscript revisions and annotations by Henry Marvin Belden and some by George Lyman Kittredge) of ballad and folk song text. Also includes manuscript music for some songs, editorial comments by Belden concerning the origin of the texts, names of persons responsible for recollecting and collecting the ballads, and the location and date when each version was transcribed. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01915 aHenry Marvin Belden Collection of Missouri Folk-Lore Society Ballads, Songs, Rimes, Games, Riddles, etc. Collected Between 1903 and 1917 (MS Am 2446). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBelden, Henry Marvin,d1865-1954.10aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.10aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896.20aMissouri Folklore Society. 0aBallads, EnglishzMissouri. 0aBalladszUnited States. 0aFolk songs, EnglishzMissouri. 7aBalladszUnited Statesz19th century. 7aTranscripts.5aat1 aKittredge, George Lyman,d1860-1941.2 aMissouri Folklore Society.02aBallads and songs collected by the Missouri Folk-lore Society. cGift;aProf. Henry Marvin Belden;d1932 June 1;e25241.64.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite.cRetrieval requires giving advance notice to the Houghton Public Services staff.1 aGift of Henry Marvin Belden, 1932.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 244603693nkcaa2200457 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003700110245007500147300002800222351033400250530006200584545020800646520069500854520038301549520014001932555008702072524014202159546003002301544011102331600004802442600004502490600004102535600004002576600003702616600005002653600004102703600003902744600003102783600003402814650004202848655004402890655002002934655002202954541007302976561006903049506009403118852002303212012125056-320130116142208.0020710i18851964mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn663988883 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams family photographs and other materials,f1885-1964. a1 boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Williams family photograph albums, ca. 1890s-1930s; II. Williams family loose photographs (A. Tennessee Williams portrait photographs, B. Tennessee Williams photographs with others, C. Photographs of other persons, D. Images of places, events, and miscellaneous); and III. Other materials. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aCollection of photographs, primarily of Tennessee Williams, his family, relatives, friends, or acquaintances. Photographs, various sizes, mostly snapshots, but also formal studio portraits, mounted or inserted into scrapbook-type albums or stored loose. Images include historical family photographs of Williams' grandparents and parents, as well as many family snapshots of himself, his sister, brother, and other family members. There are also some photographs relating to his professional life such as his agent Aubrey Wood and Hollywood personalities Elvis Presley, Laurence Olivier, and others. Images include photographs, cabinet photographs, snapshots, carte-de-visite, and negatives.8 aIncludes photographs of the following family members, as well as many other persons: Rev. Walter Edwin Dakin, 1857-1955 (TW's grandfather) Rosina Otte Dakin, 1863-1944 (TW's grandmother) Cornelius Coffin Williams, 1880-1957 (TW's father) Edwina Dakin Williams, 1884-1980 (TW's mother) Rose Isabel Williams, 1909-1996 (TW's sister) Walter Dakin Williams, 1919-2008 (TW's brother)8 aIncludes some images of locations and events and also a few family memorabilia such as passports, clippings, notes, and other material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02048 aTennessee Williams Family Photographs and Other Materials (MS Thr 553). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aOlivier, Laurence,d1907-1989vPhotographs.10aPresley, Elvis,d1935-1977vPhotographs.10aWilliams, Edwina DakinvPhotographs.10aWilliams, Rose IsabelvPhotographs.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983vPhotographs.10aWilliams, Walter DakinvPhotographs.10aWood, Audrey,d1905-vPhotographs.30aDakin familyvPhotographs.30aWilliams familyvPhotographs. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aCabinet photographsy19th century.2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aDonor unknown;d1986 September 29;eno accession number.5the1 aGift, 1986. See curatorial file for additional information.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 55306055ntcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004200110245008300152300002800235351018600263545191300449520089102362520049203253520056903745555008704314524015104401546001604552544027804568581011204846581017204958600004205130600003105172650001505203650002805218650002705246656001705273700004705290700004305337700004505380541011105425561004205536506004205578852002505620012743668-520110615085829.0020710i19011940mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn719630736 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940.10aMrs. Patrick Campbell correspondence and other papers,f1901-1940 and undated. a1 boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence (A. Letters from Mrs. Patrick Campbell, B. Letters to Mrs. Patrick Campbell, C. Other correspondence); and II. Other material. aBeatrice Rose Stella Tanner Campbell (1865-1940) was a prominent British actress. She made her debut as Mrs. Patrick Campbell in 1888 playing in a string of minor successes until an 1893 role as Paula in The second Mrs. Tanqueray launched her career and garnered high praise in the press. Mrs. Patrick is particularly remembered for her role as Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion, a part written for her by George Bernard Shaw, who began correspondence with her in 1899. Though begun at the close of the previous century, the correspondence between Shaw and Mrs. Patrick did not truly bloom until 1912. At that time, Shaw, the noted playwright, Fabian socialist, journalist, dramatic and literary critic, who had been married to fellow Fabian suffragist Charlotte Frances Payne-Townshend Shaw since 1898, pronounced himself to be "head over ears in love" with Mrs. Patrick. In 1914, when Mrs. Patrick, a widow of almost 15 years, was to marry George Cornwallis-West, Shaw implored her not to marry "that George." The marriage, combined with a souring experience for the two flirtatious friends in Sandwich (1913), seemed to dull the frequency of their correspondence until the 1920s when Mrs. Patrick introduced the idea of publishing their collected letters in her autobiographical work, My life and some letters. The correspondence, though less frequent through the years, continued to the end of Mrs. Patrick's life. Her will, written in 1934, stated her long-held desire that their correspondence be published in full. Shaw's will, dated the year of his death in 1950, granted long-withheld permission for the correspondence to be published to the financial benefit of Mrs. Patrick's great-grandchildren. The collection, edited by Alan Dent, Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell: their correspondence (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1952), included a significant selection, though not all, of the correspondence. aThe largest part of this collection consists of letters written by Mrs. Patrick Campbell to George Bernard Shaw throughout the forty years of their relationship. Beginning in 1899 with Shaw’s first letter and carrying through to the end of Mrs. Patrick’s life in 1940, the two shared an early flirtatious relationship and reciprocal inspiration that perhaps most notably gave shape to the role of Eliza in Shaw’s Pygmalion. The letters between Shaw and Mrs. Patrick range widely, delving into the subjects of their active careers, family, health, emotions, travel, and their many significant theatrical and society acquaintances and friends. James Barrie, W.B. (William Bulter) Yeats, Dame Ellen Terry, Alfred and Edith Sophy Lyttelton, Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Sir Arthur Wing Pinero and Sir Henry Irving are mentioned with casual frequency. Politics is a notably absent theme.8 aA significant portion of the correspondence involves a specific and contentious topic for these writers: the publication of their letters. Publication exists not only as a theme of these letters, but as another framework through which they were actively read, both by Shaw and Mrs. Patrick, as well as others such as the editor of a 1952 volume of their correspondence, Alan Dent. Manuscript annotations and corrections by these parties litter the letters and are noted where applicable.8 aAlso included in this collection are two letters to friends Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lachman from Mrs. Patrick. Additionally, letters to Mrs. Patrick from her son, Alan Urquhart Campbell (“Beo”), various theatrical figures including George Arliss, Arnold Bennett, and Sir John Gielgud, and friends such as Daphne Du Maurier and Naomi Ellington Jacob are included. Typescript transcripts of Shaw’s letters and postcards to Mrs. Patrick as well as several letters from publishers and lawyers relating to the publication their correspondence round out the collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00457 aMrs. Patrick Campbell Correspondence and Other Papers, 1901-1940 (MS Thr 372.1). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aOther instances of George Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick’s correspondence are also present in the Bernard F. Burgunder Collection of George Bernard Shaw at Cornell University Library and in The George Bernard Shaw Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. aDent, Alan. Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell their correspondence. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1952.) aKilty, Jerome. Dear Liar: A comedy of letters adapted by Jerome Kilty from the correspondence of Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell. (London: Max Reinhardt, 1960.)10aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940.10aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950. 0aActresses. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aTheatery20th century. 7aActors.2aat1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950.tPygmalion.1 aCampbell, Alan Urquhart,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch AB 1955;b825 Fifth Avenue New York, New York 10021;d1983 March 8;e82M-70.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1983.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 372.101384nkm a2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245003300110260003100143300006400174500011300238500002600351524005400377546001600431650001900447650002100466655002900487710009800516710001900614710003200633541024000665561015200905852004901057013066879-620120830101547.0020710s1996 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn773709735 aMH-HTcMH-HTegihc00aPostcards, Coracle, 1978-96. a[London :bCoracle,c1996] a1 box (48 postcards) :bill. (some col.) ;c4 x 18 x 13 cm. a48 postcards housed in 1 box. Postcards produced by artists associated with Coracle Press and Workfortheeye. aTitle from box cover. aMS Thr 773. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aVisual poetry. 0aConcrete poetry. 7aPostcardszEngland.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)2 aCoracle Press.2 aWorkfortheeyetodo (Gallery)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 773zShelved with bMS Thr 77402649ctcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004200122245006700164300002600231351002900257545012100286520075900407555008701166555010901253524011901362546001601481600004201497600001801539610003301557610003601590650002301626651004501649655002001694655001601714655002201730700006501752700004401817700004001861700003001901541016201931561006702093506004202160852002502202009222053-320121126103437.0031008i17991945mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm788477051 aMAHV03A320 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858.10aMatthew Calbraith Perry additional correspondence,f1799-1945. a1 boxa(5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aPerry was an American naval officer, best known for negotiating the treaty that opened Japan to trade with the West. aLetters written by Perry discuss personal finance issues, duties at home, and naval news. Collection contains a letter of appointment to Perry written by John Adams, a book called "Presentation of the Relics of Matthew Perry" from Japan, letter to John Rockefeller from the US Naval Academy about Matthew Perry, a biography of Matthew Perry, a personal account written about Perry's visit to Japan by a native, and a printed booklet summarizing the Japan trip. Also contained in the collection is a book of illustrations of Newport, newspaper clippings about Matthew Perry and his family, genealogical material, and a deed of sale to Matthew Perry of Peel Island for $50.00. There is also a letter containing information of the Perry family coat of arms.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010378 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-137. aMatthew Calbraith Perry Additional Correspondence, 1799-1945 (MS Am 1815.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858.30aPerry family.20aUnited States Naval Academy.10aUnited States.bNavyxOfficers. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationszJapan. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aRockefeller, John D.q(John Davison),d1839-1937erecipient.1 aAdams, John,d1735-1826ecorrespondent.1 aHone, John,d-1832,ecorrespondent.1 aPerry family,erecipient.0 cDeposit, gift;aMrs. Gouverneur M. Phelps;bOrchard Farm, South Ashfield, Mass.;dDeposit, 9 Sept. 1965, gift, Dec. 1967;eformerly 65M-40, now 69M-137.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. Gouverneur M. Phelps, 1965; gift, 1967.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1815.202649ctcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029035001700069040002100086100003900107245015400146300002600300351011000326545014400436520035400580520016300934520016001097524014101257546003601398555008701434600002601521655002201547700003701569700003701606700005201643700003201695700005101727700003701778700003501815700008401850852002401934506003401958541010301992541010202095561005402197010962385-120090707113742.0070904i18631971mau|||||||||||||||||engd0 aocn612812877 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNickerson, Charles C.,ecollector.10aCharles C. Nickerson collection of W. H. (William Hurrell) Mallock and other papers,fca. 1863-1971 (inclusive),gca. 1863-1908 and 1962-1971 (bulk). a1 boxa.1 linear ft.) aOrganized in two series: I. Letters from W. H. (William Hurrell) Mallock to others; and II. Other papers. aWilliam Hurrell Mallock was an English author of novels, poems, and prose on economics, philosophy, politics, religion, and social welfare. aThe collection is formed around the collector's research into W. H. Mallock. The Mallock letters in the collection generally concern his writing, including arrangements to publish; other letters are about Mallock's writing in response to queries from the collector or are simply from other notable writers. Includes a Mallock genealogy signed H.W.L.8 aRecipients of Mallock's letters include William Morris Colles, Henry James Nicoll, C. N. Richardson, and Alexander D. O. (Alexander Dundas Ogilvy) Wedderburn.8 aAlso includes letters of Sir Max Beerbohm; Randolph Caldecott; Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton; Aldous Huxley; C. P. Snow; and Charlotte Mary Yonge. aCharles C. Nickerson Collection of W. H. (William Hurrell) Mallock and Other Papers (MS Eng 1635). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection material in English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0203810aNickerson, Charles C. 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956.1 aCaldecott, Randolph,d1846-1886.1 aColles, William Morris,d1855-1926,erecipient.1 aHuxley, Aldous,d1894-1963.1 aMallock, W. H.q(William Hurrell),d1849-1923.1 aNicoll, Henry James,erecipient.1 aRichardson, C. N.,erecipient.1 aWedderburn, Alexander D. O.q(Alexander Dundas Ogilvy),d1854-1931,erecipient.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 16350 aCollection open for research.0 cGift;aCharles C. Nickerson;b164 County Road, Plympton, MA 02367;d2007 August 22;e2007M-9.5hou0 cGift;aCharles C. Nickerson;b164 County Road, Plympton, MA 02367;d2004 June 29;e2003M-72.5hou1 aGift of Charles C. Nickerson, 2004 and 2007.5hou02063ntcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004300110245004900153300002600202351010700228545011600335520030700451555008700758524012700845546001600972544002500988600004301013650003601056655002101092655002001113655002101133656001701154700004301171700004701214541006301261561004601324506004201370506012301412852002401535541007001559561004801629010588519-320120416101242.0070703i18191866mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn776215492 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aMacready, William Charles,d1793-1873.10aWilliam Charles Macready papers,f1819-1866. a1 boxa.2 linear feet aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from William Charles Macready; and II. Other material. aWilliam Charles Macready was an English stage manager and actor known particularly for his Shakespearean roles. aThis collection includes 77 letters from Macready to a number of recipients, many also involved in the British and American stage, including Edwin Forrest, 1806-1872 and Washington Irving, 1783-1859. Autograph documents by Macready, his bookplate, and clippings relating to his death are also included.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02276 aWilliam Charles Macready Papers, 1819-1866 (MS Thr 814). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also MS Thr 547.10aMacready, William Charles,d1793-1873. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 7aBookplates.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aObituaries.2aat 7aActors.2aat1 aForrest, Edwin,d1806-1872,erecipient1 aIrving, Washington,d1783-1859,erecipient0 cOld gift;asource unknown;ddate unknown;e2007MT-5r.5the1 aGift of unknown donor, date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 8140 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno accession number.5the1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5the02479nrcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110005500108245010700163260003200270300002600302351004900328545040500377520021500782555008700997524016001084546001601244600002901260600005701289610005501346650002501401600001901426655001801445655001901463655002501482655001701507655002201524655002401546655001701570655003001587655002501617655002001642655002001662700005201682710002501734541009501759561009001854506004201944852002301986013396096-X20121109192801.0121025i18641897mau|||| ||||||||||a|eng d0 aocn815332530 aMH-HegihccMH-H2 aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial (Kittery Point, Me.)10aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial (Kittery Point, Me.) memorabilia, jewelry and silver tablewareh[object] aVarious places,c1864-1897. a1 boxa.25 linear ft. aArranged in order as received in repository. aThe William Dean Howells Memorial House is located at 36 Pepperrell Road in Kittery Point, Maine. The writer and critic William Dean Howells occupied this gracious two-story Victorian house during the early 1900's. His descendant John N. M. Howells donated the house to Harvard University in 1977. The property is maintained as a memorial to the author and is administered by a five-member committee. aMemorabilia formerly owned by the William Dean Howells family. Includes: a Saint Gaudens medal of Mildred Howells, 2 women's brooches, a man's scarab stickpin, 4 silver napkin rings, and a silver serving spoon.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02373 aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial (Kittery Point, Me.) Memorabilia, Jewelry and Silver Tableware, 1864-1897 (MS Am 2851). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowells, Mildred,d1872-10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920xHomes and haunts.20aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial (Kittery Point, Me.) 0aAmerican literature.30aHowell family. 7aJewelry.2aat 7aBrooches.2aat 7aCommemoratives.2aat 7aMedals.2aat 7aMemorabilia.2aat 7aNapkins rings.2aat 7aRealia.2aat 7aScarabs (sculpture).2aat 7aServing spoons.2aat 7aStickpins.2aat 7aTableware.2aat1 aSaint-Gaudens, Augustus,d1848-1907,edesigner.2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cTransfer;aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial;bKittery Point, Maine;d1990 May 7;e90Z-3.5hou1 aTransferred from the William Dean Howells Memorial (Kittery Point, Maine), 1990.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Am 285101113ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245005500139300003200194500011400226500002700340581006400367524005500431655003800486655002200524655001600546700005500562541009300617561003900710561007200749852002600821009586767-820050607171319.0050323s1913 ||||||| |||| ||||p eng d0 aocn612865248 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aNoyes, Alfred,d1880-1958.10aTales of the mermaid tavern :kmanuscript,f[1913] a1 box ;c27 cm. or smaller. aAutograph manuscript and page proofs with manuscript revisions for the 1913 edition of Noyes' book of poetry. aIn a tray case, 30 cm. aAlfred Noyes, Tales of the mermaid tavern (New York, 1913). aMS Eng 1000. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907,eformer owner. cGift;aTalbot Aldrich;ddeposited June 1943, made gift 1 Dec. 1947;e42M 1665-1666.5hou aGift of Talbot Aldrich, 1947.5hou aFrom the library of Thomas Bailey Aldrich (Harvard bookplate).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 100001579ckcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100002800125245002700153300004000180351008400220545007800304520017600382555008700558524011800645600002800763600004300791600004500834600005100879610003600930650003400966650003301000655005101033655002001084541006601104561004801170852002301218009605237-620050504144330.0050420nuuuuuuuumau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocm793923301 aMHAT05-F10003 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEvans, Thomas Harrison.00kPhotographs,fundated. a1 box and 1 drawera(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Small photographs; and II. Oversized photographs. aThomas Harrison Evans was the brother of the donor, Madge Evans Kingsley. aPortrait photographs of actors, the movie picture lot of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio, and scenes from theatrical productions, including Of Mice and Men and True Confession.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01735 aThomas Harrison Evans Photographs (MS Thr 476). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEvans, Thomas Harrison.10aBerr, Georges,d1867-1942.tMon crime.10aVerneuil, Louis,d1893-1952.tMon crime.10aSteinbeck, John,d1902-1968.tOf mice and men.20aMetro-Goldwyn-MayervPortraits. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aActors, AmericanvPortraits. 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat cGift;aMadge Evans Kingsley;d25 Oct. 1944;e2004MT-115.5the aGift of Madge Evans Kingsley, 1944.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 47602468ntcaa2200481 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004400110245008200154300004400236351009200280545031500372520043000687524016001117546002601277555008701303600002501390600004401415600003301459655002201492655002201514655001901536655002001555655001901575655002001594655002001614650001101634650002201645650001801667650001801685650002201703650001901725656001801744656002801762700002501790710002901815506002301844852002401867541005901891561003601950013627845-020130405191112.0130304i19201988mau|||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocn832016317 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHughes, Russell Meriwether,d1898-1988.10aRussell Meriwether Hughes photographs, watercolors, and ephemera,f1920-1988. a1 box and 1 portfolio box (1 linear ft) aOrganized into the following series I. Photographs; II. Watercolors; and III. Ephemera. aRussell Meriwether Hughes (1898-1988), also known as La Meri, was an American dancer, teacher, scholar and choreographer specializing in ethnic Spanish and Indian dance. She co-founded the School of Natya with Ruth St. Denis in 1940 and founded Ethnologic Dance Center and the Ethnologic Dance Theater in 1945. aThe collection features photographs relating to the career of Russell Meriwether Hughes, know professionally as La Meri, as well as several watercolors attributed to her, pamphlets, and clippings. It is comprised mainly of individual portraits of La Meri in ethnic costumes and dance poses, primarily depicting the dances of India, Indonesia, Persia, and the Philippines, though Eastern Europe and Spain are also represented. aRussell Meriwether Hughes Photographs, Watercolors, and Ephemera, 1920-1988 (MS Thr 943). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials in English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0241000aLa Meri,d1898-1988.10aHughes, Russell Meriwether,d1898-1988.10aSt. Denis, Ruth,d1880-1968. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aBrochures.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 0aDance. 0aDancexEducation. 0aDancezIndia. 0aDancezSpain. 0aDancezIndonesia. 0aDance costume. 7aDancers.2aat 7aDancexEducation.2lcsh0 aLa Meri,d1898-1988.2 aEthnologic Dance Center.0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 943 cGift;aAnna Erskin Croused1991 July 2e91-92.0045the aGift of Anna Erskin Crouse5THE04371nkcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070110004700091245011700138300004800255351011900303545098600422520047801408520053801886555008702424524015202511546001602663544025702679600003902936610007002975650003703045650005103082651002303133651004603156651004603202650007003248655002003318655002203338700005403360700004703414541011603461561003803577561007803615561006403693506015603757852003603913012324950-320110107090013.0100421i18991900mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aUnited States.bArmy.bCorps of Engineers.10aUnited States Army Corps of Engineers photographs of Spanish fortifications around Havana, Cuba,fca. 1899-1900. a1 box and 1 portfolio boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Loose photographs and other material; and II. Rolled panorama photographs. aAfter the Spanish-American war, during the US occupation of Cuba, Colonel William Murray Black was made the Chief Engineer of the Department of Havana on General William Ludlow’s staff for the Corps of Engineers (on January 2, 1899). In this position, he organized a new Department of Public Works and established sanitary conditions in the city of Havana. Upon the arrival of General Leonard Wood, Black became Chief Engineer of the Island of Cuba. He wrote a code of regulations for the conduct of Public Works, which remained in force until they were incorporated into the laws of the new Cuban Republic. His establishment of public mapping, construction of sewers, paving of streets, construction of wharves, and the protection of the ocean-front established Havana as a viable seaport. [Source: www.spanamwar.com]. These photographs of the Spanish defenses were probably taken after the Spanish-American War (1898 April-August), prior to beginning the public works projects. aPhotographs of Spanish colonial fortifications around Havana, Cuba including earthworks and buildings, such as barbed wire entanglements, batteries, block houses, pontoon bridges, redoubts, roads, standing trenches, and many other images. Photographs were accompanied by a map of Cuba (not present at time of cataloging) and were supposed to be keyed to this map. Collection also includes a letter from Charles Moore (AB 1878) to Mr. Kiernan at the Harvard College Library.8 aBlack and white photographs, sized 12.5 x 18 cm. All are undated except one which is May 1899. Most photographs are stamped: "ENG DEP'T D of H." Some include text: "Spanish earthworks" and/or "Havana defenses." Some photographs pasted together to form panorama views. Each group of photographs was enclosed in an envelope listing name/description of image and negative number. Each envelope was annotated: "Position on Map by marginal cross-index." These groupings were retained during cataloging, as was the order within each group.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02130 aUnited States Army Corps of Engineers Photographs of Spanish Fortifications Around Havana, Cuba (MS Am 2711). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aThese photographs may correlate to the map at the University of California, Davis, Shields Library: United States Army. Corps of Engineers. Map showing locations of temporary field works erected by the Spanish for the land defense of Havana, 1897-1898.10aBlack, William Murray,d1855-1933.10aUnited States.bArmy.bCorps of Engineers.bDepartment of Havana. 0aPublic workszCubavPhotographs. 0aSpanish-American War, 1898zCubavPhotographs. 0aCubavPhotographs. 0aHavana (Cuba)y19th centuryvPhotographs. 0aHavana (Cuba)y20th centuryvPhotographs. 0aFortificationszHavana (Cuba)vPhotographs.vEarly works to 1800. 7aPanoramas.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBlack, William Murray,d1855-1933,eformer owner.1 aMoore, Charles,d1855-1942,eformer owner.0 cGift;aCharles Moore;bHarwich Port, Massachusetts;d1900 September 3;e2009M-102 (recat. from SA 1740.9).5hou1 aRecataloged from SA 1740.9*.5hou1 aOriginal gift of Charles Moore to the Harvard College Library, 1900.5hou1 aSent to Charles Moore by Colonel William Murray Black.5hou1 aMost of this collection is open for research use. Item (88) is fragile and access requires permission of curator, as well as instructions for use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2711zBox 2 is PF02087ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103100003400124245005400158300004000212351003900252545004300291520041000334530006200744555008700806524010600893546001600999600003401015650003501049655004001084655001801124656002301142700006101165700005701226700005701283700005101340541004201391561005701433506012301490852002501613852006301638009574111-920130917164012.0020710i18581899mau |||||||eng|d0 aocm79380968 aMAHV05B10004 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aEmily Dickinson miscellaneous papers,f1858-1899. a1 box and 1 volumea(.3 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aDickinson was a poet of Amherst, Mass. aIncludes a variety of materials by and about the poet Emily Dickinson and the Dickinson family. Emily Dickinson items include letters, autograph poems, a black cake recipe, and a visiting card. Letters are to family members including Susan Huntington Dickinson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Martha Gilbert Smith, and others. Family miscellany includes letters from Lavinia Norcross Dickinson and others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01731 aEmily Dickinson Miscellaneous Papers, 1858-1899 (MS Am 1118.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoemszAmericany19th century.2aat 7aRecipes.2aat 7aWomen poets.2lcsh1 aDickinson, Lavinia Norcross,d1833-1899,ecorrespondent.1 aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913,erecipient.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911,erecipient.1 aSmith, Martha Gilbert,d1829-1895,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5hou1 aAcquired from various sources at various times.5hou1 aReaders are expected to use the facsimiles available. Access to originals requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.78 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1118.7z"A thunder-storm" is shelved as MS02760ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110003700108245005700145300004000202351005400242545074300296520032801039555008701367524010701454546001601561581022401577650004501801655005301846610003901899610003701938655004201975655004702017655001802064852003502082541011102117561004002228561006502268506004202333852002302375009998331-120120716074508.0060622i18461850mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612836271 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aBoston Union of Associationists.10aBoston Union of Associationists records,f1846-1850. a1 box and 1 volumea(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. aThe Boston Union of Associationists, an affiliate of the American Union of Associationists (founded May 1846), was devoted to the propagation of Fourierism, a philosophy developed by François Marie Charles Fourier (1772–1837), a French utopian socialist and philosopher. This Boston Union was organized on 30 November 1846 and operated steadily until 1851. The Union divided itself into groups, notably the Group of Practical Affairs, Group of Indoctrination, and Group of Social Culture. Some members of this organization were also participants in their sister society, the Boston Religious Union of Associationists, as well as the Brook Farm Community, which was a transcendentalist Utopian experiment in West Roxbury, Massachusetts. aIncludes: lists of members; manuscript minutes of meetings, financial account books, bylaws, and constitutions; printed invitations; and printed tickets to events. Also contains items concerning the sub-groups of the Union, including the Group of Guaranties, Group of Practical Affairs, and Group of Study & Indoctrination.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02168 aBoston Union of Associationists Records, 1846-1850 (MS Am 2730). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aFor detailed information on this society, see: Sterling F. Delano. The Boston Union of Associationists (1846-1851): 'Association is to me the great hope of the world.' Studies in the American Renaissance. 1996, pp.5-40. 0aFourier, Charles,d1772-1837xInfluence. 7aAccount books2aatzUnited Statesy19th century.20aAmerican Union of Associationists.20aBoston Union of Associationists. 7aBylaws (administrative records).2aat 7aMinuteszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aTickets.2aat8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 27303item (5)0 cPurchase;d1933 May 17;eNo accession number; Recataloged from Soc 859.209*;hFriends of the Library.5hou1 aRecataloged from Soc 859.209*.5hou1 aPurchased with funds from Friends of the Library, 1933.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 273001699ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100006200124245009300186300004100279351003900320545010700359520018500466555008700651555011300738524015000851600005001001600001801051650002701069655001901096656002601115656002301141541009801164561003901262506004201301852003001343008988262-820120502112721.0021011i18491860mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127413241 aMAHV02-A141 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFelton, C.C.q(Cornelius Conway),d1807-1862,erecipient.10aLetters sent to C. C. (Cornelius Conway) Felton from various correspondents,f1849-1860. a1 box anda1 volumea(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCornelius Conway Felton was a classical scholar and professor, and later president of Harvard College. aContains letters to Felton, many of which relate to classical studies, and especially archaeological investigations at Athens. Also contains Felton's lecture on Aristophanes, 1852.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009398 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-234-235. aLetters Sent to C. C. (Cornelius Conway) Felton From Various Correspondents, 1849-1860 (MS Am 1172-1172.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aFelton, C.C.q(Cornelius Conway),d1807-1862.00aAristophanes. 0aClassical antiquities. 7aLectures.2aat 7aArchaeologists.2lcsh 7aClassicists.2lcsh0 cGift;aJames F. Drake;b24 West 40th Street, New York 18, New York;d1949;e49M-234-235.5HOU1 aGift of James F. Drake, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1172-1172.101026ntcaa2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005100108245006500159300004000224500003100264520012600295524012200421600002700543655002000570655002200590655002100612541004500633561004100678506002300719852003000742009815301-320130912084931.0020710i19101931mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612779042 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRollins, Hyder Edward,d1889-1958,ecollector.10aHyder Edward Rollins papers concerning O. Henry,f1910-1931. a1 box and 1 volumea(.6 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aScrapbook, clippings, photographs, letters, etc. concerning American author, O. Henry (William Sidney Porter, 1862-1910). aHyder Edward Rollins Papers Concerning O. Henry, 1910-1931 (MS Am 1104-1104.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHenry, O.,d1862-1910. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat cGift;aMr. Hyder E. Rollins;d1932.5hou aGift of Hyder E. Rollins, 1932.5hou aMarked restricted.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1104-1104.101827ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003600122245007800158300004100236545005500277520033100332555008700663555011300750524013400863546001600997600003601013650003801049655003801087700004901125740003301174740004301207541012701250561005101377506004201428852003101470009049241-220120111090244.0030129s1876 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm815112101 aMAHV03-A18 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCruikshank, George,d1792-1878.10aGeorge Cruikshank papers concerning The recollections,f1876 and undated. a1 box and 1 volumea(.66 linear ft.) aCruikshank was an English artist and caricaturist. aIncludes autograph manuscript of The recollections. Also includes autograph manuscript notes for The recollections, letters by various correspondents concerning the publication of Cruikshank's memoirs, and autograph manuscript in an unidentified hand of versions of Memoir of George Cruikshank by Sir Benjamin Ward Richardson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-155-156. aGeorge Cruikshank Papers Concerning The Recollections, 1876 and undated (MS Eng 1194-1195). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCruikshank, George,d1792-1878. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat1 aRichardson, Benjamin Ward,cSir,d1828-1896.0 aMemoir of George Cruikshank.4 aThe recollections of Geoge Cruikshank.0 cPurchase;aCharles J. Sawyer Ltd.;b12-13 Grafton St. London W. 1, Cat. 261;d1962 July;e62M-155; 62M-156;h£1,000.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1194-119502381ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245008900145300003900234351005200273545020800325520042100533555008700954524012801041546001601169544011101185500004801296600003701344650004701381655001801428655002201446700004501468740002101513740002201534541021301556561009101769506004201860506009401902852002301996011293262-220130627083022.0071023i19401957mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn463650393 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams typescripts for Battle of angels and The rose tattoo,f1940-1957. a1 box and 1 volumea(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title, then by date. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aIncludes four typescript drafts of scripts of the play The rose tattoo that were developed by Williams from January of 1950 through the summer of 1950. The text has been reworked from the first "kitchen sink" draft to the final product. Also with a 1940 typescript script of the play Battle of angels, annotated by actress Miriam Hopkins and inscribed in 1957. Original covers, notebook, and slip-case were retained.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02047 aTennessee Williams Typescripts for Battle of Angels and The Rose Tattoo (MS Am 2660). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library. aSee curatorial file for additional details.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aScripts.2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat1 aHopkins, Miriam,d1902-1972,eannotator.42aThe rose tattoo.02aBattle of angels.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b101 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY;d2007 October 17;e2007M-15;h$55,000.00 ($20,000.00 - Douglass Roby Fund for the HCL, per TH; $35,000.00 - Amy Lowell Trust).5hou1 aPurchased with the Douglass Roby Fund for the HCL and the Amy Lowell Trust, 2007.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 266003135cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245004200160300004300202351031800245545027400563520085200837555008701689555010801776524009001884544008801974650004702062600003702109610004502146610003702191650003502228650003502263650004102298650003602339650003302375651003102408651004202439651003102481651003702512541005002549561004102599506004202640852003102682000601996-X20110105084020.0860530i19321964mau eng d0 aocn6123682161 aMAHV86A284 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLittle, Lester Knox,d1892-1981.10aLester Knox Little papers,f1932-1964 a1 box and 18 volumesa(2.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1999: Correspondence relating to Lester Little Knox's commission as Inspector General of Chinese Customs Service, 1950-1964; II. fMS Am 1999.1-.14: Personal correspondence, 1941-1950, 14 vols.; and III. fMS Am 1999.15-.18: Official correspondence, 1942-1949, 4 vols. aLittle (1892-1981) graduated from Dartmouth College in 1914 and later became the last foreign head of the Chinese Customs Service. He was in mainland China from the early 1940s until shortly after the revolution, then had various assignments in the Far East until 1954. aThe bulk of the collection is correpondence, both official and personal, pertaining to Little's service as inspector general of the Chinese Customs Service in the pre-revolutionary China of the 1940s. Official correspondence is with foreign embassies, naval and military authorities, Chinese and foreign officials, and U.S. embassy staff. Also contains papers relating to his mission to the League of Nations as Commissioner on Special Duty with the Chinese Delegation, 1932, concerning the Japanese seizure of customs houses in Manchuria; correspondence and reports, 1950-1951, on the customs service in Japan and the Philippines; correspondence, 1951-1952, relating to the Advisory Committee on Undeveloped Areas; correspondence, 1954, with the Chinese Inspectorate of Customs in Taiwan; and miscellaneous professional correspondence, 1953-1964.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-75. aLester Knox Little Papers (MS Am 1999-1999.18). Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aSee also unprocessed accession of Little's diaries and correspondence in *2000M-56. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, American.10aLittle, Lester Knox,d1892-1981.20aAdvisory Committee on Undeveloped Areas.10aUnited States.bForeign Service. 0aCustoms administrationzChina. 0aCustoms administrationzJapan. 0aCustoms administrationzPhilippines. 0aCustoms administrationzTaiwan. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945zChina. 0aChinaxHistoryy1937-1945. 0aChinaxHistoryyCivil War, 1945-1949. 0aChinaxHistoryy1949-1976. 0aUnited StatesxRelationszChina.0 cGift;aLester K. Little;d1974;e81M-75.5HOU1 aGift of Lester K. Little, 1974.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1999-1999.1802747cpcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245004100160300004100201351016600242545005200408520045000460555008700910555028300997524009801280546001601378600003701394600004901431650002501480650003801505655002001543655002501563655004401588655004401632655002201676655001601698655004701714655004701761700004601808700002201854700003801876541018201914561010502096506004202201852005802243000602423-820130712094351.0860919i18821949mau eng d0 aocn1223573331 aMAHV86A565 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956.10aMax Beerbohm papers,fca. 1882-1949. a1 box and 19 volumesa(2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. pfMS Eng 696: Drawings; II. fMS Eng 696.1: Letters to various correspondents; and III. MS Eng 696.2-696.19: Other papers. aBeerbohm was a British author and caricaturist. aConsists chiefly of caricatures, portraits, costume design drawings (chalk, crayon, pen, pencil, ink, wash, watercolor), and lithographs. Also includes letters to Mabel Beardsley, poems and other compositions written for or with Sir William Rothenstein, and Beerbohm's short story "A. V. Laider." Also contains a photograph of Beerbohm as a boy, a portrait drawing of Beerbohm by Powys Evans ("Quiz"), clippings, and a self-portrait of Beerbohm.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015158 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records 1944-1967, under *44M-326F; *48M-93 to 117, 119 to 133PF, 145, 146, 150, 151F, 757PF, 759PF; *49M-113; *50M-163-164F; *52M-220; *53M-57F; *58M-32F; *60M-63; *60M-96 to 98, 120, 121; *63M-101; *67M-118. aMax Beerbohm Papers, ca. 1882-1949 (MS Eng 696-696.19). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956.10aBeerbohm, Max,cSir,d1872-1956,xPortraits. 0aCaricaturezEngland. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCostume design.2aat 7aDrawings, Englishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawings, Englishy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aWatercolors, Englishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolors, Englishy20th century.2gmgpc1 aBeardsley, Mabel,d1871-1916,erecipient.1 aQuiz,d1899-1982.1 aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945.0 cGift, purchase;aA. E. Gallatin, among other sources;d1924-1968;e44M-326F, 48M-93 to 117, 119 to 133PF, 145, 146, 150, 151F; 49M-113, 53M-57F; 60M-96 to 98, 121, 67M-118.5HOU1 aGift of A. E. Gallatin, 1949, with gifts, purchase, and transfer from other sources, 1924-1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 696-696.19zItem MS Eng 696.19 is PF01812ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003500123245004100158300004200199351003900241545009500280520031400375555008700689555010700776524009100883600003500974600005901009650003501068655002401103655003201127655001601159655002201175700004601197700003501243541005201278561004401330506004201374852003401416009035714-020110114094504.0021108i19001969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810011991 aMAHV02-A214 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aEliot, Henry Ware,d1879-1947.10aHenry Ware Eliot papers,f1900-1969. a1 box and 2 volumesa(.66 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHenry Ware Eliot, Jr. was a writer, archeologist, and brother of American poet T.S. Eliot. aIncludes letters from Henry Ware Eliot to Charlotte Champe Stearns Eliot and other members of the Eliot family. There are transcribed poems and other writings by Henry Ware Eliot and letters to Theresa Eliot from various correspondents as well as Theresa Eliot's pastel and watercolor portraits of T.S. Eliot.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006068 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-6. aHenry Ware Eliot Papers (MS Am 1691.10-1691.12). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEliot, Henry Ware,d1879-1947.10aEliot, T.S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965,xPortraits. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPastels (visual works)2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat1 aEliot, Charlotte,d1843-1929,erecipient.1 aEliot, Theresa Garrett,d1884-0 cGift;aMrs. Henry W. Eliot;d1975;e75M-6.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Henry W. Eliot, 1975.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.10-1691.1202047ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002100104100004600125245004000171300004300211351002800254545011200282520020700394520027000601524010700871600003900978600002001017610004401037650004401081650005201125650005301177655004701230655004701277655002501324656001801349541007101367561005101438852002201489541007101511561005101582852002801633009954066-520130910115818.0060502i18571887mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn6128236310 aocn612823664 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMunson, Myron A.q(Myron Andrews),d1835-10aMyron A. Munson papers,f1857-1887. a1 box and 20 volumesa(1.5 linear ft.) aPapers are unprocessed. aMunson (A. B. 1860, A. M. 1865 from Andover Theological Seminary) was a Congregational minister and author. aDiaries, journals, commonplace books, pastoral records, sermon notes, notes of lectures taken while Munson was a student at Andover Theological Seminary, and an article concerning Captain Thomas Munson. aIncludes autograph of: A pioneer of Hartford and New Haven, being an account of the official career and public services of Capt. Thomas Munson; a discourse delivered in the Centre Church, New Haven, at the quarter-millenial reunion of the family, August 17th, 1887. aMyron A. Munson Papers, 1857-1887 (MS Am 793 and MS Am 955-958). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aMunson, Myron Andrews,d1835-1922.10aMunson, Thomas.20aAndover Theological SeminaryxStudents. 0aCongregational churcheszUnited States. 0aCongregational churcheszUnited StatesxClergy. 0aCongregational churcheszUnited StatesvSermons. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aSermonszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aChurch records.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh0 cGift;aNew York State Library;d8 Nov. 1929;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of the New York State Library, 1929.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 7930 cGift;aNew York State Library;d8 Nov. 1929;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of the New York State Library, 1929.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 955-95802170cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100110004300121245007800164300004300242545013800285520045400423555008700877555010900964524013301073546001601206610004301222650003001265650003101295650004701326655002601373700003501399700002201434700004201456700003201498700003801530541008701568561007101655506004201726852002801768000601772-X20130107103558.0851219i17541865mau eng d0 aocm830170781 aMAHV85A56 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences.10aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences meteorological records,f1754-1865. a1 box and 33 volumesa(3.5 linear ft.) aThe American Academy of Arts and Sciences was chartered in Massachusetts in 1780 and is the second oldest learned society in the U.S. aMeteorological records gathered by the Academy, including 33 volumes of meteorological journals and observations kept by Enoch Hale, James Jackson, Edward Holyoke and others, for Boston, Salem, Waltham, Springfield, and Gardner, during the 19th century and for Cambridge during the late 18th century. Also 1 box with several manuscripts of both daily observations and summary tables, mostly from New England towns, maintained by various individuals.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011978 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-262. aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences Meteorological Records, 1754-1865 (MS Am 1360-1361). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences. 0aMeteorologyzNew England. 0aMeteorologyvObservations. 0aPrecipitation (Meteorology)vObservations. 7aWeather diaries.2aat1 aHale, E.q(Enoch),d1790-1848.1 aHall, Jonathan P.1 aHolyoke, Edward Augustus,d1728-1829.1 aJackson, James,d1777-1867.1 aWigglesworth, Edward,d1732-1794.0 cDeposit;aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences;d1955;e54M-262 and 54M-263;5HOU1 aDeposited by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1955.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1360-136102512cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245004400155300004300199545006700242520028100309555008700590555033000677524010301007600003201110650005001142650003801192655002301230655002401253655003801277655002701315740002301342740001501365740002701380740002101407740001701428740001401445541046401459561011701923506004202040852003202082000602492-020120208102018.0861030i19261975mau eng d0 aocn1225205671 aMAHV86A627 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSharp, Margery,d1905-1991.10aMargery Sharp compositions,f1926-1975. a1 box and 37 volumesa(4.2 linear ft.) aSharp (1905-1991) was an English author of books for children. aContains autograph manuscripts of various novels and stories including the Miss Bianca books, The faithful servants, The Innocents, The Rescuers, Martha in Paris, and Bernard the Brave. Includes notes and early drafts, revised typescripts, printer's copies, and galley proofs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-122, 1965-1966, under *65M-98, 1966-1967, under *66M-118, 1967-1968, under *67M-24, 1970-1971, under *70M-10 and *70M-29, 1971-1972, under *71M-72, 1972-1973, under *72M-14, 1976-1977, under *76M-88, 1978-1979, under *78M-16. aMargery Sharp Compositions, 1926-1975 (MS Eng 1234-1234.37). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSharp, Margery,d1905-1991. 0aChildren's literature, Englishy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPrinters' proofs.2aat0 aBernard the brave.0 aInnocents.4 aThe faithful servants.0 aMartha in Paris.0 aMiss Bianca.0 aRescuers.0 cPurchase;aMrs. Geoffrey CastlebB6, Albany, Piccadilly, London W1, later of Observatory Cottage, Neptune Alley, Aldeburgh, Suffolk England, and through Little, Brown and Company, 34 Beacon St., Boston MA 02106;d4 Sept. 1964, Dec. 1965, Mar. 1967, Aug., 1967, Oct. 1970, 11 Dec. 1970, 17 Jan. 1972, 9 Nov. 1972, Jan. 1979;e64M-122, 65M-98, 66M-118, 67M-24, 67M-95, 69M-31, 70M-1, 70M-10, 72M-14, 78M-16, 70M-29, 71M-72; 76M-88;h£500, Amy Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund from Mrs. Geoffrey Castle, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1972, 1977, and 1979.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1234-1234.3702501cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245004800164300004100212351013800253545026800391520057500659555008701234555010801321524009301429600004201522650005701564650003101621650003901652655002001691655003801711655002701749656001901776656002901795700003401824740001801858541010501876561006001981506004202041852003202083000601744-420110114105959.0851211i18741913mau eng d0 aocn1224192881 aMAHV85A31 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCable, George Washington,d1844-1925.10aGeorge Washington Cable papers,f1874-1913. a1 box anda5 volumesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1288: Letters from George Washington Cable; and II. MS Am 1288.1-1288.4: Compositions. aGeorge Washington Cable was an American author who became famous for his fictional treatment of the Creoles of Louisiana. His best known books are Old Creole Days (1879), a collection of stories, and the novels, The Grandissimes (1880) and Madame Delphine (1881). aIncludes letters to Marion A. Baker, a longtime friend of Cable's and an editor of The New Orleans Times-Democrat, as well as letters by Cable to various correspondents, including friends, and autograph seekers. The letters to Baker primarily concern Cable's novels, career as an author, aspects of public life, including lectures and readings, financial matters, and social life. Also includes some clippings, as well as a printer's copy of The Grandissimes and autograph manuscript drafts of three stories: Attalie Brouillard; Jean-ah Pouquelin; and Madame Delicieuse.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006388 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-86. aGeorge Washington Cable Papers (MS Am 1288-1288.4) Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCable, George Washington,d1844-1925. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited Statesy19th century. 0aPublishers and publishing. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPrinters' proofs.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aNewspaper editors.2lcsh1 aBaker, Marion A.,erecipient.0 aGrandissimes.0 cGift;aMr. and Mrs. Edward Larocque Tinker;b550 Park Ave., New York NY;d4 Dec. 1952;e52M-86.5hou1 aGift of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Larocque Tinker, 1952.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1288-1288.402577ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003800123245004900161300004300210351003600253545018400289520047900473530006200952555008701014555012801101524011501229546001601344650003601360600003801396650003901434650003501473655001801508655001701526655002301543655003801566655001601604655001601620655002301636700005901659700003401718700004701752700002301799740003401822541007701856561009701933506004202030852003502072009065351-320120208103020.0021120i18371970mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn122563949 aMAHV02A251 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862.10aHenry David Thoreau manuscripts,f1837-1970. a1 box and 6 volumesa(1.25 linear ft.) aOrganized in call number order. aHenry David Thoreau was an American essayist, poet, naturalist, and philosopher of the New England Transcendentalist movement. He was a graduate of Harvard College, Class of 1837. aIncludes drafts, fragments, and some complete autograph manuscripts for poems, essays, journals, a lecture, and notes. Includes Thoreau's first published piece, Obituary for Miss Anna Jones, fragments of Walden and Civil disobedience, two essays he wrote while a student at Harvard College, his translation of Prometheus Bound, and a 1970 transcription of his fragmentary journals of the 1840s among others. Also includes a journal fragment by his sister, Sophia E. Thoreau. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008618 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1971, under *64M-132, *64M-168, *70M-16. aHenry David Thoreau Manuscripts, 1837-1970 (MS Am 278.5-MS Am 278.5.25). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTranscendentalism (New England)10aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat1 aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862.tCivil disobedience.0 aAeschylus.tPrometheus bound.1 aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862.tWalden.1 aThoreau, Sophia E.2 aObituary for Miss Anna Jones.0 cGifts;avarious sources;dvarious dates;e64M-168; 64M-132; 70M-16.5HOU1 aGifts from various sources at various times. See individual items for full information.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 278.5-278.5.2502110cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245003600153300004000189351017800229545005400407520030100461524008300762530006200845555008700907555010800994600003001102650003801132650004201170650003401212650003801246650001701284650003101301655002001332655001601352655002201368655001601390655002201406655002501428700004901453541005501502561004601557506004201603852003101645000602488-220111025124621.0861029i18111971mau eng d0 aocn1226093321 aMAHV86A623 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLang, Andrew,d1844-1912.10aAndrew Lang papers,f1811-1971. a1 box and 9 volumesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Lang; II. Letters to Lang; III. Other letters; IV. Other manuscripts; and V. MS Eng 1292.1-1292.9: Compositions by Lang. aLang was a Scottish poet, folklorist and scholar. aContains correspondence, mostly letters from Lang or letters from others to the collection donor, B. Meredith Langstaff, about Lang; and 9 volumes of manuscripts by Lang including poems, fairy tales, peasant songs, a sketchbook, and other writings. Also contains photographs, notes and clippings. aAndrew Lang Papers (MS Eng 1292-1292.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007678 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-17.10aLang, Andrew,d1844-1912. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturexScottish authors. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 0aEnglish poetryxScottish authors. 0aFairy tales. 0aFolk literature, Scottish. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aSketchbooks.2aat 7aSongszScotland2aat1 aLangstaff, Bridgewater Meredith,erecipient.0 cGift;aB. Meredith Langstaff;d1972;e72M-17.5hou1 aGift of B. Meredith Langstaff, 1972.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1292-1292.902359cpc a2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004200123245006300165300004100228351040300269520038500672524010401057545005201161555008701213546001601300600004201316630002601358650003901384650003501423655005201458655004501510655002001555655002701575656001901602700005201621700003901673700004001712541004901752561008701801506004201888852003101930000602230-820100302101736.0860801i18231889mau eng d0 aocn6123717651 aMAHV86A421 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.10aJohn Greenleaf Whittier additional papers,fca. 1823-1889. a1 box anda9 volumesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: MS Am 324: Tribute to Edward Everett; MS Am 324.2: Several poems by J.G. Whittier; MS Am 324.3: Rhymed catalogue of his father's library; MS Am 324.4: Poetical works; MS Am 324.5: Poetical works; MS Am 324.6: Index to Whittier's poems; MS Am 324.7: Letters to H.M. Pitman; MS Am 324.8: My namesake; MS Am 324.9: Vesta; and MS Am 324.10: Letters to T.B. Aldrich. aConsists chiefly of poems and letters by Whittier. Includes 26 letters to Thomas Bailey Aldrich, chiefly concerning contributions to The Atlantic Monthly, and letters to Harriet Minot Pitman. Includes copy and proof sheets for the Riverside Edition of Whittier's poems, 1888, and an index to Whittier's poems, recording their periodical publication, prepared by Horace E. Scudder. aJohn Greenleaf Whittier Additional Papers (MS Am 324-324.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aWhittier was an American poet and abolitionist.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00216 aIn English.10aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.40aThe Atlantic monthly. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aEngravingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPrinters' proofs.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907,erecipient.1 aPitman, Harriet Minot,erecipient.1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.0 cGift;avarious persons;dvarious dates.5hou1 aGift of various persons, various dates, see finding aid for full information.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 324-324.1003361ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245004400142300003700186351011400223520028000337545077900617545055701396555008701953546001602040524009402056544007502150600003402225655002802259655002002287655002202307655001602329700004302345700004602388700004002434700005402474541017902528561004502707506002802752852002402780541013602804852002302940009869657-220131106121818.0060214i19241972mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn861192473 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aElliott, Richard,d1907-1974.10aRichard Elliott papers,fca. 1924-1972. a1 box, 1 foldera(.4 linear ft.) aOrganized in three series: I. Correspondence; II. Richard Elliott biographical material; III. Other material. aThis collection is comprised chiefly of correspondence with parents and friends, notably, poet John Ashbery; composer and author, Paul Bowles; and Father James Harold Flye. Other formats present include a drypoint (print), passport, photographs, printed ephemera, and a will. aRichard James Elliott (1907-1974) was born in Windsor (N.Y.) where his parents owned the Windsor Whip Company. He studied piano at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and attended Dartmouth College (B.A. in English, 1930) and the University of Pennsylvania (M.A. 1931). He subsequently taught at St. Andrew's in Tennessee where he befriended the reknowned teacher, Father James Harold Flye. Unhappy in teaching, Elliott took a post at the Brooklyn Public Library in 1937. He lived on Water Street in Brooklyn, earning a library science degree from Columbia University and associating with artists, writers, and musicians (many identified with the New York School), among them his neighbors, the writer and composer, Paul Bowles, and the set designer, Oliver Smith. aElliott moved back to the family home in Windsor in 1947 to work on a novel, taking a position at the Harpur College Library. The publisher Alfred A. Knopf accepted a first draft of the novel but rejected the final version. Elliott published "9 Elaborations for 26 Characters" in Locus Solus (no. V, 1962) and a few other works, including a small volume of surrealist stories (A Song and a Diary for A) published shortly before his death. He remained in the historic family home; his health deteriorating after retirement in 1969, Elliott died in 1974.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02460 aIn English. aRichard Elliott Papers, ca. 1924-1972 (MS Am 2934). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe Houghton Library holds papers of John Ashbery and Jane Freilicher.10aElliott, Richard,d1907-1974. 7aDrypoints (prints)2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aAshbery, John,d1927-,ecorrespondent.1 aBowles, Paul,d1910-1999,ecorrespondent.1 aFlye, James Harold,ecorrespondent.1 aSmith, Oliver Lemuel,d1918-1994,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;aThomas A. Goldwasser; 486 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA 94102b486 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA 94102;d2006 March 31;e2005M-41;h$28025.00 (Roby fund).5hou1 aPurchased with the Roby fund, 2006.5hou0 aOpen for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 29340 cPurchase;aLocus Solus Rare Books;b790 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10021;d2006 February 14;e2005M-41;h$2505.50 (Roby fund).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 293403104cpcaa2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100006000122245005400182300003800236351003900274545015600313520050100469555008700970555010801057524010401165546001601269600004801285600005101333630001501384650003901399650003801438650002501476655001701501656001901518700006701537700004601604700006501650700004701715700005501762700005401817700004801871700004601919700005401965700004702019700003502066700005802101700004902159541018502208561007002393852002302463561010002486000601888-220130519083959.0860429i19041930mau eng d0 aocm86143746 aMAHV86A186 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965,erecipient.10aT. S. Eliot editorial correspondence,f1904-1930. a1 box, 1 volumea(.33 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aT. S. Eliot was a poet, critic, and dramatist. He was editor of The Criterion (1923-1929) and director of the British publishing firm of Faber & Faber. aChiefly letters to Eliot from writers, critics and publishers, many concerning his role as editor of The Criterion; also includes Eliot's Ph.D. thesis in philosophy at Harvard, "Experience and the Objects of Knowledge in the Philosophy of F. H. Bradley." Includes letters from Conrad Aiken, Ernst Robert Curtius, John Gould Fletcher, E.M. Forster, Andre Gide, Herman Hesse, James Joyce, John Maynard Keynes, Harold Monro, I. A. Richards, May Sinclair, William Carlos Williams, and Virginia Woolf.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015038 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-22. aT. S. Eliot Editorial Correspondence, 1904-1930 (MS Am 1432). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.10aBradley, F. H.q(Francis Herbert),d1846-1924.00aCriterion. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aPhilosophy, English. 7aTheses.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aRichards, I. A.q(Ivor Armstrong),d1893-1979,ecorrespondent.1 aGide, André,d1869-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aForster, E. M.q(Edward Morgan),d1879-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973,ecorrespondent.1 aCurtius, Ernst Robert,d1886-1956,ecorrespondent.1 aFletcher, John Gould,d1886-1950,ecorrespondent.1 aHesse, Hermann,d1877-1962,ecorrespondent.1 aJoyce, James,d1882-1941,ecorrespondent.1 aKeynes, John Maynard,d1883-1946,ecorrespondent.1 aMonro, Harold,d1879-1932,ecorrespondent.1 aSinclair, May,ecorrespondent.1 aWilliams, William Carlos,d1883-1963,ecorrespondent.1 aWoolf, Virginia,d1882-1941,ecorrespondent.0 cGift and transfer;aMarion C. Eliot and Henry Ware Eliot, Harvard University, Dept. of Philosophy, 1938;b83 Brattle St., Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1943 September 3;e43M-22.5hou1 aGift of Miss Marion C. Eliot and Mr. Henry Ware Eliot, 1943.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 14321 aEliot's Ph.D. thesis was received from Department of Philosophy, Harvard University, 1938.5hou02456cpc a2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004100123245002400164300003500188351003600223545007600259520059300335555008700928555011101015524009601126650003401222600004101256650005101297650002501348651004701373651003601420655002001456655001801476655004501494655002401539655006701563655002201630655001801652655002201670700005201692700004001744700004901784740003501833561004001868541006001908852003001968000601803-320061222093707.0860313i18781939mau eng d0 aocn122581257 aMAHV86A109 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAddison, Julia de Wolf Gibbs,d1866-00kPapers,f1878-1939. a1 box,a2 v.a(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized in call number order. aAddison was an American author, artist, graphic designer, and musician. aContains manuscripts and letters by Addison including an unpublished typescript Fables and Gables of Brittany, with photograph illustrations, and 18 manuscript children's books, most with watercolor illustrations by Addison. Some of the books are written by others including Oliver Wendell Holmes, William Schwenck Gilbert, and John Godfrey Saxe. Also includes letters Addison wrote to her mother Mrs. Franklin Gibbs which form a journal of a tour in Europe, Addison's notes for a talk on illuminated manuscripts, reviews and clippings on her books on art, and printed material about her.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-10-11, 49. aJulia de Wolf Gibbs Addison Papers (MS Am 1735-1737). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aIllustrated children's books.10aAddison, Julia de Wolf Gibbs,d1866- 0aChildren's literature, Americany19th century. 0aVoyages and travels. 0aBrittany (France)xDescription and travel. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDrawingsxAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aIllustrations.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aReviews.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat1 aGilbert, W. S.q(William Schwenck),d1836-1911.1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.1 aSaxe, John Godfrey,d1816-1887.tMasquerade.02aFables and gables of Brittany. aGift of Alice B. Lovett, 1964.5hou cGift;aAlice B. Lovett;d1964;e64M-10-11, 64M-49.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1735-173701980ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001700122245006000139300003800199351003900237545031600276520014000592555008700732555011300819524010700932546001601039600001701055600002101072600002101093650002901114651002901143655002201172655002701194700003401221700004801255700003601303700004301339541006101382561004701443506006901490852002301559008859642-720121218101648.0020925i18691961mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm786381431 aMAHV02-A84 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aHowe family.10aHowe, Richards, and Robinson family papers,f1869-1961. a1 box, 2 volumesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aJulia Ward Howe was the author of the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and a women's suffrage and club leader and lecturer; her daughter was author Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards, and her granddaughter was Rosalind Richards. Edwin Arlington Robinson was an American poet and acquaintance of the Howe/Richards family. aCollection documents all three families and Gardiner, Maine. Includes correspondence, compositions, photograph, and notebooks of verse.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1983, under *62M-313-328. aHowe, Richards, and Robinson Collection, 1869-1961 (MS Am 2127). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aHowe family.30aRichards family.30aRobinson family. 0aWomen authors, American. 0aGardiner (Me.)xHistory. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoetry notebooks.2aat1 aHowe, Julia Ward,d1819-1910.1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943.1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964.1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richards;d1963;e62M-313-328.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1963.5HOU0 aOpen for research use. Formerly restricted until June 2001.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 212701315cpcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245005800147300001100205520018900216524005500405535006500460544010400525545009500629555008000724600005300804600003900857651003800896561004100934541005000975852002401025000602386-X20040601115741.0860915i19331946mau eng d0 aocn612374078 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSmuts, Jan Christiaan,d1870-1950.00aLetters to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Lamont,f1930-1951. a1 box. aConsists chiefly of letters by Smuts to Florence Lamont (Mrs. Thomas W. Lamont) as well as a few to Thomas W. Lamont. Also includes 3 letters from Mrs. Smuts and 1 from their daughter. aMS Eng 1023. Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aOriginals are in the Smuts Archive, University of Cape Town. aPapers of Thomas W. Lamont are in Manuscripts and Archives, Baker Library, Harvard Business School. aSmuts was a South African statesman and general. Lamont was an American investment banker.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *56M-133.10aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948.10aSmuts, Jan Christiaan,d1870-1950. 0aSouth AfricaxHistoryy1909-1961. aGift of Thomas S. Lamont, 1956.5hou 3Papers.aLamont, Thomas S., 1956.cGift.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 102301201ctm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004100108245004100149300001100190520028800201524005400489545020500543600004100748610002400789650005700813561003900870541003900909852002300948000602507-220040917150956.0860220i19171918mau eng d0 aocn612376638 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938.00kLettersbto his parents,f1917-1918. a1 box. aConsists of 121 letters (25 August 1917-3 December 1918) from Wells to his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Wells. Written from London, the letters constitute a journal of Wells's World War I activities with the American Red Cross and the office of the American Military Attaché, London. aMS Am 1698. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aWells was a rare book dealer and educator. During World War I he was stationed in London, first as deputy commissioner to the American Red Cross and later as military attaché to the American embassy.10aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938.20aAmerican Red Cross. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPersonal narratives, American. aGift of Edgar H. Wells, 1925.5hou cGift;aEdgar H. Wells;d1925.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 169801465cpcaa2200325z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002500122245003800147300001100185545016900196520019000365524010300555555005300658600003400711600002500745610003300770650003500803650004000838651003900878610002900917655001900946541006800965561004001033506004301073852002301116000602519-620110107114939.0860224i19191920mau eng d0 aocn6123766701 aMAHV86A78 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aParker, Samuel Dunn.10aPolice strike papers,f1919-1920. a1 box. aParker was Brigadier General of the Massachusetts State Guard when Governor Calvin Coolidge called out the militia during the Boston police strike, Sept.-Dec. 1919. aContains ca. 244 letters, general orders, and printed ephemera pertaining to the strike. Includes responses, both positive and negative, to the behavior of the guardsmen on police duty. aSamuel Dunn Parker Boston Police Strike Papers (MS Am 1723). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aUnpublished finding aid available in repository.10aCoolidge, Calvin,d1872-1933.10aParker, Samuel Dunn.10aMassachusetts.bState Guard. 0aPolicezMassachusettszBoston. 0aPolice Strike, Boston, Mass., 1919. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial conditions.10aMassachusetts.bMilitia. 7aOrders.2ftamc0 cGift.aEdward Reynolds, 1954.d1954;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Edward Reynolds, 1954.5hou0 aPapers are open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172301545cbc a2200301z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002600123245008800149300001100237520015500248524009200403545027400495555008000769561004200849600005200891600002600943650003900969651005101008655002401059506005701083541004301140583003701183852002301220000601900-520020606090541.3860501i19661970mau eng d0 aocn6123673261 aMAHV86A197 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHarrington, Marion E.00aPapers relating to the Wentworth House and Mary Baker Eddy,f1966-1970 (inclusive). a1 box. aLetters, notes, compositions, photographs, and printed matter concerning the history of the Wentworth House and Mary Baker Eddy's connections with it. aMarion E. Harrington, Wentworth House Collection. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe Wentworth House in Stoughton, Mass. was the home of Mary Baker Eddy from 1868 to 1870. Marion Harrington purchased the house in 1928 and devoted many years to researching the house's history. The house is now operated as a museum by the Longyear Historical Society.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *70M-117. aGift of Mrs. Marion Harrington, 1971.10aEddy, Mary Baker,d1821-1910xHomes and haunts.10aHarrington, Marion E. 0aHistoric buildingszMassachusetts. 0aStoughton (Mass.)xBuildings, structures, etc. 7aPhotoprints.2ftamc aAccess may be restricted. Details at the repository. 3PapersaHarrington, Marion, 1971cGift 3PapersaSurvey/pbec04/22/86kft8 bHOUcBhMS Am 187102021cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110002900123245007400152300001100226520027900237544020400516524011400720545026500834555008001099610002701179610006001206610002201266650002601288650006801314655003501382655002301417561006001440506005701500541006601557583003601623852002401659000601929-320051018122507.0860508i19401941mau eng d0 aocn1225058121 aMAHV86A221 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aPercy, Shaw and Hepburn.00aArchitectural plans for the Houghton Library,f1940-1941 (inclusive). a1 box. aConsists of 241 drawings in pencils and colors, blueprints, and negative photostats that show the evolution of the design for the Library. Architect William Graves Perry selected the drawings to reflect in particular the critical stages in the development of the final plan. nAdditional architectural plans for the Houghton Library from three separate accessions (*98M-49, *2003JM-233, *2005M-19), may be found at the Property Information Resource Center, Harvard University. aPerry, Shaw and Hepburn's Architectural Plans for the Houghton Library. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPerry, Shaw and Hepburn was the Boston architectural firm that designed Houghton Library, the rare book and manuscript library at Harvard University. The firm won the Harleston Parker medal for architecture in New England in 1942 for its work on this building.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *75M-114.20aPerry, Shaw & Hepburn.20aHarvard UniversityxLibrariesxDesign and construction.20aHoughton Library. 0aLibrary architecture. 0aLibrary buildingszMassachusettszCambridgexDesigns and plans. 7aArchitectural drawings.2ftamc 7aBlueprints.2ftamc aGift of Perry, Dean and Stewart, Architects, 1973.5hou aAccess may be restricted. Details at the repository. 3PapersaPerry, Dean and Stewart, Architects, 1973cGift.5hou 3PapersaSurvey/eec05/02/86kft8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 196400970ctm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005100108245004000159300001100199520013100210524005400341545003800395600005100433650003900484650002900523700003000552561003700582541008600619852002300705000601986-220040917100212.0860529i19361937mau ||| | eng d0 aocn612368064 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aFarrell, James T.q(James Thomas),d1904-1979.00aLetters to Gail Borden,f1936-1937. a1 box. aConsists of 11 letters by Farrell to Gail Borden discussing his work, the literary scene, politics, and international affairs. aMS Am 2026. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFarrell was an American novelist.10aFarrell, James T.q(James Thomas),d1904-1979. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aPolitics and literature.1 aBorden, Gail,erecipient. aGift of Gavin Borden, 1984.5hou cGift;aGavin Borden;b925 Park Avenue, NY, NY 10021;d1984 Nov. 14;e84M-10.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 202601117cbc a2200217z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004100108245003400149300001100183520024700194524005400441545020500495600004100700650005700741561003900798541003900837852002300876000601832-720040917151511.0860328i19181918mau eng d0 aocn612366612 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938.00aLetters to his family,f1918. a1 box. aIncludes 51 letters to his mother Gertrude Wells, 2 letters to his father Dr. Frank Wells, and 1 letter to his sister Briggs Wells Stabler. All the letters date from 1918 when Wells was in the office of the American Military Attaché, London. aMS Am 1839. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aWells was a rare book dealer and educator. During World War I he was stationed in London, first as deputy commissioner to the American Red Cross and later as military attaché to the American embassy.10aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPersonal narratives, American. aGift of Edgar H. Wells, 1929.5hou cGift;aEdgar H. Wells;d1929.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 183901245cbc a2200265z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004200108245004300150300001100193520027600204524005400480545013500534500003200669600002100701600004200722600003000764610005400794651004300848541002700891583003800918852002300956000601969-220040917151755.0860520i18801884mau eng d0 aocn612367859 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRichardson, William King,d1859-1951.00aLetters to Roland Lincoln,f1880-1884. a1 box. aConsists of letters written by Richardson chiefly from Oxford, where he was a student in Balliol College from 1880 to 1884. Includes comments on social and political events and includes some letters written during trips to the continent. Some letters concern Oscar Wilde. aMS Am 2006. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aRichardson was a lawyer and book collector. His library was left to the Houghton Library at Harvard. Roland Lincoln was his uncle. aTyped transcripts included.10aLincoln, Roland.10aRichardson, William King,d1859-1951.10aWilde, Oscar,d1854-1900.20aBalliol College (University of Oxford)xStudents. 0aGreat BritainxDescription and travel. 3Papers.aUnknown.5hou 3Papers.aSurvey/pbec05/16/86kdw8 bHOUcBhMS Am 200600762ntm a2200205 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108245005700121300001100178500003100189520012900220524005400349651003700403541005800440561003400498852002400532009780574-220051019140114.0051019i16421700enk|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612771940 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aengalat10aBranston manor collection :kmanuscript,f1642-1700. a1 box. aCollection is unprocessed. aCollection of English and Latin manuscript relating to the Branston manor (Lincolnshire), dated 22 Apr. 1642 to 9 Apr. 1700. aMS Eng 595. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aLincolnshire (England)xHistory. cGift;aE. F. Gay;d1 Nov. 1919;eno acc. number.5hou aGift of E. F. Gay, 1919.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 59501056ctm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245004500154300001100199520018700210524005400397545011400451600003100565600002300596650003900619561004400658541008900702852002300791000601877-720040917075759.0860421i19051925xx ||| | eng d0 aocn6123670921 aMAHV86A176 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926.00aLetters to Lucy Allen Paton,f1905-1925. a1 box. aConsists of 80 autograph and typescript letters by Norton to her friend Paton while the latter was living in Europe. The letters range over places, people, books, and current events. aMS Am 1967. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aNorton was an author of Cambridge, Mass. who wrote on the French essayist, Montaigne. Paton was an historian.10aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926.10aPaton, Lucy Allen. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. aBequest of Lucy Allen Paton, 1951.5hou cBequest;aLucy Allen Paton;bHotel Vendome, Boston, MA;d1951 Nov. 14;e51M-80.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 196701526cpcaa2200325z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245003800155300001100193351003900204545017900243520019300422524008800615555008700703555010800790600003200898650003700930650001800967655001800985656001701003700001801020541005301038561004401091506004201135852002301177000601853-X20130124101928.0860409i17631877mau eng d0 aocn6123668601 aMAHV86A154 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAllen, William,d1784-1868.10aWilliam Allen papers,f1763-1877. a1 box. bArranged alphabetically by author. aAllen was a Congregational minister, educator, and author. He was minister in Pittsfield, Mass. (1810-1817) and served as president of Bowdoin College (1819-1831, 1833-1838). aConsists of letters, sermons, and other manuscripts of William Allen and other members of the Allen family. Also includes printed material on William Allen and on the Battle of Bennington. aWilliam Allen Papers, 1763-1877 (MS Am 1824). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-99.10aAllen, William,d1784-1868. 0aCongregational churchesxClergy. 0aChristianity. 7aSermons.2aat 7aClergy2lcsh3 aAllen family.0 cGift;aMrs. Frederick Merk;d1968;e67M-99.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Frederick Merk, 1968.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 182401483ntm a2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003800110245006800148300002900216520027400245520010200519520009800621524008100719546003000800600003800830610002400868655003800892655001900930700006000949740002801009541008201037561005001119852002401169012515496-820100630125532.0020710s1952 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn656153578 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.10aRobert Edmond Jones Harvard lectures on the theater,f1952 May. a1 casea(.1 linear feet) aTypescript and typescript carbons of lecture I, II, and III, all with autograph manuscript corrections, and with manuscript annotations in the hand of Professor Frederick C. Packard; in Cambridge. Lecture IV, entitled: Curious and profitable, is a printed version only.8 aLecture I: 23 pages; Lecture II: 33 pages; Lecture III: 21 pages; Lecture IV: 13 pages (printed).8 aAll marked with speaking times, notes for how to deliver, and marked as having been recorded. aMS Thr 51. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.20aHarvard University. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aLectures.2aat1 aPackard, Frederick C.q(Frederick Clifton),eannotator.02aCurious and profitable.0 cGift;aFrederick Packard;dno date;eno accession number; marked gratis.5the1 aGift of Frederick Packard, date unknown.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 5101991ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001900108245005000127300002800177500003000205505077800235524008701013600003401100600002101134600001901155650003701174650005201211650005001263655001601313700003401329700003601363700003101399700004801430700004601478541006501524561004201589852002201631009958032-220130910125332.0060509i17331790xx |||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612825673 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aMayhew family.10aMayhew family papers,f1730-1790 and undated. a1 casea(.1 linear ft.) aWritten in several hands.0 a1. Will of Ebenezer Allen, signed, dated at Chilmark, Mass., 1 Feb. 1731; with a statement of probate, signed by Paine Mayhew at Dukes County Probate Court, 14 June 1733 -- 2. Land grant giving Experience Mayhew 600 acres in Hampshire County, Mass., dated 3 Dec. 1741; with an undated note in the hand of Jonathan Mayhew -- 3. Two devotionals in the hand of Jonathan Mayhew, unsigned, undated. One is a prayer composed, presumably, during the sickness that led to his death. -- 4. Two letters from Harrison Gray to Elizabeth Mayhew, dated at London, 2 May 1783 and 1 June 1790, concerning the positive character of her late father, Jonathan Mayhew. One letter contains a copy of a letter sent to Harrison from Sarah Gill, dated 23 Feb. 1771, concerning her impending death. aMayhew Family Papers, 1730-1790 (MS Am 977). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aMayhew, Jonathan,d1720-1766.10aAllen, Ebenezer.30aMayhew family. 0aDevotional literature, American. 0aPastoral theologyzUnited Statesy18th century. 0aLand grantszMassachusettszHampshire County. 7aWills.2aat1 aMayhew, Jonathan,d1720-1766.1 aMayhew, Experience,d1673-1758.1 aMayhew, Paine,d1677-1761.1 aGray, Harrison,d1712-1794,ecorrespondent.1 aWainwright, Elizabeth Mayhew,d1759-1829.0 cGift;aCharles H. Taylor;d6 May 1930;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor, 1930.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 97701409ntc a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245005000139300002800189500003100217520032700248520012700575524010000702600003100802600001800833651006200851541013500913561009601048852002301144010023139-X20130910132644.0060719i18221829xxu|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612840685 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGlynn, Elizabeth Bartlett.10aElizabeth Bartlett Glynn letters,f1822-1829. a1 casea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aContains letters from Glynn to family members in Kingston, Mass., chiefly addressed to her mother Lucy Bartlett, though often including notes to several family members in a single letter. The letters concern Glynn's time living in and around the Washington, D.C. area, including her marriage to a Maj. Glynn, 25 July 1826. aThe collection also contains a letter to Glynn from her mother and letters between various members of the Bartlett family. aElizabeth Bartlett Glynn Letters, 1822-1829 (MS Am 1070). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGlynn, Elizabeth Bartlett.30aGlynn family. 0aWashington (D.C.)xSocial life and customsy19th century.0 cTransfer;aHarvard Business School Library (originally the gift of Charles H. Taylor);d9 Apr. 1931;erecat. from MS Am 5009.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor; transferred from the Harvard Business School Library, 1931.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 107001212ntc a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001900108245003600127300002800163500003100191520028700222500004400509524007700553600001900630600003400649651009000683655003700773541007700810561004800887852002300935010104852-120060928164600.0060915i18481849ctu|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612855457 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aArnold family.00kPapers,f1848-1849 and undated. a1 casea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aOfficial copies of records and transcripts in various hands, some identified, of documents and other papers from manuscript repositories in Connecticut, relating to Benedict Arnold, his estate and its confiscation, and his branch of the Arnold family; with genealogical information. aTyped list of contents with collection. aArnold Family Papers (MS Am 1313). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aArnold family.10aArnold, Benedict,d1741-1801. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783xFinance, commerce, confiscations, etc. 7aGenealogieszUnited States.2aat0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;erecat. from Autograph file.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 131300837ntc a2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110002200108245004200130300002800172500003100200520012500231524009100356610002200447650001400469655004800483541006500531852002300596010062458-820130910132607.0060721i18461855mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612840901 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aBrenda (Schooner)10aBrenda (Schooner) papers,f1846-1855. a1 casea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aAccounts, bills of sale, and other papers concerning the schooner Brenda, also referred to as a yacht on some documents. aBrenda (Schooner) Papers, 1846-1855 (MS Am1071). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aBrenda (Schooner) 0aShipping. 7aAccountszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cUnknown;ano source;dno date;erecat. from MS Am 5010.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 107101434ntcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003600108245005400144300002900198500001700227500002200244520022700266520026100493524009100754650006200845650002700907541005900934541007300993561003101066561004901097852002201146009858525-820130910114836.0060130i17961826xxu|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612793354 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPickering, Timothy,d1745-1829.10aTimothy Pickering papers,f1796-1826 and undated. a1 casea(.15 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn several hands. aContains correspondence, account books, deeds, and other materials, chiefly produced in Massachusetts, concerning Pickering's property, personal finance, political views, in specie verification of fruits, and other topics. aIncludes: incomplete draft of political letter dated Washington, March 19, 1810, which was found in the Corporation Records of Harvard College; and "Alphabet for specie certificates issued from the quarter master general's office commencing at number 501." aTimothy Pickering Papers, 1796-1826 (MS Am 660). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aCost and standard of livingzMassachusettsy18th century. 0aFruitxIdentification.0 cGift;ano source;d11 Mar. 1890;eno acc. number.5hou0 cGift;aEdward Charles Pickering;d3 Nov. 1914;eno acc. number.5hou1 aAnonymous gift, 1890.5hou1 aGift of Edward Charles Pickering, 1914.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 66001490ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002100110245007000131300002900201520017500230520045000405524008300855546003000938600002100968600003700989655002201026700006201048541006101110561003901171852002601210012515524-720100802085023.0020710s1947 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn656153580 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aDowning, Robert.10aRobert Downing papers concerning A streetcar named Desire,f1947. a1 casea(.2 linear feet) aStage manager's script (promptbook) for original production of the play in New York City, with manuscript annotations by the stage manager, Robert Downing, December 1947.8 aAlso includes: playbill for the play at Wilbur Theatre (Boston), 1947 November 3, signed by Marlon Brando, Tennessee Williams, Jessica Tandy and others; playbill from Ethel Barrymore Theatre (New York), 1947 December 15-on; typescript (signed) of "Scene Twelve" written by Robert Downing; autograph manuscript dialogue (by Tennessee Williams), 1947 December; and letter of transmittal of this material from Downing to Bill [?], 1947 December 29. aMS Thr 91.5. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aDowning, Robert.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 7aPromptbooks.2aat1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.tStreetcar named Desire.0 cGift;aRobert Downing;d1947;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Robert Downing, 1947.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 91.501359ntc a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005700108245004400165300002700209351003100236520019600267545006400463524009700527600005700624610003600681651004700717700006300764700006000827700005500887541006500942561004801007852002601055009914425-520130910124349.0060404i18671900xxu|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612815360 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLangbein, George F.q(George Frederick),d1843-1911.10aGeorge F. Langbein letters,f1867-1900. a1 case (.2 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aContains letters to Langbein from Robert Barnwell Roosevelt, Charles H. Van Brunt, Amos J. Cummings, and others, concerning New York State legislation, general legal issues, and other topics. aLangbein was a representative in the New York State Senate. aGeorge F. Langbein Letters, 1867-1900 (MS Am 889.163). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLangbein, George F.q(George Frederick),d1843-1911.10aNew York (State).bLegislature. 0aNew York (State)xPolitics and government.1 aCummings, Amos J.q(Amos Jay),d1841-1902,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Robert Barnwell,d1829-1906,ecorrespondent.1 aVan Brunt, Charles H.,d1835-1905,ecorrespondent.0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno acc. number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 889.16300908ntc a2200205 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245005500151300002800206500012000234520003800354524011800392600004300510700004200553541006500595852004200660010111182-720060929162719.0060921i18891896xxu|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612857776 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.00kLetters :bto Arthur Raymond Gledhill,f1889-1896. a1 casea(.2 linear ft.) a43 autograph and typescript letters, signed, dated 3 Jan. 1889-28 Oct. 1896, at Gardiner, Me., and Cambridge, Mass. aLetters concern personal matters. aEdwin Arlington Robinson Letters to Arthur Raymond Gledhill (MS Am 1337.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.1 aGledhill, Arthur Raymond,erecipient.0 cUnknown;ano source;dno date;erecat. from PR 5750.12.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1337.5mLobby IX.4.1201689ntcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003400110245007900144300002900223351010500252545029200357520017200649555008700821524012600908546001601034600003401050650003001084700004501114541010801159561007701267506004201344852002501386012664246-X20130116142917.0020710i19291931mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn698957826 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGershwin, George,d1898-1937.10aGeorge Gershwin letters to Isaac Goldberg,f1929 August 22 - 1931 July 30. a1 casea(.25 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. See curatorial file for additional information concerning this collection. aGeorge Gershwin was an American composer and pianist. Isaac Goldberg (1887-1938) was an American journalist, author, critic, translator, and editor. Goldberg received an AB from Harvard College in 1910, AM in 1911, and a PhD in 1912. He wrote articles and a biography on George Gershwin. a12 typescript signed letters from Gershwin to Goldberg. Letters concern Gershwin's composing activities, his concerts and other activities, and discussion of his life.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02135 aGeorge Gershwin Letters to Isaac Goldberg (MS Thr 222). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGershwin, George,d1898-1937. 0aComposerszUnited States.1 aGoldberg, Isaac,d1887-1938,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Edward I. Stern;b14 Garrett Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts;d1952 April 10;e51M-203.5the1 aGift of Mrs. Edward I. Stern in memory of Dr. Isaac Goldberg, 1952.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 22202167ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003400125245006700159300002800226545004300254520024600297530006200543555008700605524011900692546001600811600003400827655001600861700005700877700004400934700005100978700004301029541007501072561015701147506010101304852002501405845039901430009590431-X20130712113343.0050429i18421886mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793905031 aMAHV05-B10033 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aEmily Dickinson letters to various correspondents,f1842-1886. a1 casea(.3 linear ft.) aDickinson was a poet of Amherst, Mass. aLetters are primarily to Susan Huntington Dickinson. Also includes letters to Martha Gilbert Smith, Mrs. Jonathan Leavitt Jenkins (Sarah Maria Eaton), and Abiah Palmer Root Strong, among others as well as Dickinson's last will and testament. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01525 aEmily Dickinson Letters to Various Correspondents, 1842-1886 (MS Am 1118.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886. 7aWills.2aat1 aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913,erecipient.1 aJenkins, Sarah Maria Eaton,erecipient.1 aSmith, Martha Gilbert,d1829-1895,erecipient.1 aStrong, Abiah Palmer Root,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aAlfred Leete Hampson;d1950 May;eno accession number.5hou1 aPurchased from Alfred Leete Hampson with funds given by Gilbert H. Montague, class of 1901, in happy memory of Amy Angel Collier Montague, 1950.5hou0 aReaders must use facsimile. Access to the originals requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 1118.4 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou00932nrm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006100108260001900169300002600188520004100214500004200255524005500297546001600352611004800368655002900416655001700445710002500462541011100487561005600598852002400654013588818-220130110124457.0130110s1862 xx |||| ||||||||||a|eng d0 aocn824194838 aMH-HcMH-Hegihc10aFront & side view of the Great Exhibition 1862h[object] aLondon,c1862. a1 case ;c9.5 x 6 cm. aA now empty case, except for mirror. aTitle taken from front cover of case. aMS Eng 1729. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aGreat Exhibitiond(1862 :cLondon, England) 7aCases (containers).2aat 7aRealia.2aat2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cDeposit; bequest;aSusan D. Bliss;b9 East 68th Street, New York, New York;d1958 June; 1967;e57Z-6.5hou1 aDeposit of Susan D. Blass, 1958; bequest 1967.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Eng 172901725nrm a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004900108245002000157260002300177300002500200520009000225500006500315500028300380500015300663524005400816546001600870600004000886655001700926655001700943700006700960700005501027710002501082710004101107710003501148541014101183561004001324852002301364013461698-720121113113239.0121113nuuuuuuuuxx |||| ||||||||||a|eng d0 aocn818434892 aMH-HcMH-Hegihc1 aJackson, Charles,d1775-1855,eformer owner.10aRazorh[object] aEngland,cundated. a1 case and 1 folder. aA 17 cm. (length) Wade & Butcher razor (Sheffield), marked: Celebrated concave razor. aIn a leather case. Case has embossing: Joseph Rogers & Sons. aWith autograph manuscript note (signed) in the hand of Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (on stationery of the Supreme Court of the United State): "This razor either belonged to my grandfather Jackson [Charles Jackson] or was used to shave him when he was dead. The gap was made by me." aAlso with letter from donor Verner W. Clapp to William A. Jackson, concerning razors found in the dressing room of Justice Holmes, 1957 December 10. aMS Am 2873. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1841-1935. 7aRazors.2aat 7aRealia.2aat1 aClapp, Verner W.q(Verner Warren),d1901-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1841-1935,eformer owner.2 aZ-Closet Collection.2 aJoseph Rogers & Sons,emanufacturer.2 aWade & Butcher,emanufacturer.0 cGift;aMr. Verner W. Clapp;bCouncil on Library Resources, Inc., 1025 Connecticut Avenue, Washington DC;d1957 December 10;e57Z-4.5hou1 aGift of Verner W. Clapp, 1957.5hou8 bHOUcZhMS Am 287301066ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245006100108300003200169500003100201500003000232520017900262524009800441650005200539651002600591610003800617655004700655541006200702561003800764852002200802009854862-X20130910113933.0060125m17721793mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612791119 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPapers concerning Medway, Mass.,f1772-1793 and undated. a1 envelopea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aWritten in various hands. aContains a journal of sermons delivered (1772-1776), list of town members and money provided by them for continental troops (1780), a tax assesment document, and other items. aPapers concerning Medway, Mass., 1772-1793 (MS Am 628). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aPastoral theologyzUnited Statesy18th century. 0aMedway (Mass. : Town)10aUnited States.bContinental Army. 7aSermonszUnited Statesy18th century.2aat0 cGift;aElijah Clarke;d6 July 1846;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Elijah Clarke, 1846.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 62801576ntc a2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245009600108300003200204351003100236520038400267524014300651600003300794600002500827600003400852650003900886651004200925651003900967655003001006700003301036700002501069700003401094541007401128561005001202852002201252009954909-320130910125603.0060503s19uu onc|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612823916 aMH-HedacscMH-H00aPapers concerning Lennox and Addington county and Hastings county, Ontario, Canada,f[19--] a1 envelopea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aChiefly typescript (carbon) transcriptions of letters and documents concerning the history of Hastings county, and Lennox and Addington county, from the late-18th cent. to the mid-19th cent. Many of the items are authored by or concern John Ferguson and William Bell. Also includes the reminiscences of John Collins Clark, and a photograph of a residence in Collins Bay, Ontario. aPapers Concering Lennox and Addington County and Hastings County, Ontario, Canada, 19-- (MS Am 961). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBell, William,dactive 1790.10aClark, John Collins.10aFerguson, John,dactive 1790. 0aFrontier and pioneer lifezCanada. 0aLennox and Addington (Ont.)xHistory. 0aHastings (Ont. : County)xHistory. 7aPhotographszCanada.2aat1 aBell, William,dactive 1790.1 aClark, John Collins.1 aFerguson, John,dactive 1790.0 cGift;aClarance MacDonald Warner;d5 Jan. 1929;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Clarance MacDonald Warner, 1929.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 96100942ntc a2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002100108245003900129300003200168500003100200520023800231524008900469600002100558600002100579541005900600561004200659852002300701009960707-720130910130212.0060511i17261833mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612826459 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLangdon, Samuel.10aSamuel Langdon papers,f1726-1833. a1 envelopea(.1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aContains letters, receipts, notes, and other papers, chiefly addressed to Capt. Samuel Langdon, with some later correspondence addressed to Maj. Samuel Langdon (possibly a son). The papers chiefly concern family and business matters. aSamuel Langdon Papers, 1726-1833 (MS Am 1001). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aLangston family.10aLangdon, Samuel.0 cGift;aCharles H. Taylor;d1932;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor, 1932.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 100102561ntcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002000108245003900128300003200167351061400199545032600813520007001139546001601209524008801225555008701313600002001400600002301420600003301443600003001476610003601506610003401542650004101576651006201617700003601679700005201715700004301767700002301810700004901833700003301882700004501915506004101960541007102001561004502072852002202117009872921-720111013170415.0060217i17971828xx |||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612800580 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aWillard family.10aWillard family papers,f1797-1828. a1 envelopea(.1 linear ft.) aThe constituent documents of this collection were glued by their edges to individual pages of bound notebooks or, in the case of Augustus Willard's journal, gathered together in a folder; contents descriptions were written on the covers. This was presumably done by the donor, a family member. The original arrangement has been preserved, viz.: notebook entitled "Letters of Augustus Willard", items (1)-(12); folder, "Journal of a voyage to the West Indies", item (13); notebook, "Funeral Address on Dr. John Clarke (H.C. 1774), item (14); notebook, "Letters from Sidney Willard (H.C. '98)", items (15)-(18). aJoseph Willard (1738-1804) was a Congregational minister, scholar of ancient Greek, astronomy, and mathematics, and president of Harvard College (1781-1804). He had three sons, Augustus (1775-1799), Sidney (1780-1856), and Joseph (1761-1827), some of whose family and business activities are documented in the collection. aConsists of letters, a journal, eulogies, and a printed obituary. aIn English. aWillard Family Papers, 1797-1828 (MS Am 772). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0221630aWillard family.10aWillard, Augustus.10aWillard, Sidney,d1780-1856.10aClarke, John,d1755-1798.20aHarvard UniversityxPresidents.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aVoyages and travelszCaribbean Area. 0aWest IndiesxDescription and travelvEarly works to 1800.1 aTucker, Thomas,ecorrespondent.1 aPearson, Eliphalet,d1752-1826,ecorrespondent.1 aSheafe, James,d1755-1829,erecipient.1 aWillard, Augustus.1 aWillard, Sidney,d1780-1856,ecorrespondent.1 aWillard, Joseph,d1738-1804.1 aWillard, Joseph,d1761-1827,erecipient.0 aCollection is open for research use.0 cGift;aMiss S. Willard;d1916 April 18;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Miss Susanna Willard, 1916.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 77201207ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245004500146300003700191500003100228500011000259520016800369500002700537524005400564650004100618651003900659650003300698700006500731541008200796561004000878852002300918010005185-520060630114117.0060630s1918 vp |||| |||| 000|m eng d0 aocn612837908 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHale, Richard Walden,d1871-1943.10aReview of the news :ktypescript,f1918. a1 envelope ;c28 cm. and smaller aCollection is unprocessed. aTypescript letters (carbon), signed, and essays (carbon), unsigned, dated at Boston, 25 May-12 Dec. 1918. aNews summaries sent to Richard C. Cabot, in charge of a hospital in Bordeaux, France, for use in his lectures on current events; with correspondence and postcards. aIn an envelope, 33 cm. aMS Am 2458. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918zUnited States. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1913-1921. 0aWorld politicsy20th century1 aCabot, Richard C.q(Richard Clarke),d1868-1939,erecipient.0 cGift;aRichard W. Hale;bBoston;d1929 June 24;erecat. from H 796.18F*.5hou1 aGift of Richard W. Hale, 1929.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 245801010ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100004300107245005500150300001300205500007600218500003100294524005400325655002600379655001800405700005000423700005500473561007700528541008700605852007600692008918966-320050118155749.0020524i19091933xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm84429679 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.00kLettersbto Mr. and Mrs. Henry Palmer,f1909-1933. a1 folder a2 autograph letters (signed) and 2 Christmas cards, all with envelopes. aAll letters from New York. aMS Am 2184. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aChristmas cards.2aat 7aLetters.2aat1 aPalmer, Henry,cof Gardiner, Me.,erecipient.1 aPalmer, Henry,cMrs. of Gardiner, Me.,erecipient. aPurchased with Morris Gray fund from Mrs. Mary P. Bradstreet, 1954.5hou cPurchased;aFrom Mrs. Mary P. Bradstreet;d1954;e54M-199;hMorris Gray fund.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2184zShelved with bMS Am 2179-2180 and bMS Am 2182-2184.01353ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100004400107245008700151300001300238500008000251500031800331500006300649524005400712600003000766600003300796600004100829561005500870541011000925852007601035008917551-420050121085449.0020523s1898 xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm83342815 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCopeland, Charles Townsend,d1860-1952.00kCompositionsbon Austen, Stevenson, and Carlyle :kmanuscripts,f1898 and undated. a1 folder aAutograph manuscript compositions in the hand of Charles Townsend Copeland. aIncludes the following titles bound into one volume: (1) Miss Austen and Miss Ferrier: Contrast and comparison (79p.), incomplete, n.d.; (2) Robert Louis Balfour Stevenson (41p.), n.d.; (3) Carlyle as a letter-writer (42p.), n.d.; and (4) Introduction and comment on Carlyle letters (65p.), 1898 Jul. 5- Sept. 25. aSome pages are loose and housed in separate folder in box. aMS Am 2182. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAusten, Jane,d1775-1817.10aCarlyle, Thomas,d1795-1881.10aStevenson, Robert Louis,d1850-1894. aGift of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Dunbar, 1953.5hou cGift;aMr. and Mrs. Charles F. Dunbar;b9 Otis Lane, Bellport, Long Island;d1953 Apr. 15;e52M-291.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2182zShelved with bMS Am 2179-2180 and bMS Am 2182-2184.02496ctcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245007400108300001300182545114000195520021301335520017801548520013001726546001601856524005401872600003201926610002201958655002001980506002302000541006402023561004202087852010102129012844982-920130219153156.0110803s1851 mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn828256715 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aClippings on Lowell Institute lectures given by Orville Dewey,f1851. a1 folder aOrville Dewey (1794-1882) was an American Unitarian minister born in Sheffield (Mass.). He graduated from Williams College in 1814 and Andover Theological Seminary in 1819 but declined a permanent pastorate, having unsettled views regarding theology. He was offered a pulpit in Gloucester (Mass.) which he accepted temporarily; thereafter he became a Unitarian and was appointed assistant to Dr. William Ellery Channing in Boston (Mass.). In 1823 he became pastor of the Unitarian Church in New Bedford (Mass.), remaining for ten years until travelling to Europe on account of his health. He took a position with the Unitarian Church of New York in 1835 but in 1842 his health again failed, occasioning a second trip to Europe from which he returned in 1844. He resigned his post in 1848 and retired to his farm in Sheffield where he prepared a series of lectures on the "Problem of Human Life and Destiny" for the Lowell Institute of Boston, a series repeated twice in New York and delivered in many other cities. This was followed by a second Lowell series in 1855 on the "Education of the Human Race," a series also widely repeated. aClippings covering 12 lectures given by Dewey every three or four days from October 21-November 28, 1851, with the heading "The problem of human destiny: considered in its bearings on human life and welfare". aClippings come from the Daily evening traveller, the American semi-weekly traveller, and/or the American weekly traveller (all variant editions published in Boston (Mass.)). aWith a manuscript cover note in an unknown hand and another undated clipping entitled "Our age - the advancement of the age". aIn English. aMS Am 2746. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDewey, Orville,d1794-1882.20aLowell Institute. 7aClippings.2aat0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aRoger E. Stoddard;d2006 November 3;e2011M-13.5hou1 aGift of Roger E. Stoddard, 2006.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2746zshelved together: MS Am 2742, MS Am 2743, MS Am 2746, MS Am 2751, MS Am 285002481ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002200108245004200130300003100172545031900203520014900522520043400671520018101105524005401286546001601340600002101356600004501377600002101422650002801443655002401471700006101495700004901556700003501605700005201640700002101692700003901713700003301752700005101785541014301836561003701979506004202016852002502058013314204-320120803191101.0020710i18331847mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn804095602 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aHutchings family.10aHutchings family letters,f1833-1847. a1 foldera(.02 linear ft.) aElizabeth Coit Lathrop Hutchings (b.1813) was the wife of Samuel Hutchings, a Presbyterian missionary who served with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) in Oodooville, Ceylon and in Madras, India. Four of the Lathrop sisters married ministers and sailed with their husbands to Ceylon. aTypescript transcripts of original letters in the possession of Grace E. Dox [Mrs. Elmer Allan Dox], the great-granddaughter of E. C. Hutchings.8 aTranscripts include letters: Samuel Hutchings to Sister Fanny Leffingwell Lathrop Hallock (1833); E. C. Hutchings to mother Joanne Lathrop (1843); Harriet Joanna Lathrop Perry to mother Joanne Lathrop (1835); Jane Lathrop Cherry to E. C. Hutchings and Samuel Hutchings (1842); E. C. Hutchings to mother and family (1836); E. C. Hutchings to friends (1837); and multiple letters between Rufus Anderson and Samuel Hutchings (1847).8 aAlso includes a letter from the donor, Grace E. Dox to Houghton Library concerning these letters, 1968 February 28; and with biographical information on various family members. aMS Am 2811. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aHutchins family.10aHutchings, E. C.q(Elizabeth C.),d1813-30aHutchins family. 0aMissionaries, American. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aHutchings, E. C.q(Elizabeth C.),d1813-ecorrespondent.1 aAnderson, Rufus,d1796-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aDox, Grace E.,ecorrespondent.1 aHallock, Fanny Leffingwell Lathrop,erecipient.3 aHutchins family.1 aHutchings, Samuel,ecorrespondent.1 aLathrop, Joanne,erecipient.1 aPerry, Harriet Joanna Lathrop,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aGrace E. Dox [Mrs. Elmer Allan Dox];b30 Grant Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey 07017;d1968 February 28;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Grace E. Dox, 1968.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 281101030nacaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245009300093300003100186351001700217546001600234600005000250610002700300655002000327541027200347561011400619506004200733852004900775013087619-420120202143332.0120202s1840 mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPlaybills for Leigh Hunt's Legend of Florence performed at Covent Garden Theatre,f1840. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIn English.10aHunt, Leigh,d1784-1859.tLegend of Florence.20aCovent Garden Theatre. 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 261 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 810zshelved with MS Thr 80901091ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005200093300003100145351001700176500011100193500004600304546004500350655002200395655002700417541025000444561011400694506004200808852002300850013081969-720120221101456.0120131i17991965mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aTheatrical tickets and invitations,f1799-1965. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aIncludes approximately 30 tickets, invitations, and miscellaneous documents, some with manuscript content. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English, French, German, and Italian. 7aInvitations.2aat 7aTicketsxTheater.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 695the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcFhMS Thr 80200985ctcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005400093300003100147351001700178500021600195546001600411600002900427700003400456700001900490700003400509700003400543541016500577852002500742012318024-420120522132744.0100413s1850 mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aLetters concerning Jenny Lind,f1850 and undated. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aThree letters remarking on Jenny Lind's appearances, including: to Augusta N. Ladd from unknown, July 5 [no year]; Edwin W. Fogg to Ann E. L. Hobbs, 1850 October 7; Aldus [ ] to Thomas Anderson, 1850 December 8. aIn English.10aLind, Jenny,d1820-1887.1 aAnderson, Thomas,erecipient.1 aFogg, Edwin W.1 aHobbs, Ann E. L.,erecipient.1 aLadd, Augusta N.,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aLa Scala Autographs, Inc.;b301 N. Harrison St, Box 900, Princeton, NJ 08540;d2010 April 13;e2009MT-79;h$850.00 (Francis W. Hatch Book Fund).5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 46700752ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003100093245007600124300003100200351001700231500004600248546001600294600003100310700003600341506004600377541009800423852002500521012560456-420100902171258.0100830i19841999mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGielgud, John,d1904-2000.10aJohn Gielgud correspondence with Margot Peters,f1984-1999 and undated. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aGielgud, John,d1904-2000.1 aPeters, Margot,ecorrespondent.1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aMargot Peters;b511 College St, Lake Mills, WI 53551;d2010 August 24;e2010MT-4.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 60501544cacaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005900110300003100169351003000200520016500230546001600395555008700411524012600498650004400624650004200668600005200710655004300762506003700805541027100842561011401113852005101227012594064-520110408191414.0101020i18201831mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn712906055 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPlaybills relating to works of Lord Byron,f1820-1831. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aArranged in folder order. aPlaybills for plays by or based on works by Baron George Gordon Byron Byron (1788-1824) performed in London (England) and Hull (England) in the 1820s and 1830s. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02148 aPlaybills Relating to Works of Lord Byron (MS Thr 670). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aTheaterzEnglandzLondony19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandzHully19th century.10aByron, George Gordon Byron,cBaron,d1788-1824. 7aPlaybillszEnglandy19th century.2aat aCollection is open for research.0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 85the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 670zshelved with pfMS Thr 67400779ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100004100106245005100147300003100198351001700229500010200246546002700348600004100375655002000416541007800436506002300514852002400537013402870-820121102141358.0121102i18371840mau |||||||fre|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs afreaita1 aPocci, Franz,cGraf von,d1807-1876?10aPlaybills for private theatricals,f1837-1840. a1 folder (.04 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aFour playbills, three in French and one in Italian, presumably designed and illustrated by Pocci. aIn French and Italian.10aPocci, Franz,cGraf von,d1807-1876. 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cPurchase;d1964 February 13;e2012MT-18;h$21.70 (F. E. Chase Fund).5the0 aOpen for research.8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 92902168ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103100003400124245010400158300003100262545037200293520016800665520010300833555008700936524013301023600003401156600005101190600006301241610003001304610001701334611002301351650004701374700004501421700006101466700005201527700006701579852002601646541008501672561004901757009719100-020050801134644.0050722i18261958mau |||||||eng|d0 aocm79463937 aMAHV05B10055 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aNansen, Fridtjof,d1861-1930.00kCorrespondencebwith Frederick Sydney Parry and other papers,f1823-1958 (inclusive),g1897 (bulk). a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aFridtjof Nansen, a Norwegian explorer, oceanographer, and statesman, was noted for his Arctic expedition of 1893-1896, travelling closer to the North Pole than anyone had reached and using his specially-built vessel "Fram" to demonstrate the revolutionary concept of pack-ice drift. Frederick Sydney Parry was the grandson of Arctic explorer Sir William Edward Parry. aThe papers concern gifts to Nansen in honor of his "Fram" expedition and mention publications on Arctic exploration by George S. Nares and Sir Clements R. Markham. aIncludes letters of Sir George Back, Sir Francis Leopold M'Clintock, and Sir William Edward Parry.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01779 aFridtjof Nansen Correspondence with Frederick Sydney Parry and Other Papers (MS Eng 1510). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aNansen, Fridtjof,d1861-1930.10aNares, George S.q(George Strong),d1831-1915.10aMarkham, Clements R.q(Clements Robert),cSir,d1830-1916.20aBritish Arctic Explorers.20aFram (Ship).20a"Fram" Expedition. 0aArctic regionsxDiscovery and exploration.1 aParry, Frederick Sydney,ecorrespondent.1 aParry, William Edward,cSir,d1790-1855,ecorrespondent.1 aBack, George,cSir,d1796-1878,ecorrespondent.1 aM'Clintock, Francis Leopold,cSir,d1819-1907,ecorrespondent.8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1510 cPurchase;aH.W. Pratley;d1959 July 24;e2004M-124.h$378.00 (with 59-133).5hou aPurchased, 1959 (removed from *59-131).5hou02960ctcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003300091245010100124300003100225351005400256545056600310520069300876546001601569555008701585500003701672524015201709651003201861600003301893650005101926651005201977655002502029700003802054700004502092700003302137700004202170700002502212852002402237541021002261506003702471561009002508010596715-720131108185556.0070717i17611803mau |||||||||||i|eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784.10aSamuel Johnson additional letters and Hester Lynch Piozzi additional correspondence,f1761-1803. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aSamuel Johnson (1709-1784) was one of the leading literary figures of eighteenth-century England. He is best remembered for compiling the first comprehensive dictionary of the English language, published in 1755. He was memorialized in James Boswell’s The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (1791). Hester Lynch Salusbury was born in Wales in 1741, and in 1763 married wealthy London brewer Henry Thrale. After the Thrales were introduced to Samuel Johnson in 1765, their home became the center of an important coterie of literary, artistic, and political figures. aPredominantly letters written by Samuel Johnson to his stepdaughter Lucy Porter. Samuel Johnson never had children of his own and wrote fondly to his stepdaughter, who was the child of his deceased wife, Elizabeth Porter. The letters largely discuss his health and the concerns he has for Lucy's health. Other letters in the collection are from Hester Lynch Piozzi to the writer Charles Burney. They discuss the health of friends and family (including Samuel Johnson) who frequented Streatham Park, which Piozzi fancied a literary lodge of sorts. Also includes a letter from William Ridlington to Piozzi, seeking critical advice on his new law paper, and discusses current day literature. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02467 aCollection is open for research. aSamuel Johnson Additional Letters and Hester Lynch Piozzi Additional Correspondence, 1761-1803 (MS Eng 1754). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aStreatham (London, England)10aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784. 0aLexicographerszGreat BritainxCorrespondence. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy18th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat1 aPiozzi, Hester Lynch,d1741-1821.1 aBurney, Charles,d1726-1814,erecipient.1 aDavies, Reynold,erecipient.1 aPorter, Lucy,d1715-1786,erecipient.1 aRidlington, William.8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 1754 cPurchase;aChristopher Edwards;bHatch Gate Farmhouse, Lines Road, Hurst, Berkshire RG10 0SP, England;d2007 July 2;eMS Eng 1754;h$103923.02 (Endowment Fund for the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection).5hou0 aCollection is open for research.1 aPurchased with the Endowment Fund for the Donald and Mary Hyde Collection, 2007.5hou00713ctm a2200169 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100004900093245007600142300003000218546001600248600004900264700003300313852002300346541017400369011581346-220081118171505.0081006s1864 xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBarnum, P. T.q(Phineas Taylor),d1810-1891.10aP. T. (Phineas Taylor) Barnum letter to John Greenwood,f1864 April 29. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aIn English.10aBarnum, P. T.q(Phineas Taylor),d1810-1891.1 aGreenwood, John,erecipient.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 4670 cPurchase;aLion Heart Autographs, Inc.;b470 Park Av South - Penthouse, New York, NY 10016;d2008 October 6;e2008MT-42;h$3250.00 (Richard C. Marcus Theatre Fund).5the00721ctm a2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002000093245006000113300003000173351001700203546001600220600002000236700003900256852002300295541016300318506004600481011581961-420090724143151.0081007nuuuuuuuuxx |||||||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGraham, Martha.10aMartha Graham letter to Olive Cousens Holmes,fundated. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English.10aGraham, Martha.1 aHolmes, Olive Cousens,erecipient.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 4670 cPurchase;aLion Heart Autographs;b470 Park Av South - Penthouse, New York, NY 10016;d2008 October 7;e2008MT-43;h$475.00 (Walter Terry Memorial Fund).5the aRetrieval requires permission of curator.00934ctm a2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002200093245006100115300003000176351001700206500011200223500004600335546001500381600002200396611002400418700003300442852002300475541016000498506004600658011576140-320081118142156.0080929s1954 xx |||||||||||||||||fre|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aReymond, Georges.10aGeorges Reymond letter to Georges Michel,f1954 July 23. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aConcerns works of art Reymond agreed to lend to the Diaghilev exhibition at the Edinburgh Festival of 1954. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn French.10aReymond, Georges.20aEdinburgh Festival.1 aMichel, Georges,erecipient.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 4670 cPurchase;aMichael R. Weintraub, Inc.;b135 West 26th St, New York, NY 10001;d2008 September 29;e2008MT-44;h$275.00 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest).5the1 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.00772ctcaa2200169 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100001900093245006500112300003000177351001700207600001900224700003300243852002300276541030300299011875840-320120522102921.0090225s1961 mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aInge, William.10aWilliam Inge letters to Barbara Baxley,f1961 February 3-14. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed.10aInge, William.1 aBaxley, Barbara,erecipient.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 4670 cPurchase;aRichard Stoddard;b43 E. 10th St, Suite 6-D, New York, NY 10003;d2009 February 25;e2008MT-93;h$425.00 ($100.00 Russel Crouse Fund for Twentieth Centure Theatre ; $94.00 Jack Lemmon AB 1947 Memorial Fund ; $80.00 Edward Sheldon Book Fund ; $151.00 miscellaneous additional funds).5the00850ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100003500093245011000128300003000238351001700268546001600285500005800301600003500359700003000394700003700424541016000461852002300621011750643-520120522102243.0081121i19521953xx ||||| eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aHerrmann, Bernard,d1911-1975.10aBernard Herrmann letters to Arnold Weissberger concerning Herrmann's opera Wuthering Heights,f1952-1953. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English. aWith a copy of a letter from Rudolf Bing to Herrmann.10aHerrmann, Bernard,d1911-1975.1 aBing, Rudolf,d1902-1997.1 aWeissberger, Arnold,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aLa Scala Autographs;b301 N. Harrison Street, Princeton, NJ 08540;d2008 November 20;e2008MT-50;h$1000.00 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 46701582ntcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002700108245010700135300003100242500012400273520029700397500001500694524014600709546001600855600002700871600005200898600008100950700005201031541012001083561004501203852006801248012053710-920091118144833.0090812i19631964mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612878892 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPiediscalzi, Nicholas.10aNicholas Piediscalzi review of Erik Erikson's Insight and responsibility and other papers,f1963-1964. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aTypecript review, two letters from Erik Erikson to Piediscalzi, dated 1964 July 15 and 27, and other typescript papers. aPiediscalzi's review with Erikson's manuscript marginal comments, a letter concerning the review, another letter concerning materials for the seminar History and Life History, a schedule for the seminar, and a copy of the Rationale and description of Social Sciences 139, fall term 1963-1964. aIn a case. aNicholas Piediscalzi review of Erik Erikson's Insight and responsibility and other papers (MS Am 2666). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPiediscalzi, Nicholas.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.10aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.tInsight and responsibility.1 aErikson, Erik H.q(Erik Homburger),d1902-1994.0 cGift;aNicholas Piediscalzi;d2009 August 7;e2009M-20.h$.5houb5537 Capellina Way, Santa Barbara, CA 93111-1427;1 aGift of Nicholas Piediscalzi, 2009.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2666zShelved with bMS Am 2661-2663 and 2665-266600970ntcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002900091245007000120300003000190351001700220500020900237500004600446546001600492600002900508700003100537506004300568541011800611852002300729012361679-420100603145812.0100603i17791781mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDavis, John,d1761-1847.10aJohn Davis letters to Thomas Davis with other papers,f1779-1781. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLetters from son at Harvard College to father, with a receipt for supplies for a trip to Penobscot and documentation of the phases of the solar eclipse of October 27, 1780, as observed from Penobscot Bay. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aDavis, John,d1761-1847.1 aDavis, Thomas,erecipient. aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aRobert Rothschild;b15 West 53rd Street, Apartment 23B, New York, NY 10019;d2010 May 26;e2009M-117.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 268800847ntcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002300091245008400114300003000198351001700228500004000245500004600285546001600331600002300347655002200370700004600392506004300438541011100481852002500592012562950-820100902175357.0100902i19501959mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMeserve, Walter J.10aWalter J. Meserve letters received from Mildred Howells and others,f1950-1959. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aWith one photograph and a pamphlet. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aMeserve, Walter J. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aHowells, Mildred,d1872--ecorrespondent.1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aWalter J. Meserve;bP.O. Box 174, Brooklin, ME 04616;d2010 September 2, October 1;e2010M-17.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 269500860ctm a2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003200090245013100122300003100253351001700284500004600301546001600347600003200363655001600395655001800411506004300429541014600472852002400618012556486-420100825123253.0100825s1800 xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLloyd, Charles,d1775-1839.10aWritten at Barnwell near Cambridge, 1 March 1800. To Mr. Southey :kmanuscript poem, with additional poems,f1800 and undated. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English.10aLloyd, Charles,d1775-1839. 7aPoems.2aat 7aSonnets.2aat1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cPurchase;aBernard Quaritch Ltd;b40 South Audley St, London W1K 2PR England;d2010 August 25;e2010M-15;h$24000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 165702591ctcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245003700139300003000176351006200206545096000268520024701228546001601475555008701491524008701578600003101665650003701696650003301733650002801766650001301794655001901807655002201826700003001848700003701878700004801915506003701963541014302000561006302143852002302206012738586-X20110610114251.0110408i19501959mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn731351332 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRivers, Larry,d1925-2002.10aLarry Rivers papers,f1950-1959. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aOrganized alphabetically by author, then chronologically. aLarry Rivers was born Yitzhok Loiza Grossberg to Russian-Jewish parents in 1923 (sometimes claimed to be 1925) in the Bronx, New York, changing his name to Larry Rivers in 1940 after being introduced as "Larry Rivers and the Mudcats" performing at a local pub. From 1940-1945 he worked as a jazz saxophonist in New York City; he studied at the Juilliard School of Music in 1945-1946. Rivers took up painting in 1945 and studied at the Hans Hofmann School from 1947–1948 at the encouragement of Nell Blaine. Rivers embarked on a trip to Paris in 1950 to write poetry and study paintings in the Louvre; Blaine joined him after a few weeks, renting a studio in order to paint. He went on to become a filmmaker and occasional actor and became associated with Pop Art and the New York School. Rivers died in 2002. Margaret Harmsworth McCulloch was a fellow painter and sculptor living in Paris and the daughter of Desmond Harmsworth, an artist and publisher. aIncludes Rivers's letters to Margaret Harmsworth McCulloch (one with a sketch of Nell Blaine), Desmond Harmsworth, a postcard with clipping from Nell Blaine to Rivers, a photograph of one of Rivers's paintings, and miscellaneous other papers. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02167 aLarry Rivers Papers, 1950-1959 (MS Am 2719). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRivers, Larry,d1925-2002. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aArt, Americany20th century. 0aNew York school of art. 0aPop art. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBlaine, Nell,d1922-1996.1 aHarmsworth, Desmond,erecipient.1 aMcCulloch, Margaret Harmsworth,erecipient.0 aCollection is open for research.0 cPurchase;aPaul Rassam;bFlat 5, 18 East Heath Road, London NW3 1AJ England;d2011 April 11;e2010M-85;h$4021.23 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 271901718nacaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003100110245005400141300003000195545022900225520026200454546001600716524013200732600001800864610004800882655003600930655003400966506004201000541027201042561011401314852002401428012324663-620110617102429.0100421i18531888mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn731354012 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWoodin, W. S.,eperformer.10aEphemera related to W. S. Woodin,fca. 1853-1888. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aWilliam Samuel Woodin (1826-1888) was a popular entertainer in London and provincial English towns who specialized in imitation, improvisation, song, and dance. He operated Woodin's Polygraphic Hall in London from 1855-1869. aIncludes: two sheets of pasted-down photographs of Woodin in costume as various characters; clippings from various newspapers concerning Woodin's performances and death; pictorial prints of Woodin in character; and a playbill from Woodin's Polygraphic Hall. aIn English. aEphemera Related to W. S. Woodin, ca. 1853-1888 (MS Thr 689). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWoodin, W. S.20aWoodin's Polygraphic Hall (London, England) 7aPhotographsy19th century.2aat 7aPlaybillsy19th century.2aat0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).3lot 705the1 aPurchased with funds from the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 68901541ctcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003000108245004000138300003000178545014500208520029100353546001600644555008700660524009000747600003000837600002100867650002800888700002600916700003100942700001800973700003100991506002301022541009601045561006301141852002301204013087262-820120322101305.0120202i19581961mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn781553245 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHurley, Irma,d1929-2009.10aIrma Hurley papers,fca. 1958-1961. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aIrma Hurley (1929-2009) was an American stage and screen actress who belonged to the inner circle of various New York school of art members. aLetters among and a group composition by members of the New York school of art. Includes a typescript of a play, "The Coronation Murder Mystery by John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch, and Frank O'Hara (for James Schuyler)"; and letters between Frank O'Hara and Joe LeSueur, as well as to Hurley. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02279 aIrma Hurley Papers, ca. 1958-1961 (MS Am 2792). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHurley, Irma,d1929-2009.10aSchuyler, James. 0aNew York school of art.1 aAshbery, John,d1927-1 aKoch, Kenneth,d1925-2002.1 aLeSueur, Joe.1 aO'Hara, Frank,d1926-1966.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz;d2012 February 02;e2011M-78;h$7850.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, 2012.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 279202270ctcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245006500140300003000205545035900235520012700594520058400721544012401305546001601429524011501445600001801560600003201578630004901610655003801659700002001697700002701717506002301744541009901767561006701866852002301933013087252-020120416135515.0120202i19691976mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn787848043 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSissman, L. E.,d1928-1976.10aL. E. Sissman correspondence with William Shawn,f1969-1976. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aLouis Edward Sissman (1928-1976) was an American poet, columnist, and advertising executive. He graduated from Harvard College in 1949 as Class Poet and settled outside Boston to work as an advertising copywriter. From 1964 to 1974, his poetry and prose were published in the New Yorker and Atlantic Monthly. Sissman died in 1976 of Hodgkin’s lymphoma. aEditorial correspondence between writer, poet and advertising executive L. E. Sissman and New Yorker editor William Shawn. aTyped letters (signed Ed Sissman) to Shawn, with Shawn's carbon or photocopied notes, chiefly concern Sissman's book reviews and other short pieces for the New Yorker, as well as contemporary literature and ideas for articles. Includes one letter from Anne Sissman to William Shawn in response to Shawn's letter following her husband's death; interoffice correspondence and related material including a tear sheet from New England Advertising Week for the L.E. Sissman Award, created as a memorial; and one photograph of Dick Cavett's office relating to a piece by L. E. Sissman.1 nThe L. E. Sissman papers and L. E. Sissman additional papers are also held by the Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aL. E. Sissman Correspondence with William Shawn, 1969-1976 (MS Am 2791). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCavett, Dick.10aSissman, L. E.,d1928-1976.00aNew Yorker (New York, N.Y. : 1925)xHistory. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aShawn, William.1 aSissman, Anne Bierman.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz;d2012 February 02;e2011M-77;h$750.00 (Edward Hyde Cox Fund).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Edward Hyde Cox Fund, 2012.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 279100910ntm a2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003000090245004600120300003000166351001700196500010000213546001600313600001900329650001500348710004700363506002300410541009000433561005500523561006500578852002500643013344363-920120910110153.0120907i19802000xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMcCloud, Mark,edesigner.10aMark McCloud blotter art,fca. 1980-2000. a1 folder (.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aExamples of McCloud-designed perforated paper used as a delivery medium for LSD (blotter acid). aIn English.10aMcCloud, Mark. 0aLSD (Drug)2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-45.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 282901205ctcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003100090245004100121300003100162351001700193500015600210546001600366700003800382700005100420700002900471700003500500700003200535700003600567700003000603700003100633506002300664541021500687852002500902013724234-420130724130032.0130710i18491857mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMaxwell, Hugh,erecipient.10aLetters to Hugh Maxwell,f1849-1857. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aWith letters from Ralph Waldo Emerson, John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, Millard Fillmore, Horace Greeley, Washington Irving, Horace Mann, and Jared Sparks. aIn English.1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.1 aCalhoun, John C.q(John Caldwell),d1782-1850.1 aClay, Henry,d1777-1852.1 aFillmore, Millard,d1800-1874.1 aGreeley, Horace,d1811-18721 aIrving, Washington,d1783-1859.1 aMann, Horace,d1796-1859.1 aSparks, Jared,d1789-1866.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aSwedenborgian House of Studies c/o Pacific School of Religion;b1798 Scenic Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94709;d2013 July 2;e2013M-3;h$9500.00 (Houghton Fund to Support Study of Ralph Waldo Emerson).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 292601114ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003200090245007400122300003100196351001700227500016100244546001600405600003200421506002300453541019500476541021200671852002500883013732617-320130724133044.0130719s1940 mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJolas, Eugène,d1894-1952.10aFragments of Eugène Jolas's Man from Babel :ktypescript,fca. 1940. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aTwo sections from the original annotated typescript of Jolas's autobiography, Man from Babel: one on James Joyce; the other on Alsace-Lorraine and Hans Arp. aIn English.10aJolas, Eugène,d1894-1952.0 aOpen for research.0 3Item no. 85, on James Joyce;cPurchase;aJean-Yves Lacroix;b51 rue du Montparnasse, Paris, France 75014;d2013 June 7;e2012M-190;h$1306.85 (Class of 1952 Manuscript Department Fund).5hou0 3Item no. 86, on Alsace-Lorraine and Jean Arp;cPurchase;aJean-Yves Lacroix;b51 rue du Montparnasse, Paris, France 75014;d2013 June 7;e2012M-190;h$1045.48 (Class of 1952 Manuscript Department Fund).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 292700893ctmaa2200193 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002300069100005200092245009800144300003100242351001700273500008600290546001500376600005200391506002300443541020700466852002600673013817902-620131106144434.0131101s1574 xx |||||||||||||||||fred aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aBeaujoyeulx, Baltasar de,d-approximately 1587.10aDocument signed by Baltasar de Beaujoyeulx and naming him ballet master :kmanuscript,f1574. a1 foldera(.04 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aDocument on verso of a document signed by Francese Dorleans (François d'Orleans) aIn French.10aBeaujoyeulx, Baltasar de,d-approximately 1587.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aGolden Legend, Inc.;b449 South Beverly Dr., Suite 205, Beverly Hills, CA 90212;d2013 October 28;e2013MT-16;h$10000.00 (Helen Delano Willard Memorial Fund for the Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 100001097nacaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007600093300003100169351001700200500008300217546001600300650004000316651005800356541027200414561011400686506004200800852004900842013087594-520120202142010.0120202i18221880mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aLondon (England) theatrical periodicals and advertisements,f1822-1880. a1 folder (.08 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aTheatrical periodicals and small advertisements issued by individual theaters. aIn English. 0aTheatery19th centuryvPeriodicals. 0aLondon (England)xTheatery19th centuryvPeriodicals.0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 661 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 809zshelved with MS Thr 81001105nacaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005500093300003100148351001700179500012400196546001600320610003800336610002600374655003400400541027200434561011400706506004200820852002500862013087652-620120202150217.0120202i18001870mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aEnglish playbills printed on silk,fca. 1800-1870. a1 folder (.08 linear feet) aUnprocessed. a15 silk playbills from various theaters in England, three from the Woburn Abbey Theatre, four from the Olympic Theatre. aIn English.20aOlympic Theatre (London, England)20aWoburn Abbey Theatre. 7aPlaybillsy19th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aLisa Cox Music Ltd;b16 Hookway House, Hookway, Crediton, Devon, England EX17 3PU;d2009 August 24;e2009MT-93;h$22557.00 total for ca. 70 lots ($20557.00 - Frank E. Chase Bequest ; $2000.00 - George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History).5the3lot 651 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest and the George and Faith Kahrl Fund for Theatre History, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFDhMS Thr 81102001ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002000108245006800128300003000196351003000226545021600256520022600472546001600698555008700714524011800801600002000919600001900939610004100958650002700999650003701026650004401063650004901107651004901156655003301205700003201238506002301270541016001293561008501453852010101538012840011-020120416135645.0110728i19101926mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn787845395 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHamlin, Irving.10aIrving Hamlin papers concerning psychical research,f1910-1926. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aIrving Hamlin (1873-) lived in Evanston, Illinois, where he was associated with the Evanston Sound Proof Door Company. He was an avid researcher of the paranormal, traveling frequently to participate in seances. aIrving Hamlin's copy of "The Strange Experience of Mrs. Rockway" by Psychicticus, with letters to him, including one from William James, and printed material concerning this and other cases of parapsychological phenomena. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02301 aIrving Hamlin Papers Concerning Psychical Research, 1910-1926 (MS Am 2742). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHamlin, Irving.10aRockway,cMrs.20aBoston Society for Psychic Research. 0aMediumsy20th century. 0aParapsychologistsy20th century. 0aParapsychologyxResearchy20th century. 0aParapsychologyzWest Virginiay20th century. 0aWest VirginiaxParapsychologyy20th century. 7aSéancesy20th century.2aat1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aDavid J. Holmes Autographs;bP.O. Box 90, Hamilton, NY 13346;d2011 July 28;e2011M-11;h$1500.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund, 2011.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2742zshelved together: MS Am 2742, MS Am 2743, MS Am 2746, MS Am 2751, MS Am 285001102ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100001900091245003800110300003000148351001700178500023800195500008300433546001600516600001900532700003800551700002300589700003600612700003900648506002300687541011500710852002300825013237402-120120613112815.0120612i18201881mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aAlcott family.10aAlcott family papers,f1820-1881. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes: "My business journal while peddling in Virgina 1820" by Chatfield Alcott; autograph letters from Louisa May Alcott and Amos Bronson Alcott to Abigail Allen; and autograph letter from Amos Bronson Alcott to Chatfield Alcott. aFor a family tree, related family history, and transcripts, see internal file. aIn English.30aAlcott family.1 aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.1 aAlcott, Chatfield.1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.1 aAllen, Abigail Alcott,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aMartha and Thomas Kakuk;b7600 Hunters Ridge Drive, Kalamazoo, MI 49009;d2012 May 23;e2011M-132.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 280400734nkcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069245005000090300003000140351001700170546001600187655002200203710004700225506002300272541009000295561005500385561006500440852002300505013344416-320120910105415.0120907i19581971mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aFilm stills from drug movies,fca. 1958-1971. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIn English. 7aPhotographs.2aat2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-46.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 283100883nkcaa2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003300090245005500123300003000178351001700208500006000225546001600285600001800301655001700319710004700336506002300383541009000406561005500496561006500551852002500616013365901-120121001170607.0121001s1967 xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRodan, Keith,ephotographer.10aKeith Rodan photographs at an art festival,f1967. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aPhotographs presumably taken in San Francisco (Calif.). aIn English.10aRodan, Keith. 7aPhotographs.2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-65.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 284301162ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003500090245007800125300003000203351001700233545020400250500006800454546001600522600003500538700003000573710004700603506002300650541009000673561005500763561006500818852002500883013362685-720120926143945.0120926i19181920mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrowley, Aleister,d1875-1947.10aAleister Crowley correspondence with Cecil Frederick Russell,f1918-1920. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aCrowley was an English occultist, mystic, ceremonial magician and poet who was responsible for founding the religious philosophy of Thelema. C.F. Russell met and became a follower of Crowley in 1918. aThe correspondence employs Thelemic salutations and signatures. aIn English.10aCrowley, Aleister,d1875-1947.1 aRussell, Cecil Frederick.2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-57.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 283701029ctcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003800090245009500128300003000223351001700253500017800270546001600448600003800464700004400502700003100546506002300577541018500600852002600785013628300-420130306135406.0130305i19121930xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRicketts, Charles S.,d1866-1931.10aCharles S. Ricketts and Charles Hazelwood Shannon letters to Cecil French,fca. 1912-1930. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aAutograph letters and postcards from Ricketts and autograph cards from Shannon to Irish collector and artist Cecil French discussing art, artists, travel, and relationships. aIn English.10aRicketts, Charles S.,d1866-1931.1 aShannon, Charles Hazelwood,d1863-1937.1 aFrench, Cecil,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aMaggs Bros Ltd.;b50, Berkeley Square, London, W1J 5BA ENGLAND;d2013 February 26;e2012M-129;h$4400.00 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization in HCL).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 173800857ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003900090245006600129300003000195351001700225500012500242546001600367600003900383600003500422506002300457541014800480852002300628013689677-420130604122410.0130521i18541887mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aWilliam Dean Howells letters to J. Harvey Greene,f1854-1887. a1 folder (.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLetters from Howells to his boyhood friend, James Harvey Greene. With a letter from J. A. Howells to Margaret [?], 1910. aIn English.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aGreene, J. Harvey,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aJaneanne Narrin;b28 Spooks Branch Extension, Asheville, NC 28804;d2013 May 1;e2012M-153;h$3000.00 (Jacob Blanck Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 291700869ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069245006500090300003100155351001700186500013100203546001600334610003300350655002700383655003700410506002300447541017000470852002300640013786005-620131001124703.0130925s1964 mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aMississippi Freedom Project student circular letters,f1964. a1 foldera(.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aTypescript and mimeographed letters from Bill, a Harvard student working in Mississippi as part of the Freedom Summer project. aIn English.20aMississippi Freedom Project. 7aCircular letters.2aat 7aHarvard students' papers.2local0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aBolerium Books;b2141 Mission St., Ste.300, San Francisco, CA 94110;d2013 September 4;e2013M-26;h$500.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 293500936ctcaa2200217 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003000090245005800120300003100178351001700209500013100226546001600357600003000373600005300403700004000456506002300496541017300519852002600692013769323-020130903151026.0130903s1814 mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMacaulay, Colin Campbell.10aColin Macaulay letters to Mrs. Aulay Macaulay,f1814. a1 foldera(.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLetters from a schoolboy to his mother constituting eyewitness accounts of London celebrations following the fall of Napoleon. aIn English.10aMacaulay, Colin Campbell.10aNapoleonbI,cEmperor of the French,d1769-1821.1 aMacaulay, Aulay,cMrs.,erecipient.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aJames Fergusson Books & Manuscripts;b39 Melrose Gardens, London W6 7RN United Kingdom;d2013 August 17;e2013M-19;h$1323.37 (Andrew Oliver Book Fund).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 174600782ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100002500090245007900115300003100194351001700225500006100242546001600303600002500319700003500344506002300379541015100402852002300553013815868-120131030172759.0131030i19591990mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHall, Donald,d1928-10aDonald Hall correspondence with John Ridland and other papers,f1959-1990. a1 foldera(.08 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes a typescript copy of Hall's An evening's Frost. aIn English.10aHall, Donald,d1928-1 aRidland, John,ecorrespondent.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aRalph B. Sipper;b10 West Micheltorena Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101;d2013 October 24;e2013M-35;h$4000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 294201345cpmaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100004000090245010300130300005000233351001700283500018500300500005300485546001600538600002500554655001600579655002100595700003900616700003700655700003200692700003200724700003400756506002300790541012400813845008100937852002501018012872540-020130905164652.0110823s2011 xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDahlberg, William N.,etranscriber.10aInterview with Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon for The Dartmouth :ktypescript transcript,f2011 July. a1 foldera(.08 linear ft.) +e1 CD-R (700 MB) aUnprocessed. aInterview was conducted in July 1977 by Dartmouth College students Jesse Boyd Hayes, Daniela Varon, and Mary Klages for the weekly literary column "Word for Word" in The Dartmouth. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: CD-R. aIn English.10aDahlberg, William N. 7aCD-Rs.2aat 7aInterviews.2aat1 aHall, Donald,d1928-einterviewee.1 aHayes, Jesse Boyd,einterviewer.1 aKenyon, Jane,einterviewee.1 aKlages, Mary,einterviewer.1 aVaron, Daniela,einterviewer.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aWilliam N. Dahlberg;bDartmouth College, 116 Wentworth Hall, Hanover, NH 03755;d2011 August 12;e2011M-29.5hou aSpecial equipment or surrogate required; consult Houghton staff (CD-R).5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 275201258ckcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100002400093245006000117300003000177351001700207545017700224520011000401546001600511600004600527600005300573600002400626610002200650655002500672730004600697506002300743541020300766852002300969013157223-720120427161800.0120419i18791900mau||| |||||||ita|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aRizzi, P.,eartist.10aCostume designs for the ballet Day-Sin,fca. 1879-1900. a1 folder (.1 linear feet) aUnprocessed. aThe ballet, with music by Romualdo Marenco and choreography by Ferdinando Pratesi, premiered in Turin in 1879; it was first performed in Milan at Teatro alla Scala in 1891. a15 costume designs, some bearing the stamp of Teatro La Fenice (Venice, Italy), and most signed P. Rizzi. aIn Italian.10aMarenco, Romualdo,d1841-1907,ecomposer.10aPratesi, Ferdinando,d1831-1879,echoreographer.10aRizzi, P.,eartist.20aTeatro La Fenice. 7aCostume design.2aat0 aDay-Sin (Choreographic work : Pratesi, F)1 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aJ & J Lubrano ... LLC;b351 West Neck Rd, Lloyd Harbor, NY 11743;d2012 April 19;e2011MT-32;h$4500.00 (Beatrice, Benjamin and Richard Bader Fund in the Visual Arts of the Theatre).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 84601719ckcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004600110245005600156300003000212545012700242520022000369520024900589524013400838546001600972600001800988600003101006600002001037650002601057655004501083541018001128561006401308506003201372852002501404013190554-620120607143440.0120521s1941 mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn795013755 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aMcBean, Angus,d1904-1990c(Photographer)10aAngus McBean photographs of Mela Carter,fca. 1941. a1 folder (.1 linear feet) aAngus McBean (1904-1990) was a Welsh photographer, associated with surrealism. Mela Carter was a dancer and choreographer. a5 original black and white photographs by photographer Angus McBean, of ballet dancer Mela Carter, in ballet costume. All photographs were taken in McBean's Temple Bar Studio in London; items 1-3 were signed by him.8 aIncludes: (1) Mela Carter with arms extended overhead, hands clasped; (2) Mela Carter in ballet pose; (3) Mela Carter portrait; (4) Mela Carter, upper torso, with arms overhead; and (5) "Ballet Eros. World famous Mela Carter and Rovi Pavinoff." aAngus McBean Photographs of Mela Carter, ca. 1941 (MS Thr 856). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCarter, Mela.10aMcBean, Angus,d1904-1990.10aPavinoff, Rovi. 0aBallety20th century. 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century.2aat0 cPurchase;aAnnette Martin;bDove House, 17 Hatherley St, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire GL50 2TU England;d2012 May 21;e2011MT-43;h$1500.00 (Howard D. Rothschild Bequest).5the1 aPurchased with the Howard D. Rothschild Bequest, 2012.5the0 aOpen for research use.5the8 bTHEcPFDhMS Thr 85603118ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101130002000122245004700142300003000189351003900219545067600258520057000934500006701504555008701571555010801658524009701766546001601863600002001879610003301899650002301932655002401955656001601979700004001995700005002035700004702085700005002132700005402182700005202236007001402288843012902302852002802431541005702459561004802516506004202564852006602606008862926-020121218102421.0020927i18081913mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm800932321 aMAHV02-A89 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aPalfrey family.10aPalfrey family correspondence,f1808-1913. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aThe central figure in this collection, John Gorham Palfrey (1796-1881), was a Unitarian minister, professor at Harvard Divinity School, editor of the North American Review, congressman from Massachusetts (1847-1849), postmaster of Boston (1861-1867), and historian, best known for his multi-volume "History of New England." His father John Palfrey (1768-1843) was a merchant in Boston and later owned a plantation in Attakapas, La. John Gorham Palfrey's son, John Carver Palfrey (1833-1906) was a military engineer during the Civil War and was later an officer in the textile manufacturing business. His daughter Sarah Hammond Palfrey (1823-1914) was a novelist and poet. aConsists chiefly of letters written by John Gorham Palfrey and by Charles Francis Adams. Letters written by John Gorham Palfrey include several to Ralph Waldo Emerson, concerning personal matters but with some references to Emerson's lectures, and some to various Palfrey family members concerning family matters and personal finances. Letters by Charles Francis Adams are addressed to John Gorham Palfrey and Sarah Hammond Palfrey, mostly regarding personal matters. One letter to Sarah explains his increasing indifference to poetry. Many letters are photocopies. aSee also larger group of Palfrey family papers in bMS Am 1704.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011150 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-96. aPalfrey Family Correspondence, 1808-1913 (MS Am 2132). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aPalfrey family.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aFinance, Personal. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1807-1886.1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882,erecipient.1 aPalfrey, John,d1768-1843,ecorrespondent.1 aPalfrey, John Carver,d1833-1906,erecipient.1 aPalfrey, John Gorham,d1796-1881,ecorrespondent.1 aPalfrey, Sarah Hammond,d1823-1914,erecipient.hd|bfa012baap aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Imaging Services,d2007.e1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.7s2007 maun a8 bMMFcHDhFilm Mas H19620 cGift;aMrs. Charles A. Woodrow;d1962;e62M-96.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Charles A. Woodrow, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2132zShelved with bMS Am 2130 and bMS Am 2131.01704ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004700122245005300169300003000222545015000252520010700402555008700509555010900596524010300705546001600808600005800824600004700882610002600929610004400955655002000999655002401019655003801043655002201081655001601103656001901119541004701138561003701185506004201222852006601264008862662-820121218102320.0020925i19191955mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm799733541 aMAHV02-A87 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMcCord, David Thompson Watson,d1897-1997.10aDavid Thompson Watson McCord Papers,f1919-1955. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aMcCord was an American poet, Harvard College graduate of the class of 1921, and for 38 years, the executive director of the Harvard College Fund. aIncludes: autograph poems, galley proofs, clippings, and a photograph of a portrait drawing of McCord.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-85F. aDavid Thompson Watson McCord Papers, 1919-1955 (MS Am 2130). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMcCord, David Thompson Watson,d1897-1997vPortraits.10aMcCord, David Thompson Watson,d1897-1997.20aHarvard College Fund.20aHarvard UniversityxAlumni and alumnae. 7aClippings.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh0 cGift;aDavid McCord;d1961;e61M-85F.5HOU1 aGift of David McCord, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2130zShelved with bMS Am 2131 and bMS Am 2132.01461ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100001700122245004700139300003000186351003900216520021100255555008700466555010900553524009700662546001600759600001800775650001900793655002400812655001600836655001600852700002900868700001600897541005600913561004600969506004201015852006601057008893623-620121218093722.0020927i17931949mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807794201 aMAHV02-A91 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGrew family.10aGrew family additional papers,f1793-1949. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aIncludes correspondence, wills, poems, and genealogical data relating to the Grew family, including Henry and Mary Grew of Philadelphia. Two letters from Mary Grew celebrate the recent abolition of slavery.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010948 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-211. aGrew Family Additional Papers, 1793-1949 (MS Am 2146). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aGrewe family. 0aAbolitionists. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aGrew, Henry,d1781-1862.1 aGrew, Mary.0 cGift;aMrs. Ruth Dexter Grew;d1949;e48M-211.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Ruth Dexter Grew, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2146zShelved with bMS Am 2145 and bMS Am 2147.01360ctcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004400123245007500167300003000242351004800272520010500320555008700425555011300512524011700625650005700742600003100799655002200830655003300852655002000885541006200905561004800967852005501015008896911-820050601220211.0020927s18uu mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm816749791 aMAHV02-A100 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aChurchill, Frank S.,cMrs.,ecollector.10aMrs. Frank S. Churchill portrait collection of abolitionists,f[18--]. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of subject. aPrinted photographs and lithographs of men and women associated with the U.S. anti-slavery movement.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-514-532. aMrs. Frank S. Churchill Portrait Collection of Abolitionists (MS Am 2156). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAbolitionistszUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century.10aChurchill, Frank S.,cMrs. 7aLithographs.2aat 7aPhotomechanical prints.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat cGift;aMrs. Frank S. Churchill;d1943;e43M-514-532;5HOU aGift of Mrs. Frank S. Churchill, 1943.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2156zShelved with bMS Am 2156-2160.01483ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004000122245006800162300003000230545014300260520009000403524010700493555008700600600002900687600004000716650003000756650001700786650002000803650003800823655002000861655001600881541013200897561004201029506003701071852004901108008875378-620090304113732.0020401i19281940mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127264811 aMAHV02A16 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLowes, John Livingston,d1867-1945.10aJohn Livingston Lowes papers concerning John Keats,f1928-1940. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aLowes was a literary scholar, critic, and professor of English at Washington University, St. Louis (1909-1918) and at Harvard (1918-1939). aLetters, notes, and clippings concerning Lowes' work on the English poet, John Keats. aJohn Livingston Lowes Papers Concerning John Keats (MS Am 2143). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0014610aKeats, John,d1795-1821.10aLowes, John Livingston,d1867-1945. 0aCriticismzUnited States. 0aRomanticism. 0aEnglish poetry. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotes.2aat0 cGift;aMr. John Wilber Lowes;b9 Buckingham Street, Cambridge, Mass.;d1945;e45M-558, 45M-560, 45M-567, 45M-569, 45M-572.5hou1 aGift of John Wilber Lowes, 1945.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2143zShelved with bMS Am 214402055ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004200123245005600165300003000221351003900251545010500290520044600395555008700841555011000928524010601038546001601144600004201160600002201202610003101224610003001255630001201285630001901297650002901316650003901345650003001384651005401414541005801468561004701526506004201573852005401615008903238-120121218102536.0021002i19261930mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm792927891 aMAHV02-A108 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949.10aOswald Garrison Villard correspondence,f1926-1930. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aOswald Garrison Villard, Harvard graduate (B.A. 1893; M.A. 1896), was an American editor and author. aLetters include correspondence between Harold D. Jacobs, the editor of the Baltimore Daily Post, and Villard concerning a lecture Villard gave concerning several newspapers, including the Nation, the New York Evening Post, the United Press and Scripps Howard Papers. Letters to others address suffrage, the Wisconsin Political Equality League, and letters to the Governor of Wisconsin John J. Blaine concerning the Wisconsin senatorial race.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011168 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-223F. aOswald Garrison Villard Correspondence, 1926-1930 (MS Am 2168). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949.10aJacobs, Harold D.20aUnited Press Associations.20aUnited Media Enterprises.00aNation.00aNew York post. 0aSuffragezUnited States. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aElectionszUnited States. 0aWisconsinxPolitics and governmenty20th century.0 cGift;aProfessor Sterling Dow;d1962;e61M-223F.5HOU1 aGift of Professor Sterling Dow, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2168zShelved with bMS Am 2166-217001475ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100002000121245007100141300003000212520018800242524011800430555008700548600002900635600002000664610002900684650004200713655002000755655002800775710004600803541018500849561005201034506003701086852005001123008875512-620090304114254.0020410i18991943mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm775944381 aMAHV02A18 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMorgan, John H.10aMorgan papers concerning the Anderson Auction Company,f1899-1943. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aCorrespondence, clippings, financial records, and other materials concerning the sale of John Keats items through the Anderson Auction Company (later called Anderson Galleries, Inc.). aJohn H. Morgan Papers Concerning the Anderson Auction Company (MS Am 2144). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0014810aKeats, John,d1795-1821.10aMorgan, John H.20aAnderson Galleries, Inc. 0aAuctionszNew York (State)zNew York. 7aClippings.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat2 aAnderson Galleries, Inc.,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;afrom John Wilson Townsend;bMilner Hotel, Lexington, Kentucky;d1943 February;e42M-1045F; recataloged from the Keats Room files (2002 April);hFriends fund ($150).5hou1 aPurchased from John Wilson Townsend, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2144zShelved with bMS Am 2143.01941ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004900121245007100170300003000241351003000271545042100301520017100722555008700893555011200980524012401092546001601216600003701232650002301269656001901292700005601311700006001367541005401427561004301481506004201524852004901566008859033-X20121218101503.0020925i18801886mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798402061 aMAHV02A83 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887,erecipient.10aDorothea Lynde Dix letters from Horatio Appleton Lamb,f1880-1886. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aDix was a humanitarian crusader for the mentally ill. She investigated the conditions of the hospitalized insane in many U.S. states and some European countries, and petitioned state and national legislatures for reforms. She was also superintendent of army nurses during the Civil War. Lamb (Harvard College class of 1871) was a park commissioner in Milton, Mass. Harris Charles Fahnestock was an investment banker. aLetters from Lamb to Dix concern personal and financial matters. Also includes one letter from Fahnestock to Dix, and an 1881 document signed by Dix concerning bonds.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-224-226 aLetters from Horatio Appleton Lamb to Dorothea Lynde Dix, 1880-1886 (MS Am 2125). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aFinance, Personal. 7aBankers.2lcsh1 aLamb, Horatio Appleton,d1850-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aFahnestock, Harris Charles,d1835-1914,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aUnknown source;d1960?;e60M-224-226.5HOU1 aSource unknown; received ca.1960?5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2125zShelved with bMS Am 212601700nkmaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004500122245005900167300003000226520016600256524010900422555008700531555013100618546001600749600004600765600005000811600003300861600004000894600004900934600003900983600003801022655002201060655002001082541009601102561004401198506004201242852006601284008896085-420121218081052.0020425q18001899mau||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocm77865549 aMAHV02A259 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aGuerrier, Edith,d1870-1958,ecollector.10aEdith Guerrier collection of portraits,f19th-century. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aIncludes photographs of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Bronson Alcott Pratt, Henry David Thoreau, Elizabeth Sewall Pratt, Helen Thoreau, John Thoreau; and other materials. aEdith Guerrier Collection of Portraits, 19th-Century (MS Am 2153). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-540-541, 543-545, and 549. aIn English.10aPratt, Bronson Alcott,d1899-vPortraits.10aEmerson, Edward Waldo,d1844-1930vPortraits.10aGuerrier, Edith,d1870-1958.10aPratt, Elizabeth SewallvPortraits.10aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862vPortraits.10aThoreau, Helen,d-1849vPortraits.10aThoreau, John,d-1842vPortraits. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cGift;aMiss Edith Guerrier;d1944 February 18.e43M-540-541, 43M-543-545, and 43M-549.5hou1 aGift of Miss Edith Guerrier, 1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2153zShelved with bMS Am 2154 and bMS Am 2155.01472ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100007400123245005900197300003000256351003000286520009700316555008700413555011300500524010900613546001600722600006200738650001100800650004000811650003200851655001600883655002900899541007900928561004201007506004201049852005501091008900029-320120813082402.0021002i18861889mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826947161 aMAHV02-A106 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960,ecollector.10aMark Antony De Wolfe Howe menu collection,f1886-1889. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aFour menus for dinners held in Boston and Paris, including many signatures of the attendees.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004638 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-346-349. aMark Antony De Wolfe Howe Menu Collection, 1886-1960 (MS Am 2166). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960. 0aMenus. 0aRestaurantszMassachusettszBoston. 0aRestaurantszFrancezParis. 7aMenus.2aat 7aSignatures (names).2aat0 cGift;aM.A. DeWolfe Howe;d1945;e44M-346, 44M-347, 44M-348, 44M-349.5hou1 aGift of M.A. DeWolfe Howe, 1945.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2166zShelved with bMS Am 2166-2170.01557ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004300123245007100166300003000237351003000267545011500297520005400412500008800466555008700554555011300641524012100754546001600875651002900891600004300920656001700963700004800980541006001028561004701088506004201135852005401177008903784-720130212102957.0021002i19151933mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm780367501 aMAHV02-A109 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.10aEdwin Arlington Robinson letters to Rosalind Richards,f1915-1933. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aEdwin Arlington Robinson was an American poet and an acquaintance of the Richards family from Gardiner, Maine. aEighteen letters written by Robinson to Richards. aCollection was restricted until 2003, but this restriction was lifted in June 2001.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-197-214. aEdwin Arlington Robinson Letters to Rosalind Richards, 1915-1933 (MS Am 2169). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aGardiner (Me.)xHistory.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935. 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964,erecipient.0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richard;d1945;e45M-197-214.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2169zShelved with bMS Am 2166-217001869ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003700107245006500144300003000209351003000239545039200269520022100661555008700882524011500969546001601084600003701100650002401137655001601161655002201177656001501199700006901214700005701283541005501340561004001395506004201435852006601477008896485-X20121218080759.0020927i18691885mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79125281 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887.10aDorothea Lynde Dix letters to Thomas Lamb Eliot,f1869-1885. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aDix was a humanitarian crusader for the mentally ill. She investigated the conditions of the hospitalized insane in many U.S. states and some European countries, and petitioned state and national legislatures for reforms. She was also superintendent of army nurses during the Civil War. Eliot was a Unitarian minister, an educator, and assisted in the founding of Reed College in Oregon. aIncludes letters from Dix to Eliot and his wife, Henrietta Robins Mack Eliot. Also includes typescript transcripts of most letters, some letters to others and a few of Dix's manuscript compositions, especially poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01087 aDorothea Lynde Dix Letters to Thomas Lamb Eliot, 1869-1885 (MS Am 2154). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aMentally illxCare. 7aPoems.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aReformers.1 aEliot, Henrietta R.q(Henrietta Robins Mack),d1845-erecipient.1 aEliot, T. L.q(Thomas Lamb),d1841-1936,erecipient.0 cGift;aW. G. Eliot, Jr.;d1944;e43M-603-635.5HOU1 aGift of W.G. Eliot, Jr., 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2154zShelved with bMS Am 2153 and bMS Am 2155.01381ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004100122245005200163300003000215545007400245520005700319555008700376555010900463524010300572546001600675600004100691655001800732655003000750655001600780541013900796561005100935506004200986852005101028008923300-X20110902082802.0030908s1850 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm803623851 aMAHV03A255 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aForrester, Alfred Henry,d1804-1872.10aAlfred Henry Forrester compositions,fca. 1850. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aForrester (pseud. Alfred Crowquill) was an English writer and artist. aAutograph manuscript plays, ballets, and pantomimes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013738 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-269. aAlfred Henry Forrester Compositions, ca. 1850 (MS Eng 1432). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aForrester, Alfred Henry,d1804-1872. 7aBallets.2aat 7aPantomimeszEngland.2aat 7aPlays.2aat0 cPurchase;aArthur Rogers;b4 Eldon Place, Newcastle-on-Tyne 1, England;d4 June 1953;e52M-269;hNo price given, Duplicates fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Duplicates fund, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1432zShelved with bMS Eng 143001769ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003800123245004400161300003000205545028400235520009700519555008700616555011300703524009400816546001600910650002600926600003800952610003300990650002501023655002001048655003801068655001601106656002301122656002301145541009301168561004701261506004201308852005701350008906832-720130212093455.0021002i19111920mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm826947181 aMAHV02-A111 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRand, Edward Kennard,d1871-1945.10aEdward Kennard Rand papers,f1941-1945. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aRand was an American classicist and medievalist. Educated at Harvard (B.S. 1894) and the University of Munich (Ph.D. 1900), he taught at Harvard (1901-42), where he was Pope Professor of Latin (1931-42). He founded the Medieval Academy of America (1925) and the journal Speculum. aLetters, clippings, and notes removed from books E. K. Rand donated to the Houghton Library.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-601-605. aEdward Kennard Rand Papers, 1941-1945 (MS Am 2172). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aLiterature, Medieval.10aRand, Edward Kennard,d1871-1945.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aClassical philology. 7aClippings.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aNotes.2aat 7aClassicists.2lcsh 7aMedievalist.2lcsh0 cBequest;aEdward Kennard Rand;d1946;e45M-601; 45M-602; 45M-603; 45M-604; 45M-605.5HOU1 aBequest of Edward Kennard Rand, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2172zShelved with bMS Am 2171 (2)-(6)01576ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003800123245005200161300003000213351003900243545016600282520008000448555008700528555010900615524010200724546001600826600003800842650003900880655003800919656001900957656002100976656002200997541005601019561004601075506004101121852007601162008916826-720130212091208.0021002i18411867mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm787290581 aMAHV02-A116 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMotley, John Lothrop,d1814-1877.10aJohn Lathrop Motley correspondence,f1841-1867. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aMotley was an American historian, novelist, and diplomat who was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts. He was minister to Austria, 1861-67, and to England, 1869-70. aLetters to and from colleagues and one unidentified manuscript composition.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *50M-22F. aJohn Lothrop Motley Correspondence, 1841-1867 (MS Am 2179). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMotley, John Lothrop,d1814-1877. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aDiplomats.2lcsh 7aHistorians.2lcsh0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Stracey;d1950;e50M-22F.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Stracey, 1950.5HOU0 aFormerly restricted until 1979.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2179zShelved with bMS Am 2179-2180 and bMS Am 2182-2184.01556ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005300123245008500176300003000261351003000291545008700321520010300408555008700511555010900598524012300707546001600830600004100846600002900887650003500916700004500951700004000996541005401036561004401090506004201134852005401176008903181-420121218102908.0021002i19251935mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm838980151 aMAHV02-A107 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBelmont, Eleanor Robson,d1879-1979,erecipient.10aLetters to Eleanor Robson Belmont concerning Amy Lowell,f1925-1935 and undated. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLowell was an American poet; Belmont was an actress, socialite, and philantropist. aLetter from Lowell to Belmont and letters from Ada Dwyer Russell to Belmont concerning Amy Lowell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011188 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-222. aLetters to Eleanor Robson Belmont Concerning Amy Lowell, 1925-1935 (MS Am 2167). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBelmont, Eleanor Robson,d1879-1979.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century.1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925,ecorrespondent.1 aRussell, Ada Dwyer,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. August Belmont;d1962;e61M-222.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. August Belmont, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2167zShelved with bMS Am 2166-217002772nkcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004300121245007700164300003000241351005600271545055700327520050100884530006201385555008701447555011101534524011401645600003201759600002801791600004801819600005301867600005001920600004601970600003602016650003702052651002702089651003502116655002202151541006402173561004202237506004202279852005302321008935866-X20130917163039.0020802i18801890mau|||||||||||||||k|eng d0 aocm79455937 aMAHV02A59 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894,ecompiler.10aPhotographs of Celia Thaxter and Appledore Island (Me.),fca. 1880-1890. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) bPhotographs are arranged as received in repository. aCelia Thaxter was an American poet and essayist who lived many years in the Isles of Shoals, Maine, first on White Island and later on Appledore Island. Her family owned a hotel, Appledore House, and a cottage which became Celia's home and literary salon; both buildings burned in 1914. She often lived apart from her husband, Levi Lincoln Thaxter, and cared for her oldest son, Karl, until her death. This collection was apparently a gift for Rose Lamb, a friend and eventually co-editor of Thaxter's letters; the first photograph is inscribed to her. aThe collection is comprised of fourteen photographs mounted on board and presented in a handsewn accordion-style cloth enclosure. There is one photograph of Celia Thaxter with her grandson, Charles Eliot Thaxter, and one portrait of five artist and musician friends (Appleton Brown, William Mason, John Knowles Paine, Ross Turner, and William Winch). The remaining photographs depict the interior and exterior of Thaxter's cottage and the surf. Several photographs have been inscribed by Thaxter. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001598 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-88-89. aPhotographs of Celia Thaxter and Appledore Island (Me.) (MS Am 1272.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBrown, AppletonvPortraits.10aLamb, Rose,erecipient.10aMason, William,d1829-1908vPortraits.2aat10aPaine, John Knowles,d1839-1906vPortraits.2aat10aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894xHomes and haunts.10aTurner, Ross,d1847-1915vPortraits.2aat10aWinch, WilliamvPortraits.2aat 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aAppledore Island (Me.) 0aIsles of Shoals (Me. and N.H.) 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cgift;aMrs. Horatio Lamb;d1943 Sept. 14;e*43M-88-89.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Horatio Lamb, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1272.1zShelved with bMS Am 1272.200922ctcaa2200205 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003400090245006300124300002900187351001700216545012200233520011700355546001600472600003400488506002300522541014800545852002300693013703927-120130612155726.0130610i19601980mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRexroth, Kenneth,d1905-1982.10aKenneth Rexroth contracts and other documents,f1960-1980. a1 folder (.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aKenneth Rexroth was an American poet, translator and critical essayist associated with the San Francisco Renaissance. aComprised of 21 signed and unsigned contracts for various books and other writings, plus copyright certificates. aIn English.10aRexroth, Kenneth,d1905-1982.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aRalph B. Sipper;b10 West Micheltorena Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101;d2013 May 29;e2012M-169;h$4000.00 (Amy Lowell Trust).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 291901244ntcaa2200229 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003700090245009800127300003000225351001700255500009300272546001600365610002100381600002400402700006500426506002300491541023800514541023800752852002400990013702810-520130610162348.0130607i18891897xx |||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHodson, Laurence W.,ecollector.10aKelmscott Press specimen sheets and ephemera collected by Laurence W. Hodson,fca. 1889-1897. a1 foldera(.1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aWith a few receipts, letters (including one signed by Sydney Cockerell), and an invoice. aIn English.20aKelmscott Press.10aHodson, Laurence W.1 aCockerell, Sydney Carlyle,cSir,d1867-1962,ecorrespondent.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 64));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-159;h2908.57 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).5hou0 cPurchase (Bloomsbury Auctions London sale of 4 April 2013 (lot 66));aRichard A. Linenthal;b25 Fitzgeorge Avenue, London W14 0SY, England;d2013 April 4;e2012M-159;h3533.53 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 174101785ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004800122245006800170300003000238545023000268520014500498555008700643555010900730524010600839546001600945600006400961600003601025600005401061600004901115600004101164655002201205655002001227541005701247561004701304506004201351852005401393008920800-520130212085215.0021004s1898 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm814743321 aMAHV02A119 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964,ecollector.10aRosalind Richards photograph collection,fca. 1898 and undated. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) aRosalind Richards was a daughter of novelist Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards and granddaughter of suffragist and author Julia Ward Howe. American poet Edwin Arlington Robinson was a personal acquaintance of the Richards family. aIncludes portrait photographs of Edwin Arlington Robinson, Elizabeth Winthrop Chapman, Samuel Ward, and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-293. aRosalind Richards Photograph Collection, ca. 1898 (MS Am 2186). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChapman, Elizabeth Winthrop Chanler,d1886-1937xPortraits.10aRichards, Rosalind,d1874-1964.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935xPortraits.10aWard, Anna Hazard Barker,d-1900xPortraits.10aWard, Samuel,d1814-1884xPortraits. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cGift;aMiss Rosalind Richards;d1954;e55M-293.5HOU1 aGift of Miss Rosalind Richards, 1954.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2186zShelved with bMS Am 2186-218801725ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002900123245005900152300003000211545008800241520022700329555008700556555010800643524010900751546001600860650006900876600002900945610003200974655002401006656001701030700005401047700007001101541005801171561006201229506004201291852005401333008921155-320130204134839.0021004i19521958mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810623371 aMAHV02-A121 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.10aEzra Pound letters to Thomas James Wilson,f1952-1958. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) aPound was an American poet and Wilson was director of the Harvard University Press. aLetters from Pound to Wilson of the Harvard University Press concerned with the Scholars' Edition of the Confucian Anthology. Also includes trial proofs and letter from Wilson to William A. Jackson of the Houghton Library.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-93. aEzra Pound Letters to Thomas James Wilson, 1952-1958 (MS Am 2188). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century.10aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.20aHarvard University.bPress. 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aWilson, Thomas James,d1902-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964,erecipient.0 cGift;aHarvard University Press;d1958;e58M-93.5HOU1 aTransferred from the Harvard University Press, 1958.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2188zShelved with bMS Am 2186-218801289ntcaa2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004500108245007400153300003000227545017400257500004600431520010100477524012400578600003200702600003300734600001800767651002300785655002400808655002200832561004200854541006100896852005400957009707118-820051019143511.0020710q17001900mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612892573 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,ecollector.00kManuscriptsbconcerning the White family of Selborne,fca. 1700-1900. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) aOne of the prominent members of the White family of Selborne was Gilbert White (1720-1793), a pioneering British naturalist who is regarded as England's first ecologist. aCollection is unprocessed; ca. 83 pieces. aAutograph manuscripts about the White family of Selborne England, including genealogical tables. aSamuel Henshaw Collection Concerning the White family of Selborne (MS Eng 731.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.30aWhite family. 0aSelborne (England) 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, 1943.5hou cBequest;aMr. Samuel Henshaw;d1943 June;e47M-375.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 731.1zShelved with bMS Eng 731.01974ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002100123245006400144300003000208545035400238520020400592500005900796555008700855555010900942524010201051546001601153600002101169600002101190600003301211655002201244655002201266655002001288700004301308740004101351541005601392561004601448506004201494852007601536008918530-720130212090720.0021002s1888 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm825764301 aMAHV02-A117 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aMelville family.10aMelville family additional papers,fafter 1888 and undated. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) aThe Melvilles of this collection were ancestors of the author Herman Melville. Thomas Melvill Sr. (1751-1832), grandfather of the author, was a merchant, naval officer, and U.S. Collector for the Port of Boston. Thomas Melvill Jr. (1776-1845), his son and an uncle of the author, was a banker and exporter in Europe and a farmer in Pittsfield, Mass. aIncludes genealogical notes on the Melville and the Dearborn families and photographs of the Melville family, some of which illustrated Eleanor Melville Metcalf's Herman Melville, cycle and epicycle. aThere are variant spellings for the Melvill(e) family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013958 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1953-1954, under *53M-102. aMelville Family Additional Papers, After 1888 (MS Am 2183). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aDearborn family.30aMelville family.10aMelvill, Thomas,d1776-1845. 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aMetcalf, Eleanor Melville,d1882-1964.0 aHerman Melville, cycle and epicycle.0 cGift;aMrs. Henry K. Metcalf;d1954;e53M-102.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Henry K. Metcalf, 1954.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2183zShelved with bMS Am 2179-2180 and bMS Am 2182-2184.01542nkcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245004600146300003000192520034300222520027000565524008200835546001600917600003800933655004200971655001701013740006601030541007301096561004101169506004201210852002401252013328532-420120815124031.0020710i19071941mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn806795282 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966.10aEdward Gordon Craig woodcuts,f1907-1941. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) a27 signed and dated woodcuts printed on Japanese paper, contained in a portfolio with bookmark of Gordon Craig on the back cover. Five of the woodcuts, dated from 1907-1920, are reproduced in: Woodcuts and Some Words by Edward Gordon Craig, London, 1924. Includes autograph manuscript list by Craig of 17 of these woodcuts listing titles.8 aAlso with proof sheets from The life and Strange Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe ... by Daniel Defoe, with woodcuts by Edward Gordon Craig, Weimar, 1941; third and fourth proof sheets, covering beginning of text of an edition apparently as yet unpublished. aMS Thr 886. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966. 7aWoodcutszEnglandy20th century.2aat 7aProofs.2aat42aThe life and strange surprising adventures of Robinson Crusoe0 cGift;aMaurice Wertheim;d1946 March 22;e45M-195PF; 45M-196PF.5the1 aGift of Maurice Wertheim, 1946.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 88601336nkcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005500108245010600163300003000269520017900299500005300478524005400531546001600585600005500601651005200656650003600708655004300744655004300787541006900830561004400899506004200943852007300985013334410-X20120822120645.0020710i19021948mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn808231111 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShurcliff, Arthur A.q(Arthur Asahel),d1870-1957.10aMeasured plan of the Brookhouse place, near Marblehead, Mass., built 1825 :kmanuscripts,f1902-1948. a1 foldera(.2 linear ft.) aIncludes: (1) pencil drawing (signed in ink), Boston, 1902. 54 x 30 cm.; 1s.(1p.); and (2) blueprint of a tracing of the original drawing made in 1948. 64 x 36 cm.; 1s.(1p.). aShurcliff's name spelled Shurtleff on blueprint. aMS Am 2821. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aShurcliff, Arthur A.q(Arthur Asahel),d1870-1957. 0aMarblehead (Mass.)xBuildings, structures, etc. 0aGardenszUnited StatesxDesign. 7aBlueprints (reprographic copies).2aat 7aDrawingszAmericany20th century.2aat0 cGift;aArthur A. Shurcliff, Esq.;d1950 March 16;e49M-156.5hou1 aGift of Arthur A. Shurcliff, 1950.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 2821zShelved together: pfMS Am 2817, 2819-2821, 282401656ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002700123245004500150300003000195545019100225520017400416524008400590555008700674555013800761600002700899610002900926650004600955655002201001655001601023655002201039541012701061561005401188506004201242852005801284009095396-720120307090129.0030430i19401978mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612765039 aMAHV03A228 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aIacovella, Mary Arena.10aMary Arena Iacovella papers,f1940-1978. a1 foldera(.3 linear ft.) aMary Arena Iacovella (1905-1983) was a poet and novelist hopeful of being published. John Hall Wheelock (1886-1978) was an American poet, scholar, and editor for Charles Scribner's Sons. aIncludes letters from John Hall Wheelock regarding rejection of her manuscripts, other correspondence, a photograph, a typescript by Iacovella, and a pamphlet of poetry. aMary Arena Iacovella Papers (MS Am 2301). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-80 and 1966-1967, under *66M-133.10aIacovella, Mary Arena.20aCharles Scribner's Sons. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat0 cGift;aMary Arena Iacovella;b2355 Prospect Ave., Bronx, New York 10458;d1978 Aug. 1; 1967 Apr. 1;e78M-80; 66M-133.5HOU1 aGift of Mary Arena Iacovella, 1966 and 1978.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2301zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2300-230102305ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101110003600122245003100158300003000189351002900219545054800248520022600796555008701022555011301109524010201222610003601324610005401360650003201414650003201446650005501478651003901533655001601572655001801588700003201606700003101638700003401669561006001703541011001763852005801873009505721-820120307090314.0020710i16651837mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn122560135 aMAHV04A78 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.)00kSermon papers,f1665-1837. a1 foldera(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aThe First Church was formed in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1633, but in 1636 the minister and most of the members removed to Hartford, Conn. In 1829 the First Parish or First Church (Congregational) in Cambridge split into factions of Unitarian and Trinitarian persuasion. The latter, with the pastor Abiel Holmes, separated to form the Shepard Congregational Society, and continued subsequently under the name of the First Church. The Unitarians continued to be known as the First Parish, though claiming the title of First Church until 1899. aSermons and notes on sermons delivered in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Includes manuscript sermons of Abiel Holmes, notes on sermons by Increase Mather, and notes written by Joseph Baxter on sermons delivered from 1690-1692.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016578 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-127-130. aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.) Sermon Papers (MS Am 2356). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.)20aShepard Congregational Society (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aChristianityy17th century. 0aChristianityy19th century. 0aCongregational churcheszMassachusettszCambridge. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xChurch history. 7aNotes.2aat 7aSermons.2aat1 aBaxter, Joseph,d1676-1745.1 aHolmes, Abiel,d1763-1837.1 aMather, Increase,d1639-1723. aDeposited by the Shepard Historical Society, 1963.5hou cDeposit;aShepard Historical Society;bCambridge, Mass.;d1963;e63M-127, 63M-128, 63M-129, 63M-130.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2356zShelved in 1 box: MS Am 2356-235710819ctcaa2201105 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041003800108100003800146245004000184300003100224351096700255545048501222520046701707520030902174520070002483520087203183520048704055520032004542530006204862555008704924524009005011546008905101650002805190600003805218610003305256610005105289650003805340650001705378650003805395650003305433655003605466655003805502656002305540700005405563700007005617700005005687700004505737700004205782700004305824700004405867700006405911700005705975700004806032700006106080700004806141700003506189700005006224700003606274700003606310700004106346700004806387700003806435700003706473700003406510700004106544700007106585700004606656700006506702700003606767700004506803700003606848700005106884700004706935700006806982700003707050700003607087700003107123700005707154700005007211710005207261541013907313541013607452541016507588541015807753561006507911561005807976561004308034506006508077852002308142541013908165541013608304541015408440541015808594506013108752852004408883541013908927541013609066541015409202541015809356506014009514852005909654008937558-020130115084848.0020710i19082000mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612734788 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aengaspaagerafreaitaaporajap1 aQuine, W. V.q(Willard Van Orman)10aW. V. Quine papers,fca. 1908-2000. a123 boxesa(57 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. General correspondence with Quine; II. Other correspondence with Quine (A. Correspondence concerning requests for permission to publish or for copies; B. Invitations to lecture, declined; C. Invitations to referee or serve on board, declined; D. Invitations to write, declined; E. Crank letters sent to Quine; F. Editorial correspondence with publishers and editors regarding Quine publications; G. Recommendations [Restricted]); III. Compositions by others; IV. Compositions by Quine (A. Articles and other short texts, B. Books and other long texts, C. Occasional lectures D. Harvard lectures and other teaching materials, E. Abortive writings and miscellaneous notes, F. Computer floppy disks, G. Unidentified compositions by Quine); V. Quine student papers (A. Oberlin College, B. Harvard University, C. Miscellaneous early papers); VI. Biographical materials; VII. Card files; and VIII. Papers found with Quine books. aW. V. (Willard Van Orman) Quine (1908-2000) was an American mathematician, logician, and philosopher, widely considered one of the dominant figures in Anglo-American philosophy in the last half of the 20th century. He completed his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1932 and later became a junior fellow at Harvard and a member of the faculty in 1936. In 1948 he became a full professor at Harvard, holding the Edgar Pierce Chair of Philosophy from 1956 until his retirement in 1978.0 aPapers include: professional correspondence and topical files; crank letters; requests for permission to publish Quine writings; declined invitations sent to Quine to lecture, referee, serve on a board, and write; Quine's notes and compositions for lectures, books, articles, teaching and work from his own student years; collected compositions written by others, most with annotations by Quine; biographical miscellany; and ephemera, clippings, and photographs. aAlso includes restricted files including: Quine's recommendations written for others along with resumes and correspondence; files about students; correspondence concerning the recommending and selection of candidates for teaching positions, awards, etc...; and some Harvard University departmental files. aSeries I, the large, general correspondence series, includes many prominent correspondents in the world of 20th-century philosophy, and much conversation about departments at Harvard University and various philosophical societies and journals. Also, mixed within this series, are topical folders including letters and information about the main entry. It should be noted that Quine's correspondence often contained philosophical proofs, logical and mathematical symbols, and other philosophical expressions that appear more like working papers for his writings than simple letters. Many of the names featured in this correspondence series, also have entries in Series III, Compositons by others. aA few of the correspondents included in series I are: American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philosophical Association, Association for Symbolic Logic, A. J. (Alfred Jules) Ayer, Rudolf Carnap, Noam Chomsky, Alonzo Church, Donald Davidson, Burton Dreben, Herbert Feigl, Dagfinn Føllesdal, Philipp Frank, P. T. (Peter Thomas) Geach, Roger F. Gibson, Nelson Goodman, Carl Gustav Hempel, Saul A. Kripke, Ernest LePore, Bryan Magee, Ruth Barcan Marcus, Charles W. (Charles William) Morris, Ernest Nagel, Jean Piaget, Charles Parsons, Michael Polanyi, Sir Karl Raimond Popper, Hilary Putnam, John Rawls, Richard Rorty, Bertrand Russell, Gilbert Ryle, B. F. (Burrhus Frederic) Skinner, J. J. C. (John Jamieson Carswell) Smart, P. F. Strawson, Alfred Tarski, Jean Van Heijenoort, Hao Wang, Alfred North Whitehead, J. O. (John Oulton) Wisdom, and many, many others. aQuine's compositions include: his own early course work and notes on classes taken at Oberlin College and at Harvard University; notes from later years; teaching materials, especially lectures materials for courses at Harvard; lecture materials for occasional lectures; and appointment calendars, clippings on his life, and a few other personal or family related items. There is very little personal correspondence, photographs or papers, as these were retained by the Quine family.8 aThe final series, papers found with his books primarily concern or are related to Quine's trip to Japan in December 1996 to receive the Inamori Foundation's Kyoto Prize for lifetime achievement in creative arts and moral sciences. Also included is a printed book of poems kept and annotated by Quine from 1913-1922. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01800 aW. V. Quine Papers, ca. 1908-2000 (MS Am 2587). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English, French, German, Portuguese, Spanish, Japanese and Italian. 0aLanguage and languages.10aQuine, W. V.q(Willard Van Orman)20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of Philosophy. 0aLogic, Symbolic and mathematical. 0aMetaphysics. 0aPhilosophy, Moderny20th century. 0aPhilosopherszUnited States. 7aLetters of recommendation.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhilosophers.2aat1 aVan Heijenoort, Jean,d1912-1986,ecorrespondent.1 aSmart, J. J. C.q(John Jamieson Carswell),d1920-ecorrespondent.1 aPolanyi, Michael,d1891-1976,ecorrespondent.1 aParsons, Charles,d1933-ecorrespondent.1 aNagel, Ernest,d1901-ecorrespondent.1 aLePore, Ernest,d1950-ecorrespondent.1 aKripke, Saul A.,d1940-ecorrespondent.1 aHempel, Carl G.q(Carl Gustav),d1905-1997,ecorrespondent.1 aGeach, P. T.q(Peter Thomas),d1916-ecorrespondent.1 aChurch, Alonzo,d1903-1995,ecorrespondent.1 aAyer, A. J.q(Alfred Jules),d1910-1989,ecorrespondent.1 aCarnap, Rudolf,d1891-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aChomsky, Noam,ecorrespondent.1 aDavidson, Donald,d1917-2003,ecorrespondent.1 aDreben, Burton,ecorrespondent.1 aFeigl, Herbert,ecorrespondent.1 aFøllesdal, Dagfinn,ecorrespondent.1 aFrank, Philipp,d1884-1966,ecorrespondent.1 aGibson, Roger F.,ecorrespondent.1 aGoodman, Nelson,ecorrespondent.1 aMagee, Bryan,ecorrespondent.1 aMarcus, Ruth Barcan,ecorrespondent.1 aMorris, Charles W.q(Charles William),d1903-1979,ecorrespondent.1 aPiaget, Jean,d1896-1980,ecorrespondent.1 aPopper, Karl R.q(Karl Raimund),d1902-1994,ecorrespondent.1 aPutnam, Hilary,ecorrespondent.1 aRawls, John,d1921-2002,ecorrespondent.1 aRorty, Richard,ecorrespondent.1 aRussell, Bertrand,d1872-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aRyle, Gilbert,d1900-1976,ecorrespondent.1 aSkinner, B. F.q(Burrhus Frederic),d1904-1990,ecorrespondent.1 aStrawson, P. F.,ecorrespondent.1 aTarski, Alfred,ecorrespondent.1 aWang, Hao,ecorrespondent.1 aWhitehead, Alfred North,d1861-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aWisdom, J. O.q(John Oulton),ecorrespondent.2 aAssociation for Symbolic Logic,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aWillard Van Orman Quine;d1991 November 25; 1991 December; 1992 January; 1994 November 2;e91M-68; 91M-69; 91M-70; 94M-35.5hou0 cTransfer (originally gift from W. V. Quine to HUA);aHarvard University Archives;bPusey Library;d1993 December 14;e93M-157.5hou0 cGift;aQuine family, via Douglas B. Quine;b59 Taylor Road, Bethel, CT 06801;d2001 July 23; 2002 August 6; 2002 December 24;e2001M-7; 2002M-5; 2012M-100.5hou0 cGift;aRuth Barcan Marcus;bDepartment of Philosophy, Yale University, P.O. Box 208306, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8306;d2006 March 9;e2005M-43.5hou1 aGift of W. V. O. Quine and the Quine family, 1991-2002.5hou1 aTransfer from Harvard University Archives, 1993.5hou1 aGift of Ruth Barcan Marcus, 2006.5hou1 aSome materials restricted; see finding aid for details.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 25870 cGift;aWillard Van Orman Quine;d1991 November 25; 1991 December; 1992 January; 1994 November 2;e91M-68; 91M-69; 91M-70; 94M-35.5hou0 cTransfer (originally gift from W. V. Quine to HUA);aHarvard University Archives;bPusey Library;d1993 December 14;e93M-157.5hou0 cGift;aQuine family, via Douglas B. Quine;b59 Taylor Road, Bethel, CT 06801;d2001 July 23; 2002 August 6; 2002 December 24;e2001M-7; 2002M-5.5hou0 cGift;aRuth Barcan Marcus;bDepartment of Philosophy, Yale University, P.O. Box 208306, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8306;d2006 March 9;e2005M-43.5hou1 aMost of this collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 25873boxes 1-54, 59-1190 cGift;aWillard Van Orman Quine;d1991 November 25; 1991 December; 1992 January; 1994 November 2;e91M-68; 91M-69; 91M-70; 94M-35.5hou0 cTransfer (originally gift from W. V. Quine to HUA);aHarvard University Archives;bPusey Library;d1993 December 14;e93M-157.5hou0 cGift;aQuine family, via Douglas B. Quine;b59 Taylor Road, Bethel, CT 06801;d2001 July 23; 2002 August 6; 2002 December 24;e2001M-7; 2002M-5.5hou0 cGift;aRuth Barcan Marcus;bDepartment of Philosophy, Yale University, P.O. Box 208306, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8306;d2006 March 9;e2005M-43.5hou1 aRestricted: for legal or university policy reasons; see finding aid for details to which portions are restricted and for how long.5hou8 bHOUcVAULThMS Am 25873boxes 55, 56, 57, 58, 120, 12101623ntm a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245006400148300002500212500005200237520010300289505029800392545009600690500002700786524005400813610003300867650001700900650003300917650002300950650002400973650002400997650002201021650002501043650003401068541010701102561005101209852002501260010134273-X20061023161749.0061023nuuuuuuuuxxu|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612867010 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMoore, Charles Herbert,d1840-1930.00kComposition :bconcerning painting :kmanuscript,fundated. a123 leaves ;c27 cm. aAutograph manuscript, unsigned, with revisions. aArranged by topic: five sections of historical summaries and six of technical aspects of painting.0 a1. Ancient painting -- 2. Medieval painting -- 3. Venetian painting -- 4. The rise of landscape painting -- 5. Pre-Raphaelitism -- 6. Perspective -- 7. Chiaroscuro -- 8. Tone, mystery, breadth, and finish -- 9. Qualities growing out of processes and materials -- 10. Composition -- 11. Colour. aMoore taught at Harvard, 1871-1909, and was the director of the Fogg Art Museum, 1896-1909. aIn a tray case, 28 cm. aMS Am 1499. Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aChiaroscuro. 0aLandscape paintingxHistory. 0aPainting, Ancient. 0aPainting, Medieval. 0aPainting, Venetian. 0aPre-Raphaelitism. 0aPaintingxTechnique. 0aPaintingxTechniquexHistory.0 cGift;aElizabeth Huntington Moore;bHartely Wintney, Hampshire, England;d24 Sept. 1945;e45M-37.5hou1 aGift of Elizabeth Huntington Moore, 1945.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 149903157ntcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100004200091245008400133300002900217351001700246545016700263545009900430545054200529545021401071545015201285520015601437520017501593555009601768546001601864600002901880655002201909655001901931655002201950700003101972700002402003700002102027700003602048700002502084700003202109700005402141506002302195541016702218561006202385852002402447506002302471541016702494852005002661013694609-720130918101453.0130529i18801990mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKillorin, Joseph,d1926-,ecollector.10aJoseph Killorin collection of papers by and about Conrad Aiken,fca. 1880-1990. a13 boxes (12 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aConrad Potter Aiken (1889-1973) was an American novelist and poet whose work included poetry, short stories, novels, a play and an autobiographical novel, Ushant. aJoseph Killorin was a friend of Aiken's who also edited a selection of Aiken's letters (1978). aAiken was the son of wealthy, socially prominent New Englanders who had moved to Savannah, Georgia, where his father became a respected physician and brain surgeon. In 1901, Aiken's father killed his mother and committed suicide; Aiken was subsequently raised by his aunt in Massachusetts, attending Middlesex School in Concord (Mass.) and then Harvard University. At Harvard, he edited the Advocate with T. S. Eliot who became a lifelong friend. Aiken was influenced in his early poetry by his teacher, the philosopher George Santayana. aWhile living in England from 1921 until the outbreak of WWII, Aiken was mentor to the English author Malcolm Lowry. Aiken wrote or edited over 50 books; in 1950 he was named Poet Laureate of the United States. aAiken was married first to Jessie McDonald from 1912–1929; second to Clarissa Lorenz in 1930; and third to Mary Hoover, a noted painter, in 1937. aIncludes compositions, correspondence, drawings, photographs, and a bronze death mask of Aiken by Arnold Geissbuhler (friend and neighbor in Brewster). aIncludes material by and about Gordon Bassett, Edward Burra, Malcolm Lowry, George (Jake) Wilbur, Aiken's third wife, Mary Augusta Hoover Aiken, and other family members. aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02440 aIn English.10aKillorin, Joseph,d1926- 7aDeath masks.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aAiken, Conrad,d1889-1973.1 aAiken, Mary Hoover.1 aBassett, Gordon.1 aBurra, Edward John,d1905-1976.1 aGeissbuhler, Arnold.1 aLowry, Malcolm,d1909-1957.1 aWilbur, George B.q(George Browning),d1887-1976.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aElizabeth Killorin;b347 Stony Brook Road, Brewster MA 02631;d2013 May 1, September 10;e2012M-143;h$215000.00 (Amy Lowell Fund, in 5 payments).5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell fund, 2013.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 29160 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aElizabeth Killorin;b347 Stony Brook Road, Brewster MA 02631;d2013 May 1, September 10;e2012M-143;h$215000.00 (Amy Lowell Fund, in 5 payments).5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 29163box 13: bronze death mask03232ctcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105245005500126300002900181351011500210545025200325545069900577520034101276500007701617555008701694524012201781600001801903600002901921600003601950600003401986600002302020600004702043600003302090600001902123650005102142655002002193655002402213655002802237655002602265655005102291655002902342655002402371656001702395700002902412700003602441700003402477700001802511700002302529700003302552700004702585700001902632541002802651852002302679009576627-820080822133644.0050318i18911978mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6128629911 aMHAT05-B10003 aMH-HcMH-Heappm10aBunce family and Nugent family papers,f1891-1978. a13 boxesa(6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Family records; II. Literary manuscripts; and III. Theatrical records. aAlan Coe Bunce (1903-1965) and his wife Ruth Elizabeth Nugent Bunce were successful actors of the stage and radio. The family of Alan Bunce, (reported by his grandson Andrew Bunce, in August 2008), believes Alan Bunce's true birth date to be 1900. aThe following persons (and others) are also represented in this collection: Alan Nugent Bunce (1933-2008) was the son of Alan Coe Bunce and Ruth Elizabeth Nugent Bunce and was born in New York and died in Massachusetts. He was a writer and editor for the Christian Science Monitor; Elliott Nugent (1899-1980) was an actor, playwright, producer and stage performer who entered film with the coming of sound and became a director in 1932; J.C. (John Charles) Nugent (1878-1947) was an stage and film actor, and a playwright and theater commentator for Variety; and Peg Lynch (b.1917-) was a writer and radio actress. She was the creator, writer, and star of the television show, Ethel and Albert. aFamily correspondence, financial and legal records, theatrical scripts, including radio scripts from the Ethel and Albert series, photographs, and clippings concerning the professional careers of Alan Bunce and Ruth Nugent Bunce. Also contains correspondence of the actor J. C. Nugent (1868-1947), Alan Coe Bunce, and Alan Nugent Bunce. aElectronic finding aid represents only a portion of the full collection.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01706 aBunce Family and Nugent Family Papers (MS Thr 400). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aBunce family.10aBunce, Alan,d1903-1965.10aBunce, Alan Nugent,d1933-2008.10aBunce, Ruth Elizabeth Nugent.10aLynch, Peg,d1917-10aNugent, J. C.q(John Charles),d1879-1947.10aNugent, Elliott,d1899-1980.30aNugent family. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aRadio scripts.2aat 7aActors.2aat1 aBunce, Alan,d1903-1965.1 aBunce, Alan Nugent,d1933-2008.1 aBunce, Ruth Elizabeth Nugent.3 aBunce family.1 aLynch, Peg,d1917-1 aNugent, Elliott,d1899-1980.1 aNugent, J. C.q(John Charles),d1878-1947.3 aNugent family. cAlan Nugent Bunce;5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 40002961cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004100123245010300164300003100267351023500298545020600533520058900739555008701328555010801415524011001523530006201633546001601695630002601711600004101737630002301778650004401801650001801845655002001863655002101883655001701904655005101921655004501972655002102017656001902038656002302057656002502080700005602105700005502161700005302216541009802269561004702367506004202414852002302456000601850-520111025124738.0860408i18651939mau eng d0 aocn6123668151 aMAHV86A151 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMartin, Edward Sandford,d1856-1939.10aEdward Sandford Martin correspondence and compositions,f1865-1939 (inclusive),g1914-1939 (bulk). a13 boxesa(6.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Edward Sandford Martin; II. Letters by Edward Sandford Martin; III. Other correspondence; IV. Compositions by Edward Sandford Martin; V. Other compositions; and VI. Miscellaneous. aMartin, an essayist and poet, was a founder and editor of Life (1887-1933). He also wrote an editorial column for Scribner's Magazine, Harper's Weekly (1893-1913), and for Harper's Monthly (1920-1935). aChiefly correspondence with Charles William Eliot, Edward Mandell House, and Theodore Roosevelt, among others. Letters by Martin are mostly retained carbon copies. Also contains essays, editorials, poems, notes, and drafts of compositions, printed copies of his articles, scrapbooks, photographs, clippings, and ephemera. Materials pertain to both his writing career and his interest in spiritualism, as well as the subjects of his editorials and contemporary socio-political issues. Also includes correspondence with psychic mediums, many of whom he apparently supported financially.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002978 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-64. aEdward Sanford Martin Correspondence and Compositions (MS Am 1863). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aIn English.00aLife (New York, N.Y.)10aMartin, Edward Sandford,d1856-1939.00aHarper's magazine. 0aPeriodicalsxPublishingzUnited States. 0aSpiritualism. 7aClippings.2aat 7aEditorials.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh 7aJournalists.2lcsh 7aSpiritualists.2lcsh1 aEliot, Charles William,d1834-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aHouse, Edward Mandell,d1858-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Edward S. Blagden;b125 E. 63rd St., New York, NY 10021dApr. 1971;e70M-64.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Edward S. Blagden, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 186302354ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002300104110004000127245006000167300003100227351012200258545045400380520012700834555008700961555010001048524012001148546001601268650004901284610004001333650004101373650004801414655002701462655002001489655002801509655002201537655002901559700002101588700001701609700003301626541013701659561008201796506004201878852002401920000603142-020130912082855.0050504i19641982mau|||||||||||||||||eng d0 aocm793923061 aMHAT05-B10015 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aPeople's Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.)10aPeople's Theatre (Cambride, Mass.) records,f1964-1982. a13 boxesa(6.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Photographs; II. Clippings and Programs; III. Scripts; and IV. General Files. aThe People's Theatre was founded in 1964 by Ruth Elder, formerly a professor of speech and drama at Tufts University. One of the most noted features of the company was its dedication to multiracial casting, a policy that was established by Elder and adopted by her successors, Chris Connaire (1967-1980) and June Judson (1980-1982). When it closed in 1982, the People's Theatre was the oldest continuously operating small theatre in the Boston area. aContains business correspondence, scripts, photographs, and clippings relating to the People's Theatre of Cambridge, Mass.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015578 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-144. aPeople's Theatre Records, 1964-1982 (MS Thr 443). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aCommunity theaterzMassachusettszCambridge.20aPeople's Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aExperimental theaterzUnited States. 0aTheaterzMassachusettszCambridgexFinance. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat1 aConnaire, Chris.1 aElder, Ruth.1 aJudson, June Brenner,d1929-0 cGift;aPeople's Theatre through June Judson and Brook Lipset;b220 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass.;d1985 February 26;e2003MT-144.5the1 aGift of the People's Theatre through June Judson and Brook Lipset, 1985.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 44303080cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106100001900129245003700148300005300185351050300238545021000741520054400951520026501495555008701760524010401847600001901951650003601970655005002006655002002056655002202076655002602098655002002124655001802144655005102162655002302213655002202236541012302258561003702381506004202418506012302460852009902583012573702-520110822131002.0k|||||||||||||||||050215i19311964mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn670304467 aMH-MTcMH-MTedacs1 aRapport, Will.10aWill Rapport papers,f1931-1964. a13 boxes and 3 portfolio drawersa(5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Drawings by Will Rapport, by name of individual; II. Drawings by Will Rapport, by title of production; III. Negatives by Will Rapport; IV. Photographs by Will Rapport; V. Printing plates and wood blocks by Will Rapport; VI. Photographs collected by Will Rapport; VII. Playbills collected by Rapport; VIII. Drawings by Will Rapport, oversize; IX. Theatrical window cards collected by Will Rapport, oversize; and X. Posters collected by Will Rapport, oversize. aRapport (active ca. 1931-1960) is known foremost as a photographer of dance productions and theatrical plays, but also was an illustrator and cartoonist. He worked mainly in the Boston, Massachusetts area. aIncludes orginal drawings (many are cartoons) of performers and theatrical scenes, primarily used for newspaper promotions of productions in the Boston, Massachusetts area. Drawings are: watercolors, ink, graphite, crayon, and photomechanicals. Most are signed by Rapport and often are inscribed to him from the performer. Also includes relief and intaglio prints by Rapport as well as a few original printing plates and wood blocks, and original photographs and negatives by Rapport of Boston and New York City plays, ballets, and operas.8 aOther materials in this collection are theatrical materials Rapport collected, mostly associated with his original work, including: playbills from Boston (1948-1964); theatrical photographs taken by others; and window cards and posters from Boston productions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02107 aWill Rapport Papers (MS Thr 612). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRapport, Will. 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBoston. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aNegatives.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPrinting plates.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPosters.2aat 7aWatercolorszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aWindow cards.2aat 7aWood blocks.2aat0 cGift;aWill Rapport;b87 Grafton St., Arlington, Massachusetts;d1966;e2003MT-157; recataloged from bMS Thr 457.5the1 aGift of Will Rapport, 1966.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 612zPF material is shelved at Houghton in portfolio drawers (see finding aid)01105ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245006200148300003500210500009300245520012000338500002700458524005400485600004000539650004800579651007100627541007600698561006400774852002500838010135957-820061025115404.0061025m18631914vp |||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612867686 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1835-1915.00kLetters :bto Henry Lee Higginson,f1863-1865, 1909-1914. a13 items ;c26 cm. or smaller. aAutograph and typescript letters, signed; dated at Boston, Washington, and other cities. aConcern chiefly personal matters; letters from the 1860s contain information about Adams' service in the Civil War. aIn a tray case, 29 cm. aMS Am 1508. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAdams, Charles Francis,d1835-1915. 0aMilitary service, VoluntaryzUnited States. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives.0 cDeposit;aEstate of Mrs. Henry Higginson;d12 Apr. 1946;e45M-334.5hou1 aDeposited by the Estate of Mrs. Henry Higginson, 1946.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 150801539ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245003900139300002300178500023500201520031300436500002200749524005700771600006000828600006300888600006300951600001801014650004701032700001801079541007501097561006301172852002601235009766708-020051007095801.0050928s1930 enk|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612765343 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950.00kLetters :bto E. W. Lummis,f1930. a13 items ;c33 cm. aFour letters and four cards, autograph, signed; one typescript letter, signed; typescript notes from Lummis with Shaw's autograph notes and signature; two telegrams to Lummis from Blanche Patch, Shaw's secretary; and one envelope. aThe typescript from Lummis is a synopsis of a theory about Shakespeare's Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2, on which Lummis had written the draft of a book; the correspondence mentions Lummis' theory, with frequent discussion of the character Falstaff, and Lummis' desire for Shaw to write an introduction to the book. aIn a case, 36 cm. aMS Eng 256.50. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616xCharactersxFalstaff.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tKing Henry IV.nPart 1.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tKing Henry IV.nPart 2.10aLummis, E. W. 0aFalstaff, John, Sir (Fictitious character)1 aLummis, E. W. cPurchase;ano source;d19 Feb. 1934;eno acc. number;hHowe fund.5hou aPurchased with the Henry Saltonstall Howe fund, 1934.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 256.5001462ntc a22002417u 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089100005100105245007100156300008000227500013400307500011900441581028200560524005500842651005800897651007200955655006901027655004401096561005701140852002301197007810579-X20130528160625.0k||| |||||| |k|980610m18441844xx ai |||||||eng|d0 aocm793209111 aMorton, Henry J.q(Henry Jackson),d1807-1890.14aThe illustrated Sta. Croix news :kmanuscript and drawings,f1844. a13 leavesa(22 drawings) :bink, wash, pencil, and watercolor ; 33 x 21 cm. aIllustrated diary of a sail from St. Croix to St. John and St. Thomas in January 1844; cover design includes Danish coat of arms. aWith transcript prepared for printed edition (typescript carbon copy, with MS. annotations, 1972 Apr., 25 leaves). aText with Danish translation and drawings published as "Diary/Dagbog" in St. Croix St. Thomas St. John: Danish West Indian Sketchbook and Diary/Skitsebog og dagbog fra Dansk Vestindien, 1843-44 (Copenhagen: Dansk Vestindisk Selskab & St. Croix Landmark Society, 1975), 161-181. afMS Am 2074. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aUnited States Virgin IslandsxDescription and travel. 0aSaint Croix (United States Virgin Islands)xDescription and travel. 7aDiarieszVirgin Islands of the United Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDrawingszAmericany19th century.2lcsh aGift of Robert Graff, '41 and Mrs. Graff, 1989.5HOU8 bHOUcFhMS Am 207402345cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003400123245004400157300003300201545004400234520033600278555008700614555017300701524010100874546001600975600003400991650003801025655002001063655003701083655003801120655001701158655001701175655002101192740002701213740002801240830006701268541031301335561003901648506004201687852003201729561009001761561008401851000602323-120130212092216.0860827q18871908mau eng d0 aocn1224051551 aMAHV86A505 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMerrick, Leonard,d1864-1939.10aLeonard Merrick papers,fca. 1887-1908. a13 volumesa(1.1 linear ft.) aMerrick was a British author and actor. aIncludes manuscripts of several stories by Merrick and the final draft, with some odd draft sheets, of The Mission of Miriam Lea, which was published in 1888 as Mr. Bazalgette's Agent and was Merrick's first book. Also includes some revised proofs, two commonplace books, and a scrapbook of clippings of reviews of Merrick's books.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014018 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-906f-907F; 1947-1948, under *47M-380-386; 1950-1951, under *50M-111. aLeonard Merrick Papers, ca. 1887-1908 (MS Eng 741-741.10). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMerrick, Leonard,d1864-1939. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCommonplace bookszEngland.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNovels.2aat 7aProofs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat0 aMission of Miriam Lea.0 aMr. Bazalgette's agent. 0aOpen Collections Program at Harvard University.pReading.5net0 cGift; Purchase.aGift, W.B.O. Field, Purchase, Dutton's Inc. (270 Park Ave., New York), Purchase, Elkin Mathews Ltd. (Takely Bishops, Stortford England);dGift & purchase, 1942; purchase January 1957;eGift 47M-380-386, purchase 42M-906F-907F, purchase 50M-111;hNo prices given, Bemis fund, Hayes fund.5hou1 aGift of W. B. O. Field, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 741-741.10 aManuscript of The Mission of Miriam Lea was purchased with the Bemis fund, 1943.5hou1 aCollection of newspaper clippings was purchased with the Hayes fund, 1947.5hou02715ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003200107245003800139300003400177545008700211520033800298555008700636555010800723530038900831530006201220524007801282546001601360600003201376600003301408650003801441655002001479655003801499655001601537700003301553700004901586700003801635740002801673541010301701561004801804506004201852845039901894852002402293009077254-720100520155729.0021213i17561799mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d1 aMAHV02-A300 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBoswell, James,d1740-1795.10aJames Boswell papers,f1756-1799. a13 volumesa(1.25 linear ft.) aBoswell was an English writer, as well as friend and biographer of Samuel Johnson. aIncludes letters written by Boswell and Samuel Johnson to various correspondents, autograph manuscript fragment of Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson, publication agreements for Johnson's Lives of the poets and other works, autograph manuscript poem by Hester Lynch (Salusbury) Thrale Piozzi, and one silked letter by Piozzi to Davies.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-48. aFor facsimile reproduction of fMS Eng 1386 (1), see:  Boswell, James, 1740-1795. "Dr. Johnson's Life in scenes" : a reproduction of those leaves from James Boswell's manuscript of the Life (Houghton fMs Eng 1386) in which Dr. Johnson dines with Mr. Wilkes / with a foreword by Mary, Viscountess Eccles ; and an afterword by Bruce Redford. Cambridge, Mass. : Houghton Library, 2003. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aJames Boswell Papers (MS Eng 1386). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBoswell, James,d1740-1795.10aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784. 0aEnglish literaturey18th century. 7aContracts.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aDavies, Reynold,erecipient.1 aJohnson, Samuel,d1709-1784,ecorrespondent.1 aPiozzi, Hester Lynch,d1741-1821.0 aLife of Samuel Johnson.0 cGift;aArthur A. Houghton, Jr.;bWhe Plantation, Queenstown MA 21658;d1987 Dec. 26;e78M-48.5HOU1 aGift of Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., 1987.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 138602561ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100003300123245005100156300003300207351022600240545018300466520023500649555008700884555010900971524012401080546001601204600003301220650004201253655002001295655002901315656002201344700004801366740002201414740002101436740002001457740001901477541008701496561007001583506004201653852003201695007001401727843022101741562008801962852002102050866004402071009092575-020120425084616.0030317i19171928mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm805632251 aMHAT03-A4 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aO'Neill, Eugene,d1888-1953.10aEugene O'Neill papers,f1917-1928 and undated. a13 volumesa(1.4 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Thr 18.1: Letters from Agnes Boulton to Eugene O'Neill; II. MS Thr 18.2: Letters from Eugene O'Neill to Agnes Boulton and other letters; and III. MS Thr 18.3-18.13: Compositions. aO'Neill was an American dramatist and winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1936. Agnes Boulton was O'Neill's second wife and an author of popular novels and short stories. aIncludes correspondence between Agnes Boulton and O'Neill, clippings, and typescripts (some carbon copies with autograph revisions) of Bread and butter, Lazarus laughed, Marco millions, and Now I ask you, among other compositions.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-266. aEugene O'Neill Papers, 1917-1928 (MS Thr 18.1-18.13). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aO'Neill, Eugene,d1888-1953. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh1 aBoulton, Agnes,d1893-1968,ecorrespondent.0 aBread and butter.0 aLazarus laughed.0 aMarco millions.0 aNow I ask you.0 cPurchase;aAgnes Boulton;d1957;e64M-266;h$10,000 with the F.E. Chase fund.5the1 aPurchased with the F.E. Chase fund from Agnes Boulton, 1957.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 18.1-18.13hd|afu---baca aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass.cHarvard University Library, Microreproduction Department,d[1970?].e2 reels : positive and negative ; 35 mm.nCopy reproduced: MS Thr 18.10, Harvard Theatre Collection.7s1970 mau a aMicrofilm: incomplete; The personal equation TS.s. (autograph revisions) only.5the8 bTHEcGENhTSM 67 0bTheatre CollectionhTSM 6780a2 reels.03778ntcaa2200577 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003800122245004400160300004800204351021400252545014200466520058500608520014201193555008701335555020001422524009301622530006201715546003001777650003701807600003801844600001901882600003601901610003401937651003201971610003402003610002702037650003902064650003302103650003602136651004602172655002602218655002002244655002502264655001802289655001902307655001902326655002302345655001502368655002202383655002102405700003802426541017902464561008302643506004202726845039902768852003303167008259890-820090903120843.0991215i17991888mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122349351 aMAHV99A37 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.10aAmos Bronson Alcott papers,f1799-1888. a130 volumes anda5 boxesa(20.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following four series: Letterbooks of ABA (MS Am 1130.9); Works of ABA (bMS Am 1130.10); Autobiographical collections of ABA (MS Am 1130.11); and Journals and diaries of ABA (MS Am 1130.12). aAlcott was an American philosopher of the New England Transcendentalist group, teacher, reformer, and father of writer Louisa May Alcott. aPapers include autograph manuscripts of ABA (and others), clippings, diaries, drawings, ephemera, Alcott family genealogical materials, letterbooks, maps, notes, photographs, printed materials, and scrapbooks. All series have multiple types of materials including: records of the Town and Country Club; a few Ralph Waldo Emerson manuscripts; autobiographical writings by ABA; Alcott family correspondence (both within and outside the family); correspondence of friends and family to and from ABA; ABA and family members' diaries; and materials relating to life in Concord (Mass.). aAlso includes materials concerning the Temple School (Boston, Mass.), Concord School of Philosophy, and the utopian community Fruitlands.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000588 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or consult the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-305, *59M-306, *59M-307, and *59M-308. aAmos Bronson Alcott Papers (MS Am 1130.9-1130.12). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aMaterials are in English. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century.10aAlcott, Amos Bronson,d1799-1888.30aAlcott family.10aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.20aConcord School of Philosophy. 0aFruitlands (Harvard, Mass.)20aTemple School (Boston, Mass.)20aTown and Country Club. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPhilosopherszUnited States. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aAutobiographies.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aLetter books.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.0 cDeposit, then purchase;aMrs. F. Wolsey Pratt;bIndian Spring Road, Concord, Massachusetts;d1960 June; 1992 June;e59M-305, 59M-306, 59M-307, 59M-308;hAmy Lowell fund.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. F. Wolsey Pratt, 1960; purchase, Amy Lowell fund, 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1130.9-1130.1201193ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245005600140300003600196500009300232520009700325500002700422524005300449600003200502600004300534650005100577655003900628700005500667700004500722541007300767561005100840852002400891009775177-420051020150315.0051011i18741893enk|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612769454 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aDobson, Austin,d1840-1921.00kLetters :bto Frederick Locker-Lampson,f1874-1893. a137 items ;c18 cm. or smaller. aAutograph letters, signed; a few addressed to "Mrs. Locker," Hannah Jane Locker-Lampson. aLetters concern personal matters and publishing interests, and include some poems by Dobson. aIn a tray case, 22 cm. aMS Eng 62. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDobson, Austin,d1840-1921.10aLocker-Lampson, Frederick,d1821-1895. 0aAuthors and publisherszEnglandy19th century. 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat1 aLocker-Lampson, Frederick,d1821-1895,erecipient.1 aLocker-Lampson, Hannah Jane,erecipient. cGift;aFriends of the Library;d16 Sept. 1931;eno acc. number.5hou aGift of the Friends of the Library, 1931.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 6200886ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002900108245004000137300002500177500006400202500002600266581003500292524005600327655006100383655004000444541009700484561004800581852002700629010118614-220061005145108.0060929s1923 enk|||| |||| ||||f eng d0 aocn612860966 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aByrne, Donn,d1889-1928.10aBlind Raftery :kmanuscript,f1923. a137 leaves ;c26 cm. aAutograph manuscript, signed, dated England, 13 Sept. 1923. aIn a slipcase, 27 cm. aLondon: The Century Co., 1924. aMS Am 1373.5. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aManuscripts for publicationzEnglandy20th century.2aat 7aNovelszIrelandy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aArthur A. Houghton, Jr.;bWye Plantation, Queenstown, MD;d21 Nov. 1988;e88M-6.5hou1 aGift of Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., 1988.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1373.502026nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087110003900108245008300147300003300230351005200263545033500315520019900650555008700849524014900936546001601085544019501101610003901296650002801335650006401363655005001427655001801477541010901495561004101604506004201645852002501687013335058-420120829093558.0020710i19051970mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn808232122 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aArtcraft Lithograph & Printing Co.10aArtcraft Lithograph & Printing Co. theatrical posters,f1905-1970 and undated. a1387 postersa(5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of production. aArtcraft was a New York printing firm, owned by Samuel Golden, that specialized in theatrical materials. The donor, Irene Dash, was Golden's daughter. A three sheet (3-sheet) poster is a common term for a larger poster that is normally approximately 3-times the size of the most common poster, called a one sheet (1-sheet) poster. aCollection includes 3-sheet posters advertising a variety of types of theatrical productions in the United States, especially including New York City, Boston, Los Angeles, and many other cities.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01705 aArtcraft Lithograph & Printing Co. Theatrical Posters, 1905-1970 (MS Thr 889). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aThe Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division also holds a large collection of Artcraft posters, as does the Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library of the University of Georgia.20aArtcraft Lithograph & Printing Co. 0aTheatrical productions. 0aTheaterzNew York (State)zNew YorkxHistoryy20th century. 7aPerforming arts postersy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPosters.2aat0 cGift;aIrene Dash;b161 West 16th Street, New York, New York 10011;d1984 August 1; 1988 January 4.5the1 aGift of Irene Dash, 1984, 1988.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPPFhMS Thr 88909471nkdaa2200985 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001400106040002100120110011600141245016600257246002900423246002300452300008200475351032200557544005200879545061200931520081101543520175902354520023604113524018504349530005304534555008704587546001604674651007104690650006204761610007004823610007504893610007504968610008305043610008205126610007705208610007705285610007705362610007705439610007705516610007705593610007705670610006805747610005305815610002605868610010405894610003905998650004706037650004506084651005006129651008306179651006306262655005906325655007506384655004706459655004806506655005006554655005506604655005106659655005006710655005106760655004906811655005106860655004806911700003506959700005606994700004307050700002007093700004207113700002407155700005607179700005707235700003507292700004507327700003707372700005507409700003707464700002007501700005407521700002007575700005107595541019707646561014107843506004207984845039908026852006008425008690743-320131101085736.0t|||| |||| ||||md010725k18611912mau||| ||||||| k|eng d0 aocn6127025381 aMAHV01A26 aMH-HedacscMH-H2 aMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.bCommandery of the State of Massachusetts,ecollector.10aMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War collection,f1724-1933 (inclusive),g1861-1912 (bulk).10aLoyal Legion collection.10aMOLLUS collection. a139 boxes (including 13 portfolio), 1 volume, and 2 MS boxesa(47 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Confederate States of America portrait images; II. Union portrait images; III. Other portrait images; IV. Unidentified portrait images; V. Oversized portrait images; VI. Patriotic covers; VII. Group portrait images; VIII. Other images; IX. Manuscripts; and X. Printed material. aSee bMS Am 1084 (328) for VI. Patriotic covers. aThe Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States was established in Philadelphia on 1865 April 15 as an organization of officers who fought for the Union during the Civil War. Among its stated purposes was "to cherish the memories and associations of the war" and to "strengthen the ties of fraternal fellowship and sympathy formed by companionship-in-arms." The Commandery of the State of Massachusetts was instituted on 1868 March 4. Activities included social gatherings; the presentation of historical papers on the war; and the collection of books, manuscripts, photographs, and memorabilia. aMany of the images are copy prints of well-known prints and photographs of soldiers, battlefields, and other Civil War subjects. The collection also includes some unique images, such as original drawings of Civil War vessels by artist Worden Wood; drawings of battlefields made shortly after the war, apparently by a veteran of the 20th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment; post-war photographs of battlefields showing veterans of the 13th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment; and reproductions of drawings of war-era North Carolina, apparently by a member of the 44th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment. Images include the following genres: cartes-de-visite, cabinet photographs, clippings, engravings, tintypes, copy prints, drawings, lithographs, photomechanical prints, negative prints, sketches, and watercolors. aManuscripts include original letters, diaries, regimental documents, and other papers relating to the Civil War. Highlights include a substantial archive of the papers of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, commander of the 1st South Carolina Volunteers, the first predominantly African-American regiment in the Civil War; research files of Daniel Eldredge on the history of the 3rd New Hampshire Infantry Regiment; Augustus C. Hamlin's extensive correspondence files on Andersonville Prison and the Battle of Chancellorsville; extensive documentation of the antebellum South and of the Confederate States of America; wartime correspondence of Union generals Gustave Paul Cluseret, George Nelson Macy, James Birdseye McPherson, George Duncan Wells, and Edward Augustus Wild; a diary and wartime correspondence of Private John M. Haines of the 3rd New Hampshire Infantry Regiment; original manuscript wartime diaries of Robert H. Gray of the 4th Maine Infantry Regiment, William Ware Hall of the 5th Rhode Island Heavy Artillery Regiment, Wesley T. Harris and Ezra Brown Peabody of the 3rd New Hampshire Infantry Regiment, Henry A. Tracy of the 1st Massachusetts Light Artillery Battery and John G. Wiggin of the 11th Massachusetts Light Artillery Battery; and extensive documentation relating to the 12th, 20th, 31st, 35th, and 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiments, 1st New York Engineer Regiment, 1st South Carolina Volunteers, and United States Sanitary Commission. The collection also features an eclectic collection of pre-war and post-war manuscripts, including two significant manuscripts signed by Filipino independence leader Emilio Aguinaldo, post-war correspondence of General Winfield Scott Hancock, and memoirs by numerous former Civil War officers. aPrinted material includes ephemera relating to the Civil War such as blank forms, broadsides, clippings, leaflets, printed orders, and sheet music; and a subseries of complete copies of newspapers, mostly from the Civil War period. aMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts Civil War Collection, 1724-1933 (MS Am 1084). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aColor digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00124 aIn English. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 0aChancellorsville, Battle of, Chancellorsville, Va., 1863.10aUnited States.bArmy.bSouth Carolina Volunteers, 1st (1862-1864)10aUnited States.bArmy.bRhode Island Infantry Regiment, 5th (1861-1863)10aUnited States.bArmy.bNew Hampshire Infantry Regiment, 3d (1861-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Light Artillery Battery, 11th (1864-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Light Artillery Battery, 1st (1861-1864)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 54th (1863-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 44th (1862-1863)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 35th (1862-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 31st (1861-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 20th (1861-1865)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 13th (1861-1864)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 12th (1861-1864)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMaine Infantry Regiment, 4th (1861-1864)10aConfederate States of America.bArmyvPortraits.20aAndersonville Prison.20aMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States.bCommandery of the State of Massachusetts.20aUnited States Sanitary Commission. 0aAfrican American soldiersxCorrespondence. 0aVeteranszUnited StatesxSocieties, etc. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xParticipation, African American. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPhotographs. 7aCabinet photographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs)zUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aEngravingszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aGroup portraitszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aLithographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aNewspaperszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPortraitszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aSheet musiczUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aTintypeszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aAguinaldo, Emilio,d1869-1964.1 aCluseret, Gustave Paul,d1823-1900,ecorrespondent.1 aEldredge, D.q(Daniel),d1840 or 1841-1 aGray, Robert H.1 aHaines, John M.,dapproximately 1841-1 aHall, William Ware.1 aHamlin, Augustus C.q(Augustus Choate),d1829-1905.1 aHancock, Winfield Scott,d1824-1886,ecorrespondent.1 aHarris, Wesley T.,d1836-1911.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911.1 aMacy, George Nelson,erecipient.1 aMcPherson, James Birdseye,d1828-1864,erecipient.1 aPeabody, Ezra Brown,d1820-1894.1 aTracy, Henry A.1 aWells, George Duncan,d1826-1864,ecorrespondent.1 aWiggin, John G.1 aWild, Edward Augustus,d1825-1891,erecipient.0 cDeposit; then gift;aMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts;d1938 September; 1974 gift;e2001M-13 (recataloged from MS Am 9018).5hou1 aDeposited by the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States Commandery of the State of Massachusetts, 1938; gift 1974.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1084zSome pf boxes shelved in bMS stacks03874cpcaa2200601 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003600122245007300158300003800231351061800269545036200887520059401249555008701843555015701930524010002087546001602187600003602203600003602239600003602275600002102311650003902332650003902371650002802410650002502438651003202463651003002495655002102525655001702546655002502563655001802588655001902606655002302625655001602648655001602664655004502680655004502725655001802770655002402788655002302812655002502835656002302860700005202883700005202935710005102987541008403038561007703122506004203199852003103241000601724-X20120813083521.0851205i17961933mau eng d0 aocn122590069 aMAHV85A13 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBradford, Gamaliel,d1863-1932.10aGamaliel Bradford papers,f1796-1933 (inclusive),g1878-1932 (bulk). a139 v., 27 boxesa(24 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following fourteen series: I. MS Am 1183-1183.2: Correspondence; II. MS Am 1183.3-1183.5: Journals; III. MS Am 1183.6-1183.23: Miscellaneous compositions; IV. MS Am 1183.24-1183.26: Other materials; V. MS Am 1183.27: Plays; VI. MS Am 1183.28: Poems; VII. MS Am 1183.29: Novels and short stories; VIII. MS Am 1183.30: Prose writings; IX. MS Am 1183.31: Additional correspondence; X. MS Am 1183.32: Bradford family papers; XI. MS Am 1183.33: Drama Reading Circle; XII. MS Am 1183.34: Note cards; XIII. MS Am 1183.35: Miscellaneous papers; and XIV. MS Am 1183.36: Outline for essay on Thomas Mann. aBradford was a biographical essayist, poet, dramatist, and critic of Wellesley, Mass. He was the sixth of seven Gamaliel Bradfords in an unbroken succession, of whom the first was a great-grandson of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony. He is best known for the development of the "psychograph," a type of biography that focuses on personality. aContains: letterbooks of professional correspondence and some personal correspondence; journals; manuscripts and transcriptions of plays, poems, novels, short stories, essays, translations, editorials, and reviews; notes for different works; a scrapbook of clippings by and about Bradford; and a recordbook for the Octopus Club, and one for the Drama Reading Circle, both clubs of Wellesley, Mass. Also includes correspondence of previous generations of the Bradford family, especially his great-grandfather, Gamaliel Bradford (1763-1824) to his grandfather, Gamaliel Bradford (1795-1839).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009668 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Hougton Accessions Records, 1942-1959, under *42M-1940, *43M-830, *45M-614-615, *45M-618-637, *48M-304-322. aGamaliel Bradford Papers, 1796-1933 (MS Am 1183-1183.36). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBradford, Gamaliel,d1763-1824.10aBradford, Gamaliel,d1795-1839.10aBradford, Gamaliel,d1863-1932.30aBradford family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aVoyages and travels. 0aWellesley (Mass.)xHistory. 0aWellesley (Mass.)xClubs. 7aEditorials.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aFamily records.2aat 7aFiction.2aat 7aJournals.2aat 7aLetter books.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy18th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aReviews.2aat 7aShort stories.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aTranscriptions.2aat 7aBiographers.2lcsh1 aBradford, Gamaliel,d1795-1839,ecorrespondent.1 aBradford, Gamaliel,d1763-1824,ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,ecorrespondent.0 cGift.aBradford, Mrs. Gamaliel;bWellesley Hills, Mass.;d1942;emultiple.5hou1 aGift of Helen Hubbard Ford Bradford (Mrs. Gamaliel Bradford), 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1183-1183.3601278ntcaa22002295u 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029100003800070245004400108300003000152351003100182545021700213520020300430524004200633610004900675610002500724600003800749650004500787655003700832852009600869506008300965008871807-720120307121133.0020326i19601990mau |||||||eng|d1 aHunt, William Morris,d1912-2003.00aWilliam Morris Hunt papers,f1960-1990. a14 boxesa(14 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aWilliam Morris Hunt II (Harvard college S.B. Class of 1936) is a theatrical producer (especially of the Cambridge Drama Festival) and historian. He was one of the founders of the Poets' Theater (Cambridge, Mass.) aAddition to material, some uncataloged, already at the Harvard Theatre Collection. Documents the Elliot Norton Award, the Cambridge Drama Festival, Boston theaters, arts and entertainment in Boston. aMS Thr 408. (Unprocessed collection).20aCambridge Drama Festival (Cambridge, Mass.).20aElliot Norton award.10aHunt, William Morris,d1912-2003. 0aTheaterzMassachusettszBostonxHistory. 7aHarvard students' papers.2local8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 408zBox 14 retained in Theatre Collection (bMS Thr 408); Boxes 1-13 at HD. aCollection is unprocessed. Consult Harvard Theatre Collection for access.5the02926cpcaa2200493 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002300102110003400125245007300159300003000232351009500262545043200357520042000789555008701209555010001296524013201396546001601528610003401544650002201578650003701600650004601637650002401683655002401707655001701731655002001748655002801768655004501796655002201841655001801863655002201881655002001903655001901923655002101942655002801963541010401991561004102095506004702136506013902183852007202322583003802394000603147-120131126124849.0851119i18821927mau eng d0 aocn6123782151 aMHAT85-A38 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aBoston Bijou Theatre Company.10aBoston Bijou Theatre Company records,f1882-1927,g(bulk) 1882-1886. a14 boxesa(3 linear feet) aOrganized into two series: I. Financial records; and II. Administrative and other records. aOpened in 1882 by George W. Tyler, the Boston Bijou was the first American theatre that was equipped with an electrical lighting system. The theatre was managed from 1886 to 1894 by Benjamin Franklin Keith, who presented a new form of variety entertainment later named "vaudeville". Renamed the Bijou Opera House in 1901, the theatre featured primarily light opera until 1927, at which time it was converted into a movie house. aFinancial records, including receipts for salaries and building expenses, cancelled checks, and account books, comprise the bulk of the collection. Also includes bylaws and minutes of the company, souvenir programs and playbills, two scrapbooks of clippings including reviews, three photographs, an illustrated historical review of the theatre, and an original electric light bulb from Edison's incandescent system.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015798 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-130. aBoston Bijou Theatre Company Records, 1882-1927 (MS Thr 432). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aBoston Bijou Theatre Company. 0aTheaterxFinance. 0aTheaterszMassachusettszBoston. 0aElectric lighting, IncandescentxHistory. 0aTheatersxLighting. 7aAccount books.2aat 7aBylaws.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aLamps (lighting device components).2aat 7aLight bulbs.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aSouvenir programs.2aat0 cGift;aRussell Hastings;b35 Appleton St., Cambridge MA 02138;d1975 September 8;e2003MT-130.5the1 aGift of Russell Hastings, 1975.5the0 aThis collection is open for research.5hou1 aThe majority of this collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 432zBox 14, item (40) shelved at Houghton in VAULT 3Records.aSurvey/eec03/25/85kdw02352nacaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006200110300003100172351011600203520043900319555008700758524014000845546001600985650004401001650005501045650005501100650001501155650001201170650001401182655002801196655003101224630002401255630001401279630002501293630001801318630001501336630002101351710009801372541013101470561015201601506012301753506004201876852002401918012849742-420111201082718.0020710i19062005mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn746608393 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSouvenir programs for theatrical productions,f1906-2005. a14 boxesa(4.2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Standard souvenir programs A-Z; and II. Oversize souvenir programs A-Z. aThis collection contains theatrical printed souvenir programs, both standard and oversize, from 20th and 21st century productions in the United States and England. It also contains some film souvenir programs, photographs, ticket stubs, press releases, clippings, and other promotional materials. Notable productions include Annie Get Your Gun, Carousel, Fiddler on the Roof, Kiss Me Kate, Peter Pan, West Side Story, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02197 aSouvenir Programs for Theatrical Productions, 1906-2005 (MS Thr 701). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzEnglandzLondony20th century. 0aTheaterzNew York (State)zNew Yorky20th century. 0aTheaterzNew York (State)zNew Yorky21st century. 0aActresses. 0aActors. 0aMusicals. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat 7aMusical performances.2aat00aAnnie Get Your Gun.00aCarousel.00aFiddler on the Roof.00aKiss Me Kate.00aPeter Pan.00aWest Side Story.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 70102205nacaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245008400093300003100177351011100208520036900319555008700688524016200775546001600937610002900953610002000982610002601002610003301028610003501061650004301096650004201139650004101181655002801222655003401250710009801284541013201382561015201514506004201666506012301708852002401831013184555-120120830104656.0020710i19241998mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSouvenir programs of ballet, dance, and theatrical productions,fca. 1924-1998. a14 boxesa(4.2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Ballet programs; II. Dance programs; and III. Theatrical programs. aCollection of 20th-century printed souvenir programs from ballet, dance, and theatrical productions, primarily from the United States. Notable companies include American Ballet Theatre, Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Martha Graham Dance Company, Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers, and many others. There are also a few magazines (periodicals) and a ticket stub.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02311 aSouvenir Programs of Ballet, Dance, and Theatrical Productions, ca. 1924-1998 (MS Thr 847). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aAmerican Ballet Theatre.20aBallet Theatre.20aNew York City Ballet.20aMartha Graham Dance Company.20aTed Shawn and His Men Dancers. 0aTheater.zUnited States.y20th century 0aBallet.zUnited States.y20th century 0aDance.zUnited States.y20th century 7aSouvenir programs.2aat 7aMagazines (periodicals).2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 84702526ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245003600108300003000144351012600174545026400300520051800564520013501082555008701217524007501304546005001379600002101429610005201450650003801502650001701540655003701557700001901594700002501613700002001638700002301658700003201681700003001713700002101743541006701764561004501831506004201876506012301918852008702041011577941-820081209074220.0020710i19551970mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612835397 aMH-HedacscMH-H00aLinguistics papers,f1955-1970. a14 boxesa(6 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. Unidentified manuscripts and unmarked printed materials are at the end. aThese papers appear to have been collected by Peter Tumarkin while a graduate student in the Department of Linguistics at Harvard University. He attended Harvard College 1954-1958, Class of 1958 and the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 1966-1970. aPapers contain articles, grant reports, theses, and other papers concerning various topics in the field of linguistics. Includes mimeographs, typescript photocopies, and printed materials with and without annotations. Some include manuscript annotations by Peter Tumarkin and some items are marked: "P. Tumarkin" or "Department of Linguistics, Harvard University." Also includes autograph manuscript notes by Tumarkin, a few papers for classes in Linguistics (some at Harvard), and unidentified linguistic papers. aIncludes papers by Noam Chomsky, Susumu Kuno, George Lakoff, James D. McCawley, Paul M. Postal, John Robert Ross, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01997 aLinguistics Papers (MS Am 2633). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English, French, and German.10aTumarkin, Peter.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of Linguistics. 0aGrammar, Comparative and general. 0aLinguistics. 7aHarvard students' essays.2local1 aChomsky, Noam.1 aKuno, Susumu,d1933-1 aLakoff, George.1 aMcCawley, James D.1 aPostal, Paul Martin,d1936-1 aRoss, John Robert,d1938-1 aTumarkin, Peter.0 cGift;aPeter Tumarkin;dafter 1970;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Peter Tumarkin, after 1970.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 2633zIn process of being sent to Harvard Depository (October 2008)02818cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002500123245004300148300002900191351050800220530006200728545011100790520043300901524010001334555008701434555011601521600002201637600002501659600003001684600003201714600003501746650003901781650003801820655001901858655001801877655002201895655001901917700003001936700003201966700003501998541017902033561009902212506004202311852003102353000602413-020120604113647.0860918i18981960mau eng d0 aocn6123743591 aMAHV86A556 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBosanquet, Theodora.10aTheodora Bosanquet papers,f1898-1960. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: bMS Eng 1213: Letters and compositions of Henry James; bMS Eng 1213.1: Original diaries of Theodora Bosanquet; bMS Eng 1213.2: Transcribed diaries of Theodora Bosanquet; bMS Eng 1213.3: Letters of various persons; bMS Eng 1213.4: Articles and talks about Henry James; bMS Eng 1213.5: Printed Jamesiana; bMS Eng 1213.6: Letters and compositions of Charles Williams; bMS Eng 1213.7: Compositions of Theodora Bosanquet; and bMS Eng 1213.8: Bosanquet family photographs. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aTheodora Bosanquet (1887?-1961) became secretary to Henry James in 1907. She was also a critic and editor. aBosanquet's papers reflect her connection with Henry James as well as her other literary activities and friendships. Includes 69 letters from James; Bosanquet's diaries, 1898-1960, including transcriptions of passages concerning James; articles and talks about James; letters from Edith Wharton and others; poetry and prose by Bosanquet; letters and other papers by Charles Williams; photographs of Bosanquet and family members. aTheodora Bosanquet Papers, 1898-1960 (MS Am 1213-1213.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-73-*63M-82.10aBosanquet family.10aBosanquet, Theodora.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aWharton, Edith,d1862-1937.10aWilliams, Charles,d1886-1945. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aArticles.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.1 aWharton, Edith,d1862-1937.1 aWilliams, Charles,d1886-1945.0 cPurchase;aDillon, Teresa J.;d1963;e63M-73; 63M-74; 63M-75; 63M-76; 63M-77; 63M-78; 63M-79; 63M-80; 63M-81; 63M-82; 63M-83;hAmy Lowell Fund and Henry James royalties.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund and Henry James royalties from Teresa J. Dillon, 1963.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1213-1213.802456cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001800123050001300141100003200154245004300186300002900229351017100258545013800429520055200567555008701119555010801206524008201314600003201396610003301428650002201461650002701483650001701510650001701527650001601544650001501560650003301575650002001608650001801628655001901646655001901665655002201684655001601706656002201722700002701744541009601771561004201867506004201909852002301951000601801-720090611142528.0860312i18751938mau eng d0 aocn6123657161 aMAHV86A107 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aengafreaita10aMS71-1071 aHall, Edwin Herbert,d1855-10aEdwin Herbert Hall papers,f1875-1938. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions Edwin Herbert Hall; II. Compositions by others; III. Correspondence of Edwin Herbert Hall; and IV. Miscellaneous. aEdwin Herbert Hall (1855-1938) was an American physicist and discoverer of the Hall effect. He taught physics at Harvard (1881-1921). aConsists of 13 boxes of compositions by Hall (and a few by others) and one box of correspondence. Hall's writings include notes, lectures, and articles on such subjects as the Hall effect and other related phenomena, metallic conduction, atomic structure, ionization, and the teaching of physics. Includes lectures in French on higher education in the United States. Correspondence dates chiefly from 1915 to 1928 and includes copies of Hall's outgoing letters. Also included are visas for Hall and his wife Caroline Bottum Hall, and a photograph.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-41. aEdwin Herbert Hall Papers (MS Am 1734). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHall, Edwin Herbert,d1855-20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAtomic structure. 0aElectric conductivity. 0aElectricity. 0aHall effect. 0aIonization. 0aMagnetism. 0aPhysicsxStudy and teaching. 0aThomson effect. 0aVolta effect. 7aArticles.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aVisas.2aat 7aPhysicists.2lcsh1 aHall, Caroline Bottum.0 cGift;aConstance H. Hall;b39 Garden Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1964;e64M-41.5HOU1 aGift of Constance H. Hall, 1964.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 173402786cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002100123245004000144300002900184351003900213545030500252520069800557530006201255524007901317555008701396555010701483600002101590610003601611650002001647650002001667651003601687651003501723655002701758655001801785655003801803655002201841655002001863700003501883700003101918700003501949700003201984700004302016700002702059700004002086541006502126561004802191506004202239852002302281000602019-420130917155738.0860610i18941941mau eng d0 aocn6123690321 aMAHV86A304 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aBerenson family.10aBerenson family papers,f1894-1941. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aBernard Berenson (1865-1969) was an art historian. Included in the collection are materials by his parents, Albert and Julia (or Judith), his siblings, Senda, Abram, Elizabeth, and Rachel, some of their spouses, and his own wife Mary. The family emigrated from Vilna, Russia to Boston, Mass. in 1876. aCollection contains seven boxes of correspondence between family members, much of it from the grown children to their mother or between siblings. Includes three boxes of letters from Mary Berenson to her mother-in-law describing life with Bernard Berenson at the Villa I Tatti in Florence, Italy, and Mary's manuscript "On meeting Bernard Berenson." Many of the letters or postcards from non-family members are addressed to Elizabeth Berenson. Also contains three diaries, 1925, 1927, and 1932, an address book, a postcard collection, and some books of Elizabeth; 213 family photographs; a few other manuscripts by family members; two boxes of plaster angels; and other miscellaneous material. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aBerenson Family Papers (MS Am 2013). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1983-1984, under *83M-9.30aBerenson family.20aVilla I Tatti (Florence, Italy) 0aArt historians. 0aFamily records. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aItalyxDescription and travel. 7aCasts (sculpture)2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat1 aAbbott, Senda Berenson,d1868-1 aBerenson, Abram G.,d1873-1 aBerenson, Bernard,d1865-1959.1 aBerenson, Elizabeth,d1878-1 aBerenson, Judith Michliszanski,d1849-1 aBerenson, Mary,d1864-1 aPerry, Rachel Berenson,d1880-1933.0 cGift;aRichard Arthur Berenson;d1983;e83M-9.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Richard Arthur Berenson, 1983.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 201303272ctcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004000121245004600161300002900207351011700236545009100353520058100444555008701025555016201112524012901274530006201403500017001465546001601635600004001651600005601691600005401747600006101801600005501862600003701917600005501954700003602009700004902045700005502094700004502149700006702194700004702261700005202308700006702360700004302427700003702470730005802507541006702565561006402632506004202696852002802738008851046-820130311105953.0020228i18461942mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797896871 aMAHV02-A7 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCowles, Anna Roosevelt,d1855-1931.10aAnna Roosevelt Cowles papers,f1846-1942. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Anna (Roosevelt) Cowles; II. Other letters; III. Manuscripts. aAnna (Roosevelt) Cowles was the elder sister of American president Theodore Roosevelt. aCorrespondence includes letters to/from Corinne (Roosevelt) Robinson; letters from Helen Rebecca (Roosevelt) Robinson, Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt, Eleanor (Roosevelt) Roosevelt, Elizabeth Norris (Emlen) Roosevelt, Martha (Bulloch) Roosevelt, and Theodore Roosevelt, Sr.; also from Elisabeth (Mills) Reid; condolences on the deaths of Theodore Roosevelt, Sr., Martha (Bulloch) Roosevelt, Alice Hathaway (Lee) Roosevelt, Elliott Roosevelt, and Theodore Roosevelt; also letters of Edith Kermit (Carow) Roosevelt to/from Emily Tyler Carow and Gertrude Elizabeth (Tyler) Carow.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000058 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-66. aAnna Roosevelt Cowles Papers, 1846-1942 (MS Am 1834.1). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Roosevelt family papers (008186829) aIn English.10aCowles, Anna Roosevelt,d1855-1931.10aRoosevelt, Alice Lee,d1861-1884xDeath and burial.10aRoosevelt, Elliott,d1860-1894xDeath and burial.10aRoosevelt, Martha Bulloch,d1835-1884xDeath and burial.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1831-1878xDeath and burial.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xDeath and burial.1 aCarow, Emily Tyler,d1865-1939.1 aCarow, Gertrude Elizabeth Tyler,d1835-1895.1 aReid, Elisabeth Mills,d1858-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aRobinson, Corinne Roosevelt,d1861-1933.1 aRobinson, Helen Rebecca Roosevelt,d1881-1962,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Edith Kermit Carow,d1861-1948.1 aRoosevelt, Eleanor,d1884-1962,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Elizabeth Norris Emlen,d1825-1912,ecorrespondent.1 aRoosevelt, Martha Bulloch,d1835-1884.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1831-1878.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cDeposit;aTheodore Roosevelt Association;d1968;e68M-66.5hou1 aDeposited by the Theodore Roosevelt Association, 1968.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1834.102387ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003400121245005100155300002900206351010500235545013300340520027900473544008100752555008700833555010900920524010101029546001601130610003501146600003401181610003701215610003001252650004101282650003201323655001901355655001801374656001901392656001801411700006401429700005001493700005901543700004901602700005901651541010501710561004701815506004201862852002501904009430522-620130124102825.0040803i18591892mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm786422751 aMAHV04A60 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.10aPhillips Brooks additional papers,f1859-1892. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Sermons; and II. Lectures, correspondence, and other papers. aBrooks was an Episcopal clergyman. He was rector of Trinity Church, Boston (1868-1893), and bishop of Massachusetts (1891-1893). aIncludes sermons and lectures by Brooks, as well as sermon plans and notebooks. Also contains letters to Brooks from various correspondents, including Oscar Fay Adams, Benjamin Fosdick Harding, Charles James Palmer, Leighton Parks, Charles Henry Wright Stocking, and others. aAdditional sermons possibly from the same series can be found in MS Am 1594.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-142. aPhillips Brooks Additional Papers, 1859-1892 (MS Am 1593). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aTrinity Church (Boston, Mass.)10aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.20aEpiscopal ChurchzMassachusetts.20aEpiscopal ChurchxClergy. 0aPastoral theologyxEpiscopal Church. 0aChristianityy19th century. 7aLectures.2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aBishops.2lcsh 7aClergy.2lcsh1 aPalmer, Charles J.q(Charles James),d1854-ecorrespondent.1 aAdams, Oscar Fay,d1855-1919,ecorrespondent.1 aHarding, Benjamin Fosdick,d1857-1923,ecorrespondent.1 aParks, Leighton,d1852-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aStocking, Charles Henry Wright,d1835-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Hubert A. Hawkins;b12 Shaffner St., Worcester 5, Mass.;dSeptember 1959;e59M-142.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Hubert A. Hawkins, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 159301186ntcaa2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245005000147300002900197500003100226545024000257520013800497524010200635555006100737600003900798600001900837655002400856541003900880852002500919009815263-720130910131531.0020710i19301950mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612779011 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aCharles Eliot Norton letters,fca. 1830-1908. a14 boxesa(7 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aOrganized in the following series: I. Letters by C.E. Norton to others (8 boxes); II. Letters by C.E. Norton to his family (2 boxes); III. Letters by C.E. Norton to miscellaneous others (1 box); and IV. Norton family letters (3 boxes). aLetters from Norton to miscellaneous others and to Norton family members; also includes letters from Norton family members to others. aCharles Eliot Norton Letters, ca. 1830-1908 (MS Am 1088.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee grey file in Houghton Reading Room for partial list.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.30aNorton family. 7aFamily papers.2aat eReclassified from MS Am 9028.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.207124ntcaa2200769 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002200108245004100130300003000171351089400201530006201095545010201157520029301259520041101552520054301963520027402506520017702780520024702957520041903204520041303623524009404036555008704130546003404217650003604251600002204287600003404309600004304343600004504386600004504431600003104476600003504507600003504542600004204577600001704619610004104636610004104677650003504718651002004753655004604773655004904819655005504868655006704923655005704990655005705047655005605104656002305160700004505183700003105228700003505259700003505294700004305329700004205372700004505414700001705459541013305476561017205609561008105781506004205862852002605904541008905930007001406019843029206033852002906325009570632-120130712114303.0020710i17571934mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612859928 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aDickinson family.00aDickinson family papers,f1757-1934. a14 boxes (7.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Austin Dickinson papers, 1842-1896 (A. Austin Dickinson correspondence, B. Austin Dickinson letters to Susan Huntington Dickinson, C. Other materials relating to Austin Dickinson); II. Edward Dickinson papers, 1819-1874 (A. Edward Dickinson correspondence, B. Edward Dickinson compositions, C. Edward Dickinson other materials); III. Emily Norcross Dickinson papers, 1823-1842 (A. Emily Norcross Dickinson correspodence, B. Emily Norcross Dickinson other materials); IV. Lavinia Dickinson papers 1839-1898 (A. Lavinia Dickinson correspondence, B. Lavinia Dickinson other materials) V. Susan Huntington Dickinson papers, 1839-1913 (A. Susan Huntington Dickinson correspondence, B. Susan Huntington Dickinson compositions, C. Susan Huntington Dickinson other materials); VI. Other Dickinson family papers, 1757-1934; VII. Root family papers, 1830-1884 aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aThe Dickinson family of Amherst, Massachusetts was related to the American poet, Emily Dickinson. aThe bulk of this collection consists of correspondence and compositions by members of the family of Emily Dickinson. The majority of the papers belong to her brother (William Austin Dickinson), brother's wife (Susan Huntington Dickinson) and parents (Edward and Emily Norcross Dickinson). aI. Austin Dickinson papers, 1842-1896. This series includes correspondence between Austin Dickinson and his family members, especially his wife, Susan Huntington Dickinson. Other materials included in this series are those related to Austin Dickinson's education and profession as a lawyer, as well as clippings and other materials related to life events such as his marriage to Susan Huntington Dickinson. aII. Edward Dickinson papers, 1819-1874. This series includes letters and a few transcriptions of letters between Edward Dickinson, business associates, family members and friends. Also includes compositions written by Edward Dickinson during his education at Amherst College and Yale College. Other materials include those related to his business as a lawyer in Amherst (Mass); an autograph album related to his term in the United States. Congress (33rd : 1853-1855) and other items related to his involvement in the community in Amherst. aIII. Emily Norcross Dickinson papers, 1823-1842. This series includes letters between Emily Norcross Dickinson and mainly other members of her family. Also includes documents and compositions related to Emily Norcross Dickinson's education, church attendance and death. aIV. Lavinia Dickinson papers, 1839-1898. This series includes letters between Lavinia Norcross Dickinson, her friends and family as well as compositions and a pocket diary. aV. Susan Huntington Dickinson papers, 1839-1913. This series includes correspondence between Susan Huntington Dickinson and mainly family members. Includes essays, notes and other compositions mainly about her life and the history of Amherst. aVI. Other Dickinson Family papers, 1757-1934. Includes collection materials from other family members, third party letters and other items. Family members include Edward Austin Dickinson (1861-1898), nephew of the poet Emily Dickinson (1830-1886); Samuel Fowler Dickinson (1775-1838), the grandfather of the poet; Thomas Gilbert Dickinson (1875-1883), nephew of the poet; among other distant relatives and friends. aVII. Root Family papers, 1830-1884. Abiah Root was the daughter of Deacon Harvey Root of West Springfield (Feeding Hills, Mass.). She attended Amherst Academy (Amherst, Mass.) for only one year (1843-1844), where she met Emily Dickinson (1839-1886) and then transferred to Miss Margaret Campbell's school in Springfield (Mass.). The bulk of this series consists of correspondence between Root family members. aDickinson Family Papers, 1757-1934 (MS Am 1118.95). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01967 aMaterials chiefly in English. 0aPoetryzAmericany19th century.30aDickinson family.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aDickinson, Emily Norcross,d1804-1882.10aDickinson, Lavinia Norcross,d1833-1899.10aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913.10aDickinson, Austin,d-1895.10aDickinson, Edward,d1803-1874.10aDickinson, Edward,d1861-1898.10aDickinson, Samuel Fowler,d1775-1838.30aRoot family.20aAmherst CollegexAlumni and alumnae.20aYale UniversityxAlumni and alumnae. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmherst (Mass.) 7aEssayszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDiarieszAmherst (Mass.)y19th century.2aat 7aLegal documentszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aCommonplace bookszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aFinancial recordszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aAutograph albumszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aWomen poets.2lcsh1 aDickinson, Lavinia Norcross,d1833-1899.1 aDickinson, Austin,d-1895.1 aDickinson, Edward,d1803-1874.1 aDickinson, Edward,d1861-1898.1 aDickinson, Emily Norcross,d1804-1882.1 aDickinson, Samuel Fowler,d1775-1838.1 aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913.3 aRoot family.0 cPurchased;aMiss Louise B. Graves;b56 River St., Boston, Massachusetts;d1946 March 13;e45M-425 (2-5);hMorris Gray fund.5hou1 aBulk of collection purchased from Alfred Leet Hampson with funds given by Gilbert H. Montague, class of 1901, in happy memory of Amy Angel Collier Montague, 1950.5hou1 aSome materials gift and purchase from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.950 cPurchased from Alfred Leet Hampson;d1950 May;hfunds from Gilbert H. Montague.5houhd|bf||||baaa aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Imaging Services,d1984.e1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.nFilmed: from Box 3, Edward Dickinson letters to Emily Norcross Dickinson, 1829-1839; from Box 5, Emily Norcross Dickinson letters to Edward Dickinson, 1831-1839.7s1984 maun a8 bMMFcHDhFilm Mas H652.208376ckc a2201441 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106041001800129100003900147245011400186300008300300351006700383520039800450520071800848520052201566524018302088530006202271555008702333544040302420546003602823600003002859600003602889630004502925630005302970630004903023600002403072600006303096600003303159600005803192600004203250600002903292600003403321600002603355600003903381600002403420600005303444600003503497600004503532600003403577600002203611600003703633600003603670600003203706600003903738600005803777600002303835600001903858600004603877600003003923600004003953600003403993600002204027600003804049600003404087600003304121600003304154600003104187600003204218600003504250600003304285600003404318600003804352600002504390610002004415630004604435630004604481630004004527630005304567630006804620630004304688630005104731630004304782630005204825630004404877630004304921630004304964630004505007630005205052630004505104630004705149630003305196630004505229630003205274630004405306630004005350630005005390630005405440630004505494630005405539630004005593630005605633630005505689630004205744630005405786630003605840630004305876630004405919630004405963655002206007655002006029655002006049655004406069700002606113541007906139561004506218852002506263541007906288561004806367852002706415541007906442561004806521852002606569541007906595561004806674852002606722506003406748541007906782561004806861852002506909005965994-720120614112824.0t|||||||||||||||||950911m19091975maunnn |ineng d0 aocn682581391 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafrearus1 aRothschild, Howard D.,ecollector.10aHoward D. Rothschild collection on Ballets Russes of Serge Diaghilev: Photographs and scrapbooks,f1909-1975. a14 boxes, 2 MS volumes, 2 fMS volumes, and 1 portfolio drawer (12 linear ft.); aOrganized into two series: I. Photographs; and II. Scrapbooks. aThe collection contains images of dancers, choreographers, artists, composers and other people related to Ballets Russes, as well as images of scenes from the Ballets Russes productions. The collection also includes photo albums of Ballet Russes dancers and scrapbooks with press clippings, typescripts of reviews, original photographs and drawings compiled by Peggie Cochrane and Anton Dolin. aSubjects include: Serafima Astaf’eva, George Balanchine, Cyril Beaumont, Adolf Bolm, Enrico Cecchetti, Fyodor Chaliapin, Charlie Chaplin, Alexandra Danilova, Ninette De Valois, Serge Diaghilev, Anton Dolin, Michel Fokine, Vera Fokina, Sergei Grigoriev, Tamara Karsavina, Vera Koralli, Matilda Kshesinskaia, Lydia Kyasht, Mikhail Larionov, Serge Lifar, Lydia Lopokova, Alicia Markova, Leonide Massine, Vera Nemchinova, Bronislava Nijinska, Waslaw Nijinsky, Romola Nijinsky, Michel Pavloff, Anna Pavlova, Pablo Picasso, Maiia Plisetskaia, Maurice Ravel, Howard Rothschild, Artur Rubinstein, Lydia Sokolova, Olga Spessivtzeva, Igor Stravinsky, Nicolas Tcherepnine, Lubov Tchernecheva, Leon Woizikowski, and others. aProductions include: Cleopatra, Prince Igor, Sadko, Schéhérazade, Spectre de la rose, Sleeping beauty, Biches, Prodigal son, Carnaval, Daphnis and Chloe, Dieu bleu, Coq d'or, Firebird, Petrouchka, Pavillon d'Armide, Chatte, Cimarosiana, Giselle, Apollo, Oiseau d'or, Roi nu, Sylphides, Soleil de nuit, Boutique fantasque, Afternoon of a faun, Till Eulenspiegel, Zephire et Flore, Rite of spring, Gods go a-begging, Good humored ladies, Parade, Three-cornered hat, Facheux, Orientales, Narcisse, Matelots, Papillons. aHoward D. Rothschild Collection on Ballets Russes of Serge Diaghilev: Photographs and Scrapbooks (MS Thr 414.2). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02116 aFor additional material held by the Harvard Theatre Collection, see: Howard D. Rothschild Collection on Ballets Russes of Serge Diaghilev: Manuscripts and objects (MS Thr 414.1); Howard D. Rothschild Collection on Ballets Russes of Serge Diaghilev: Drawings and prints (MS Thr 414.4). Harvard Theatre Collection, Hougthon Library, Harvard University; and Howard D. Rothschild Papers (MS Thr 414.3). aIn English, French and Russian.10aDolin, Anton,d1904-1983.10aSpessivtzeva, Olga,d1895-1991.00aFâcheux (Choreographic work : Nijinska)00aZéphire et Flore (Choreographic work : Massine)00aOiseau d'or (Choreographic work : Petipa, M)10aWoizikowski, Léon.10aPliset︠s︡kai︠a︡, Maĭi︠a︡ Mikhaĭlovna,d1926-10aLopokova, Lydia,d1892-1981.10aKshesinskai︠a︡, Matilʹda Feliksovna,d1872-1971.10aKaralli, Vera Alekseevna,d1889-1972.10aBolm, Adolf,d1884-1951.10aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929.10aRothschild, Howard D.10aAstaf'eva, Serafima Aleksandrovna.10aBalanchine, George.10aBeaumont, Cyril W.q(Cyril William),d1891-1976.10aCecchetti, Enrico,d1850-1928.10aChaliapin, Fyodor Ivanovich,d1873-1938.10aChaplin, Charlie,d1889-1977.10aCochrane, Peggie.10aDanilova, Alexandra,d1907-1997.10aDe Valois, Ninette,d1898-2001.10aFokine, Michel,d1880-1942.10aFokina, Vera Petrovna,d1886-1958.10aGrigorʹev, S. L.q(Sergeĭ Leonidovich),d1883-1968.10aKarsavina, Tamara.10aKyasht, Lydia.10aLarionov, Mikhail Fedorovich,d1881-1964.10aLifar, Serge,d1905-1986.10aMarkova, Alicia,cDame,d1910-2004.10aMassine, Leonide,d1896-1979.10aNemchinova, Vera.10aNijinska, Bronislava,d1891-1972.10aNijinsky, Waslaw,d1890-1950.10aNijinsky, Romola de Pulszky.10aPavloff, Michel,d1891-1981.10aPavlova, Anna,d1881-1931.10aRavel, Maurice,d1875-1937.10aRubinstein, Artur,d1887-1982.10aSokolova, Lydia,d1896-1974.10aStravinsky, Igor,d1882-1971.10aTcherepnine, Nicolas,d1873-1945.10aTchernicheva, Lubov.20aBallets russes.00aCléopâtre (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aPrince Igor (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aSadko (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aSpectre de la rose (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aSleeping Beauty (Choreographic work : Nijinska after Petipa, M)00aBiches (Choreographic work : Nijinska)00aProdigal son (Choreographic work : Balanchine)00aCarnaval (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aDaphnis and Chloe (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aDieu Bleu (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aCoq d'or (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aFirebird (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aPetrouchka (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aPavillon d'Armide (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aChatte (Choreographic work : Balanchine)00aCimarosiana (Choreographic work : Massine)00aGiselle (Choreographic work)00aApollo (Choreographic work : Balanchine)00aRoi nu (Choreographic work)00aSylphides (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aSchéhérazade (Choreographic work)00aSoleil de nuit (Choreographic work : Massine)00aBoutique Fantasque (Choreographic work : Massine)00aAfternoon of a faun (Choreographic work)00aTill Eulenspiegel (Choreographic work : Nijinsky)00aRite of spring (Choreographic work)00aGods go a-begging (Choreographic work : Balanchine)00aGood humored ladies (Choreographic work : Massine)00aParade (Choreographic work : Massine)00aThree-cornered hat (Choreographic work : Massine)00aOrientales (Choreographic work)00aNarcisse (Choreographic work : Fokine)00aMatelots (Choreographic work : Massine)00aPapillons (Choreographic work : Fokine) 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aNegatives.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aScrapbookszEnglandy20th century.2aat1 aRothschild, Howard D.0 cBequest;aHoward D. Rothschild;d1990 March 23;eno accession number;5the1 aBequest of Howard Rothschild, 1990.5the8 bTHEcFhMS Thr 414.20 cBequest;aHoward D. Rothschild;d1990 March 23;eno accession number;5the1 aBequest of Howard D. Rothschild, 1990.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 414.20 cBequest;aHoward D. Rothschild;d1990 March 23;eno accession number;5the1 aBequest of Howard D. Rothshcild, 1990.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 414.20 cBequest;aHoward D. Rothschild;d1990 March 23;eno accession number;5the1 aBequest of Howard D. Rothschild, 1993.5the8 bTHEcPPhMS Thr 414.20 aCollection open for research.0 cBequest;aHoward D. Rothschild;d1990 March 23;eno accession number.5the1 aBequest of Howard D. Rothschild, 1990.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 414.202384ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004500123245007800168300004400246351024000290545003700530520023000567520010600797555008700903555010700990524011901097600004501216650003501261655002401296700005101320700004001371700005001411700005201461700006401513700004901577700003601626700005101662700004501713541008001758561006701838506004201905852002701947009241985-220081023090136.0031112i18231876mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127931981 aMAHV03A370 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.10aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow letters to various correspondents,f1823-1876. a14 boxes, 43 volumesa(12.8 linear ft.) aMaterial is organized alphabetically by name of recipient, but finding aid is organized chronologically, with some letters to Ferdinand Freiligrath and his family grouped together at the end. See finding aid for additional information. aLongfellow was an American poet. aLetters are to Lewis G. Clarke, Willis G. Clarke, James Thomas Fields, Ferdinand Freiligrath, Alice Longfellow, Stephen Longfellow, Zilpah Longfellow, Charles Eliot Norton, and Charles Sumner, among many other correspondents. aThe 43 volumes are cases that formerly housed these letters. Box 14 also contains some empty folders.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004888 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-9. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Letters to Various Correspondents (MS Am 1340.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aClarke, Lewis Garrard,d1812-1897,erecipient.1 aClarke, Willis Gaylord,erecipient.1 aFields, James Thomas,d1817-1881,erecipient.1 aFreiligrath, Ferdinand,d1810-1876,erecipient.1 aLongfellow, Alice M.q(Alice Mary),d1850-1928,erecipient.1 aLongfellow, Stephen,d1776-1849,erecipient.1 aLongfellow, Zilpah,erecipient.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908,erecipient.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,erecipient.0 cGift;aThe Trustees of the Longfellow House Trust;dJuly 1954;e54M-9.5hou1 aGift of The Trustees of the Longfellow House Trust, 1954.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1340.102254nkc a22003615a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007700110300004500187351005300232545023000285520053700515555008701052524015501139546001601294600001801310600001801328600001601346600001801362600001801380600002101398600001801419600003801437655002601475655003601501710006701537541017501604561004601779506004201825852002501867009218439-120131010131330.0031020i19712003mau|||| ||||| |||||eng d0 aocn860408043 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCostume and set designs for theatrical and film productions,f1971-2003. a14 designs in10 foldersa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by the name of designer. aCollection was purchased at the Broadway Cares 17th Annual Broadway Flea Market and Grand Auction in New York. Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS is one of the leading nonprofit AIDS fundraising and grant-making organizations. aCostume ans set designs donated by the artists to the Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS annual auction of theatrical designs to raise funds to fight AIDS. Includes designs for Twelfth night by Frank Boros, and Ringling Brothers Circus by Ann Hould-Ward, set designs for Grease by John Arnone, Veins and thumbtacks by Guy Gallo, Comedy of errors by Todd Potter, Hansel and Gretel and Thoroughly modern Millie by David Gallo, Christmas spectacular by Bill Hoffman, and poster design for the motion picture The Godfather by Billy Puzo.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02466 aCostume and Set Designs for Theatrical and Film Productions, 1971-2003 (MS Thr 977). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aArnone, John.10aBoros, Frank.10aGallo, Guy.10aGallo, David.10aHoffman Bill.10aHould-Ward, Ann.10aPotter, Todd.10aPuzo, William Victor,d1945-2006. 7aCostume designs.2aat 7aScenographyy20th century.2aat2 aBroadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS (Organization),eauctioneer.0 cPurchase;aBroadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS;bNew York, NY;d21 September 2003;e2003MT-109;h$460 (Bader fd.); $100 additional charge to be added by Book Accounts.5the1 aPurchased with the Bader fund, 2003.5the1 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFDhMS Thr 97701708ckcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245006500147260002300212300007100235520024900306500009900555500002600654500003300680500003300713524008200746544009200828610004700920650005200967655004401019655004901063740001701112541013301129561005501262506004201317852002301359012088470-420091001085809.0090930s1856 fr |||| ||||||||||a|fre d0 aocn612250438 aMH-HegihccMH-H1 aAlbert, Alfred,dactive 1833-1876.10a[Alfred Albert costume designs for "Le Corsaire"]h[graphic] a[Paris,cca. 1856] a14 drawings :bwatercolor, pencil, ink ;c24 x 16 cm. (each image) a14 drawings for costume designs for the Paris Opera production of a ballet loosely based on Byron's poem, The Corsair; Joseph Mazilier, choreographer. Depicts designs for Medora (2nd costume, 3rd costume), and others. 14 of a set of 16 designs. aRectos include text in French (in pencil and ink) describing each design, some text on versos. aSome drawings signed. aDrawings matted and in case. aTitle supplied by cataloger. aMS Thr 160. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 aSee Marian Hannah Winter Collection in HTC for an additional 2 designs from this group.20aOpéra de Paris.bBalletxPictorial works. 0aBallet dancerszFrancezParisvPictorial works. 7aWatercolorszFrancey19th century.2aat 7aCostume designsxTheatery19th century.2aat32aLe Corsaire.0 cPurchase;aNorman Grida;b2-bis, Cité Bergère, Paris 9, France;d1966 February 28;e65M-132;hFrank E. Chase fund ($225).5the1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase fund, 1966.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcFhMS Thr 16001335nkc a22002775a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100003600087245004100123246002400164300003300188520019600221500002400417500005000441524005500491600007000546600006200616650004700678655004500725655004400770700006500814541010300879561005000982852002501032007482926-220040617123513.0920411s1809 enk||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocn6121940491 aCruikshank, Robert,d1789-1856.00kCaricatures :kdrawings,f[ca. 1809]18aCaricature drawings a14 drawings, bound ;c43 cm. aSigned ink and watercolor over pencil cartoons regarding the case of Mary Anne Clarke, mistress of the Duke of York. Album includes twelve drawings by Cruikshank and two drawings by Woodward. aTitle from binding. aBound in tan polished calf with gold tooling. aMS Eng 1137. Houghton Library. Harvard University.10aClarke, Mary Anne Thompson,d1776-1852vCaricatures and cartoons.00aFrederick Augustus,cDuke of York and Albany,d1763-1827. 0aPolitical cartoonszEnglandy19th century. 7aCaricatureszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc1 aWoodward, G. M.q(George Moutard),dapproximately 1760-1809. cDeposit;aWilliam S. Spaulding;b37 Le Colombier, Gstaad, Switzerland;dNov. 1959;e59M-300F.5hou aDeposited by William S. Spaulding, 1959.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 113701173ctcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004100121245002500162300004300187520019300230524005400423600002900477610004100506650003900547650003700586655002500623700002000648700002600668700002900694700004100723541004500764583003700809852002500846007537754-320080130142359.0970725i19541963mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm790160971 aMAHV97A31 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSarton, May,d1912-1995,erecipient.10kLetters,f1954-1963. a14 items in 1 foldera(.05 linear ft.) aLetters from Abigail Avery, Joan Hocking Kracke, Richard Hocking, and William Ernest Hocking. Includes printed material relating to the founding of the Shady Hill School (Cambridge, Mass.) aMS Am 2070. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSarton, May,d1912-1995.20aShady Hill School (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat1 aAvery, Abigail.1 aKracke, Joan Hocking.1 aHocking, Richard,d1906-1 aHocking, William Ernest,d1873-1966. d1994e*94M-523LettersaMay SartoncGift 3LettersaProcessedc07/25/97kBS8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 207002474ctcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004400124245005100168300003100219351003000250545012800280520072600408555008701134555010901221524010101330546001601431600004401447600002901491600004301520610003301563650003901596650003901635651003601674651006201710655001801772655002001790655002601810655002201836656001701858541006001875561005001935506004201985852002502027008899547-X20120813080013.0021002i18901922mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127296401 aMAHV02-A103 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.10aJosephine Preston Peabody diaries,f1890-1922. a14 volumesa(2 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aPeabody was an American poet, dramatist, pacifist and feminist. She was a special student at Radcliffe College (1894-1896). aThe diaries describe daily life in and around Cambridge, Massachusetts, including family life, transcriptions of conversations, fashions, theatre, concerts, reflections on current events, and descriptions of acquaintances. Also describe in some detail two trips to Europe. Earlier diaries include her early literary aspirations, studies at Radcliffe, and frequent discussions of poetry and music. Later diaries occasionally include short poetic compositions, descriptions of outings with poets Edwin Arlington Robinson and Amy Lowell, and comments on the publication and staging of her plays. Also included are some ephemera, clippings, pressed plants, and photographs of Peabody and her family inserted into the diaries.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009448 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-642. aJosephine Preston Peabody Diaries, 1890-1922 (MS Am 2162). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.20aRadcliffe CollegexStudents. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPlant speciment.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh0 cGift;aProfessor Lionel S. Marks;d1942;e45M-642.5HOU1 aGift of Professor Lionel S. Marks, 1942.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 216203010cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245004800154300004300202351021500245545006500460520040400525555008700929555022701016524011601243546001601359600003201375600003101407650003301438650003801471655003801509655001601547656002201563740002201585740003001607007001401637843019101651852002801842541043901870561008902309506004202398852004302440561010502483000602460-220130204135355.0860929i18871932mau eng d0 aocn6123754231 aMAHV86A599 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950.10aBernard Shaw additional papers,f1887-1932. a14 volumes and 1 boxa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Eng 1046-1046.8, 1046.10: Compositions and letters; II. bMS Eng 1046.9: Letters to various correspondents; and III. MS Eng 1046.12-1046.16: Forgeries and other papers. aGeorge Bernard Shaw was an Anglo-Irish dramatist and author. aCollection consists primarily of manuscripts by Shaw, including typescripts with revisions and additions of Arms and the Man and Mrs. Warren's Profession. Other manuscripts are articles, reviews, essays, plays, and an autobiographical sketch. Also includes Shaw's answers to questions of T. D. O'Bolger, author of the Life of George Bernard Shaw, and letters by Shaw mostly on professional concerns.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013908 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-129-134, 136, 138, 145, 146, 244; 1956-1957, under *56M-188, 199; 1962-1963, under *62M-198; and 1972-1973, under *72M-74. aBernard Shaw Additional Papers, 1887-1932 (MS Eng 1046-.10, 1046.12-.16). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aO'Bolger, Thomas Demetrius.10aShaw, Bernard,d1856-1950. 0aEnglish dramay20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh0 aArms and the man.0 aMrs. Warren's profession.hd|bfa012baap aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Imaging Services,d2006.e1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.nFilmed: MS Eng 1046.1 only (typescript of Arms and the Man).7s2006 maun a8 bMMFcHDhFilm Mas H18660 cDeposit/gift, bequest, purchase;aGift, L. Richard Bamberger, Bequest, Joseph Hall Schaffner, Purchase, David Magrue Book Shop;bGift (65 Broadway, New York NY), purchase (442 Post St., San Francisco 2, Calif.);dDeposit 26 Jan. 1953, gift May 1953-June 1957, Bequest Nov. 1972, Purchase Feb. 1963;eGift 52M-129-134, 136, 138, 145, 146, 244, 56M-188, 199, bequest 72M-74(201), purchase 62M-198;hNo price given, Amy Lowell fund.5hou1 aThe bulk of the collection was the gift of Mr. L. Richard Bamberger, 1953-1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1046-.10, 1046.12-.16 aAlso purchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1963; and the bequest of Joseph Halle Schaffner, 1972.5hou02164ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003600121245005000157300004400207351013200251545034000383520022600723555008700949555010801036524008901144546001601233600003601249600004901285650002801334650006001362651005001422656002301472710005101495710004701546541009501593561004701688506004201735852002501777009361428-420110105080618.0040729i19031914mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm812767051 aMAHV04A57 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBradford, Gamaliel,d1863-1932.10aGamaliel Bradford correspondence,f1903-1914. a14 volumes and 1 boxa(1.58 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Letters received (with card index), arranged chronologically; and II. Publisher's correspondence. aBradford was an American biographer, critic, poet, and dramatist. He was born in Boston, the sixth of seven Gamaliel Bradfords in unbroken succession, of whom the first was a great-grandson of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony. He perfected the method of writing "psychographs," or short portraits of historical figures. aChiefly correspondence concerning Bradford's publications, including his books and articles on General Robert E. Lee and the American Civil War. His publishers included Houghton Mifflin Company and Little Brown & Company.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1953-1954, under *53M-36. aGamaliel Bradford Correspondence (MS Am 2339). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBradford, Gamaliel,d1863-1932.10aLee, Robert E.q(Robert Edward),d1807-1870. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aBiographers.2lcsh2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,ecorrespondent.2 aLittle, Brown and Company,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Gamaliel Bradford,b9 Abbott Street, Wellesley 81, Mass.;d1953;e53M-36.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Gamaliel Bradford, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 233902018ntm a2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245003700131300003300168545035000201500008700551500003600638520031200674524005400986600002301040600005501063610002701118600003801145600003801183600002101221650005201242651005401294651004601348655001801394561005001412541016901462852004901631009120275-220030917130125.0030609i18301840xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612772306 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPrescott, Timothy.10aDiary :kmanuscript,f1830-1840. a140 sheets in 1 v. ;c40 cm. aThis diary is attributed to Timothy Prescott who was a leading citizen of Concord, Mass. in the early years of the 19th century. He was apparently both a lawyer and a farmer and is said to be the father of Civil War hero, Colonel George L. (George Lincoln) Prescott (1829-1864). He was active in the town's business and in some reform movements. aAutograph manuscript diary (unsigned), Concord, Mass., 1830 Apr. 1 - 1840 Apr. 12. aPartially disbound and unlaced. aIncludes records of the weather, affairs of the town of Concord, family information, anti-slavery matters, the lyceum movement, listing of lectures attended, and the ordinary activities of the inhabitants. Mentions knowing the Emersons, Thoreaus, Rev. Ezra Ripley, and many other prominent Concord citizens. aMS Am 2312. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPrescott, Timothy.10aPrescott, George L.q(George Lincoln),d1829-1864.10aConcord Lyceum (Mass.)10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.10aThoreau, Henry David,d1817-1862.30aPrescott family. 0aLectures and lecturingzMassachusettszConcord. 0aConcord (Mass.)xIntellectual lifey19th century. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aDiaries.2aat aPurchased with the P.D. Howe fund, 1995.5hou cPurchase;aJoseph Rubinfine American Historical Augographs,b505 South Flagler Dr., Suite 1301, West Palm Beach, Florida 33401,d1995 June 21e94M-97(f)h$35005hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2312zShelved with bMS Am 231001425ntm a2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108240003100141245003500172300002500207500006800232500007500300520014500375500002700520581004500547524005600592600003300648650002100681650002700702651004300729651004400772651003600816655006700852541009200919561006101011852002701072010088686-820060830161111.0060824s1896 ja |||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612847203 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904.10aGleanings in Buddha-fields10aIn Osaka :kmanuscript,f1896. a142 leaves ;c21 cm. aAutograph manuscript, dated in Kobe (Japan), Mar.-15 May, 1896. aTitle derived from chapter title in Hearn's Gleaning in Buddha-fields. aConcerns Hearn's impressions of Osaka, including a description of the city, religious temples, Buddhism, Japanese culture, and other topics. aIn a slip case, 22 cm. aGleaning in Buddha-fields (Boston, 1897) aMS Am 1213.2. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904. 0aBuddhismzJapan. 0aTempleszJapanzOsaka. 0aOsaka (Japan)xDescription and travel. 0aOsaka (Japan)xSocial life and customs. 0aJapanxSocial life and customs. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cGift;aEdward Larocque Tinker;ddeposited 20 Nov. 1950, given Dec. 1953;e50M-87A.5hou1 aDeposit of Edward Larocque Tinker, 1950; gift 1953.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1213.201315ntm a2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245007400148300002500222500005000247500002000297581008100317581007800398581011600476581005100592500002200643524005400665610004200719610003300761655007200794541009400866561004000960852002501000010174471-420061220114559.0061213s1890 mau|||| |||| 000|e eng d0 aocn612880377 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923.13aAn historical sketch of Harvard University :kmanuscript,f[ca. 1890] a142 leaves ;c27 cm. aAutograph manuscript, signed, with revisions. aPrinter's copy. aPublished in History of Middlesex County, Massachusetts (Philadelphia, 1890) aReprinted as An historical sketch of Harvard University (Cambridge, 1890) aRevised and enlarged as History and customs of Harvard University in Universities and their sons (Boston, 1898) aIssued separately as Harvard (Cambridge, 1900) aIn a case, 29 cm. aMS Am 1717. Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHarvard College (1636-1780)xHistory.20aHarvard UniversityxHistory. 7aPrinters' copies (Provenance)zUnited Statesy19th century.2rbprov0 cGift;aRichard Ehrlich;b1316 Mass. Ave., Cambridge 38, Mass.;d1964 Apr.;e63M-186.5hou1 aGift of Richard Ehrlich, 1964.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 171701117ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003100108245007100139300003700210500018400247500002700431524005700458655004700515655006100562655003900623541012600662561007100788852002800859009608526-620050502110345.0050420s1951 ||||||| |||| ||||p eng d0 aocn612876502 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aThomas, Dylan,d1914-1953.10aPoem on his birthday :band other poems :kmanuscript,f[ca. 1951] a143 leaves ;c26 cm. or smaller. aAutograph drafts, unsigned, of "Poem on his birthday" (1951) and other poems; with notes, lists of words, and ideas for future poems; also galley proofs of "Poem on his birthday." aIn a tray case, 31 cm. aMS Eng 943.11. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aGalley proofszEnglandy20th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzEnglandy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszEnglandy20th century.2aat cGift;aIsabella Gardner, in the name Oscar Williams;b2019 Irving Ave South, Minneapolis, MN;d19 Oct 1961;e61M-44.5hou aGift of Isabella Gardner in the name of Oscar Williams, 1961.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 943.1101207ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245003300141300004800174500021800222500004000440500006300480500009700543581004700640524005500687650001600742541009000758561006500848852005200913010563138-820070611173022.0750723s1912 enk|||| |||| 00010deng d0 aocn612794907 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aDauber :kmanuscript,f1912. a143 leaves in 6 folders.c25 cm. or smaller aAutograph manuscript, written mostly on 4"x6" cards in black ink on one side only. These are gathered within folders numbered I-VI, and foliated 1-143. Fols. 1-14, in folder I, are on larger sheets of lined paper. aDate from subscription on fol. 143. aIn a quarter red leather and brown cloth tray case, 25 cm. aWith a letter from Masefield dated 7 February 1950 presenting the ms. to Harvard University.8 aPublished as Dauber: a poem (London 1913). aMS Eng 1619. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aSea poetry. cGift;aJohn Masefield;bBurcote Brook, Abingdon, Oxon.;d1950 March 8;e49M-123.5hou aGift of the author in memory of Thomas W. Lamont, 1950.5hou8 bHOUcGENmShelved in Lobby VII.4.9hMS Eng 161903503cpcaa2200541 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245004100158300003100199351037900230520087000609524008701479530006201566545019101628555009601819555016301915546001602078600003502094630002102129650003902150650001102189650005102200650004402251650003002295655002702325655002002352655002002372655001902392655003802411655001602449655002202465655001802487700005302505700003402558700005402592700002102646700003702667700004702704700003102751541006302782561004402845506004202889852003002931000602007-020130805163935.0860606i19221967mau eng d0 aocn6123688641 aMAHV86A294 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrown, John Mason,d1900-1969.10aJohn Mason Brown papers,f1922-1967. a144 boxesa(36 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to John Mason Brown; II. Additional letters to John Mason Brown; III. Letters from John Mason Brown; IV. Letters to Catherine Screven (Meredith) Brown; V. Other letters; VI. Compositions by John Mason Brown; VII. Compositions by others; VIII. Other papers of John Mason Brown; and IX. bMS Am 1948.1: Additional correspondence. aChiefly correspondence of John Mason Brown, including letters from over 6000 correspondents and many carbon copies of outgoing letters. Correspondents include Edward Campbell Aswell, Brooks Atkinson, Barrett Harper Clark, Norman Cousins, Alan Goodrich Kirk, David Thompson Watson McCord, and Lee Simonson. The correspondence reflects Brown's interest in the theater and his work as a columnist for Saturday Review and as a television commentator. Also includes some writings by Brown and others; lecture notes; theater photographs, drawings, and clippings; business papers, including contracts with publishers and television companies; reviews and clippings on books by Brown; and photographs and other material from Brown's service in the Navy during World War II on the staff of Vice-Admiral Alan G. Kirk, particularly during the invasions of Sicily and Normandy. aJohn Mason Brown Papers (MS Am 1948-1948.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aBrown was an American author. He was drama critic for the New York Evening Post (1929-1941) and New York World (1941-1942) and was a columnist and editor for Saturday Review (1944-1969).0 aElectronic finding aid available (1520KB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006558 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-111. aIn English.10aBrown, John Mason,d1900-1969.00aSaturday review. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aDrama. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xNaval operations. 0aCriticismzUnited States. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aContracts.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aReviews.2aat1 aClark, Barrett H.q(Barrett Harper),d1890-1953.1 aAtkinson, Brooks,d1894-1984.1 aAswell, Edward C.q(Edward Campbell),d1900-1958.1 aCousins, Norman.1 aKirk, Alan Goodrich,d1888-1963.1 aMcCord, David Thompson Watson,d1897-1997.1 aSimonson, Lee,d1888-1967.0 cBequest;aJohn Mason Brown;d1969;e75M-111.5hou3Papers.1 aBequest of John Mason Brown, 1969.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1948-1948.100914ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004000108245004500148300002500193500006400218500003300282520003000315500002600345581004500371524005300416655006700469541006700536561004500603852002400648009832613-920051214140959.0051214s1862 xxu|||| |||| ||||1 eng d0 aocn612783307 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aStowe, Harriet Beecher,d1811-1896.10aAgnes of Sorrento :kmanuscript,f[1862] a145 leaves ;c20 cm. aAutograph manuscript, unsigned, with revisions; incomplete. aTitle supplied by cataloger. aChapters 20-22 and 24-26. aIn a slipcase, 22 cm. aStowe, Agnes of Sorrento (Boston, 1862). aMS Am 269. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century.2aat cGift;aMrs. J. T. Fields;d17 Oct. 1916;eno acc. number.5hou aGift of Mrs. James T. Fields, 1916.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 26900930ntm a2200217 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245007500141300002500216500004900241500002600290524005700316581013000373655003800503541009600541561004700637852002800684009564719-820050314095848.0050303s1900 ||||||| |||| ||||e eng d0 aocn612857406 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEllis, Havelock,d1859-1939.14aThe nineteenth century :ban utopian retrospect :kmanuscript,f[1900] a145 leaves ;c26 cm. aAutograph manuscript, signed, with revision. aIn a slipcase, 29 cm. aMS Eng 1073.1. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aEllis, Havelock, The nineteenth century: an utopian retrospect (Boston, Small, Maynard & company; London, G. Richards, 1901). 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat cGift;aBayard L. Kilgour, Jr.;b225 E. 4th St, Cincinnati, OH;d18 Dec. 1957;e57M-81.5hou aGift of Bayard L. Kilgour, Jr., 1957.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1073.101611ckcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245006900162300003000231520028300261555008700544555009000631500006000721524012000781650001900901655001900920655002400939655002300963710001600986541012701002561011501129506004201244852002301286008293274-320130212112345.0020620q15uu19uuxx ||| | || k|eng d0 aocn1225749651 aMAHV02-A39 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWhitney, James Edward,ecollector.10aJame Edward Whitney collection of playing cards,fca. 1500-1920. a15 boxesa(16 linear ft.) aCollection of packs of playing cards, both manuscript and printed, from early 16th century to early 20th century. Most packs incomplete. Includes cards from: Austria, China, England, France, Germany, Hindustan, Hopi Tribe, Japan, Korea, Spain, Sweden, United States, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014548 aUnpublished printed finding aid in curatorial file, formerly cataloged as SG 3102.09. aFinding aid created by donor, James Edward Whitney, Jr. aJames Edward Whitney Collection of Playing Cards, ca. 1500-1920 (MS Am 2204). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aPlaying cards. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPlaying cards.2aat 7aGame cards.2gmgpc2 aHopi Tribe.0 cGift to Widener Library;aJames Edward Whitney, Jr., '89;d11 Dec. 1925.erecataloged from: SG 3102.1* - SG 3102.100*5HOU1 aGift to Widener Library of James Edward Whitney, Jr., '89, 1925. Recataloged from SG 3102.1*-SG 3102.100*5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 220403279cpcaa2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003200123245003800155300003000193351018300223545008600406520098200492524009501474555008701569555013801656546001601794600003201810610003401842630003901876650003901915650003501954650001801989655002802007655001702035655002402052655003802076655006702114655001602181655004502197655001902242700003002261700003202291700002702323700001902350700002002369700002002389541010302409561011002512506004202622852003002664561006702694000601946-320130415115031.0860513i19441981mau eng d0 aocn1225901331 aMAHV86A237 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSissman, L. E.,d1928-1976.10aL. E. Sissman papers,f1944-1981. a15 boxesa(4 linear ft.). aArranged in five series: I. Letters to Louis Edward Sissman; II. Letters from Louis Edward Sissman; III. Other letters; IV. Compositions; and V. bMS Am 1985.1: Other manuscripts. aLouis Edward Sissman was an American poet, columnist, and advertising copywriter. aThe bulk of the collection is manuscripts by Sissman, mostly poems, but also prose including essays, drafts, notes, fragments of stories and novels, and a few speeches. Includes a typescript with annotations, the galley proofs, and the page proofs of Hello, Darkness: The Collected Poems of L.E. Sissman, a posthumous collection selected and arranged by Peter Davison; as well as printer's copies and proofs of his earlier works. Also contains 5 boxes of correspondence, both personal and professional. Correspondents include Anthony Hecht, Howard Moss, Stanley Moss, Edward A. Muir, and Kurt Vonnegut. Most of the letters, which include correspondence with other poets and publishers, and fan mail, pertain to his poetry, but 68 letters to his parents written between 1944 and 1959 discuss his student days at Harvard and early days in advertising. Third party correspondence concerns his poetry. Also a few miscellaneous manuscripts by others and printed copies of his poems. aL. E. Sissman Papers, 1944-1981 (MS Am 1985-1985.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005368 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-70, and 1980-1981, under *80M-27. aIn English.10aSissman, L. E.,d1928-1976.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents.00aNew Yorker (New York, N.Y. : 1925) 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aCopy writers. 7aDrafts (documents)2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat1 aMoss, Howard,d1922-1987.1 aHecht, Anthony,d1923-2004.1 aDavison, Peter,d1928-1 aMoss, Stanley.1 aMuir, Edward A.1 aVonnegut, Kurt.0 cPurchase & gift;aSissman, Anne B., 1978; Davison, Peter, 1981.d1978, 1981;e77M-70, 80M-27.5hou1 aPurchased from Anne B. Sissman with gifts from Mr. & Mrs. John Updike and the Amy Lowell fund, 1978.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1985-1985.11 aGift of Peter Davison (Proofs for Hello, Darkness), 1981.5hou03380nkcaa2200613 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005400110300003100164351005700195520072400252530006200976555008701038524013201125546001601257650001601273650001501289650001301304650001501317650001501332650001601347650001501363650001201378600004201390600004501432600004501477600004601522600005001568650004201618650004201660650003601702650003601738650003501774650003601809650003501845650003701880650003601917655002201953655004601975655003002021655003302051655002202084655003302106655003302139655002302172710009802195541013202293561015202425506004202577506012302619852002402742012965186-920120229103510.0020710i18621982mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn760461466 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of theatrical performers,f1862-1982. a15 boxesa(4.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by name of subject of image. aThis collection includes photographs of actors, actresses, dramatists, opera singers, composers, musicians, dancers, comedy acts, as well as burlesque and vaudeville performers primarily from the 19th century, with a few from the 20th century. The bulk of the collection focuses on popular performers from the United States and England, but also includes performers from France, Ireland, Russia, Germany, and Scotland. The photographs are mostly cartes-de-vistes and cabinet photographs, but include photographic postcards, copy prints, photogravures, photomechanical prints, and stereographs. Notable performers include Belle Archer, Dion Boucicault, Fanny Davenport, Joseph Jefferson, Edward Sothern, and many others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02223 aPhotographs of theatrical performers, 1862-1982 (MS Thr 710). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aVaudeville. 0aBurlesque. 0aDancers. 0aMusicians. 0aComposers. 0aDramatists. 0aActresses. 0aActors.10aArcher, Belle,d1858-1900vPortraits.10aBoucicault, Dion,d1820-1890vPortraits.10aDavenport, Fanny,d1850-1898vPortraits.10aJefferson, Joseph,d1829-1905vPortraits.10aSothern, Edward Askew,d1826-1881vPortraits. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy20th century. 0aTheaterzFrancey19th century. 0aTheaterzIrelandy19th century. 0aTheaterzRussiay19th century. 0aTheaterzScotlandy19th century. 0aTheaterzGermanyy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPhotographic postcards.2aat 7aCopy prints.2aat 7aPhotogravures (prints).2aat 7aPhotomechanical prints.2aat 7aStereographs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 71002175ctcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100041002300121100004500144245006200189300002900251351003900280545020800319520017100527546006500698555008700763555010900850524011200959530006201071600004501133600005701178651005201235651005201287651007101339655002001410655002001430655002001450655001601470655002201486655002101508655002301529656002001552541005101572561004101623506004201664852002301706008855247-020121109104800.0020618i18791915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm831575351 aMAHV02A38 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aengafreachiatib1 aRockhill, William Woodville,d1854-1914.10aWilliam Woodville Rockhill additional papers,f1879-1915. a15 boxesa(5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aRockhill was an American scholar-diplomat known especially as the first Westerner to befriend and advise a Dalai Lama of Tibet. He was U.S. Minister to Greece, Romania, Serbia, China, Russia, and Turkey. aIncludes Rockhill's correspondence (mostly letters to him), compositions, clippings, scrapbook, negatives, photographs, translations of letters, notes, and notebooks. aIncludes materials in English, French, Chinese, and Tibetan.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010048 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-284. aWilliam Woodville Rockhill Additional Papers, 1879-1915 (MS Am 2122). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aRockhill, William Woodville,d1854-1914.00aThub-bstan-rgya-mtsho,cDalai Lama XIII,d1876-1933. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationsy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationsy20th century. 0aTibet Autonomous Region (China)xForeign relationszUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNegatives.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aDiplomats.2aat0 cGift;aCourtland Hoppin;d1951;e49M-284;5HOU1 aGift of Courtland Hoppin, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 212205441ctcaa2200625 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105041001300126100001900139245003700158300002900195351023600224545127600460520081301736520074402549546003703293555008703330555010303417524011503520600001903635600003003654600004503684600004603729600003303775600003203808600003003840610003803870650003603908650001703944650003503961650002803996650002804024650002004052650003504072650002704107651004604134655002304180655005004203655003804253655005104291655005104342655001804393655002804411700004704439700003504486710003504521710002604556541007104582561009704653506004204750852002304792008386241-220130212112813.0050421i19141991mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6122397771 aMHAT05-B10008 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aBloch, Stella.10aStella Bloch papers,f1914-1991. a15 boxesa(6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Manuscripts and Typescripts; II. Published works; III. Artwork by Stella Bloch; IV. Correspondence; V. Photographs; VI. Reviews; VII. Publicity; VIII. Subject files; and IX. Audio recordings. aStella Bloch was born in Poland between 1897 and 1899 to a Polish-born emigrant mother who had been living in New York and returned there to raise her daughter. Inspired by an Isadora Duncan performance in 1914, Bloch began her earliest training with Duncan's first group of students, the Isadorables. As an adolescent, Bloch took art classes from the Art Students League of New York, and began drawing and documenting dance and dancers. Bloch married Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy, curator of Indian and Muhammadan Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the couple toured the Far East, where Bloch studied the dances of Bali, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, and Java. Upon her return to Boston and New York, Bloch gave performances of Javanese dance and lectures on life in the Far East. She wrote articles for magazines, and was featured in newspapers and magazines as well. She published a book, Dancing and the Drama East and West (Orientalia, 1922), which contrasted Eastern theater with Western theater. The book also included some of Bloch's sketches from Bali, Cambodia, China, and Java. Bloch had many exhibitions of her artwork, primarily in New York but also in California, where she and her second husband, the lyricist Edward Eliscu, lived for a few years. aThe collection consists of selected essays and articles written by Bloch on subjects ranging from Isadora Duncan to philosophy to Eastern (Balinese, Cambodian, Chinese, Indian, Japanese, Javanese) dance and culture; artwork by Bloch featuring Duncan dancers, dancers and other performers in the Far East, and performers during the Harlem Renaissance; photographs of various subjects, including Balinese, Chinese, Javanese, and Kathakali dancers, the Eastman Theatre in Rochester, New York, chorus girls from the Harlem jazz scene, Nyota Inyoka, Ethel Barrymore, and portraits of Bloch in various costumes and genres, including Duncan, Spanish, Javanese, and flapper poses; and newspaper and magazine reviews featuring Bloch. The bulk of the material covers from the late 1910s through the Harlem Renaissance.8 aAlso includes correspondence to, from, and regarding Bloch, notably Nyota Inyoka, George Cukor, and R. H. Macy & Co.; publicity and programs for Bloch's performances and exhibitions; subject files on people and events of significance to Bloch; and audio recordings of jazz music. There is almost no material on Bloch's family (parents, husbands, children) or early education; the correspondence series covers only the earliest years of Bloch's career. While the artwork included in this collection contains nudes and portraits, it mainly consists of dancers and performers. Bloch used as her subjects Duncan dancers, Eastern dancers, New York City Ballet dancers, and most notably dancers, singers, and musicians of the Harlem Renaissance. aMaterials in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014558 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, 2003-2004, under *2003MT-231. aStella Bloch Papers, 1914-1991 (MS Thr 460). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBloch, Stella.10aBloch, StellavPortraits.10aBarrymore, Ethel,d1879-1959vPortraits.10aCoomaraswamy, Ananda Kentish,d1877-1947.10aDuncan, Isadora,d1877-1927.10aEliscu, Edward,d1902-1998.10aInyoka, NyotavPortraits.20aEastman Theatre (Rochester, N.Y.) 0aCourt danceszIndonesiazzJava. 0aDancezAsia. 0aDancezIndonesiazBali Island. 0aDancezIndonesiazJava. 0aDancerszUnited States. 0aDancers in art. 0aHarlem Renaissance, 1920-1940. 0aJazzxPictorial works. 0aHarlem (New York, N.Y.)xSongs and music. 7aAudiotapes.2local 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPaintingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aReviews.2aat 7aSouvenir programs.2aat1 aCukor, George,d1899-1983,ecorrespondent.1 aInyoka, Nyota,ecorrespondent.2 aMacy's (Firm),ecorrespondent.2 aNew York City Ballet.0 cPurchase;aEstate of Edward Eliscu;d1998, 2001;e2003MT-231.5the1 aPurchased from the estate of Edward Eliscu, 1998; additional material received in 2001.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 46003578cpcaa2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100003200136245006900168300003200237351033200269545057700601520065501178530006201833555008701895555011001982524007702092546002702169544012302196600001902319600002102338600003402359600002002393600003202413610003902445650003002484651005002514655002002564655002402584655002202608656002202630700004102652700003302693700003002726700003002756700005302786700005402839541005102893561005102944506004202995852002303037000601932-320110419145227.0860509i16041948mau eng d0 aocn612367571 aMAHV86A224 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengager1 aVillard, Henry,d1835-1900.10aHenry Villard papers,f1604-1948 (inclusive),g1863-1900 (bulk). a15 boxesa(6.25 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Villard; II. Letters from Villard; III. Letters to Fanny Garrison Villard; IV. German lettes and documents; V. Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War; VI. Villard family material; VII. Family genealogy, records, and photographs; VIII. Family books; and IX. Miscellaneous materials. aHenry Villard was a journalist, railway promoter, and financier. Born in Bavaria, he came to the United States in 1853. He worked as journalist for a variety of newspapers and was a Civil War correspondent for the New York Herald and New York Tribune. In 1873 Villard became a representative for a group of German bondholders of the Oregon and California Railroad, and his career as a railroad promoter in the Northwest was launched. He was president of the Northern Pacific Railroad, 1881-1884. Villard also served as representative of the Deutsche Bank in New York City. aChiefly correspondence, including long runs of letters to his wife, Fanny Garrison Villard, to his son Oswald Garrison Villard, and to other members of the Garrison family. Includes letters to and from friends and colleagues such as William Lloyd Garrison, Friedrich Kapp, Paul Lindau, Carl Schurz, and others. Also includes one box of material on Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War; one box of German letters and documents; and several boxes of pamphlets, clippings, photographs, and other ephemera, including material relating to the Northern Pacific Railroad. Genealogical material includes documents relating to the Benson family dating from 1604. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002958 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-228B. aHenry Villard Papers (MS Am 1322). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German. aThere is related material: Henry Villard Collection. Manuscripts and Archives, Baker Library, Harvard Business School.30aBenson family.30aGarrison family.10aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865.30aWillard family.10aVillard, Henry,d1835-1900.20aNorthern Pacific Railroad Company. 0aRailroadszUnited States. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aClippings.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aJournalists.2aat1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-1879.1 aKapp, Friedrich,d1824-1884.1 aLindau, Paul,d1839-1919.1 aSchurz, Carl,d1829-1906.1 aVillard, Fanny Garrison,d1844-1928,erecipient.1 aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949,erecipient.0 cBequest;aOswald Garrison Villard;d1949.5hou1 aBequest of Oswald Garrison Villard, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 132204041cpcaa2200577 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100002100124245007100145300003100216351048800247520142500735555008702160555010902247524007902356546001602435650002702451600002102478600004102499600004302540630001502583630003502598650001502633650002002648650003702668655002002705655001902725655002202744655001902766655002602785655002102811655002202832656002502854656001902879700003902898700004302937700004402980700004103024700004103065700004103106700005303147700004403200700004203244541006103286561005103347506004203398852002303440000602226-X20110126091421.0860731i18011948mau eng d0 aocn1224688841 aMAHV86-A418 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aGarrison family.10aGarrison family papers,f1801-1948 (inclusive),g1840-1907 (bulk). a15 boxesa(7.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879); II. Letters from William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879); III. Letters to William Lloyd Garrison (1838-1909); IV. Letters from William Lloyd Garrison (1838-1909); V. Letters to Wendell Phillips Garrison; VI. Letters from Wendell Phillips Garrison; VII. Letters to Fanny (Garrison) Villard; VIII. Letters to Francis Jackson Garrison; IX. Other letters; X. Notes and compositions; and XI. Miscellaneous. aThe collection focuses on the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison and his descendants, especially his son Wendell Phillips Garrison, literary editor of The Nation (1865-1906). Contains family correspondence including the courtship letters, 1834, of W. L. Garrison Sr. and Helen Benson Garrison; correspondence on his anti-slavery work and his periodical the Liberator; condolence letters on the death of his wife; and a scrapbook of his obituaries. Many letters to the Garrison children are about their father. W. L. Garrison Jr.'s correspondence is both personal and professional, including 201 letters to his sister Fanny Garrison Villard and 90 to his brother-in-law Henry Villard on business matters. The largest body of correspondence, that of Wendell Phillips Garrison, contains personal correspondence with family and friends and professional correspondence concerning The Nation. Letters to Fanny are mostly condolence letters on the death of her brother Wendell. Much of the third party correspondence concerns the celebration honoring Wendell's forty years at The Nation, or consists of letters to Elizabeth Pease Nichol, an English abolitionist. Manuscripts are mostly lectures by Wendell or notes of W. L. Garrison Sr. Also contains legal documents, photographs, genealogies, clippings, ephemera, and printed material including books and pamphlets by or about W. L. Garrison Sr. or Wendell Phillips Garrison.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006738 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-101. aGarrison Family Papers (MS Am 1906). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aAntislavery movements.30aGarrison family.10aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-1879.10aGarrison, Wendell Philips,d1840-1907.00aLiberator.00aNation (New York, N.Y. : 1865) 0aCourtship. 0aFamily records. 0aSocial reformerszUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aGarrison, Helen Eliza,d1811-1876.1 aGarrison, Francis Jackson,d1848-1916.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-1879.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1838-1909.1 aNichol, Elizabeth Pease,erecipient.1 aVillard, Fanny Garrison,d1844-1928,erecipient.1 aVillard, Henry,d1835-1900,erecipient.1 aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949.0 cBequest;aOswald Garrison Villard;d1949;e72M-101.5HOU1 aBequest of Oswald Garrison Villard, 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 190602516ntc a22004695a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101041001300126100002600139245004500165300003200210351012700242545007100369520038300440555008700823555009400910524011401004546002701118600002601145610002001171650005101191650001801242655002801260655002201288700006301310700005101373700003601424700004101460700004801501700004901549700003901598700007401637700006201711700004901773541010401822561005301926506004201979852002502021009492848-720101122170958.0041101i19211989mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612840274 aMHAT04A16 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs0 aengafre1 aRothschild, Howard D.10aHoward D. Rothschild papers,f1921-1989. a15 boxesa(7.5 linear ft.). aOrganized into four series: I. Correspondence; II. Auction catalogs; III. Miscellaneous material; IV. Additional material. aHoward D. Rothschild (d. 1989) was an artist and an art collector. aContains personal and business correspondence (including letters from dancers Alexandra Baldina, Hilda Butsova, Tamara Karsavina, Matilda Kshesinskaia, Lydia Lopokova, and Lydia Sokolova; actress Raymonde Delaunois; designers Alexandre Benois, Mikhail Larionov and Natalia Goncharova), auction catalogs, souvenir programs, press clippings, financial and other personal material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002638 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aHoward D. Rothschild Papers (MS Thr 414.3). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and French.10aRothschild, Howard D.20aBallets russes. 0aArtxCollectors and collectingzUnited States. 0aArt auctions. 7aAuction catalogs.2lcsh 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBaldina, Alexandra Vasil'evna,d1885-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aBenois, Alexandre,d1870-1960,ecorrespondent.1 aButsova, Hilda,ecorrespondent.1 aDelaunois, Raymonde,ecorrespondent.1 aGoncharova, Nataliia Sergeevna,d1881-1962.1 aLopokova, Lydia,d1892-1981,ecorrespondent.1 aKarsavina, Tamara,ecorrespondent.1 aKshesinskai︠a︡, Matilʹda Feliksovna,d1872-1971,ecorrespondent.1 aLarionov, Mikhail Fedorovich,d1881-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aSokolova, Lydia,d1896-1974,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aHoward D. Rothschild estate,b1035 Park Avenue, New York, NY;d1989-1991;e2004MT-0071.5the1 aBequest of Howard D. Rothschild, 1989-1991.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 414.302068cpcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002100121100003700142245008800179300004300267545005400310520019500364520010500559555008700664555009900751524011100850600003700961650002100998650003601019650002501055655001901080656002301099656002601122656002801148700004801176506004601224561004401270561028601314541004401600852003801644000602216-220130910105559.0k|||||||||||||||||860729i18051892mau eng d0 aocn6123709071 aMAHV86A409 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAudubon, John James,d1785-1851.10aJohn James Audubon letters and drawings,f1805-1892 (inclusive),g1805-1847 (bulk). a15 boxes and 2 volumesa(4 linear ft.) aAudubon was an American artist and ornithologist. aContains professional correspondence of Audubon and 14 boxes of his drawings. Many of the letters are to Audubon's friend and patron Edward Harris who accompanied him on several expeditions. aIncludes five drawings deposited by the Ernst Mayr Library, Museum of Comparative Zoology (MCZ 118).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000078 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accession Records, 1998-99, under *98M-51. aJohn James Audubon Letters and Drawings, 1805-1892 (MS Am 21, 21.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAudubon, John James,d1785-1851. 0aBirdsxResearch. 0aNatural historyzUnited States. 0aVoyages and travels. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aNaturalists.2lcsh 7aOrnithologists.2lsch 7aWildlife artists.2lcsh1 aHarris, Edward,d1799-1863,ecorrespondent.0 aCollection is open for research use.5hou1 aBequest of Joseph Y. Jeanes, 1930.5hou1 aProvenance: Many drawings sold by Audubon to Edward Harris in 1824 and some later given to Harris. In 1892 a large part of the Harris Collection was purchased from the estate of Edward Harris 2nd by Joseph Y. Jeanes of Philadelphia. See finding aid for additional information.5hou0 aJeanes, Joseph Y., 1930;cBequest.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 21 and fMS Am 21.503257nkcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106041003300127245004400160300005900204351012900263545053200392520098000924555008701904524012201991546008202113650004902195650001802244655002502262655001802287655002202305655001802327655002302345655004002368710002102408700001902429710003202448710004802480710002502528740002902553541006302582561003402645506004202679852007902721852002302800013719205-320130816191907.0r|||||||||||||||||020710i18901997mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn852744159 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengafreageraporadanaspa00aToy theater collection,fca. 1890-1997. a15 boxes, 5 volumes, and 1 plastic baga(5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Toy theaters, cutouts, models, and paper dolls; and II. Miscellany for toy theaters. aToy theaters were especially popular as English children's toys in the first half of the 19th-century. They were also called paper theaters and model theaters. By the late 19th-century popularity waned and publishing of these materials declined. Individual character portrait prints known as "penny plains" and "twopence coloureds" were collected and often used in toy theaters, as were engraved prints of multiple characters and scenery. Performing scripts were written especially for children to be used with these materials. aPrimarily reproductions of early 19th-century toy theater material, but some were newly designed and manufactured in the 20th-century. Collection contains toy theaters manufactured in Germany, Spain, England, the United States, and Denmark, including full cardboard and wooden theaters, prosceniums, stage floors, cloth curtains, scenery, characters, character slides, printed scripts, an audiocassette, and paper wrappers. Also includes cutouts, models, a set of electric lights for a toy theater, plastic and wooden toy figures, stencils, and paper dolls. Companies and individuals associated include: McLoughlin Bros., D'Oyly Carte, Mike Bartley, C. B. Nualart (El Teatro de los Niños), Pollock's Toy Theatres, Theatre Museum (Victoria and Albert Museum), Walt Disney Company, and many others. Tiles include: Sweeny Todd, The Mikado, Punch & Judy, The Merchant of Venice, Violet, Cinderella, Aladdin, Jack the Giant Killer, and Disney's Beauty and the Beast among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02445 aToy Theater Collection, ca. 1890-1997 (MS Thr 969). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English, Spanish, Danish, Portuguese, and French. 0aChildren's playsxStage-setting and scenery. 0aToy theaters. 7aAudiocassettes.2aat 7aCutouts.2aat 7aPaper dolls.2aat 7aScripts.2aat 7aToy theaters.2aat 7aToys (recreational artifacts).2aat2 aMcLoughlin Bros.1 aNualart, C. B.2 aPollock's Toy Theatres Ltd.2 aTheatre Museum (Victoria and Albert Museum)2 aWalt Disney Company.32aEl Teatro de los Niños.0 cSource unknown;ddates unknown;eno accession number;5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 969zShelved in Pusey after bMS Am, awaiting end-processing8 bTHEcFhMS Thr 96900324nbc a22001217a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100002200087245005600109300001400165852002300179002294612-820020606093309.7910809i19571988xx ||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6124542551 aMayer, Timothy S.10aPapers of Timothy S. Mayer,f1957-1988 (inclusive). a15 boxes.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 39902801ckcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086035001800102040002100120110002600141245004500167300003100212351004800243545067800291520018700969500014201156555008701298555010001385524013301485610002601618650002101644650003901665650004401704655003601748655003201784655002201816655002001838700005201858700004101910700004301951700005001994700004302044700003302087541016402120561005902284852002402343004598168-X20080731134222.0050317i19411948mau|||||||||||||||k|eng|d0 aocm793818250 aocm793818141 aMHAT05-F10001 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aInternational Ballet.10aScenery and costume designs,f1941-1948. a15 drawersa(4 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of ballet. aThe International Ballet was founded in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1941 by choreographer and dancer Mona Inglesby. The original company consisted of twenty-one dancers with a repertoire of seven ballets and a permanent orchestra of fifteen. One of the aims of International Ballet was to present classical ballets in the manner in which they were originally conceived. The classical ballets were reproduced by Nikolai Sergeev from the choreographic scores brought out of Russia by Sergeev. The company performed primarily in and around London, often taking ballet to towns not visited by other companies. International Ballet was disbanded in 1953 due to financial difficulties. aScenery and costume designs, primarily in pencil and watercolor for the International Ballet by William Chappell, Hein Heckroth, Prince Aleksander Schervashidze, and Doris Zinkeisen. aFinding aid describes only a portion of the collection (items 1-231); additional material (items 232-247) is described in HOLLIS records.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-139. aInternational Ballet Scenery and Costume Designs (MS Thr 388). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aInternational Ballet. 0aBalletxCostume. 0aBalletxStage-setting and scenery. 0aBalletzEnglandxHistoryy20th century. 7aCostume design drawings.2gmgpc 7aSet design drawings.2gmgpc 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aShervashidze, Aleksandr,d1867-1968,edesigner.1 aChappell, William,d1908-edesigner.1 aInglesby, Mona,d1918-echoreographer.1 aSergeev, Nikolai,d1876-1951,echoreographer.1 aHeckroth, Hein,d1901-1970,edesigner.1 aZinkeisen, Doris,edesigner. cPurchase;aMona Inglesby Derrington;bKeston Cottage, 28 Northridge St., Robertsbridge, East Sussex, England;dJune 1985;e2003MT-139;hno fund mentioned.5the aPurchased from Mona Inglesby Derrington, 1985.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 38805562cpcaa2200697 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002000122245003900142300004500181351039000226545083400616510010501450520102501555524011302580530006202693555008702755555009702842500024302939546001603182600002003198610003803218610003803256650003903294650001603333650002803349650004303377650001403420650003203434651003003466651005503496651006803551651003903619651005803658655002403716655001603740655001803756655001903774655002403793655003903817655001603856655001703872655002103889655001803910656002103928700003103949700003803980700003804018700004004056700003404096740002804130541012204158561005104280561004504331506004204376852004704418845039904465000602538-220130422075334.0860226i17131915mau eng d0 aocn6123768241 aMAHV86A95 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aPalfrey family.10aPalfrey family papers,f1713-1915. a150 boxes and 9 volumesa(60 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1704-1704.8: Correspondence of the Palfrey Family; II. bMS Am 1704.11-1704.17: John Gorham Palfrey Papers; III. bMS Am 1704.18: Miscellaneous MSS. from the Papers of William Palfrey; IV. bMS Am 1704.19: MS Books not in boxes; V. bMS Am 1704.20: Miscellaneous Sets of Proof Sheets; and VI. bMS Am 1704.21: Additional Palfrey family papers. aThe central figure in this collection, John Gorham Palfrey (1796-1881), was a Unitarian minister, professor at Harvard Divinity School, editor of the North American Review, congressman from Massachusetts (1847-1849), postmaster of Boston (1861-1867), and historian, best known for his multi-volume History of New England. His grandfather William Palfrey (1741-1780) was a business partner of John Hancock and Pay Master General of the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. His father John Palfrey (1768-1843) was a merchant in Boston and later owned a plantation in Attakapas, La. John Gorham Palfrey's son, John Carver Palfrey (1833-1906) was a military engineer during the Civil War and was later an officer in the textile manufacturing business. His daughter Sarah Hammond Palfrey (1823-1914) was a novelist and poet.4 aCollection described in Rodney G. Dennis, "The Palfrey Papers," Manuscripts 17 (Winter 1965), 34-36. aThe Palfrey family papers document the varied activities of four generations of a New England family over the course of 150 years. The bulk of the collection consists of the papers of John Gorham Palfrey, including correspondence, diaries, manuscripts and page proofs of his History of New England as well as manuscripts of shorter writings, sermons, lectures, account books, school books, and legal and financial papers. The papers of William Palfrey include detailed records of shipping transactions in England, Virginia, and Boston, and a large number of invoices showing the distribution of government funds to the army during the Revolution. John Palfrey's papers include correspondence and a journal, 1807-1814, detailing work done on his Louisiana plantation. Papers of John Carver Palfrey and Sarah Hammond Palfrey include correspondence, articles, poems, and other writings. Throughout the collection there are long runs of family letters, particularly between John Gorham Palfrey, his wife, and their children. aPalfrey Family Papers, 1713-1915 (MS Am 1704-1704.9, 1704.11-1704.21). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003878 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. aA collection of manuscripts of articles published in the North American Review during John Gorham Palfrey's editorship is described in a separate record: North American Review Papers from the Papers of the Palfrey Family (bMS Am 1704.10). aIn English.30aPalfrey family.20aHarvard Divinity SchoolxFaculty.10aUnited States.bContinental Army. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aHistorians. 0aPlantationszLouisiana. 0aPostal servicezMassachusettszBoston. 0aShipping. 0aUnitarian churchesxClergy. 0aBoston (Mass.)xCommerce. 0aMassachusettsxPolitics and governmenty1775-1865. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783xAmerican forces. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1783-1865. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aAccount books.2aat 7aDeeds.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aLogs (records)2aat 7aManuscripts (for publication)2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aProofs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aMerchants.2lcsh1 aPalfrey, John,d1768-1843.1 aPalfrey, John Carver,d1833-1906.1 aPalfrey, John Gorham,d1796-1881.1 aPalfrey, Sarah Hammond,d1823-1914.1 aPalfrey, William,d1741-1780.0 aHistory of New England.0 cGift;aDr. and Mrs. James B. Ayer; 1941; Mrs. Charles Woodrow, 1964;d1941; 1964;e63M-163 (bMS Am 1704.21 only)5hou1 aGift of Dr. and Mrs. James B. Ayer, 1941.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Charles Woodrow, 1964.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1704-1704.9, 1704.11-1704.21 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01029ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245007000141300003700211500005400248500002500302520007900327524005700406581010900463655005300572541009900625561004700724852002800771009564622-120050314095745.0050303s1922 ||||||| |||| ||||f eng d0 aocn612857389 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aEllis, Havelock,d1859-1939.10aKanga Creek :ban Australian idyll :kmanuscript,f[before 1922]. a150 leaves ;c26 cm. or smaller. aAutograph manuscript with some signs of revision. aIn a slipcase 29 cm. aIncludes Ellis' obituary from the Times literary supplement, 15 July 1939. aMS Eng 1073.2. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aEllis, Havelock, Kanga Creek: an Australian idyll (Waltham Saint Lawrence: Golden Cockerel Press, 1922). 7aManuscripts for publication.y20th century.2aat cGift;aBayard L. Kilgour, Jr.;b225 E 4th Street, Cincinnati, OH;d18 Dec. 1957;e57M-82.5hou aGift of Bayard L. Kilgour, Jr., 1957.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1073.208293cpcaa2200997 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087035001500104040002100119100005500140245004700195300004600242500004400288545008200332520045200414520025500866524008601121555008301207555024601290530022701536600005501763600002201818600001901840650005201859650004601911650005201957650001702009650002602026650005102052650001602103650004802119650005602167655001902223655002002242700004502262700005502307700006002362700005502422700005802477700005002535700005302585700005002638700003802688007001402726541008302740561030502823506004203128852006703170007001503237007001503252506007403267538020703341583005803548843017803606845011303784852001303897856017903910856013104089856012504220856012604345856014904471856011504620856011004735856013004845856012404975856012405099856016105223856012105384856011105505856011105616856011205727856015905839856010805998856011406106856011406220856011406334856011506448856011406563856011406677856011406791856010706905856014907012856013407161000602456-420130702090804.0860926i17871951mau eng d0 aocn7863946680 aocn6123753721 aMAHV86A595 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeirce, Charles S.q(Charles Sanders),d1839-1914.10aCharles Sanders Peirce papers,f1787-1951. a151 boxes, 1 v., 1 bundle (74 linear ft.) aCollection needs additional processing. aPeirce was a philosopher, logician, scientist, and the founder of pragmatism. aIncludes notebooks, lectures, and other compositions on mathematics, pragmatism, metaphysics, logic, linguistics, and the history of science. Also includes correspondence which ranges over much of Peirce's private and professional life as well as separate files of Peirce family correspondence; and his translations and reviews; and biographical material. Some manuscripts are annotated by early editors, and some have been used as printer's copy.8 aPeirce's correspondents include: Paul Carus, James McKeen Cattell, Wendell Phillips Garrison, William Fearing Gill, George Shattuck Morison, Benjamin Peirce, James Mills Peirce, Albert Stickney and others. Also with correspondence of Juliette Peirce. aCharles Sanders Peirce Papers (MS Am 1632). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://www.iupui.edu/~peirce/robin/robin.htm8 aRichard S. Robin, Annotated Catalogue of the Papers of Charles S. Peirce. [Amherst]: University of Massachusetts Press, 1967, and "The Peirce Papers: A Supplementary Catalogue," Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society, 7 (1977), 37-57. aThe bulk of the collection is included in: Microfilm Edition of the Charles S. Peirce Papers in the Houghton Library of Harvard University (Cambridge: Widener Photographic Services, 1964; supplement 1971) 38 reels (35 mm).10aPeirce, Charles S.q(Charles Sanders),d1839-1914.10aPeirce, Juliette.30aPeirce family. 0aLinguisticsxStudy and teachingzUnited States. 0aLogicxStudy and teachingzUnited States. 0aMathematicsxStudy and teachingzUnited States. 0aMetaphysics. 0aPhilosophy, American. 0aPhilosophyxStudy and teachingzUnited States. 0aPragmatism. 0aSciencexStudy and teachingzUnited States. 0aSciencexHistoryxStudy and teacingzUnited States. 7aLectures.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat1 aCarus, Paul,d1852-1919,ecorrespondent.1 aCattell, James McKeen,d1860-1944,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aGill, William Fearing,d1844-1917,ecorrespondent.1 aMorison, George Shattuck,d1842-1903,ecorrespondent.1 aPeirce, Benjamin,d1809-1880,ecorrespondent.1 aPeirce, James Mills,d1834-1906,ecorrespondent.1 aStickney, Albert,d1839-1908,ecorrespondent.1 aPeirce, Juliette,ecorrespondent.hd|afu baca0 cDeposit; Transfer.aPhilosophy Dept.; Harvard University Archives;d1960.5hou1 aMost material received from Juliette Peirce, (the widow of C. S. Peirce), to the Harvard University Philosophy Department in the winter of 1914-1915. Deposited by the Harvard University Philosophy Department with the Harvard University Archives; later transferred from the HUA to Houghton, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1632zShelved in Pusey aisle 53, marked "MS CSP"cr|cn |||||a|pcr|cn |||||a|a0 aNo restrictions on access copy.fUnrestricted online access2star5MH aDigital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.uhttp://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro02121 aHarvard University Librarylcommitted to preserve5MH aElectronic reproduction.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Digital Imaging Group,d2010, 2013.nCopy digitized: Houghton Library: MS Am 16327m2010,2013 maun s aPermission to publish or reproduce should be obtained from the appropriate curator in Houghton Library.5hou bNETcRDM403Finding aiduhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:10947571zElectronic version of the Richard Robin Catalogue, with annotations/corrections by Christian Kloesel, available403CSP (163) Studies, real curvesuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110308zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (339) Logic Notebookuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:3686182zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (725) f.22uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:10482807?buttons=yzColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (921) [Diagram of IT] 1859 June 1uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:11213591?buttons=yzColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (923-923S)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110309zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (936)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110310zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (820) [Fermatian Inference] p.1uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8345969?buttons=yzColor digital image available403CSP (1276) Lecture III, p.119uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8345965?buttons=yzColor digital image available403CSP (1279) Lecture VIII, p.29uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8345966?buttons=yzColor digital image available403CSP (1287) August 1 notebook, Table of constellations (f.30v-31r).uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8345967?buttons=yzColor digital image available403CSP (1537) Labyrinthuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110311zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (1538)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110306zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (1539)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5110307zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (1570)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:10236042zColor digital images available of entire work403CSP (1582) Printed announcement of three lectures, with ms. noteuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8345968?buttons=yzColor digital image available403(L 337)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4927598zColor digital images available of entire work403(L485 - L516)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890711zColor digital images available of entire work403(L517 - L528)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890712zColor digital images available of entire work403(L529 - L531)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890713zColor digital images available of entire work403(L532 - L535a)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890714zColor digital images available of entire work403(L536 - L554)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890715zColor digital images available of entire work403(L555 - L563)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890716zColor digital images available of entire work403(L564 - L578)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4890717zColor digital images available of entire work403(L645)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:5129451zColor digital images available of entire work403(L1574 - "Charts and Graphs")uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:11013873zColor digital images available of selected topological drawings403Charles Sanders Peirce carte de visiteuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4879452?buttons=yzClick for color digital image.01551ctm a2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029035001700069040002100086100002000107245007100127300009200198500031000290520004300600500007500643500002600718500001900744524005400763546001600817600002000833600004400853655004000897541018600937506002801123561008501151852002501236013611407-520130612142932.0130208s1971 nyu|||||||||||||||||engd0 aocn852259225 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHeller, Joseph.10aCatch-22 :ba dramatization by Joseph Heller :ktypescript,f1971. a151 leaves, variously numbereda(.15 linear ft.) :c28 cm +eprinted copy of the script aMimeograph title and stage set pages, title initialed by heller; and carbon typescript of play with manuscript revisions in at least two hands and occasional marginalia, one signed with the initials, "MHW." Leaves of Act 1 are numbered 1-68; leaves of Act II are numbered 1-80, with one leaf numbered 63a. aFirst draft of Heller's dramatization. aAlso contains the 1971 Samuel French publication of the dramatization. aIn a protective case. aAccompanied by aMS Am 2909. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHeller, Joseph.10aHeller, Joseph.tCatch-22vAdaptations. 7aPlayszUnited Statesy20th century.0 cPurchase;aHoward S. Mott, Inc.;d2013 January 31;e2012M-126;h$25000.00 (Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund).5houbP.O. Box 309, 170 South Main St., Sheffield, MA 01257-0309;0 aOpen for research.5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Harmand Teplow Class of 1920 Book Fund, 2013.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 290901107nbc a2200289z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101110002100126245003300147300001800180520015200198524008000350555005000430561002000480610002100500650003900521650002600560650005000586655002100636650003700657541006100694583003800755852002400793000603197-820020606090541.3860930i19101910mau fre d0 aocn6123795971 aMHAT86A40 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm2 aOpéra de Paris.00aPlans de scènes,fca. 1910. a152 drawings. aContains ink drawings on tracing paper which are the ground-plans of set locations for 29 ballets and operas at the Théâtre National de l'Opéra. aThéâtre National de l'Opéra, Paris Drawings. Harvard Theatre Collection.0 aManuscript catalogue available in repository. aPurchase, 1961.20aOpéra de Paris. 0aBalletxStage-setting and scenery. 0aOperazFrancezParis. 0aBalletzFrancezParisxHistoryy20th century. 7aDrawings.2ftamc 0aOperaxProduction and direction. e61M-2413DrawingsaFletcher, Ifan Kyrle, 1961.cPurchase 3DrawingsaSurvey/eec03/08/85kft8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 6104551ntcaa2200697 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029006001900048008004100067035001700108040002300125041002300148100001800171245006700189300003100256351023600287545128300523520055801806555008702364524010302451546004702554600002402601600001802625600003602643600003402679600002502713610004002738610002702778610001802805610002802823610002002851650002002871650006602891650003702957650004202994650004103036655001603077655002003093655002403113655001903137655002803156655002203184655002003206655001903226655001703245655001703262655002203279655002103301655002703322655002503349700003403374700003403408700002903442541006903471561004603540506013103586852002403717561004603741506004303787852002303830011988685-520120927112746.0i|||||||||||||||||j|||||||||||||||||090601i19102001mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn793949933 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengageranorafre1 aZorina, Vera.00aVera Zorina papers,f1910-2001 (inclusive),g1933-2001 (bulk). a153 boxesa(73 linear ft.) aOrganized into nine series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; III. Compositions by others; IV. Production records; V. Audiovisual material; VI. Music scores; VII. Programs; VIII. Financial records; and IX. Biographical material. aVera Zorina (1917-2003) was a ballet dancer, a movie and musical theater actress, a choreographer, and an opera director. She was born Eva Brigitta Hartwig in Berlin on January 2, 1917. She was married to George Balanchine from 1938 to 1946. After divorcing him she married composer and CBS artistic director Goddard Lieberson (1911-1977) with whom she had two sons, composer Peter Lieberson (1946-2011) and philosopher, writer and journalist Jonathan Lieberson (1949-1989). Her third marriage was to harpsichordist Paul Wolfe. Upon her second marriage she left the stage, but returned in the 1950s as a performer and opera narrator. In the 1960s Zorina directed opera productions at Santa Fe and the New York City Opera, as well as in Oslo, Norway. In the 1970s, she served as director with the Norwegian National Opera and Ballet in Oslo. In 1976 she was elected Director General of the Norwegian television but she resigned in 1977 upon the death of her second husband. In her later years, she produced recording albums of Igor Stravinsky and Richard Rodgers recoded legacy and other albums, served on the board of directors at CBS and Santa Fe Opera, gave lectures and classes, published an autobiography, wrote poetry, short stories and essays on dance and musical theater. aIncludes personal and business papers of Vera Zorina: correspondence of Vera Zorina and her family; drafts and galley proofs of her autobioraphy and other writings; screenplays and movies scripts; programs of ballets, musicals, operas and other theatricals projects; production records of recording sound albums, of operas, and TV productions directed by Zorina; scores of musicals and operas and narration scripts of roles performed by Zorina; audiovisual material; legal and financial papers; biographical material; scrapbooks, memorabilia and realia.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02312 aVera Zorina Papers (MS Thr 632). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, German, Norwegian, and French.10aBalanchine, George.10aZorina, Vera.10aLieberson, Goddard,d1911-1977.10aLieberson, Peter,d1946-2011.10aLieberson, Jonathan.20aBallets russes du Col. W. de Basil.20aColumbia Records, Inc.20aNorske opera.20aNorsk rikskringkasting.20aSanta Fe Opera. 0aBallet dancers. 0aMotion picture actors and actressesy20th centuryvBiography. 0aOperaxProduction and direction. 0aTelevisionxProduction and direction. 0aWomen opera producers and directors. 7aAudiotapes. 7aContracts.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aFan mail.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aMemorabilia.2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aRealia.2aat 7aScores.2aat 7aScreenplays.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aSound recordings.2aat 7aVideocassettes.2aat1 aRodgers, Richard,d1902-1979.1 aStravinsky, Igor,d1882-1971.1 aZorina, Vera,enarrator.0 cBequest;aEstate of Vera Zorina;d2009 June 1;e2008MT-103.5the1 aBequest of Vera Zorina Estate, 2009.5the1 aMuch of this collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 6321 aBequest of Vera Zorina Estate, 2009.5the0 aCollection is open for researach.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 63200991ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245005200151300005400203500013400257500002600391581002000417524005600437655006700493655005300560541008100613561004000694852002700734010110369-720060920161811.0060920s1931 xxu|||| |||| ||||1 eng d0 aocn612857613 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.10aMatthias at the door :ktypescript,f[ca. 1931] a154 leaves ;c61 cm. folded to 24 cm.; and 28 cm. aTypescript, unsigned, with autograph manuscript revisions; printer's copy; and galley proofs with autograph manuscript revisions. aIn a slipcase, 30 cm. aNew York, 1931. aMS Am 1337.6. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aGalley proofszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aLouis V. Ledoux;b155 Sixth Ave., N.Y.;d24 Mar. 1944;e43M-602.5hou1 aGift of Louis V. Ledoux, 1944.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1337.603339ctcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004800121245006200169246002500231300003100256351021600287545003600503510014500539510020700684520071600891524010801607555008701715555009701802546001601899600003101915650003901946650003601985655002702021655002902048655001702077655002302094655002602117655003802143655001602181655002002197655001702217655001602234655001602250700003402266700002302300700005502323700003102378541004202409561010602451506011002557852003002667506011202697008895058-120100512075658.0020424i19091959mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm802844981 aMAHV02A21 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWisdom, William B.,d1900-1977,ecollector.10aWilliam B. Wisdom collection of Thomas Wolfe,f1909-1959.13aThomas Wolfe papers. a156 boxesa(78 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1883: Compositions by Thomas Wolfe; II. bMS Am 1883.1: Letters to Thomas Wolfe; III. bMS Am 1883.2: Letters from Thomas Wolfe; and IV. bMS Am 1883.3: Other letters. aWolfe was an American novelist.4 aCollection described in part in: T. Little, "The Thomas Wolfe Collection of William B. Wisdom", Harvard Library Bulletin, 1 (1947), 280-287.4 aCollection described in part in: R. G. Dennis, "The William B. Wisdom Collection of Thomas Wolfe", in Thomas Wolfe: A Harvard Perspective, ed.R. S. Kennedy (Athens, Ohio: Crossant and Co., 1982), 73-80. aThe Wisdom collection consists of manuscripts, letters, and other papers of Thomas Wolfe purchased by William B. Wisdom from the Wolfe estate. The collection includes manuscripts, drafts, and notes for Wolfe's novels, as well as his plays, poems, and other writings; correspondence, chiefly from the 1930s, including long runs of letters to and from Aline Bernstein, Elizabeth Nowell, Maxwell E. Perkins, and family members; pocket notebooks; academic notebooks, exercises, essays, and examinations; legal and business papers, including royalty reports; and manuscripts and correspondence concerning Wolfe. Proofs of Thomas Wolfe's books have been catalogued and shelved with the books in the Wisdom collection. aWilliam B. Wisdom Collection of Thomas Wolfe (MS Am 1883-1883.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004358 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. aIn English.10aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican fictiony20th century. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aDrafts (documents)2aat. 7aEssays.2aat 7aExaminations.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aNovels.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aBernstein, Aline,d1881-1955.1 aNowell, Elizabeth.1 aPerkins, Maxwell E.q(Maxwell Evarts),d1884-1947.1 aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938.0 cGift;aWilliam B. Wisdom;d1947.5hou1 aChiefly gift of William B. Wisdom, 1947, with gifts and purchases from other sources, 1938-1972.5hou1 aThese manuscripts may not be consulted without the written permission of the Estate of Thomas Wolfe.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883-1883.30 aManuscript drafts of Of time and the river, bMS Am 1883 (346-367), available as photocopies (MS Am 1883.5).05409ctcaa2200781 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005000123245005000173300003100223351049500254545010900749520098900858530006201847520017901909555008702088555011002175524010802285600005002393600006102443600003302504650003902537650003502576650005702611655001602668655001902684655002702703655001902730655002002749655001802769655002402787655002202811655002602833655002002859655002202879655002902901655002202930655001602952655002102968655002202989655005003011656001703061700005503078700006203133700006103195700003603256700004903292700005003341700003203391700004803423700005003471700004803521700003903569700003503608700004703643700004503690700004503735700005503780710002103835541013303856561008903989506007704078852008604155845038604241009259000-420121210185415.0031112i18701969mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127965791 aMAHV03A372 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings additional papers,f1870-1969. a156 boxesa(78 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1892: Letters to E. E. Cummings; II. MS Am 1892.1: Letters from E. E. Cummings; III. MS Am 1892.2: Letters to Marion Morehouse; IV. MS Am 1892.3: Letters from Marion Morehouse; V. MS Am 1892.4: Other letters; VI. bMS Am 1892.5: Poems; VII. MS Am 1892.6: Prose; VIII. MS Am 1892.7: Notes; IX. MS Am 1892.8: Drawings; XIV. MS Am 1892.9: Galley proofs and page proofs; IX. MS Am 1892.10: Compositions by others; and X. MS Am 1892.11: Other papers. aCummings was an American poet. Moorehouse was his third wife and was a model, actress, and photographer. aIncludes correspondence, manuscripts and working drafts of poems and other writings, notes, diaries, sketchbooks, travel notebooks, galley and page proofs, business papers, drawings, photographs, scrapbooks, clippings, memorabilia, phonograph records, audio tapes, and one film. Cummings' correspondence includes long runs of family letters, letters from literary friends and publishers and from his agents Brandt & Brandt. Correspondents include: Kevin Andrews, Nancy (Thayer) Roosevelt Andrews, Alfred Jules Ayer, Edward Cummings, Jane Cummings, Rebecca Haswell Cummings, David Leo Diamond, John Dos Passos, Peter Monro Jack, Sheri Martinelli, Paul Nordoff, Ezra Pound, Elizabeth (Cummings) Qualey, Scofield Thayer, and Hildegard Lasell Watson, among others. Cummings' art work is represented by numerous drawings, portraits, and self-portraits as well as catalogues and clippings concerning his art. Also includes papers of his wife Marion Morehouse and some manuscripts by others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.8 aIncludes drawings such as: Cummings' pencil drawing for Paul Rosenfeld (1945); and 8 watercolor and crayon drawings by Cummings on miscellaneous subjects (between 1890-1891).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-150a. aE. E. Cummings Additional Papers, 1870-1969 (MS Am 1892-1892.11). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962vPortraits.10aRosenfeld, Paul,d1890-1946. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited Statesy20th century. 0aAudiotapes. 7aFamily papers. 7aBusiness records.2aat 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aMemorabilia.2aat 7aMotion pictures.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aPhonograph records.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aSketchbooks.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aQualey, Elizabeth Cummings,d1901-ecorrespondent.1 aCummings, Rebecca Haswell Clarke,d1859--ecorrespondent.1 aAyer, A. J.q(Alfred Jules),d1910-1989,ecorrespondent.1 aAndrews, Kevin,ecorrespondent.1 aAndrews, Nancy Thayer Roosevelt,erecipient.1 aCummings, Edward,d1861-1926,ecorrespondent.1 aCummings, Jane,erecipient.1 aDiamond, David,d1915-2005,ecorrespondent.1 aDos Passos, John,d1896-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aJack, Peter Monroe,d-1944,ecorrespondent.1 aMartinelle, Sheri,ecorrespondent.1 aMorehouse, Marion,d1906-1969.1 aNordoff, Paul,d1909-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aThayer, Scofield,d1889-ecorrespondent.1 aWatson, Hildegarde Lasell,d-1976,ecorrespondent.2 aBrandt & Brandt.0 cPurchase;aMrs. Edward Estlin Cummings;b4 Patchin Place, New York, NY 10011;d1966-1971;e67M-150a;h$60,000, Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from Mrs. Edward Estlin Cummings, 1966-1971.5hou0 aMS Am 1892.7: Section E. was restricted until 1991. It is now open.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892-1892.11zSome items shelved as PF; see finding aid for details aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01527ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110100001800123245004500141300003000186351001700216545012600233520014200359500004300501555009600544524012300640546002700763600001800790650002000808650004100828655002200869541006900891561004600960506012301006506004801129852002401177013183520-320120515145828.0020710i19202000mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn793951383 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengager1 aZorina, Vera.10aVera Zorina photographs,fca. 1920-2000. a16 boxesa(16 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aVera Zorina (1917-2003) was a ballet dancer, a movie and musical theater actress, a choreographer, and an opera director. aIncludes photographs, slides and negatives documenting Vera Zorina's career and personal life, and photographs of her family and friends. aAccess requires permission of curator.0 aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02313 aVera Zorina Photographs, ca. 1920-2000 (MS Thr 850). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German.10aZorina, Vera. 0aBallet dancers. 0aMotion picture actors and actresses. 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cBequest;aEstate of Vera Zorina;d2009 June 1;e2008MT-103.5the1 aBequest of Vera Zorina Estate, 2009.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the1 aAccess requires permission of curator.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 85002566npcaa22003855u 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087100001900104245002400123300003000147351029100177545006600468520059500534555008701129555009401216524010401310600001901414610004501433610002301478650003701501650003601538650003401574651004901608655002801657655003801685655001601723655002501739710004501764740004901809541014801858561015102006852002302157008412476-820060607135008.0000711i19661999mau||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612241529 aMHAT05B100101 aSoyinka, Wole.00kPapers,f1966-1996. a16 boxesa(24 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions, II. Correspondence, III. Union of Writers of African Peoples (UWAP) records, IV. University of Ife records, V. Production files, VI. Financial records, VII. Subject files, VIII. Biographical materials, and IX. Audio-visual material. aWole Soyinka (b. 1934) is a Nigerian author and humanitarian. aCollection includes manuscripts and typescripts of a limited number of Soyinka's works, including five published volumes known as the "Prison Diary;" correspondence (many are requests for speaking engagements or contributions to literary works); congratulatory letters for Soyinka's 1986 Nobel Prize in Literature; records of the Union of Writers of the African Peoples (UWAP); teaching and administrative records from the University of Ife; correspondence and other materials relating to productions of Soyinka's plays; financial records; biographical material; and audio visual materials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017668 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aWole Soyinka Papers (MS Thr 427). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSoyinka, Wole.20aUnion of Writers of the African Peoples.20aUniversity of Ife. 0aAuthors, Nigeriany20th century. 0aPolitical persecutionzNigeria. 0aPolitical prisonerszNigeria. 0aNigeriaxPolitics and governmenty1960-1975. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 0aCompact discs.2lcsh2 aUnion of Writers of the African Peoples.42aThe man died : prison notes of Wole Soyinka. cPurchase;aWole Soyinka;h$350,000, A. Lowell fd, HTC funds, Du Bois Institute, President's Office; from Wole Soyinka;d1995;e2004MT-114.5the aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, Theatre Collection funds, and funding from the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute and the President's Office, 1995.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 42703018cpcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122100003900135245007500174300003200249351023800281545024000519520047400759524008401233555009501317555016201412600003901574600002101613610003001634610003901664650004601703650002801749650001401777655002001791655002201811655002201833656002001855700007001875700007501945700004002020700004702060700007102107541017202178561014502350506004202495852002302537000602527-720110105082407.0860224i17731932mau eng d0 aocn1225058711 aMAHV86A85 aMH-HcMH-Heappm10aMS82-6271 aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1823-1895.10aHenry Oscar Houghton papers,f1773-1932 (inclusive)g1833-1895 (bulk). a16 boxesa(5.3 linear ft.). aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from H. O. Houghton to various members of his family; II. Letters from H. O. Hougton to other persons; III. Letters from various persons; IV. Manuscripts; and V. Miscellaneous material. aHoughton was an American printer and publisher, proprietor of the Riverside Press in Cambridge, Mass. and partner, successively, in the publishing firms of Hurd and Houghton; Houghton, Osgood & Company; and Houghton, Mifflin & Company. aChiefly letters to Henry Oscar Houghton, together with a few letters by him and letters to other family members. Also includes genealogical notes on the Houghton family; correspondence and photographs relating to the celebration in 1876 of Houghton's 40th anniversary in the printing business; clippings and other ephemera. Correspondents include family members, friends, authors published by Houghton, Mifflin, and others connected with Houghton's publishing business. aHenry Oscar Houghton Papers (MS Am 1648). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid available (170KB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-22.10aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1823-1895.30aHoughton family.20aHoughton Mifflin Company.20aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPrinting. 7aClippings.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPrinters.2lcsh1 aAllibone, S. Austinq(Samuel Austin),d1816-1889,ecorrespondent.1 aGilder, Jeannette L.q(Jeannette Leonard),d1849-1916,ecorrespondent.1 aMifflin, George H.,ecorrespondent.1 aSanborn, Kate,d1839-1917,ecorrespondent.1 aTuckerman, Henry T.q(Henry Theodore),d1813-1871,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit, then gift;aAlexander H. Dole; Deposited originally by Virginia H. Dole, Henry Oscar Houghton, Rosamond Houghton Whitney;d1961; 1976;e60M-221.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Alexander H. Dole, 1976. Originally deposited in 1961 by Virginia H. Dole, Henry Oscar Houghton, and Rosamond Houghton Whitney.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 164802235ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100004200121245005200163300003100215351008200246545042200328520019600750555008700946555010901033524010201142546001601244600004201260610003801302610002601340610004101366650005101407650005401458655002001512655002001532656002301552710003801575541006701613561005101680506009501731852002301826008925323-X20130204134101.0040428i19001950mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm841318451 aMAHV04A29 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aGardiner, William Howard,d1875-1952.10aWilliam Howard Gardiner papers,fca. 1900-1950. a16 boxesa(5.5 linear ft.) aThe bulk of these papers are unsorted and grouped only into broad categories. aGardiner was a consultant on world politics and naval affairs. He was active in the Navy League of the United States and served for a time as vice-president and president and as an unofficial consultant to both the U.S. Navy and State Departments. The Navy League was founded in 1902 as a civilian organization dedicated to the education of citizens and to the support of those in the sea-services and their families. aThese papers reflect Gardiner's work and interest in the fields of naval affairs and foreign policy. Includes correspondence, compositions, notes, notebooks, clippings, and printed pamphlets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-295. aWilliam Howard Gardiner Papers, ca. 1900-1950 (MS Am 2199). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGardiner, William Howard,d1875-1952.20aNavy League of the United States.20aUnited States.bNavy.20aUnited States.bDepartment of State. 0aFamilies of military personnelzUnited States. 0aMilitary dependentsxServices forzUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aConsultants.2lcsh2 aNavy League of the United States.0 cBequest;aWilliam Howard Gardiner;d1953 April;e52M-295.5hou1 aBequest of William Howard Gardiner, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use. Formerly restricted; restriction lifted in 1970.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 219903374nrcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029006001900048008004100067040002300108041003300131100004700164245007000211300002900281351020500310545057300515520082601088555008701914524014802001546006002149600003502209650001302244650001802257655003802275655002702313655002402340655001702364655001802381655002302399655002302422700005402445700003302499700006402532541012502596561004902721506004202770852010302812852002502915013659337-220130718095842.0t|||||||||||||||||a|||||||||||||||||020710i18231949mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aengageradanaczeafreaspa1 aEllis, E. Raymond,d1891-1946,ecollector.10aE. Raymond Ellis toy theater and puppetry collection,f1823-1949. a16 boxesa(7 linear ft.) bOrganized into the following series: I. Letters sent to E. Raymond Ellis, 1930-1946; II. Manuscripts; III. Printed materials; IV. Toy theater materials, group 1; and V. Toy theater materials, group 2. aE. Raymond Ellis (Emmons Raymond Ellis, Jr.) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1918, the son of Emmons Raymond Ellis, Sr. (1850-1918) and Jennie S. Ives Ellis. He attended Cambridge Latin School, then received an AB from Harvard College with the class of 1916. For four years he worked for his family's Boston wholesale produce business, J. R. Ellis & Sons, then in January of 1921 he became a library assistant at Harvard. He died in 1946 and left a bequest to Harvard establishing the Jenny Ives Ellis Fund for purchasing books for the Harvard College Library. aCollection includes: letters to E. Raymond Ellis from dealers, enthusiasts, and scholars of toy theater materials such as Ifan Kyrle Fletcher, Paul McPharlin, A. E. Wilson and others; autograph manuscript lists of this collection, autograph manuscript translations into English (by Ellis) of various toy theater play scripts; many printed items relating to toy theaters including pamphlets, leaflets, lists, catalogs, play scripts, picture books, price lists, journals, etc...; and toy theaters with scenes, characters, play scripts, metal slides, original boxes and wrappers, advertisements, and other items. Makers include: Alfred Jacobsen, B. Pollock, J. H. Singer (New York), Redington's Juvenile Drama, Schreibers Kinder-Theater, Webb's Juvenile Drama, and many others. Also includes a few items relating to puppets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02424 aE. Raymond Ellis Toy Theater and Puppetry Collection, 1823-1949 (MS Thr 957). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, German, Danish, Spanish, French, and Czech.10aEllis, E. Raymond,d1891-1946. 0aPuppets. 0aToy theaters. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aJuvenile drama.2local 7aPicture books.2aat 7aRealia.2aat 7aScripts.2aat 0aToy theaters.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat1 aFletcher, Ifan Kyrle,d1905-1969,ecorrespondent.1 aMcPharlin, Paul,d1903-1948.1 aWilson, A. E.q(Albert Edward),d1885-1949,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aE. Raymond Ellis;b1692 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of E. Raymond Ellis, date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 957zTemporarily shelved in Pusey stacks, at end of bMS Am, awaiting end-processing8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 95703165cpcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001400123100002900137245007100166300002900237351016500266545018700431520077800618555008701396555010901483524009601592546001601688600002901704610003301733650002501766650002001791650001301811650002001824650003701844650004001881650002301921650003601944650003101980650003202011655001902043655002002062655004702082655006702129655002502196656002802221700005802249700004702307700006402354541008102418561007102499506004202570852002302612000601856-420120425093929.0860414i18951965mau eng d0 aocn6123669071 aMAHV86A157 aMH-HedacscMH-H10aMS84-19351 aReynolds, Horace,d1896-10aHorace Reynolds papers,f1895-1965 (inclusive),g1927-1965 (bulk). a16 boxesa(8 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Horace Reynolds; III. Letters by Horace Reynolds; III. Other letters; IV. Manuscripts; and V. Other material. aReynolds, an English literature professor, specialized in Anglo-Irish literature, and also studied American spoken English and folksongs. He taught at Harvard and at Emerson College. aThe bulk of the collection is professional correspondence, mostly letters to Reynolds concerning his literary studies and book reviews. Much of the correspondence is with Irish authors, including 252 letters from Oliver St. John Gogarty, and 42 from Sean O'Casey, as well as 16 letters by William Butler Yeats to others. Other correspondence is with editors of literary review periodicals or colleagues in the college teaching of English. Manuscripts by Reynolds consist mainly of articles and notes on Gogarty and O'Casey, and a diary and notebook of his trip, 1927, to Ireland. Also contains a few manuscripts by Gogarty, O'Casey, and other authors; ballads and poems collected by Reynolds; and clippings and other printed material, mostly concerning Gogarty and O'Casey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008998 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-211. aHorace Mason Reynolds Papers, 1895-1965 (MS Am 1787). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn Englsih.10aReynolds, Horace,d1896-20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aAmerican periodicals 0aAuthors, Irish. 0aBallads. 0aBook reviewing. 0aEnglish languagezUnited States. 0aFolk songs, EnglishzUnited States. 0aFolk songs, Irish. 0aIrish literaturey20th century. 0aIrish dramay20th century. 0aIrish poetryy20th century. 7aArticles.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPoemszIreland.2aat 7aCollege teachers.2lcsh1 aGogarty, Oliver St. John,d1878-1957,ecorrespondent.1 aO'Casey, Sean,d1880-1964,ecorrespondent.1 aYeats, W. B.q(William Butler),d1865-1939,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Arthur C. Rist and John Hamilton Reynolds;d1966;e65M-211.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Arthur C. Rist and John Hamilton Reynolds, 1966.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 178701855cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122100005200135245005500187300002900242351002900271545017600300520032900476555008700805555010900892524010501001546001601106600005201122650003901174650002801213650002501241650002101266710002401287710003101311710002801342541005901370561004101429852002301470000602508-020121109185200.0860220i18921960mau eng d0 aocn1224689681 aMAHV86A68 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-5971 aMarquand, John P.q(John Phillips),d1893-1960.10aJohn Phillips Marquand correspondence,f1892-1960. a16 boxesa(8 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aMarquand was an American novelist and short story writer best known for his novels of upper class New England life and for his stories of the fictional detective Mr. Moto. aLetters (including carbon copies of Marquand's replies) consist of correspondence with literary associates, friends, and publishers. There are letters from readers of Marquand's works as well as subject files on a few of Marquand's activities, notably the Book-of-the-Month Club, United China Relief, and Writer's War Board.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-350. aJohn Phillips Marquand Correspondence, 1892-1960 (MS Am 1730). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMarquand, John P.q(John Phillips),d1893-1960. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aAuthors and readers. 0aLiterary agents.2 aWriters' War Board.2 aUnited China Relief (U.S.)2 aBook-of-the-Month Club. cGift;aJohn P. Marquand;d31 Aug. 1961;e62M-350.5hou aGift of John P. Marquand, 1961.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 173003018cpcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004200122245007300164300002900237351014500266545005700411520064400468555008701112555010801199524012301307546001601430530006201446600004301508600004201551650003901593650003901632650003501671650003501706650004301741655001901784655003801803655001601841700005601857700006001913700005601973700005802029710004702087740003602134740002102170740002502191740002502216740004202241740003102283541005802314561005102372506004202423852002302465000602523-420130124102727.0860224i18591930mau eng d0 aocn1225058651 aMAHV86A81 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.10aGeorge Edward Woodberry correspondence and compositions,f1859-1930. a16 boxesa(8 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to George Edward Woodberry; II. Letters from George Edward Woodberry; and III. Compositions. aWoodberry was an American poet, critic, and teacher. aCorrespondence of George Edward Woodberry, together with manuscripts of books, poems, lectures, addresses, and essays. There are large groups of letters from editors, notably Thomas Bailey Aldrich of The Atlantic Monthly, Wendell Phillips Garrison of The Nation, and Richard Watson Gilder of The Century. A long run of letters from E. C. Stedman is concerned chiefly with an edition of the works of Edgar Allan Poe edited by Stedman and Woodberry. Book-length manuscripts include The Appreciation of Literature, Edgar Allan Poe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nathaniel Hawthorne: How to Know Him, and The Inspiration of Poetry.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-93. aGeorge Edward Woodberry Correspondence and Compositions, 1859-1930 (MS Am 1587). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aPoe, Edgar Allan,d1809-1849xEditors.10aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited States. 7aLectures.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrison, Wendell Phillips,d1840-1907,ecorrespondent.1 aGilder, Richard Watson,d1844-1909,ecorrespondent.1 aStedman, Edmund Clarence,d1833-1908,ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,erecipient.4 aThe appreciation of literature.0 aEdgar Allan Poe.0 aRalph Waldo Emerson.0 aNathaniel Hawthorne.0 aNathanial Hawthorne: how to know him.4 aThe inspiration of poetry.0 cDeposit;aWoodberry Poetry Room;d1959;e59M-93.5hou1 aDeposited by Woodberry Poetry Room, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 158701653ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003400122245005400156300002900210351009800239545013200337520008400469555008700553555010900640524011200749546001600861600003400877610003500911650003700946650003000983655001901013655001801032656001901050541010501069561005601174506004201230852003101272009206469-820130117083243.0030918i18581891mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810694741 aMAHV03A295 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.10aPhillips Brooks sermons and lectures,f1858-1891. a16 boxesa(8 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1594: Sermons; and II. MS Am 1594.01: Lectures. aBrooks was an Episcopal clergyman. He was rector of Trinity Church, Boston (1868-1893) and bishop of Massachusetts (1891-1893). aIncludes sermons and lectures written by Brooks during his time as a clergyman.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012738 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-141. aPhillips Brooks Sermons and Lectures, 1858-1891 (MS Am 1594-1594.01). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.20aTrinity Church (Boston, Mass.) 0aEpiscopal churchzMassachusetts. 0aEpiscopal churchxClergy. 7aLectures.2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aBishops.2lcsh0 cDeposit;aEpiscopal Diocesan Library;bJoy Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1959 June;e59M-141.5hou1 aDeposited by Episcopal Diocesan Library, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1594-1594.0104243nacaa2200853 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004400110245007400154300002800228351012400256520091300380555008701293524015201380546005101532600004401583655002801627655002501655655002501680655002101705655003101726655002501757655004301782655002001825655001901845655004401864655002201908655002501930655002001955655001701975655003001992655003402022655003002056655002502086655002102111655001402132655002202146655001902168655001502187655001602202655002102218655002202239655002002261655002302281655003002304655002202334655002002356655001602376655001702392655002002409655002502429655002002454655002702474655003102501655003202532655001802564655001802582655003302600655002202633655003302655655002302688655001902711655003602730655002802766655002502794710009802819506012302917506004203040541013103082561015203213852002403365013501824-220130104190306.0020710i17022007mau|||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilson, Fredric Woodbridge,ecollector.10aFredric Woodbridge Wilson collection of printed ephemera,f1702-2007. a16 boxes (8 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by person, topic, or place.bUnless noted, original arrangement by collector has been retained. aThis collection includes ephmera and printed materials on various topics. Material types include but are not limited to admission tickets, advertisements, annual reports, bookplates, broadsides (notices), business cards, by-laws (administrative records), calendars, catalogs, clippings (information artifacts), comic books, correspondence, envelopes, essays, exhibition catalogs, fliers (printed matter), fractional currency, greeting cards, guidebooks, gum, invitations, lectures, maps, menus, obituaries, order forms, pamphlets, paper dolls, perpetual calendars, photographs, playbills, poems, poetry, portraits, postage stamps, postcards, programs (documents), promotional materials, recipes, rosters, schedules (time plans), sheet music, songs (document genre), stereographs, stickers, trade cards (advertising), travel guidebooks, and zodiac symbols. Manuscript materials, when present, have been noted.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02370 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Printed Ephemera, 1702-2007 (MS Thr 925). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are primarily in English.10aWilson, Fredric Woodbridge,ecollector. 7aAdmission tickets.2aat 7aAdvertisements.2aat 7aAnnual reports.2aat 7aBookplates.2aat 7aBroadsides (notices).2aat 7aBusiness cards.2aat 7aBy-laws (administrative records).2aat 7aCalendars.2aat 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aClippings (information artifacts).2aat 7aComic books.2aat 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aEnvelopes.2aat 7aEssays.2aat 7aExhibition catalogs.2aat 7aFliers (printed matter).2aat 7aFractional currency.2aat 7aGreeting cards.2aat 7aGuidebooks.2aat 7aGum.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aMenus.2aat 7aObituaries.2aat 7aOrder forms.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPaper dolls.2aat. 7aPerpetual calendars.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoetry.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPostage stamps.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aPrinted ephemera.2aat 7aPrograms (documents).2aat 7aPromotional materials.2aat 7aRecipes.2aat 7aRosters.2aat 7aSchedules (time plans).2aat 7aSheet music.2aat 7aSongs (document genre).2aat 7aStereographs.2aat 7aStickers.2aat 7aTrade cards (advertising).2aat 7aTravel guidebooks.2aat 7aZodiac symbols.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 92502466cpcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100001900093245004100112300004300153351016200196545012600358545038800484520011700872500009300989546001601082555009601098600001901194610004701213655002101260655001601281655002201297655002101319655002101340541013001361541009601491506002301587506008201610506013501692852002401827541013001851506006801981852003102049013714672-820131024140942.0130624i19382009mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aKilty, Jerome.10aJerome Kilty papers,fca. 1938-2009. a16 boxes, 1 foldera(12.5 linear feet) aArrangement is a rough box list only and materials are not fully cataloged. Readers should note that when fully processed, the order of materials may change. aJerome Timothy Kilty, born 1922 in Baltimore (Md.), died 2012 in Norwalk (Conn.), was an actor, director, and playwright. aKilty was raised on the Pala Indian Reservation in California and attended Lowell High School in San Francisco. While an undergraduate at Harvard, he co-founded the Brattle Theatre Company in Cambridge (Mass.). He married actress Cavada Humphrey (1919-2007) in 1956. Kilty was best known for his play "Dear Liar" based on the correspondence of Bernard Shaw and Mrs. Patrick Campbell. aIncludes scripts and other compositions, correspondence, photographs, clippings, scrapbooks, books, and posters. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: audiocassettes, audiotapes, videotapes, CD-R. aIn English. aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0244610aKilty, Jerome.20aBrattle Theatre Company (Cambridge, Mass.) 7aAudiotapes.2aat 7aCD-Rs.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aVideotapes.2aat0 cGift;aEstate of Jerome Kilty (Allen J. Silberman);b320 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06880;d2013 April 22;e2012MT-40.5the0 cGift;aJerome Kilty;d1964 July;e2012MT-40.34 scrapbooks recataloged from TS 999.1605the0 aOpen for research.1 aRestricted: for legal or university policy reasons (Box 15, 1 envelope).5the1 aThe bulk of this collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 9680 cGift;aEstate of Jerome Kilty (Allen J. Silberman);b320 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06880;d2013 April 22;e2012MT-40.5the1 aBox 15 restricted: for legal or university policy reasons.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 9683box 1501008ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004100108245004900149300003500198520011000233500003500343524005500378650004300433650004000476700004400516541013500560561005900695852002400754009384014-420040617124716.0040609s1817 enk|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612821763 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aDibdin, Thomas Frognall,d1776-1847.00kLetters :bto James Swann,f1817 Jan. - Nov. a16 items ;c25 cm. or smaller. aAutograph letters, signed, to Swann, a papermaker at Ensham, Oxford, England, regarding orders for paper. aIn a protective folder, 36 cm. aMS Eng 1139. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aPaper industryzEnglandy19th century. 0aPapermakerszEnglandy19th century.1 aSwann, James,dactive 1817,erecipient. cPurchase;aIfan Kyrle Fletcher;b22 Buckingham Gate, London, England SW1;dOct. 1960;e60M-64;h$126 Rosamond B. Loring fund.5hou aPurchased with the Rosamond B. Loring fund, 1960.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 113901009ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100003000107245007400137300004100211500010800252500005900360561003500419561008400454524005800538600003000596650003900626710002900665700004700694852002600741008742886-520020606104010.5011002i19131915xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm84324887 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.00kLettersbto William Roughead :kmanuscript,f1913 Aug 5-1915 Nov. 27. a16 items, bound :bin 1 v. ;c33 cm. aAutograph letters signed in the hand of Henry James, most with envelopes. Written from Rye and Chelsea. aBound by Riviere & Son, London, in full olive morocco. aBookplate of William Roughead. aGift of William Nicol Roughead in memory of his father, William Roughead, 1960. afMS Am 1237.20. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century.2 aRiviere & Son,ebinders.1 aRoughead, William,d1870-1952,erecipient.8 bHOUcFhMS Am 1237.2002110ntcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100041001300121100004500134245006900179300003200248351003500280545009700315520036100412546003700773555008700810524011400897600005601011650003801067600004501105650003801150650003401188650003401222655001701256655001601273655001901289655002301308656001801331740002701349740001601376740002501392740001201417740001601429541007801445561005701523506004201580852003001622009379068-620130102085719.0040604i18721902mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm79021222 aMAHV04A37 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aSwinburne, Algernon Charles,d1837-1909.10aAlgernon Charles Swinburne compositions,f1837-1909 and undated. a16 volumesa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged in call number order. aSwinburne (1837-1909) was an English lyric poet, dramatist, and critic of the Victorian era. aIncludes autograph manuscripts, typescript transcripts, galley proofs and page proofs, a photostat, and translations of Swinburne's poems and prose. Also includes a drama blank-verse fragment, portrait of Swinburne, a letter by him, and other materials. Titles include: Barking a year after, Duriesdyke, Sunset and moonrise, Sappho, John Jones, and others. aMaterials in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01142 aAlgernon Charles Swinburne Compositions, 1837-1909 (MS Eng 815-815.14). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSwinburne, Algernon Charles,d1837-1909vPortraits. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century.10aSwinburne, Algernon Charles,d1837-1909. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aProofs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPortaits.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aCritics.2aat02aBarking, a year after.02aDuriesdyke.02aSunset and moonrise.02aSappho.02aJohn Jones.0 cGifts;aVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aAcquired from various sources on various dates.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 815-815.1401198ntm a2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004600108245004200154300003200196500014700228520006200375500001500437524005400452546001600506600005900522655005500581655002200636700006700658700001800725710002900743730002200772541004600794852006800840012037905-820091118115457.0090717s1959 xxu|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612876593 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSmith, George O.q(George Oliver),d1911-14aThe fourth "R" :kpage proofs,f1959. a160 leavesc23 centimeters. aPage proofs from Ballantine Books, including cover, and a typescript letter from Betsy Simon to P. Schuyler Miller, signed, dated 1959 May 14. aProofs presented to P. Schuyler Miller for a book review. aIn a case. aMS Am 2663. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSmith, George O.q(George Oliver),d1911-tFourth "R". 7aScience fictionzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat1 aMiller, P. Schuylerq(Peter Schuyler),d1912-1974,erecipient.1 aSimon, Betsy.1 aBallantine Books (Firm).02aBallantine Books.0 cSource unknown.a;d;e2009M-9r.h$.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2663zShelved with bMS Am 2661-2663 and 2665-266601053ntm a2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001600108245006400124300003600188520011300224545012000337500002600457524005500483600003400538600003500572700005800607541006000665561006000725852002600785009381227-220041216132258.0040607i19191945enk|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612821252 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aWatt, A. S.00kLetters :bto Flora Virginia Milner Livingston,f1919-1945. a161 items ;c26 cm. or smaller. aTyped letters signed regarding the life and work of Rudyard Kipling and his wife Caroline Balestier Kipling. aA. S. Watt was the literary agent for Rudyard Kipling and was an associate in the firm of A. P. Watt & Son, London. aIn a slipcase, 28 cm. aMS Eng 1166. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936.10aKipling, Caroline,d1865-1939.1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-erecipient. cBequest;aFlora Virginia Milner Livingston;d1949.5hou aBequest of Flora Virginia Milner Livingston, 1949.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 116602232ntm a2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002500108245007500133300002300208545055900231500014100790520036500931524005401296600002501350650004701375650003601422650004901458651005601507655002401563700004001587700004401627541007001671561004601741506010801787852002301895009062840-320110819071821.0030319s1893 xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612754862 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHammond, Eli Shelby.10aSlave-life on a plantation before the war :kmanuscript,f1893 Apr. 4. a162 pages in 1 box aEli Shelby Hammond (1838-1904) was born in Brandon, Mississippi. His parents were plantation owners, John C.P. Hammond and Priscilla Attabee Shelby. He married Fannie Davis (born ca.1843) in 1864, who was also from Mississippi. Hammond was a private practice lawyer in Ripley, Mississippi and Memphis, Tennesee, a Captain in the Army of the Confederacy (1861-1865), and a federal Judge in the U.S. District Court, Western District of Tennessee (1878-1904). His son, Orlando Davis Hammond (1867-1925) was a Harvard College graduate, A.B. 1897, L.LB. 1899. aAutograph reminiscences and letter sent to Orlando Davis Hammond; and typescript letter from Eli Hammond to Justin Winsor, 1895 Dec. 16. aReminiscences were written by Hammond to his son, Orlando Davis Hammond, while he was a Harvard College student. The material concerns Eli Hammond's memories of his youth spent on his father's plantation prior to the American Civil War. Primarily concerns his memory of the life of the slaves. The plantation was probably in Mississippi where Hammond was born. aMS Am 2282. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHammond, Eli Shelby. 0aSlaveryzMississippixCondition of slaves. 0aAfrican AmericanszMississippi. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxPersonal narratives. 0aMississippixSocial life and customsy19th century. 7aReminiscences.2aat1 aHammond, Orlando Davis,erecipient.1 aWinsor, Justin,d1831-1897,erecipient.0 cGift;aOrlando Davis Hammond;d1895 Dec. 9.er.f. US 5279.225HOU1 aGift of Orlando Davis Hammond, 1895.5HOU1 aUse of orginals restricted due to condition of originals. Readers must use microfilm copy of item.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 228206571cpcaa2201213 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100004200136245004800178300004400226351011100270545055200381500019800933520097201131524008702103530006202190546003902252555008702291555018902378630001902567600004202586610003602628610006402664610002702728610002802755611003102783630003502814650002002849650002202869650001602891650002702907650002902934650004302963651004803006651003603054651006103090651003903151651005503190655001903245655001803264655001803282655001803300655001803318655001903336656001803355656002203373700003103395700003303426700005203459700005403511700004003565700002803605700005103633700003403684700003803718700001803756700002103774700002103795700002203816700003203838700004303870700004103913700003603954700003403990700002504024700003104049700003904080700004004119700004804159700002404207700003704231700002504268700005204293700002104345700005304366700003304419700004104452700003404493700003304527700003704560700003904597700003804636700002504674700002504699700003304724700003204757700004104789700003204830700005404862700003804916700002704954700003304981700003005014541005105044541007605095561005105171561006605222506004605288852002305334000602227-820131004185201.0860731i18561949mau eng d0 aocn6123716441 aMAHV86A419 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aengager1 aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949.10aOswald Garrison Villard papers,f1856-1949. a163 boxes,a6 volumesa(37 linear ft.). aOrganized into the following series: Letters addressed to Oswald Garrison Villard; and Uncataloged papers. aVillard, a journalist and author, was president of the New York Evening Post (1897-1918), editor and owner of The Nation (1918-1932), publisher and contributing editor of The Nation (1932-1935), a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and of Yachting Magazine, and owner of the Nautical Gazette. His father was Henry Villard, railroad promoter and financier; his mother was Fanny Garrison Villard, social reformer, suffragist, and philanthropist; and his grandfather was the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. aThis collection contains some unprocessed and uncataloged materials. See printed findng aid for more detail; electronic finding aid contains rough box list only for these uncataloged materials. aOver half the collection consists of professional correspondence concerning The Nation, The New York Evening Post, and the progressive political issues with which Villard was involved. Also contains correspondence with family members, much of it pertaining to his work or business affairs; minutes, ledgers, financial reports, and stockbooks of The Evening Post and some business records of The Nation; diaries, 1884-1941, and datebooks; 15 boxes of speeches; scrapbooks of Villard's articles; and notes and manuscripts for his various writing projects in history and biography. Includes material on various peace societies, civil liberties, blacks in Harlem, the NAACP, the blockade during the Civil War, Puerto Rico, and The New York Philharmonic. Also contains drafts and manuscripts of his father's memoirs, tributes to his mother and grandfather, family records, photographs, medals, memorabilia, clippings, and printed material. Also with uncataloged materials. aOswald Garrison Villard Papers (MS Am 1323). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aMaterial is in English and German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000828 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or consult the Houghton Accessions Record, 1952-1953 under *52M-228, and 1976-1977 under *76M-41.00aNew York post.10aVillard, Oswald Garrison,d1872-1949.20aAmerican Civil Liberties Union.20aNational Association for the Advancement of Colored People.20aNew York Philharmonic.20aPost War World Council.20aNational Peace Conference.00aNation (New York, N.Y. : 1865) 0aFamily records. 0aGerman Americans. 0aLiberalism. 0aPeacexSocieties, etc. 0aPeriodicalsxPublishing. 0aProgressivism (United States politics) 0aHarlem (New York, N.Y.)xSocial conditions. 0aPuerto RicoxSocial conditions. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xBlockades. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1901-1953. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1901-1953. 7aArticles.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLedgers.2aat 7aMemoirs.2aat 7aMinutes.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aEditors.2aat 7aJournalists.2aat1 aKerney, James,d1873-1934.1 aBorchard, Edwin,d1884-1951.1 aWilgus, William J.q(William John),d1865-1949.1 aTumulty, Joseph P.q(Joseph Patrick),d1879-1954.1 aPeabody, George Foster,d1852-1938.1 aHowe, William DeLancey.1 aHorwill, H. W.q(Herbert William),d1864-1952.1 aBillikopf, Jacob,d1883-1950.1 aBorah, William Edgar,d1865-1940.1 aClark, Roger.1 aCross, Gertrude.1 aDenny, George H.1 aDilliard, Irving.1 aGannett, Lewis,d1891-1966.1 aGarrison, Francis Jackson,d1848-1916.1 aGarrison, William Lloyd,d1805-1879.1 aGavit, John Palmer,d1868-1954.1 aGruening, Ernest,d1887-1974.1 aHale, Albert,d1860-1 aHard, William,d1878-1962.1 aHart, Albert Bushnell,d1854-1943.1 aHirst, Francis Wrigley,d1873-1953.1 aHobson, J. A.q(John Atkinson),d1858-1940.1 aHolden, W. Sprague.1 aHolmes, John Haynes,d1879-1964.1 aHoughton, Alanson B.1 aIckes, Harold L.q(Harold LeClair),d1874-1952.1 aKirchwey, Freda.1 aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948.1 aLawrence, David,d1888-1973.1 aMacDonald, James Ramsay,d1866-1937.1 aMayo, Katherine,d1868?-1940.1 aMcAneny, George,d1869-1953.1 aMilton, George Fort,d1894-1955.1 aMussey, Henry Raymond,d1875-1940.1 aOsborne, Thomas Mott,d1859-1926.1 aPattison, William J.1 aRatcliffe, Samuel K.1 aSinclair, Upton,d1878-1968.1 aThomas, Norman,d1884-1968.1 aVillard, Fanny Garrison,d1844-1928.1 aVillard, Henry,d1835-1900.1 aWheeler, Burton K.q(Burton Kendall),d1882-1975.1 aWhite, William Allen,d1868-1944.1 aWhitehouse, S. Howard.1 aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924.1 aZuehlsdorff, Volkmar von.0 aVillard, Oswald Garrison, 1949.cBequest.5hou0 cGift;3Scrapbook (box 153);aHenry S. Villard;d1976 July;e76M-415hou1 aBequest of Oswald Garrison Villard, 1949.5hou1 aScrapbook (box 153) presented by Henry S. Villard, 1976.5hou aCollection is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 132302197ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004300108245006700151300002300218545057700241500012400818520044300942524005501385600004301440610008801483610002301571651007101594655002401665700005801689561004801747541009801795852002601893009221110-020031027134041.0031022i18611866xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612788668 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aDarlington, William Henry,d1832-1903.10aCivil War letters :kmanuscript,f1861 July 23 - 1866 July 16. a164 items ina1 v. aDarlington was born in West Chester, Pennsylvannia on July 14, 1832. He was the son of Catharina Paxson Darlington (1806-1886) and William Darlington (1804-1879). His siblings were: Charles Paxson Darlington (1830-ca.1832), Stephen Paxson Darlington (b.1836), Francis James Darlington (1840-1897), Isabella Darlington, and Catherine Mary Darlington. He was married in 1859 to Hettie Strode Brinton Darlington. During the American Civil War, he was a member of a Company A, 30th Pennsylvannia Infantry Regiment of the Union Army (1st regiment of the Pennsylvania Reserves). a164 autograph letters from Darlington to his family, primarily his mother, sent during his service with the Union Army. aLetters are highly detailed accounts of his observations and experiences during the Civil War, both the human and historical angles. Details include: his opinion on generals and other leaders of the Union and Confederacy; his concern for the welfare of his family, especially his wife Hettie; information on daily routine of camp life; details on battles fought and losses sustained; and tells news of local West Chester boys in the army. aMS Am 801.3. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDarlington, William Henry,d1832-1903.10aUnited States.bArmy.bPennsylvania Infantry Regiment, 30th (1861-1864)bCompany A.10aWest Chester (Pa.) 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xPersonal narratives. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aDarlington, Catharine Paxson,d1806-1886,erecipient. aPurchased with the Sheldon Fund, 1938.5hou cPurchase;aParke-Bernet Galleries;d1938 Mar. 30, (Sale no. 19, item 39);hSheldon Fund.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 801.301040ntm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100001600108245004900124300002100173500007700194500014000271500003300411500002700444524005400471650003600525650003000561711005500591541007400646561004100720852002500761010071799-320060927164046.0060802m18791880nyu|||| |||| 000|m eng d0 aocn612841951 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aOwen, E. W.10aTreatise on chess :kmanuscript,f1879-1880. a164 p. ;c22 cm. aAutograph manuscript, unsigned, probably written at New York, 1879-1880. aIncludes tournaments played in 1879 and 1880, including the final score of the Fifth American Chess Congress, held in New York in 1880. aTitle supplied by cataloger. aIn a tray case, 23 cm. aMS Am 2484. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aChessxHandbooks, manuals, etc. 0aChessxTournaments, 1880.2 aAmerican Chess Congressn(5th :d1880 :cNew York)0 cGift;aSilas W. Howland;d1938 Nov. 8;erecat. from SG 3648.70*.5hou1 aGift of Silas W. Howland, 1938.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 248403273cpcaa2200649 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002300101100003200124245003800156300001500194351004600209520063300255524006700888544007800955545043501033600003001468600003401498600003801532600003801570600003501608600003301643600002101676600003801697600003601735600002101771600003301792600002901825600002001854600003201874600003301906600003301939600003601972600003902008600003802047600003302085600004302118600003302161600003502194600003402229650002802263650002302291650002002314650001702334600002902351655002002380655004102400655001802441656001902459656002202478656001702500541003502517561004802552852002302600000603152-820091221165345.0851125i18791956mau eng d0 aocn6123782731 aMHAT85A42 aMH-HTeappmcMH-HT1 aMacKaye, Percy,d1875-1956.00aPercy MacKaye papers,f1879-1956. a165 boxes. aPreliminary list available in repository. aThe bulk of the collection consists of material pertaining to community drama; correspondence with literary and theatrical figures including Edgar Lee Masters, Edwin Arlington Robinson, George Pierce Baker, Theodore Dreiser, Amy Lowell, Upton Sinclair, Edward Gordon Craig, Louis Untermeyer and Thornton Wilder. Also contains poems; manuscripts of plays; journals and diaries of Marion MacKaye; correspondence between Percy and Marion; Percy's business correspondence including correspondence with publishers; some papers of Steele MacKaye and other MacKayes; and biographical material pertaining in particular to Percy MacKaye. aPercy MacKaye Papers (MS Thr 412). Harvard Theatre Collection. aFor related materials see the Steele Mackaye Papers at Dartmouth College. aPercy Wallace MacKaye, author and dramatist, graduated from Harvard in 1897, wrote poetic dramas, operatic libretti, modern masques and spectacles, and was active in promoting community theatre. The collection includes his papers and those of his wife, Marion Homer Morse MacKaye, as well as material relating to the career of his father Steele MacKaye (1842-1894), an American theatrical designer, actor, dramatist, and inventor.10aAllen, Viola,d1867-1948.10aAnglin, Margaret,d1876-1958.10aBaker, George Pierce,d1866-1935.10aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966.10aDreiser, Theodore,d1871-1945.10aDuncan, Isadora,d1877-1927.10aDuncan, Raymond.10aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.10aKahn, Otto Hermann,d1867-1934.10aKoch, Frederick.10aLindsay, Vachel,d1879-1931.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.30aMacKaye family.10aMacKaye, Percy,d1875-1956.10aMacKaye, Steele,d1842-1894.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aMasters, Edgar Lee,d1868-1950.10aMoody, William Vaughn,d1869-1910.10aPhelps, William Lyon,d1865-1943.10aRackham, Arthur,d1867-1939.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.10aSinclair, Upton,d1878-1968.10aUntermeyer, Louis,d1885-1977.10aWilder, Thornton,d1897-1975. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aCommunity theater. 0aAmerican drama. 0aVerse drama.10aMacKaye, Marion,d-1939. 7aDiaries.2ftamc 7aManuscripts (for publication)2ftamc 7aPoems.2ftamc 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aDramatists.2lcsh 7aPoets.2lcsh cBequest;aMacKaye, Percy.5the aBequest of Percy MacKaye (A.B., 1897).5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 41201841npm a2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100003200127245002600159300003600185520037900221500008700600524005500687600004300742600004200785600006200827650004400889650005300933655004200986655004401028655004601072700005001118700003601168700003101204700004601235541012301281561006301404852002401467009388900-320040625111659.0k|||| ||||| |||an040615i18281863enk|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612822613 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCurzon, Robert,d1810-1873.00kDrawings,f1828-1863. a166 items ;c30 cm. or smaller. a166 pen, pencil, charcoal and watercolor drawings and original poetry by various athors including Robert Curzon, Walter Sneyd, Lady Annabella King (Anne Blunt), Viscount Eastnor (later Baron Sommers), and William Makepeace Thackeray among others. The drawings and cartoons depict book collectors Walter Sneyd and Robert Curzon, and a wide variety of other people and topics. aThe drawings are pasted onto the blank pages of an album and are loose in folders. aMS Eng 1129. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCurzon, Robert,d1810-1873vPortraits.10aSneyd, Walter,d1809-1888vPortraits.10aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863vSelf-portraits. 0aBook collectingzEnglandy19th century. 0aCaricatures and cartoonszEnglandy19th century. 7aCartoonszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc1 aSomers, John Somers Cocks,cEarl,d1760-1841.1 aBlunt, Anne,cLady,d1837-1917.1 aSneyd, Walter,d1809-1888.1 aThackeray, William Makepeace,d1811-1863. cPurchase;aPeter Murray Hill, catalog 72, no. 4;bLondon;dJuly 1960;e60M-22;h$315 Henry Saltonstall Howe fund.5hou aPurchased with the Henry Saltonstall Howe fund, 1960.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 112902295nam a2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040001900102245008600121260007300207300006200280500024900342500007400591500004000665510001700705510003000722651003000752651004900782655003800831655004600869700003500915752003900950830006200989541006601051561004201117562005701159852002601216007001501242035002301257843026901280856007201549852001501621506004801636007001401684852004001698843012301738002307635-620060726201332.0840604s1775 nyubf 00000 eng d0 aocm847434020 aocm55834977 aMWAebdrbcMWA00aGaine's universal register, or, American and British kalendar, for the year 1776.0 aNew-York: :bPrinted by H. Gaine, bookseller and stationer.,c[1775] a168 p., [1] folded leaf of plates :bmap ;c12 cm. (18mo) aThe contents of the calendar pages are selected or adapted from Hutchin's [sic] improved: being an almanack ... for 1776, by John Nathan Hutchins, also published by Gaine. A tides column is added. The eclipse predictions (p. [8]) are identical. aAdvertised in the New York gazette and weekly Mercury, Dec. 11, 1775. aSignatures: [A]⁴ B-E¹⁸ ²E⁸.4 aEvansc140574 aDrake, M. Almanacs,c5858 0aGreat BritainxRegisters. 0aGreat BritainxColonieszAmericaxRegisters. 7aManuscripts in books.2local5hou 7aAlmanacszNew York (State)y1776.2rbgenr1 aHutchins, John Nathan,d-1782. aUnited StatesbNew YorkdNew York. 0aEarly American imprints.nFirst series ;vno. 14057.5mic cGift;aThomas B. Gannett;d31 May 1848;eno acc. number.5hou aGift of Thomas B. Gannett, 1848.5hou aBound with a manuscript diary of Caleb Gannett.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 516.3cr mn mmmmabba a(Eaifs)aas03008276 aElectronic reproduction.bChester, Vt. :cReadex, a division of Newsbank, Inc.,d2002-2004.nIncludes files in TIFF, GIF and PDF formats with inclusion of keyword searchable text.f(Early American imprints. First series ; no. 14057).nAvailable via World Wide Web.41uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebookbatch.EAIFS_batch:aas03008276 bNETcEAIFS aAvailable to users with a valid Harvard ID.heuamb---baca8 bMICcGENhMicrofiche W 2571 (14057) aMicrofiche.b[New York :cReadex Microprint,d1985]e11 x 15 cm.f(Early American imprints. First series ; no. 14057).09334cpcaa2201681 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001400122110003000136245006900166300003100235351043900266545136600705520037902071520037802450524011502828530006202943555008703005555016303092610003503255610002103290610003203311610002903343610003003372610002103402610003303423610003903456610002403495610003103519610002903550630002603579630004103605650002603646650002803672650001403700650003103714655003803745655002203783655002003805655005003825700003503875700005603910700003903966700004204005700003004047700003404077700003004111700003904141700004004180700003704220700003304257700003104290700004304321700004004364700003604404700003004440700003904470700003304509700003104542700003504573700003804608700004104646700003904687700004004726700004804766700003304814700003804847700002904885700003704914700004004951700004004991700003505031700005005066700004105116700003905157700003505196700004005231700003905271700006205310700003905372700003005411700003605441700003205477700003005509700002905539700004005568700003705608700003505645700005505680700003205735700003605767700004005803700003705843700003905880700002905919700003905948700003105987700004406018700004106062700003706103700003006140700004206170700005106212700005506263700004006318700003306358700003406391700004006425700004006465700003406505700003506539700003906574700004206613700003506655700005106690700003206741700004006773700003206813700004006845700004006885700002006925700005906945700004407004700003607048700004807084710002907132710003507161710002907196710002107225710003207246710002107278710003307299710003907332710002407371710003107395541008107426561007307507506004207580852003007622000602501-320110610164420.0861104i18321944mau eng d0 aocn6123759001 aMAHV98-A0 aMH-HeappmcMH-H00aMS 82-6282 aHoughton Mifflin Company.10aHoughton Mifflin Company correspondence and records,f1832-1944. a169 boxesa(64 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: (bMS Am 1925): I.A. Letters to and from Houghton Mifflin, I.B. Letters from HM, II. Business correspondence, III. Legal and interdepartmental correspondence and documents; (bMS Am 1925.1) Letters to The Atlantic Monthly; (bMS Am 1925.2) Letters to and from Henry Oscar Houghton [personal correspondence]; (bMS Am 1925.3) Other letters; and (bMS Am 1925.4) Compositions, Photographs, and Contracts. aHoughton Mifflin Company, publishing house of Boston, Mass., traces its roots back to the firm of Ticknor and Fields, the premier "literary" publishing house in the United States during the middle years of the nineteenth century. Ticknor and Fields originated in the firm of Allen and Ticknor, established in 1832. The partners in Ticknor and Fields were William D. Ticknor (one of the partners in Allen and Ticknor) and James T. Fields, who entered the firm as a junior partner in 1843. After a series of changes, Ticknor and Fields evolved into Houghton, Mifflin and Company. The succession of corporate names was as follows: Allen and Ticknor (1832-1834); William D. Ticknor (1834-1843); William D. Ticknor and Co. (1843-1849); Ticknor, Reed and Fields (1849-1854); Ticknor and Fields (1854-1868); Fields, Osgood and Co. (1868-1871); James R. Osgood and Co. (1871-1878); Houghton, Osgood and Co. (1878-1880); Houghton, Mifflin and Co. (1880-1908); and Houghton Mifflin Co. (since 1908). Henry Oscar Houghton began as a printer in Cambridge, Mass. and established H. O. Houghton and Co. in 1852. Houghton's printing establishment on the Charles River in Cambridge was known as the Riverside Press. In 1864 he formed a publishing partnership in the firm of Hurd and Houghton. In 1878 the business merged with James R. Osgood and Co. as Houghton, Osgood and Co. aRecords of Houghton Mifflin and its predecessors, containing papers relating to both the printing and publishing branches of the business. Includes a voluminous file of incoming letters, chiefly post-1870, from authors published by the firm; some correspondence with other publishers; a few compositions; and a small file of editorial correspondence of The Atlantic Monthly. aIncludes 2 drawing illustrations by Frances Lester Warner: At home with variations; and Sunlight sonata, Family life with variations. Also 3 pen and ink drawing illustrations by Warner: Geoffrey went politely to the edge of the roof, and gazed down, from Fire in the sky; and From Diet and the Daily Dozen Exercise, said Endicott, is not at its best without a by-product... aHoughton Mifflin Company Correspondence and Records (MS Am 1925-1925.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or consult the Houghton Accessions Records, 1999-2000, under *99M-43.20aHoughton, Osgood, and Company.20aAllen & Ticknor.20aFields, Osgood and Company.20aH.O. Houghton & Company.20aHoughton Mifflin Company.20aHurd & Houghton.20aJames R. Osgood and Company.20aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.)20aTicknor and Fields.20aTicknor, Reed, and Fields.20aWilliam D. Ticknor & Co.40aThe Atlantic monthly.00aRiverside magazine for young people. 0aAmerican periodicals. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPrinting. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aContracts.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc1 aWarner, Frances Lester,d1888-1 aRittenhouse, Jessie B.q(Jessie Belle),d1869-1948.1 aProuty, Olive Higgins,d1882-1974.1 aMeans, Florence Crannell,d1891-1980.1 aWhite, Eliza Orne,d1856-1 aDos Passos, John,d1896-1970.1 aAbbe, George,d1911-1989.1 aAdams, Samuel Hopkins,d1871-1958.1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.1 aAustin, Mary Hunter,d1868-1934.1 aBabbitt, Irving,d1865-1933.1 aBarrus, Clara,d1864-1931.1 aBianchi, Martha Dickinson,d1866-1943.1 aBowers, Claude Gernade,d1879-1958.1 aBradford, Gamaliel,d1863-1932.1 aBuchan, John,d1875-1940.1 aBurnham, Clara Louise,d1854-1927.1 aBurroughs, John,d1837-1921.1 aCather, Willa,d1873-1947.1 aChandler, Raymond,d1888-1959.1 aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896.1 aComfort, Will Levington,d1878-1932.1 aCrockett, William Day,d1869-1930.1 aDaugherty, James Henry,d1889-1974.1 aDeland, Margaret Wade Campbell,d1857-1945.1 aEllis, Havelock,d1859-1939.1 aFields, James Thomas,d1817-1881.1 aFiske, John,d1842-1901.1 aFrothingham, Robert,d1865-1937.1 aGilder, Richard Watson,d1844-1909.1 aGovan, Christine Noble,d1898-1985.1 aGreenslet, Ferris,d1875-1959.1 aGrenfell, Wilfred Thomason,cSir,d1865-1940.1 aGriffis, William Elliot,d1843-1928.1 aGuiney, Louise Imogen,d1861-1920.1 aHagedorn, Hermann,d1882-1964.1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.1 aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1823-1895.1 aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.1 aJewett, Sarah Orne,d1849-1909.1 aJohnston, Mary,d1870-1936.1 aLarcom, Lucy,d1824-1893.1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.1 aLowes, John Livingston,d1867-1945.1 aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.1 aMatthews, Brander,d1852-1929.1 aMifflin, George H.q(George Harrison),d1845-1921.1 aMoore, Charles,d1855-1942.1 aMorse, John Torrey,d1840-1937.1 aMurfree, Mary Noailles,d1850-1922.1 aNicholson, Meredith,d1866-1947.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.1 aOlcott, Frances Jenkins.1 aPaine, Ralph Delahaye,d1871-1925.1 aParton, James,d1822-1891.1 aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.1 aPeattie, Donald Culross,d1898-1964.1 aPerkins, Lucy Fitch,d1865-1937.1 aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954.1 aPhelps, Elizabeth Stuart,d1844-1911.1 aPhillips, John C.q(John Charles),d1876-1938.1 aPorter, Eleanor H.q(Eleanor Hodgman),d1868-1920.1 aRaine, William MacLeod,d1871-1954.1 aRepplier, Agnes,d1855-1950.1 aSabatini, Rafael,d1875-1950.1 aSchultz, James Willard,d1859-1947.1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.1 aSedgwick, Ellery,d1872-1960.1 aSingmaster, Elsie,d1879-1958.1 aSmith, Nora Archibald,d1859-1934.1 aStedman, Edmund Clarence,d1833-1908.1 aTappan, Eva March,d1854-1930.1 aTerry, T. Philipq(Thomas Philip),d1864-1945.1 aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894.1 aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923.1 aThomas, Lowell,d1892-1981.1 aTicknor, William Davis,d1810-1864.1 aWarner, Charles Dudley,d1829-1900.1 aWhitman, Sarah.1 aWhitney, A. D. T.q(Adeline Dutton Train),d1824-1906.1 aWiggin, Kate Douglas Smith,d1856-1923.1 aWilliams, Ben Ames,d1889-1953.1 aWyeth, N. C.q(Newell Convers),d1882-1945.2 aWilliam D. Ticknor & Co.2 aHoughton, Osgood, and Company.2 aH.O. Houghton & Company.2 aAllen & Ticknor.2 aFields, Osgood and Company.2 aHurd & Houghton.2 aJames R. Osgood and Company.2 aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.)2 aTicknor and Fields.2 aTicknor, Reed and Company.0 cDeposit, then gift;aHoughton Mifflin Company;bBoston;d1943-on; 1991.5hou1 aGift of Houghton Mifflin Company, 1991; deposit 1943 and after.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1925-1925.402082ctcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002300069100003300092245004300125300003200168300003400200351001700234545016600251520018300417500005600600500007700656555009600733546001600829600003300845506002300878541045700901561021801358852002401576506006001600845008401660852003601744013700439-720130805143455.0130604i19332007mau 000|m engd aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGibson, William,d1914-2008.10aWilliam Gibson papers,fca. 1933-2007. a17 boxesa(16.5 linear ft.) a41 3.5" floppy disksa(59 MB) aUnprocessed. aWilliam Gibson was an American playwright and novelist. He was married to psychotherapist Margaret Brenman-Gibson, and the couple had two sons; she died in 2004. aCollection is chiefly manuscript and typescript compositions, with some correspondence relating to plays and publication and a small amount of personal and biographical material. aSee dealer's detailed description in internal file. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: floppy disks, 1/4" audiotape. aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02448 aIn English.10aGibson, William,d1914-2008.0 aOpen for research.0 cPurchase;aGeorge Robert Minkoff Rare Books (as agents for Tamarack Productions, Estate of William Gibson, William Gibson Revocable Trust);b26 Rowe Road, Great Barrington, MA 01230;d2013 May 10;e2012MT-46;h$135000.00 ($50000.00 - Francis W. Hatch Book Fund; $40000.00 - Billy Rose Theatre Fund; $20000.00 - Robert Gould Shaw Curatorship Fund; $15000.00 - Edward Sheldon Book Fund; $10000.00 - Russel Crouse Fund for Twentieth Century Theatre).5the1 aPurchased with funds from the Francis W. Hatch Book fund, Billy Rose Theatre fund, Robert Gould Shaw Curatorship fund, Edward Sheldon Book fund, and the Russel Crouse Fund for Twentieth Century Theatre, 2013.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 9671 aPartially restricted: closed for conservation (box 17). aSpecial equipment and surrogates required (box 1); consult Houghton staff.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 9673boxes 1, 1701818ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005400123245004200177300003100219351003900250545020900289520021800498555008700716555010900803524009700912546001601009500005001025600005401075600001901129651007301148655002401221655003801245656001801283541005601301561004601357506004201403852002301445008899750-220130212112034.0021002i17681866mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm843174071 aMAHV02-A105 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLoring, Charles G.q(Charles Greely),d1794-1867.10aCharles G. Loring papers,f1768-1866. a17 boxesa(5.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLoring (Harvard AB 1812, LL.D. 1850) married Anna Pierce Brace (d.1836) in 1818 and was a Harvard College fellow from 1838-1857. He was a prominent Boston lawyer and a Massachusetts State Senator in 1862. aPersonal and family letters of Charles G. Loring and the Loring family and a large amount of papers relating to the American Civil War for which Loring tried to gain support for the North from his British friends.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1946-1947, under *46M-428. aCharles Greeley Loring Papers, 1768-1866 (MS Am 2165). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aCollection items were renumbered in May 2002.10aLoring, Charles G.q(Charles Greely),d1794-1867.30aLoring family. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War,1861-1865xForeign public opinion. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aLawyers.2aat0 cGift;aCharles Greely Loring;d1938;e46M-428.5HOU1 aGift of Charles Greely Loring, 1938.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 216501925ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002100121100003900142245006300181300003100244500002800275520021700303524011500520545011500635530006100750555008700811555004000898500003300938600004900971600003901020600005001059600001901109655002001128655002801148655002501176655001801201655002401219655002001243655002201263700001901285541007301304561004701377506004201424852002501466008997580-420130910131447.0k|||| ||||| |||k|021204i18251923mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612742493 aMAHV02A269 aMH-HeMH-Hcdacs1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aCharles Eliot Norton miscellaneous papers,fca. 1825-1923. a17 boxesa(5.5 linear ft.) aPapers are uncataloged. aPapers include letters, notebooks, diaries, lecture notes, commonplace books, clippings, daguerreotypes, passports, photographs, and memorabilia. Daguereotypes depict Francis James Child and Charles Eliot Norton. aCharles Eliot Norton Miscellaneous Papers, ca. 1825-1923 (MS Am 1088.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aNorton was an American author, editor, and teacher. He was a professor of the history of fine arts at Harvard. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001658 aFinding aid is rough box list only. aRecataloged from MS Am 9028.10aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896vPortraits.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908vPortraits.30aNorton family. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCommonplace books.2aat 7aDaguerreotypes.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLecture notes.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat3 aNorton family.0 cGift;aRecataloged from MS Am 9028.bNorton Family;d1914-1940.5HOU1 aGift of the Norton family, 1914-1940.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1088.503654cpcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100004200136245004100178300003100219351025600250545025700506520112200763530006201885524008001947555009602027555009702123546001602220600005302236600004202289650003902331650003502370655004502405700003702450700003102487700003602518700003602554700003002590700003602620700003002656700005302686700004002739700003302779700003202812700005202844700003702896541009902933561005103032506004203083852002303125000601845-920130917154019.0860407i18151915mau eng d0 aocn1225640061 aMAHV86A147 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS82-6631 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.10aPickard-Whittier papers,f1815-1915. a17 boxesa(5.7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to John Greenleaf Whittier; II. Letters by John Greenleaf Whittier; III. Letters to Samuel Thomas Pickard; IV. Other letters; V. Additional materials -- Compositions, MSS; and VI. Miscellaneous material. aJohn Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) was an American poet and abolitionist. Samuel Thomas Pickard (1828-1915) was an editor of the Portland (Me.) Transcript. He was married to a niece of Whittier's and became Whittier's literary executor and biographer. aThe bulk of the collection includes letters addressed to John Greenleaf Whittier and to Samuel Thomas Pickard, and correspondence grouped under "Other letters" carried on between relatives and friends of Whittier's and Pickard's. Correspondents include: Mary Abigail Dodge, Annie Fields, Sarah Orne Jewett, Thomas Star King, Mary Todd Lincoln, Bliss Perry, Benjamin Perley Poore, Charles Sumner, Celia Thaxter, and J. T. (John Townsend) Trowbridge. There are significant collections of letters from Lucy Larcom and to Elizabeth (Hussey) Whittier, the poet's sister. The rest of the material includes typescript and manuscript copies by Samuel Thomas Pickard of Whittier's letters and poems. Pickard had sold many of Whittier's autograph letters and manuscripts in order to raise funds to preserve the poet's home in Amesbury. Finally there is a small collection of autograph manuscripts by Lucy Larcom and others which includes poems dedicated to Whittier and essays in the form of letters. The miscellaneous material contains notes and drafts by Pickard in relation to his biography of Whittier and printed ephemera. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPickard-Whittier Papers (MS Am 1844). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid available (203 KB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003868 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. aIn English.10aPickard, Samuel T.q(Samuel Thomas),d1828-1915.10aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aDodge, Mary Abigail,d1833-1896.1 aFields, Annie,d1834-1915.1 aJewett, Sarah Orne,d1849-1909.1 aKing, Thomas Starr,d1824-1864.1 aLarcom, Lucy,d1824-1893.1 aLincoln, Mary Todd,d1818-1882.1 aPerry, Bliss,d1860-1954.10aPickard, Samuel T.q(Samuel Thomas),d1828-1915.1 aPoore, Benjamin Perley,d1820-1887.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.1 aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894.1 aTrowbridge, J. T.q(John Townsend),d1827-1916.1 aWhittier, Elizabeth,d1815-1864.0 cGift;aGreenleaf Whittier Pickard;d1935;eRecat from MS Am 800.18; MS 800.18.5.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Greenleaf Whittier Pickard, 1935.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 184403619cpcaa2200553 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245004500162300002900207351029000236545034900526520074300875524009401618530006201712555009601774555009701870600003901967650003902006650002802045655005702073655002802130655001902158655006702177655002002244655001602264655004502280655004802325700003802373700003002411700004002441700003902481700003202520700003902552700003902591700004102630700003402671700003202705700003802737541010502775561004502880506004202925852002202967561003602989561004003025000602257-X20130910121118.0860807i18351919mau eng d0 aocn6123720561 aMAHV86A446 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell papers,f1835-1919. a17 boxesa(8 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from James Russell Lowell; II. Letters to James Russell Lowell; III. Letters to Charles Eliot Norton concerning Lowell papers; IV. Literary manuscripts of James Russell Lowell; V. Miscellaneous; and VI. Notebooks of James Russell Lowell. aLowell was an author, poet, editor, teacher, and diplomat. He edited The Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, The North American Review (1864-?); was professor of French and Spanish Languages and Literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; and U.S. minister to Spain (1877-1880) and to England (1880-1885). aThe bulk of the collection is correspondence, both personal and professional, between Lowell and many of his prominent contemporaries, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Holmes, Oliver Wendell Holmes, William Dean Howells, Thomas Hughes, George Bailey Loring, Charles Eliot Norton, Thomas William Parsons, Edgar Allan Poe, Edmund Quincy, and Richard Grant White. Also include poems, addresses, lectures and other manuscripts, some unpublished, by Lowell as well as notebooks with various notes and drafts, and commonplace books that he kept. In addition, collection contains Norton's correspondence concerning the publication of Lowell's letters, miscellaneous manuscripts and correspondence of third parties, and clippings about Lowell. aJames Russell Lowell Papers, 1835-1919 (MS Am 765). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid available (420 KB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003658 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aCommonplace bookszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aDrafts (documents)2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aSpeecheszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882.1 aHolmes, John,d1812-1899.1 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.1 aHughes, Thomas,d1822-1896.1 aLoring, George Bailey,d1817-1891.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.1 aParsons, Thomas William,d1819-1892.1 aPoe, Edgar Allan,d1809-1849.1 aQuincy, Edmund,d1808-1877.1 aWhite, Richard Grant,d1821-1885.0 cGift;aCharles Eliot Norton, 1903; Sara Norton, 1911; Lawrence Dwight, 1920;d1903; 1911; 1920.5hou1 aGift of Charles Eliot Norton, 1903.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 7651 aGift of Sara Norton, 1911.5hou1 aGift of Lawrence Dwight, 1920.5hou02489ctcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003900123245005600162300003100218351026200249545043100511520030400942555008701246555010801333524010801441530006201549546001601611650003601627600003901663650003201702655002001734655001901754655001801773656001801791656001901809700003501828541011301863561006001976506004202036852002502078009206468-X20131112102039.0030918i18061936mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127856381 aMAHV03A294 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888.10aJames Freeman Clarke additional papers,f1806-1936. a17 boxesa(8.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to James Freeman Clarke; II. Letters written by James Freeman Clarke; III. Letters written by various correspondents; IV. Manuscripts of James Freeman Clarke; V. Other manuscripts; and VI. Newspaper clippings. aClarke was a Unitarian clergyman, author, and reformer closely associated with the Transcendentalists. He was minister in Louisville, Ky. (1833-1840) and at the Church of the Disciples in Boston (1841-1850, 1854-1888). Clarke was editor of the Western Messenger (1836-1839). He was married in 1839 to Anna Huidekoper, daughter of Harm Jan Huidekoper, businessman, lay theologian, and founder of Meadville Theological Seminary. aChiefly letters to James Freeman Clarke from literary colleagues and family members. There is a small number of letters written by Clarke and correspondence of members of the Clarke family with others. Also includes lectures, sermons and other compositions by Clarke and others as well as clippings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-99. aJames Freeman Clarke Additional Papers, 1806-1936 (MS Am 1569.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aIn English. 0aTranscendentalism (New England)10aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888. 0aUnitarian churchesxClergy. 7aClippings.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh 7aEditors.2lcsh3 aClarke family,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit, later gift;aEliot C. Clarke;b1150 Fifth Ave., New York, New York;dOct. 1966; 1968;e66M-99.5hou1 aDeposited by Mr. Eliot C. Clarke, 1966; gift 1968.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1569.803435nacaa2200565 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041002300110245007900133300003000212351014800242545038700390520054700777555008701324524015701411544006201568544002601630546009701656650002201753600003401775600005101809655002301860655001901883655001901902655002601921655002001947655002001967655001501987655002202002655002202024655002002046655002202066655001802088655002102106655002702127655001902154655002202173655002302195655002302218655002202241710009402263700004402357506012302401506004202524541013102566561014802697852002402845013178162-620121212144327.0020710i18152008mau|||| |||| ||||| eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengaitaagerafre00aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan additional printed ephemera,f1815-2008. a17 boxes (8.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name, title, or topic.bUnless noted, original arrangement by collector Fredric Woodbridge Wilson has been retained. aArthur Sullivan (1842-1900) was an English composer and conductor. W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert (1836-1911) was a English dramatist and librettist. They formed a Victorian-era theatrical partnership, collaborating on fourteen comic operas between 1871 and 1896, of which H. M. S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado, or, The town of Titipu are among the best known. aThis collection includes subject files of printed materials related to the lives, professions, and legacies of W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. Items are arranged alphabetically by topic, title, or name. Materials include, but are not limited to, book jackets, booklets, catalogs, cigarette cards, clippings, librettos, maps, newsletters, order forms, pamphlets, photographs, posters, press kits, programs, sheet music, ticket stubs, toy theaters, and trade cards. Non-printed manuscript materials are noted when present.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02297 aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan Additional Printed Ephemera, 1815-2008 (MS Thr 839). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also: 2011T-1060, 2011T-1078, 2011Y-1079, 2011T-1075. aSee also: MS Thr 835. aCollection materials are primarily in English. Some material in Italian, German, and French. 0aTheaterzEngland.10aSullivan, Arthur,d1842-1900.10aGilbert, W. S. (William Schwenck).t1836-1911. 7aBook jackets.2aat 7aBooklets.2aat 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aCigarette cards.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aLibrettos.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aNewsletters.2aat 7aOrder forms.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPosters.2aat 7aPress kits.2aat 7aPrinted ephemera.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aSheet music.2aat 7aTicket stubs.2aat 7aToy theaters.2aat 7aTrade cards.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aWilson, Fredric Woodbridge,ecollector.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 83903792cpcaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003300124245007000157300004200227351029900269351005200568545099700620520057501617520008702192530006202279555008702341524008902428546001602517650001802533650003402551630003102585610005102616600004402667600001902711610002902730610003802759610003402797650003302831655002002864655002502884655001802909655002002927655002402947655001602971655004602987656002903033656002203062541007503084561005003159506004203209852002303251000601997-820130401100435.0860530i17681890mau eng d0 aocn1225812691 aMAHV86-A285 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Andrews,d1786-1853.10aAndrews Norton papers,f1768-1890 (inclusive),g1795-1852 (bulk). a17 boxes and 1 volumea(6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters of Andrews Norton to others; II. Letters to Andrews Norton from others; III. Correspondence of Andrews Norton and others; IV. Letterbooks of Andrews Norton; V. Notebooks of Andrews Norton; VI. Compositions of Andrews Norton; VII. Other materials. aMuch of this collection is not fully cataloged. aAndrews Norton (1786-1853) theological controversialist, biblical scholar and man of letters, was born in Hingham, Mass., the son of Samuel Norton, a shopkeeper, and Jane Andrews Norton. He graduated from Harvard College in 1804 and spent the next 15 years as a graduate student, tutor, and lecturer at Harvard and at Bowdoin College in Maine. In 1813 Harvard appointed him Dexter Lecturer on Biblical Criticism and in 1819 he was appointed the first Dexter Professor of Sacred Literature. He also acted as the College Librarian from 1813 to 1821. In 1821 he married Catharine Eliot who brought him wealth and a Cambridge estate called "Shady Hill." Norton, known as the "Unitarian Pope," was Emerson's leading foe in the Unitarian-Transcendentalist controversy. He spent his last years in deteriorating health and died in Newport, Rhode Island in 1853. Andrews and Catharine Norton had four children who survived infancy; one was scholar, critic, and Harvard professor, Charles Eliot Norton. aCorrespondence and letter books of Andrews Norton, including family correspondence and letters reflecting Norton's scholarly interests and his work as librarian and professor at Harvard; together with some manuscripts of writings by Norton; undergraduate diary from Norton's student days at Harvard; daguerreotype of Norton; diary, 1818-1819; notebooks; notes on reading and catalogue of Norton's books; and clippings. Also includes documents, 1768-1782, relating to the committee of correspondence and town militia of Hingham, Mass., where Norton's father Samuel lived. aAlso includes a framed silhouette of Andrews Norton found in C.E. Norton's papers. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01492 aAndrews Norton Papers, 1768-1890 (MS Am 1089). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aChristianity. 0aChurch historyy19th century.00aBiblexStudy and teaching.10aHingham (Mass.).bCommittee of Correspondence.10aNorton, Andrews,d1786-1853vPortraits.30aNorton family.20aHarvard College Library.20aHarvard Divinity SchoolxFaculty.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aUnitarianismzUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aDaguerreotypes.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDocuments.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aSilhouetteszUnited Statesy19th century. 7aBiblical scholars.2lcsh 7aLibrarians.2lcsh0 cGift;aNorton family;dDate uknown.eRecataloged from MS Am 9029.5hou1 aGift of the Norton family, date unknown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 108900412nkm a22001455a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070100002900087245002300116260001400139300003800153655005000191852002500241007482983-120130503164740.0920501s1980 enk||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocn6121941991 aDoyle, Charles Altamont.10aHumorous drawings. cca. 1890. a17 drawings :bink and watercolor 7aDrawingszGreat Britainy20th century.2gmgpc8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 92701160nkc a22002415a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070245005200087300003500139520022500174500006100399524005500460600001100515655005500526655004400581700005600625710002800681730003100709541010200740561005000842852002600892007482714-620040617124555.0911021s18uu enk||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocn61219346710aA. B. C. of Aesop's fables :kdrawings,f[18--] a17 drawings, [13] p. ;c28 cm. aUnsigned pen, ink wash, and watercolor drawings ascribed on the binding to Ernest Griset, but without his customary signature and not in his usual style. Includes brief descriptions of each fable in an unidentified hand. aBound in tan polished calf with gold tooling by Riviere. aMS Eng 1136. Houghton Library, Harvard University.00aAesop. 7aAlphabet bookszGreat Britainy19th century.2aat. 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc1 aGriset, Ernest Henry,d1844-1907,eattributed name.2 aRiviere & Son,ebinder.0 aAesop's fables.kDrawings. cDeposit;aWilliam S. Spaulding;b37 Le Colombier, Gstaad, Switzerland;dNov. 1959;e59M-298.5hou aDeposited by William S. Spaulding, 1959.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 113601477ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005800108245011900166246007100285300004600356505015300402500008600555500008500641524005400726600005900780700006400839710004500903710005200948541007101000561009101071852004901162010574186-820080610172342.0021010m19011909mau|||| |||| ||||ideng d0 aocn612797510 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGardiner, J. H.q(John Hays),d1863-1913,erecipient.10aLetters to J. H. Gardiner concerning the publication of Edwin Arlington Robinson's book Captain Craig,f1901-1909.38iOn spine of slipcase:aPublisher's correspondence on Captain Craig a17 items ;c28 cm. (unfolded) or smaller.0 a1 letter from Charles Scribner's Sons (1901) -- 13 letters from Houghton Mifflin & Co. (1902-1903) -- 3 letters from Laura E. Richards (1902, 1909). aThe publishers' letters are typescript; Laura Richards's letters are handwritten. aIn a cloth 4-flap folder within a quarter red leather and cloth slipcase, 32 cm. aMS Am 2543. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.tCaptain Craig.1 aRichards, Laura Elizabeth Howe,d1850-1943,ecorrespondent.2 aCharles Scribner's Sons,ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,ecorresopondent. cGift;aMrs. Alice Gardiner Davis;d1925 March 16;ePR5750.16.5hou aGift of the estate of John Hays Gardiner through Mrs. Alice Gardiner Davis, 1925.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 2543mShelved in Lobby IX.4.5.02395ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002000122245003900142300003100181351024400212545017600456520019000632530005300822524008200875555008700957555009701044600002001141600003801161650003901199650003601238650003701274655002501311655002201336700003801358506004101396561015101437845037301588852007201961008679228-820091014145005.0011127i16991939mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127015451 aMAHV01A52 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aEmerson family.10aEmerson family papers,f1699-1939. a171 boxesa(56 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions by RWE; II. Compositions by other authors; III. Correspondence of RWE; IV. Letters by and to other correspondents; V. Miscellaneous material; VI. Secondary material; and VII. Appendices. aRalph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) was an American essayist and poet. The Emerson family was prominent in the literary and social life of New England during the 19th century. aIncludes compositions and correspondence by RWE, Emerson family members, and others. Also includes photographs, daguerreotypes, notes by editors, biographers and other Emerson scholars. aColor digital images available; see finding aid. aEmerson Family Papers (MS Am 1280.235). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001218 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection.30aEmerson family.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 0aTranscendentalists (New England) 7aDaguerreotypes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. aMaterials are open for research use.1 aDeposited and presented by Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association and by others. Additional information on accessions listed in Appendices.5hou aImages linked to this finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1280.235zItems (172a) and (727) both shelved as PF's04277cpcaa2200589 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003000123245008800153300003000241351012500271545104000396520075601436555008702192555010802279524013702387610003002524610003502554650003902589650003702628650005102665650002102716650003102737655002002768655002202788700005602810700004402866700003802910700003002948700002902978700003103007700003503038700001803073700003203091700003403123700001903157700002003176700004103196700003503237700003603272700003703308700003503345700003803380710003503418541009003453561007903543506004203622852002303664006401474-620090712233617.0860819i18811981mau eng d0 aocn6126804891 aMAHV86A480 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aHoughton Mifflin Company.10aHoughton Mifflin Company correspondence,f1881-1981 (inclusive),g1940-1979 (bulk). a174 boxes (44 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent with a separate alphabetic sequence of miscellaneous correspondence at the end. aHoughton Mifflin Company, publishing house of Boston, Massachusetts, traces its roots back to the firm of Ticknor and Fields, the premier "literary" publishing house in the United States during the middle years of the nineteenth century; and to the Riverside Press, Henry Oscar Houghton's printing establishment in Cambridge, Massachusetts. After a series of changes within each firm, Ticknor and Fields and the Riverside Press merged together in 1878 to become Houghton, Osgood, and Company. Two years later, James R. Osgood left the partnership and George Harrison Mifflin and Henry Oscar Houghton formed Houghton, Mifflin, and Company. In 1908, Houghton, Mifflin and Company changed from a partnership to a corporation as the Houghton Mifflin Company. The company became publicly owned in 1967 and was bought by the French conglomerate, Vivendi Universal SA, in 2001. The succession of corporate names in the period covered by this correspondence is: Houghton, Mifflin and Co. (1880-1908); and Houghton Mifflin Company (since 1908). aCorrespondence is between Houghton Mifflin Company and the authors they published. Houghton Mifflin Company editors and staff include Paul Brooks, Ferris Greenslet, and Robert Newton Linscott, among others. Authors include Ansel Adams, James Agee, Isaac Asimov, Elizabeth Bishop, Rachel Carson, John Dos Passos, Martha Foley, Esther Forbes, John Kenneth Galbraith, John Howard Griffin, Archibald MacLeish, Carson McCullers, Roger Tory Peterson, H.A. (Hans Augusto) Rey, Arthur Meier Schlesinger, and many others. In addition to correspondence with authors, the files can contain book jackets, correspondence with literary agents and with other publishers, compositions, contracts, interoffice memoranda, jacket blurbs, photographs, and press releases.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001198 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1985-1986, under *85M-63. aHoughton Mifflin Company Correspondence, 1881-1981 (inclusive), 1940-1979 (bulk) (MS Am 2105). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHoughton Mifflin Company.20aHoughton, Mifflin and Company. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aAuthors and publishersxHistoryy20th century. 0aLiterary agents. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aContracts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aSchlesinger, Arthur M.q(Arthur Meier),d1888-1965.1 aRey, H. A.q(Hans Augusto),d1898-1977.1 aGriffin, John Howard,d1920-1980.1 aAdams, Ansel,d1902-1984.1 aAgee, James,d1909-1955.1 aAsimov, Isaac,d1920-1992.1 aBishop, Elizabeth,d1911-1979.1 aBrooks, Paul.1 aCarson, Rachel,d1907-1964.1 aDos Passos, John,d1896-1970.1 aFoley, Martha.1 aForbes, Esther.1 aGalbraith, John Kenneth,d1908-2006.1 aGreenslet, Ferris,d1875-1959.1 aLinscott, Robert Newton,d1886-1 aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.1 aMcCullers, Carson,d1917-1967.1 aPeterson, Roger Tory,d1908-1996.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company.0 cGift;aHoughton Mifflin Company;bBoston, Mass.;d1978-1985; gift 1992;e85M-63.5hou1 aDeposit, then gift of Houghton Mifflin Company, 1978-1985; gift 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 210501937ctcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110001800110245005100128300002900179351006700208520018100275524011800456545071400574546001601288555008701304610001801391650005101409655002701460730001401487852002401501541002901525506003701554561005601591011449449-520100607084713.0080425i19241985mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612815389 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aPlaybill Inc.10aPlaybill Inc. Playbill collection,f1924-1985. a18 boxes (18 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by theater name, then chronologically. aCollection of issues of the performance magazine and program, Playbill, arranged alphabetically by theater name, with number of unique dated issues noted as well as duplicates. aPlaybill Inc. Playbill collection (MS Thr 538). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aPlaybill is a monthly American magazine for theatergoers available by subscription but primarily printed for distribution at specific shows. Playbill was first printed in 1884 for a theater on 21st Street in New York (N.Y.)., now published in New York for Broadway and off-Broadway productions and in many other U.S. cities. Monthly articles appear in all Playbills distributed everywhere reflecting new shows and performers in plays, musicals, and special attractions; Playbills also contain specific cast lists and biographies, photographs, and song and scene lists printed for the particular show. Playbill Inc. is a privately held company based in New York (N.Y.) and owned by the Birsh family since 1974. aIn English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0200920aPlaybill Inc. 0aTheaterxHistoryzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aTheater programs.2aat0 aPlaybill.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 5380 cGifts;e2007MT-83r.5the aCollection is open for research. aReceived from various donors on various dates.5the02506ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245005200156300002900208351010000237545038500337520033400722524010701056555008701163555010901250581019401359546001601553650004701569600003301616600004201649650003401691650004701725655001901772655002201791700005401813541013001867561006801997506004202065852002502107009215520-020100302095644.0031016i19161952mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn122468723 aMAHV03A336 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aLetters to Florence Corliss Lamont,f1916-1952. a18 boxesa(6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Masefield letters; and II. Masfield letter transcripts. aJohn Masefield (1878-1967) was a British poet. Florence Corliss Lamont (1872-1952) was the wife of Thomas W. (Thomas William) Lamont (1870-1948), a New York financier with the firm of J.P. Morgan & Company. She graduated from Smith College and earned a Master's Degree in Philosophy from Columbia University. They met in February of 1916 while Masefield was lecturing in New York. a2189 letters from poet John Masefield to his friend, Florence Lamont, spanning nearly four decades. Includes commentary on the historical era, their friends, families, and work. Some letters include sketches by Masefield. Included with these original autograph letters are a complete set of typescript transcripts of the letters. aJohn Masefield Letters to Florence Corliss Lamont (MS Eng 1458). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-152. aSome of these letters are published in: John Masefield. Letters of John Masefield to Florence Lamont, edited by Corliss Lamont and Lansing Lamont. New York: Columbia University Press, 1979. aIn English. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945vPersonal narratives.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aLamont, Florence Corliss,d1872-1952. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPersonal narratives. 7aSketches.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aLamont, Florence Corliss,d1872-1952,erecipient.0 cDeposit, then gift;aThe children of T.W. Lamont;b23 Wall Street, New York, NY;d1956 Feb.; gift 1978 Jan. 1;e55M-152.5hou1 aDeposited by the children of T.W. Lamont, 1956; gift 1978.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 145802945ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003300121245003900154300002900193351043700222545038700659520032501046524008501371530006201456555009601518555016801614546001601782600003301798650001801831655002201849656002101871700003401892700002401926700002101950700003301971700001902004541013502023561012702158506010802285506012302393852003102516008821465-620111025125823.0020124i18641943mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127150061 aMAHV02A1 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWarren, Whitney,d1864-1943.10aWhitney Warren papers,f1864-1943. a18 boxesa(8 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 2113: Letters from WW to family (*44M-342); II. bMS Am 2113.1: Letters from Charlotte A. Tooker Warren to WW (*44M-342A); III. bMS Am 2113.2: Letters from Charlotte Warren Greenough to WW and CAW (*44M-342B); IV. bMS Am 2113.3: Letters from Lloyd Warren to WW (*44M-342C); V. bMS Am 2113.4: Correspondence with WW and others (*44M-342D); and VI. bMS Am 2113.5: Photographs (*44M-342E). aWhitney Warren was a New York architect. He studied in Paris at the Atliers of the Ecole des Beaux Arts and returned to NYC in 1896 to found the firm Warren & Wetmore. Two of the firm's major works were the Grand Central Terminal and the Biltmore Hotel, both in New York City. Warren was also a co-founder of the Beaux Arts Institute of Design and served as director for many years. aCollection includes primarily correspondence with friends, colleagues, and family: Charlotte A. Tooker Warren (his wife), Charlotte Whitney Greenough (his daughter), William Greenough (his son-in-law); Reginald Rives (his son-in-law);and Lloyd Warren (his brother). Also includes many photographs, and some compositions. aWhitney Warren Papers (MS Am 2113-2113.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid available (473 KB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003408 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-342-342E. aIn English.10aWarren, Whitney,d1864-1943. 0aArchitecture. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aArchitects.2aat1 aGreenough, Charlotte Whitney.1 aGreenough, William.1 aRives, Reginald.1 aWarren, Charlotte A. Tooker.1 aWarren, Lloyd. cGift;aMrs. William Greenough, Mrs. Reginald B. Rives, and Whitney Warren Jr.;d1945;e44M-342, 44M-342A, 44M-342B, 44M-342C.5hou aGift of the children of Whitney Warren: Mrs. William Greenough, Mrs. Reginald B. Rives, and Whitney Warren Jr., 1945.5hou0 aCollection is open for research. These papers were formerly restricted from use until 1965 Jan. 1.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 2113-2113.502618cpcaa2200529 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101100002900126245002400155300002900179351018200208545007600390520046900466555008700935524010801022600002901130650001701159650004701176650002901223655002001252655002501272655002001297655002401317655003801341655002001379655002201399655002001421655001601441655002101457655002201478656002201500656002301522710003001545740001201575740001801587541006601605561005401671852002301725007001401748843022301762562003601985852002202021866004502043000603195-120070628144615.0860930i19281981mau eng d0 aocn1225211831 aMHAT86A39 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aChase, Mary,d1907-1981.00kPapers,f1928-1981. a18 boxesa(9 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions; II. Letters to Mary Chase; III. Letters from Mary Chase; IV. Contracts; V. Scrapbooks; VI. Posters; and VII. Miscellaneous. aCase (1907-1981) was an American playwright and children's book author. aContains manuscripts of Chase's plays and fiction, correspondence, lecture notes, contracts, scrapbooks, photographs, programs, souvenir programs, posters, pamphlets, clippings, and miscellaneous material. Includes several versions of scripts for Mrs. McThing and for her Pulitzer Prize winning play, Harvey (1944), in both its play and musical forms. In addition there are proof sheets, stills and publicity shots from the Universal Pictures film based on Harvey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01584 aMary Coyle Chase Papers (MS Thr 382). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aChase, Mary,d1907-1981. 0aPlaywriting. 0aMotion pictureszUnited StatesxMarketing. 0aMusicalszUnited States. 7aClippings.2aat 7aContact sheets.2aat 7aContracts.2aat 7aLecture notes.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aScreenplays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh 7aPlaywrights.2lcsh2 aUniveral Pictures (Firm).02aHarvey.02aMrs. McThing. cGift;aHeirs of Mary Chase;d1985;eNo accession number.5the aGift of the heirs of Mary Coyle Chase, 1985.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 382hd|afu---baca aMicrofilm.bCambridge, Mass.cHarvard University Library, Microreproduction Department,d[1996?].e2 reels : negative and positive ; 35 mm.nCopy reproduced: MS Thr 382(51), Harvard Theatre Collection.7s1996 mau a aMicrofilm: number 51 only.5the8 bTHEcGENhTSM 475 0bTheatre CollectionhTSM 47580a2 reels.02789ctcaa2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003400121245005200155300002800207351004600235545017300281520041700454555008700871555010900958524010201067600001901169600003401188610004201222610003301264610003301297610003201330650001501362650001701377650002701394650001901421651002801440655002401468656002301492656002601515700004801541700006601589700006201655700007201717700004701789700007101836700005301907541007501960561011502035506004202150852002302192541005602215009544149-220130819075914.0050120q18351880mau|||||||||||||| ||eng |0 aocm793901221 aMAHV05A10 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeirce, Benjamin,d1809-1880.10aBenjamin Peirce correspondence,fca. 1835-1880. a18 boxes (9 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aPeirce (A.B. 1829), mathematician and astronomer, was a tutor (1831-1833) and professor (1833-1880) at Harvard University, where he established the Harvard Observatory. aChiefly manuscript letters to Benjamin Peirce from various correspondents, including Louis Agassiz, A. D. Bache, Jonathan Ingersoll Bowditch, Benjamin Apthorp Gould, Joseph Henry, Charles S. Peirce, and James Mills Peirce, among others. Letters concern the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Dudley Observatory, and U.S. coastal surveys. Also includes empty scrapbook covers that formerly housed letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015528 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1954-1955, under *54M-264. aBenjamin Peirce Correspondence, ca. 1835-1880 (MS Am 2368). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aPierce family.10aPeirce, Benjamin,d1809-1880.20aAmerican Academy of Arts and Letters.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty.20aHarvard College Observatory.20aUnited States Coast Survey. 0aAstronomy. 0aMathematics. 0aCoastszUnited States. 0aObservatories. 0aUnited StatesxSurveys. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aAstronomers.2lcsh 7aMathematicians.2lcsh1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aBache, A. D.q(Alexander Dallas),d1806-1867,ecorrespondent.1 aBowditch, Jonathan Ingersoll,d1806-1889,ecorrespondent.1 aGould, Benjamin A.q(Benjamin Apthorp),d1787-1859,ecorrespondent.1 aHenry, Joseph,d1797-1878,ecorrespondent.1 aPeirce, Charles S.q(Charles Sanders),d1839-1914,ecorrespondent.1 aPeirce, James Mills,d1834-1906,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit;aAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences;d1955;e54M-264.5hou1 aDeposited by American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1955; and by the Harvard University Archives, 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 23680 cTransfer;aHarvard University Archives;d1966.5hou02066ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003100124245005900155300002900214351007900243545020200322520022900524555008700753555010700840524009800947600003101045650003901076655001801115655001601133655002201149656001901171656002301190700004801213700003701261700004801298700004601346700004501392541010201437561006401539506004201603852002301645008755057-120090209091736.0021113i19011964mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127087541 aMAHV02-A219 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPrice, Lucien,d1883-1964.10aLucien Price notebooks and correspondence,f1901-1964. a18 boxesa(9 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Notebooks; and II. Correspondence. aPrice was an author and journalist with the Boston Transcript (1907-1914) and then the Boston Globe until his death. He published books on education, Europe, and memories of his early life in Ohio. aTwo hundred seventy-seven notebooks containing journal entries and notes for compositions (1901-1964). Correspondents include Witter Bynner, Herbert Collum, William James, Raymond Thibeau McClure, and Frederick H. Middleton.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003178 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-9. aLucien Price Notebooks and Correspondence (MS Am 2033). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPrice, Lucien,d1883-1964. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh 7aJournalists.2lcsh1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968,ecorrespondent.1 aCollum, Herbert,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1882-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aMcClure, Raymond Thibeau,ecorrespondent.1 aMiddleton, Frederick H.,ecorrespondent.0 cGift, Bequest;aLucien Price;b75 Hancock St., Boston Mass.d1951, 1961, 1963, 1972;e87M-9.5HOU1 aGift of Lucien Price, 1951, 1961, 1963; Bequest, 1972.5HOU aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 203302685cpcaa2200493 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245003700154300004400191351018600235545014600421520037000567524008400937530006201021555008701083555009501170500009801265546002601363600001801389600003101407650003901438650003901477655002601516655002401542655003801566655003801604655001701642655002101659655002901680700001801709700003201727700003701759700003001796710002901826506004601855561004201901561011701943541010002060852003102160000602001-120111025123548.0860603i18091940mau eng d0 aocn6123687631 aMAHV86A289 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGrant, Robert,d1852-1940.10aRobert Grant papers,f1809-1940. a18 boxes anda7 volumesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized in call-number order into two series: bMS Am 1115: Robert Grant correspondence, compositons, and other material; and bMS Am 1115.1-1115.14: Robert Grant additional papers. aGrant was a novelist and lawyer. He was judge of the Probate Court and Court of Insolvency in Boston, and a graduate and overseer of Harvard. aChiefly letters to Robert Grant dealing primarily with his novels, together with manuscripts of novels, stories, essays, and his autobiography; and scrapbooks of reviews, articles, and letters concerning Grant and his writings. Also includes family papers, especially letters to Grant's father, Patrick Grant, a Boston merchant, from his mother and other relatives. aRobert Grant Papers (MS Am 1115-1115.14). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000808 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection. aRecataloged from MS 800.3, 800.3.2, 800.3.3, 800.3.4; and from AL 1675.05 (1-10) and Cl 9916. aMaterials in English.30aGrant family.10aGrant, Robert,d1852-1940. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aAutobiographies.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNovels.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat 7aReviews (Criticism)2aat3 aGrant family.1 aGrant, Patrick,d1809-1895.1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.1 aWister, Owen,d1860-1938.2 aCharles Scribner's Sons. aCollection is open for research use.5hou1 aGift of Robert Grant, 1934-1935.5hou1 aGift in memory of Robert Grant by his sons Robert Grant, Jr., Alexander Galt Grant, and Gordon Grant, 1940.5hou0 aRobert Grant, Sr., Robert Grant Jr., Alexander Galt Grant, and Gordon Grant;cGift;d1940.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1115-1115.1401243ntm a2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245004600140300002300186500008900209520018700298500002800485500001400513524005400527600002000581600003200601600003200633610002000665650003000685650004200715700005300757541006700810561004100877852002300918010107208-220060929162532.0060918i19251926enk|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612855743 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCurle, Richard,d1883-1968.00kLetters :bto Edgar H. Wells,f1925-1926. a18 items ;c22 cm. aAutograph and typescript letters, signed, dated at London, 4 June 1925-26 Dec. 1926. aLetters concern Joseph Conrad books for sale at Hodgson and Co., Curle's collection of Conrad books, the health of Jessie Conrad, book and manuscript purchases, and personal matters. aList of letters in box. aIn a box. aMS Am 1317. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aConrad, Jessie.10aConrad, Joseph,d1857-1924.10aCurle, Richard,d1883-1968.20aHodgson and Co. 0aBook collectingzEngland. 0aBooksellers and booksellingzEngland.1 aWells, Edgar Huidekoper,d1875-1938,erecipient.0 cGift;aEdgar Huidekoper Wells;dno date;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Edgar Huidekoper Wells.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 131701137ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245005800147300002300205500011100228520008400339500001400423524005600437600003900493600004800532650002400580650001900604700006100623541010100684561006100785852002500846010194465-920061220115047.0061219i19191932vp |||| |||| 000|i eng d0 aocn612883847 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aDavis, William Morris,d1850-1934.10kLetters :bto Jacoba Brigitta Louise Hol,f1919-1932. a18 items ;c28 cm. aTypescript and autograph manuscript letters, signed and dated at various places, 29 May 1919-18 Dec. 1932. aConcerns their mutual interest in physical geography and some personal matters. aIn a box. aMS Am 1798.1. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDavis, William Morris,d1850-1934.10aHol, Jacoba B. L.q(Jacoba Brigitta Louise) 0aPhysical geography. 0aGeomorphology.1 aHol, Jacoba B. L.q(Jacoba Brigitta Louise),erecipient.0 cGift;aProf. Dr. J.B.L. Hol;b6 Damiaanberg, Meerssen The Netherlands;d1964 Nov.;e64M-76.5hou1 aGift of Prof. Dr. Jacoba Brigitta Louise Hol, 1964.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1798.102085ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100007000122245007900192300004800271545015700319520041800476555008700894555010800981524008801089600007001177600004101247650003801288650001801326655002001344655002201364656002201386700004901408700004101457541010501498561006401603506004201667852002601709009272742-520110114095605.0030910i18101917mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm78375079 aMAHV03A271 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHerschel, John F. W.q(John Frederick William),cSir,d1792-1871.10aSir John F. W. Herschel papers,f1810-1917 (inclusive),g1830-1866 (bulk). a18 volume and 2 metal boxesa(3 linear ft.) aJohn Herschel was a British astronomer and successor to his father, Sir William Herschel, in the field of stellar and nebular observation and discovery. aIncludes John Herschel's notes, autograph compositions, and correspondence with his father and others, including the 1860 correspondence with Robert Fitzroy. Materials focus espcially on double stars and include 2 boxes of "forms of registry of the micrometic measures of double stars." Also includes transcripts of his materials (1917), compositions of others, and correspondence of William Herschel with others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1967-1968, under *67M-67. aSir John F. W. Herschel Papers (MS Eng 1415). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHerschel, John F. W.q(John Frederick William),cSir,d1792-1871.10aHerschel, William,cSir,d1738-1822. 0aAstronomyxHistoryy19th century. 0aDouble stars. 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aAstronomers.2aat1 aFitzroy, Robert,d1805-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aHerschel, William,cSir,d1738-1822.0 cDeposit, then gift;aMr. Arthur A. Houghton, Jr.;b715 Fifth Ave., NY, NY;d1968 Jan.;e67M-67.5hou1 aDeposited by Arthur A. Houghton, Jr., 1968; gift 1970.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 141501765ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003300122245005600155300003100211351003500242520023500277555008700512524013100599546001600730650003400746600003300780650003600813650003800849655001600887655001600903655001900919655001900938656001600957740001600973740001900989740001101008740003101019740002401050541007601074561004801150506004201198852011501240008871559-020121218095111.0030908i19151931mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm823947501 aMAHV03A260 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aJohn Masefield additional compositions,f1915-1931. a18 volumesa(2 linear ft.) aArranged in call number order. aAutograph manuscript, typescript, galley proof, and page proof versions of prose, poems, and plays. Includes: St. George and the dragon (also published as The war and the future), Rosas, Hall sands, John M. Synge, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01098 aJohn Masefield Additional Compositions, 1915-1931 (MS Eng 811-.4, 811.6-.7, 811.12-.15). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aEnglish poetry.y20th century10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967. 0aAuthors, Britishy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aPoets.2aat02aHall sands.02aJohn M. Synge.02aRosas.02aSt. George and the dragon.02aWar and the future.0 cGift;avarious donors;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aGift of various donors, various dates.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 811-.4, 811.6-.7, 811.12-.15zSome shelved as Lobby VII.4.1; Lobby VII.4.2; and Lobby VII.4.301365ntc a22003017u 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001600089100003400105245010700139300001700246500004100263500010200304500006700406500015200473561004300625524005500668600002400723600004500747600001900792650002800811655002200839700005900861700005200920700006800972852002301040007962405-720020606104010.5k||| |||||| |k|981216i18761916xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm833803531 aLowell, Percival,d1855-1916.10aLetters to Elizabeth Lowell Putnam (Mrs. William Lowell Putnam) and William Lowell Putnam,f1876-1916. a180 letters. aAutograph and typed letters, signed. aItem 96 addressed to Katharine Bigelow Lawrence Lowell; item 120 addressed to A. Lawrence Lowell. aWith a portrait photograph of Percival Lowell, inscribed 1907. aItem 120 with 2 photographs of the Japanese actor Danjuro; item 126 with 3 photographs of racing in Algeria; item 144 with 1907 photograph of Mars. aGift of Mrs. G. D'Andelot Belin, 1993. abMS Am 2078. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDanjuroxPortraits.10aLowell, Percival,d1855-1916xPortraits.10aLowell family. 0aAstronomyxPhotographs. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aPutnam, William Lowell,cMrs.,d1862-1935,erecipient.1 aPutnam, William Lowell,d1861-1924,erecipient.1 aLowell, A. Lawrenceq(Abbott Lawrence),d1856-1943,erecipient.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 207803152nacaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006800110300003000178351020600208545038700414520047600801555008701277524014601364546004101510600005101551600003401602650002101636655002301657655001901680655001901699655002601718655002001744655002001764655001501784655002201799655002201821655002001843655002201863655001801885655002101903655002701924655001901951655002201970655002301992655002202015700004302037710009302080506012302173506004202296541013102338561014102469852002402610013139819-920121212144446.0020710i18262006mau|||| |||| ||||| eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan printed ephemera,f1826-2006. a19 boxes (5.7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Oversize (16 x 20) printed ephemera; and II. Oversize (14 x 18) printed ephemera.bOriginal arrangement by collector Fredric Woodbridge Wilson has been retained. aArthur Sullivan (1842-1900) was an English composer and conductor. W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert (1836-1911) was a English dramatist and librettist. They formed a Victorian-era theatrical partnership, collaborating on fourteen comic operas between 1871 and 1896, of which H. M. S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado, or, The town of Titipu are among the best known. aThis collection includes subject files of printed materials related to the lives, professions, and legacies of W. S. (William Schwenck) Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. Items are arranged alphabetically by topic, title, or name. Materials include, but are not limited to, book jackets, booklets, catalogs, cigarette cards, clippings, librettos, maps, newsletters, order forms, pamphlets, photographs, posters, press kits, programs, sheet music, toy theaters, and trade cards.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02292 aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan Printed Ephemera, 1826-2006 (MS Thr 835). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aGilbert, W. S. (William Schwenck),t1836-1911.10aSullivan, Arthur,t1842-1900. 0aTheaterxEngland 7aBook jackets.2aat 7aBooklets.2aat 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aCigarette cards.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aLibrettos.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aNewsletters.2aat 7aOrder forms.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPosters.2aat 7aPress kits.2aat 7aPrinted ephemera.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aSheet music.2aat 7aToy theaters.2aat 7aTrade cards.2aat1 aWilson, Fredric Woodbridgeecollector.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan(Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 83504714cpcaa2200805 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122100004000135245004600175300003100221351018200252545013600434520117700570524008501747530006201832555009701894555011001991546001602101600004002117600004302157610002202200655002802222655002202250655001602272656001902288700003602307700004302343700002902386700003002415700003002445700003202475700003102507700004302538700004002581700003502621700004502656700006202701700003902763700005602802700004902858700003002907700003902937700003602976700004003012700003903052700003803091700005003129700004103179700003803220700004203258700003303300700003203333700003903365700005503404700002903459700003303488700004003521700003803561700002003599700004203619700004203661541008403703561005603787506004203843852002303885000601762-220111028123801.0851217i18371926mau eng d0 aocn6123653641 aMAHV85A47 aMH-HedacscMH-H10aMS81-4011 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.10aThomas Bailey Aldrich papers,f1837-1926. a19 boxesa(6.3 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence of Thomas Bailey Aldrich and Lilian Woodman Aldrich; II. Other correspondence and related materials; and II. Other papers. aAldrich was a poet, novelist and short story writer, and editor of Every Saturday (1865-1874) and The Atlantic Monthly (1881-1890). aChiefly letters to Thomas Bailey Aldrich and letters to his wife, Lilian Woodman Aldrich. Includes editorial correspondence from Aldrich's years as editor of The Atlantic Monthly and letters from others concerning Aldrich's own writings. Correspondents include: Henry Mills Alden, Arlo Bates, Th. Bentzon, Edwin Booth, Edgar Fawcett, Annie Fields, Isabella Stewart Gardner, Richard Watson Gilder, Ferris Greenslet, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, William Dean Howells, Archer M. (Archer Milton) Huntington, Helen Hunt Jackson, Henry James, Sarah Orne Jewett, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Charles Eliot Norton, H. W. (Harriet Waters) Preston, Frank Dempster Sherman, Edward Rowland Sill, Edmund Clarence Stedman, Bayard Taylor, Edith Matilda Thomas, Mark Twain, Henry Van Dyke, Charles Dudley Warner, Richard Grant White, Sarah Wyman Whitman, Nathaniel Parker Willis, and George Edward Woodberry. Family correspondence includes a long series of letters by Aldrich to Lillian Woodman before their marriage. Many of the letters, principally those to Mrs. Aldrich, are largely of a social nature. Also includes a small group of financial records, invitations, menus, and other ephemera. aThomas Bailey Aldrich Papers (MS Am 1429). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid available (1.62 MB)uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003278 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-1836. aIn English.10aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,d1836-1907.10aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,cMrs.,d-1927.20aAtlantic Monthly. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aInvitations.2aat 7aMenus.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aAlden, Henry Mills,d1836-1919.1 aAldrich, Thomas Bailey,cMrs.,d-1927.1 aBates, Arlo,d1850-1918.1 aBentzon, Th.,d1840-1907.1 aBooth, Edwin,d1833-1893.1 aFawcett, Edgar,d1847-1904.1 aFields, Annie,d1834-1915.1 aGardner, Isabella Stewart,d1840-1924.1 aGilder, Richard Watson,d1844-1909.1 aGreenslet, Ferris,d1875-1959.1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911.1 aHowe, M. A. De Wolfeq(Mark Antony De Wolfe),d1864-1960.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.1 aHuntington, Archer M.q(Archer Milton),d1870-1955.1 aJackson, Helen Maria Fiske Hunt,d1831-1885.1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.1 aJarves, James Jackson,d1818-1888.1 aJewett, Sarah Orne,d1849-1909.1 aMabie, Hamilton Wright,d1846-1916.1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.1 aPierce, Henry Lillie,d1825-1896.1 aPreston, H. W.q(Harriet Waters),d1836-1911.1 aSherman, Frank Dempster,d1860-1916.1 aSill, Edward Rowland,d1841-1887.1 aStedman, Edmund Clarence,d1833-1908.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.1 aTaylor, Bayard,d1825-1878.1 aThomas, Edith Matilda,d1854-1925.1 aTuckerman, Henry T.q(Henry Theodore),d1813-1871.1 aTwain, Mark,d1835-1910.1 aVan Dyke, Henry,d1852-1933.1 aWarner, Charles Dudley,d1829-1900.1 aWhite, Richard Grant,d1821-1885.1 aWhitman, Sarah.1 aWillis, Nathaniel Parker,d1806-1867.1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.0 cDeposit, then gift;aAldrich, Talbot;d1942 deposit; 1949 gift;e42M-1836.5hou1 aDeposited by Talbot Aldrich, 1942; gift, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 142901589ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002700122245008000149300003100229351008200260520018300342555008700525555010800612524013200720546001600852600002700868600003000895650003900925650003600964655002601000655001601026656002501042541006301067561005401130506004201184852002501226008896917-720130124102619.0020426i19361957mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm798946321 aMAHV02-A24 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aFairbanks, Marjorie C.10aMarjorie C. Fairbanks correspondence and notes on Thomas Wolfe,f1936-1957. a19 boxesa(9.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions. aCorrespondence and research notes compiled by Fairbanks for a book on Thomas Wolfe including Wolfe's medical records from Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, 10-15 September 1938.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1982-1983, under *82M-79. aMarjorie C. Fairbanks Correspondence and Notes on Thomas Wolfe, 1936-1957 (MS Am 1883.9). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aFairbanks, Marjorie C.10aWolfe, Thomasd1900-1938. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican fictiony20th century. 7aMedical records.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aWomen writers.2lcsh0 cBequest;aMarjorie Crocker Fairbanks;d1979;e82M-79.5HOU1 aBequest of Marjorie Crocker Fairbanks, 1979.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883.901664ctcaa22002295a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070110003300093245005600126300003100182351001700213520097500230610003301205655002301238655002101261700002901282700002801311506004601339541002501385852002401410012675861-120131023165000.0110203i18961925mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aWeber & Fields (Comedy team)10aBurlesques performed by Weber & Fields,f1896-1925. a19 boxesa(9.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aConsists of the following burlesques performed by Weber & Fields: Box 1. Arizona; The art of Maryland; Barbara Fidgety. Box 2. Catherine Market; The con-curers; The curl and the judge. Box 3. Du Hurry; Fiddle dee dee; Gay lord Quex. Box 4. The geezer. Box 5. Helter skelter. Box 6. Higgledy piggledy. Box 7. Hoity toity. Box 8. Hurly burly; The merry widow burlesque. Box 9. The mummy and the hummingbird. Box 10. The music master; Onions; The other way. Box 11. A perfect day; Quo vas iss; The royal family; Secret servants. Box 12. The stickiness of gelatine; The three musketeers. Box 13. Twirly whirly; Under the red globe. Box 14. Waffles; Way up east; The wee minister. Box 15. Whirligig. Box 16. Whoop dee do. Box 17. The worst born; Zaza. Box 18. [unconfirmed if performed by Weber and Fields] Anthony and Cleopatra; The big little princess; Camille; Captain Jinks; The college widower; The gay grizette; Humming birds. Box 19. [parts for 7 untitled burlesques].20aWeber & Fields (Comedy team) 7aPrompt books.2aat 7aBurlesques.2aat1 aFields, Lew,d1867-1941.1 aWeber, Joe,d1867-1942.0 aCollection is open for research use.5the0 aUnknown source.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 66000990ntm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245006200142300003500204500003400239520009700273500002700370524005600397600003500453600003400488700004800522700003300570541006200603561004400665852002700709009683949-X20050614141632.0050602i18921900||||||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612888027 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936.00kLetters :bto Mr. and Mrs. Lockwood DeForest,f1892-1900. a19 items ;c25 cm. or smaller. a19 autograph letters, signed. aLetters concerning household matters, proposed visits and often mentioning Caroline Kipling. aIn a tray case, 27 cm. aMS Eng 809.3. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKipling, Caroline,d1865-1939.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936.1 aDeForest, Lockwood,d1850-1932,erecipient.1 aLockwood,cMrs.,erecipient. cGift;aFlora V. Livingston;d10 June 1947;e46M-337.5hou aGift of Flora V. Livingston, 1947.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 809.301321ntm a2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245005900140300003500199500016000234520014000394500002200534524005400556650003200610650002100642651006700663651006700730655001800797700004300815700004100858541006700899561004200966852002301008010176612-220061215163355.0061215i19081909enk|||| |||| ||||i eng d0 aocn612882067 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aReid, Whitelaw,d1837-1912.10aLetters :bto Robert Bacon and Elihu Root,f1908-1909. a19 items ;c27 cm. or smaller. aOne autograph letter, signed, and 4 typescript letters, signed, to Bacon; 14 teletype carbon letters to Root; and a patent of A. Arnaud; written in London. aThe letters are dimplomatic correspondence concerning Reid's work as U. S. Ambassodor to Great Britain; the patent is for India rubber. aIn a case, 36 cm. aMS Am 1664. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAmbassadorszUnited States. 0aRubbervPatents. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationszGreat Britainy20th century. 0aGreat BritainxForeign relationszUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPatents.2aat1 aBacon, Robert,d1860-1919,erecipient.1 aRoot, Elihu,d1845-1937,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Gasper Bacon;d11 Mar. 1941;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Gasper Bacon, 1941.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 166400905ntm a2200229 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245005100108300003500159500004300194520006800237500009200305500002700397524005300424650002900477655004500506655004500551541005700596852002200653009958882-X20060509150210.0060509m18151819xxu|||| |||| ||||p eng d0 aocn612826011 aMH-HcMH-Heappm00kPoems :kmanuscript,f1815, 1819, and undated. a19 items ;c31 cm. or smaller. aWritten in several unidentified hands. aPoems, hymns, and anthems, chiefly concerning religious themes. aA note on the back of one poem reads, "Poetical scraps of the late Mrs. Hill & others." aIn an envelope, 33 cm. aMS Am 990. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aReligionxPopular works. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aHymnszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat0 cUnknown;ano source;dno date;eno acc. number.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Am 99004395ckcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005300123245006700176246025500243300003100498351078300529545010901312520072401421520023902145530006202384555008702446555018302533524011702716546001602833600004102849600004502890651006102935655004602996655002203042655002003064700006303084700006803147541005103215561005403266506004203320852022403362845039903586006157642-520130930114559.0021029q18501915mau||| | | k|eng d0 aocm808307611 aMAHV02-A192 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMeserve, Frederick Hill,d1865-1962,ecollector.10aFrederick Hill Meserve's Historical portraits,fca. 1850-1915.33aHistorical portraits;ba collection of photographs printed directly from the original negatives and from negatives made from photographs for the most part from the collection of Frederick H. Meserve, for Mr. Adrian H. Joline, New York Vols. 1-26, 28. a19 volumesa(3 linear ft.) aIncludes the following volumes (with publication date): I-III: Authors, artists, journalists and educators. 1913; IV-VIII. Prominent people in public and private life. 1913; IX-XVI. General officers of the Union Army, War of the Rebellion. 1914; XVII. Regimental officers [of the] Union Army, War of the Rebellion. 1914; XVIII. Officers of the Union Navy. Caricatures and miscellaneous portraits. 1914; XIX-XX. Confederate States of America. 1914; XXI. Confederate States of America, miscellaneous. 1914; XXII. Clergymen, 1914; XXIII-XXV. Dramatic, 1915; XXVI. Celebraties of other countries. 1915; [Vol XXVII lacking but can be found as Lin 2112.50F]; XXVIII. Historical portraits and Lincolniana. Index of a part of the collection of Americana of Frederick Hill Meserve. 1915. aMeserve was a New York textile executive and has been called America's first great photograph collector. aA privately printed (New York, 1913-1915) collection of approximately 8000 cartes-de-visite photographs of nineteenth-century figures, including over a hundred photos of Abraham Lincoln, his famous contemporaries, both American and European, and photos of Union and Confederate Army officers. These volumes were printed directly from the original negatives (many of which were the originals made by the studio of Mathew B. Brady) and from negatives made from photographs for the most part from the collection of Frederick H. Meserve, for Mr. Adrian Hoffman Joline, New York, Vols. 1-26, 28. Bound in morocco and done on handmade paper. Vol XXVII was also issued to subscribers in 1915 as separate volume on Lincolniana. aThis set was originally subscribed by J.Pierpont Morgan Sr., but was finally compiled for A.H. Joline, often called the "Morgan-Joline set." It was one of four sets published in 1913-1915, with 3 additional sets compiled in the 1940s. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014688 aFinding aid copied from Vol XXVIII which is an index to these volumes. Index includes references to the missing volume, Vol XXVII, which can be found at Houghton as Lin 2112.50F. aFrederick Hill Meserve's Historical Portraits, ca. 1850-1915 (MS Am 2242). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMeserve, Frederick Hill,d1865-1962.10aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865vPortraits. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPortraits. 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aBrady, Mathew B.,dapproximately 1823-1896,ephotographer.1 aJoline, Adrian H.q(Adrian Hoffman),d1850-1912,eformer owner.0 cPurchase;aFrederick Hill Meserve;d1934;5HOU1 aPurchased from Frederick Hill Meserve, 1934.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 2242tr.f. US 42505.440zVol. 27, lacking, contains the same material as his "Lincolniana; historical portraits and views. New York, 1915," which is in the Nolan Collection of Lincolniana (Lin 2112.50F). aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01680ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003700121245004500158300004400203351003000247545022500277520009200502524008400594555008700678555010800765600003800873650003600911650003500947655001800982655003801000541010601038561008801144506004501232506005401277852002301331008845121-620090129100448.0020227i19371955mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127183471 aMAHV02A2 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLaFarge, Christopher,d1897-195610aChristopher LaFarge diaries,f1937-1955. a19 volumes in 3 boxesa(1.5 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aLaFarge was an American author, painter, and architect, and was a graduate of the Harvard College Class of 1920. He was the grandson of author and artist John LaFarge and the brother of author Oliver LaFarge (H.C. 1924). a19 volumes of diaries of American author, painter, and architect, Christopher La Farge. aChristopher LaFarge Diaries (MS Am 2118). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accession Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-232.10aLaFarge, Christopher,d1897-1956. 0aAmerican fictiony20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local0 cBequest of Christopher LaFarge;aFrancis W. LaFarge, executor;d1960 October;e60M-232.5hou3diaries1 aGift of the estate of Christopher LaFarge, Francis W. LaFarge, executor, 1960.5hou aCollection is open for reseach use.5hou aDiaries were formerly restricted until 1985.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 211801114ntm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002900108245003400137300004400171500002200215500004300237505014100280524005500421655003900476700004200515700004700557541012500604561006100729561004400790852002600834009363920-120040527150757.0040517s17uu enk|||| |||| ||||p eng d0 aocn612818406 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMeen, Henry,d1744-1817.00kPoems :kmanuscript,f[17--?] a19, [9], 22, 15 leaves, bound ;c22 cm. aIn various hands. aBound in half leather and paste paper.0 a1. Happiness -- 2. The Hero & Leander of Musaeus -- 3. The dedication of Solomon's Temple -- 4. The dedication of the Temple of Solomon. aMS Eng 1253. Houghton Library, Harvard University. 7aPoemszEnglandy18th century.2aat1 aMcIntosh, Henry Pague,eformer owner.1 aTurner, Dawson,d1775-1858,eformer owner. cPurchase;aPeter Keisogloff;b53 Old Arcade, Cleveland, OH ;d26 Aug 1966;e66M-14;h$10 John Pierpont Morgan fund.5hou aPurchased with the John Pierpont Morgan fund, 1966.5hou aBookplate of Henry Pague McIntosh.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 125301164ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002500108245004300133300002500176500013700201500003300338581005300371500002700424524005400451600002500505610006600530650007500596655006700671541009100738561004400829852002500873010148086-520061108150542.0061108nuuuuuuuuxxu|||| |||| 000|eaeng d0 aocn612872204 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aGoodspeed, George T.10aReminiscences :ktypescript,fundated. a191 leaves ;c28 cm. aTypescript (photocopy) with autograph manuscript corrections and revisions, as well as manuscript revisions in an unidentified hand. aTitle supplied by cataloger. aThe bookseller's apprentice (Philadelphia, 1996) aIn a tray case, 30 cm. aMS Am 1988. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGoodspeed, George T.20aGoodspeed's Book Shop (Boston, Mass.)xHistoryy20th century. 0aAntiquarian booksellerszMassachusettszBostonxHistoryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy20th century.2aat0 cGift;aGeorge T. Goodspeed;b18 Beacon St., Boston MA 02108;d1977 Jan.;e77M-75.5hou1 aGift of George T. Goodspeed, 1977.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 198801201ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245005200146246002000198300002500218545011100243500007600354500005100430520007100481524005400552600003800606650005700644655001800701655003800719561004400757541009700801852002500898009128375-220030620095500.0030620s1945 xx |||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612773136 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHollis, Henry French,d1869-1949.10aUnder the heel in Paris :kmanuscript,f[1945?]13aBoche in Paris. a193 sheets ;c31 cm. aHollis was a graduate of Harvard College A.B. 1892 and a US Senator from New Hampshire (served 1913-1919). aTypescript and typescript (carbon), with autograph revisions by Hollis. aLabelled: first instalment [sic] 33,000 words. aRecounts his experiences in France during WWII, from 1940 to 1945. aMS Am 2317. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHollis, Henry French,d1869-1949. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xPersonal narratives, American. 7aMemoirs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat aGift of Henry French Hollis, 1946.5hou cGift;aHenry French Hollis,b74, Avenue Marceau, Paris, France;d1946 Mar. 14e45M-192F5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 231701257ntm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100004200127245006700169300005200236500014600288524005500434600003500489600005300524655004700577655004500624700004400669541015200713561005100865561005100916852002400967009364033-120050809122558.0k|||| ||||| |||in040517s1937 enk|||| |||| ||||0aeng d0 aocn612818436 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aGogarty, Oliver St. John,d1878-1957.10aAs I was going down Sackville Street :kgalley proofs,f[1937] a194 sheets ;c17 x 63 cm. folded to 17 x 32 cm. aGalley proofs with autograph manuscript corrections. Includes a photograph of Oliver St. John Gogarty, Oliver D. Gogarty and Horace Reynolds. aMS Eng 1245. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aGogarty, Oliver D.xPortraits.10aGogarty, Oliver St. John,d1878-1957xPortraits. 7aGalley proofszEnglandy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century.2aat1 aReynolds, Horace,d1896-eformer owner. cPurchase;aEstate of Horace Mason Reynolds, Walter Haigh executor;b5 Boylston St., Cambridge, MA;dFeb 1966;e65M-154;h$100 Amy Lowell fund.5hou aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1966.5hou aFrom the estate of Horace Mason Reynolds.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 124501128nbc a22001817a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070245009700087300002900184520045900213555007400672561007900746580004600825600002600871700002600897852002300923002294452-420020606093309.7910809i19651988xx ||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn61245407210aPapers of John Lithgow: correspondence and personal journals series,f1965-1988 (inclusive). a199 letters + 4 journals aSeries includes letters written to John Lithgow from Arthur Lithgow, Bobby Short, David Hwang, Katherine Hepburn, Joe Papp, Harold Prince, Arthur Gordon, Mike Nichols, Alan Fox, Bob Fosse, Alexander Cohen, and Judd Hirsch. Series also contains personal journals kept by Lithgow including one kept during rehearsals of Trevor Griffith's Comedians. Most of the correspondence is in the form of backstage greetings sent to Lithgow prior to his performances.0 aDetailed data base inventory available at repository (File: LITHGOW). aGifts of John Lithgow: 2 October 1985, 22 September 1988, and 20 May 1991. aForms part of the Papers of John Lithgow.10aLithgow, John,d1945-1 aLithgow, John,d1945-8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 39600715ntm a2200205 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070040002100086100002900107245008200136300002000218500003900238524005400277600004200331600002900373655001900402655002200421852006600443008874500-720040923084156.0020329s1921 xx |||||||eng|d0 aocm80362322 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925.00kReceiptbfor loan for Keats exhibition :ktypescript (signed),f1921 Mar. 20. a1p. in 1 folder aIncludes list of materials loaned. aMS Am 2142. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aKeats, John,d1795-1821xExhibitions.10aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925. 7aReceipts.2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2142zShelved with bMS Am 2139 and bMS Am 2141.01425nrcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245004900093300002900142351005200171545015000223520003900373524012700412650002700539650001400566655001900580655001700599710009800616541024000714561015200954506004201106852002301148013067144-420120830100925.0020710i17001899mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aJapanese netsuke collection,fca. 1700-1899. a2 boxesa(.2 linear ft.) aSee curatorial file for additional information. aNetsukes are small objects carved in wood, ivory, horn, or sometimes wrought in metal; sometimes used as toggles for Japanese kimonos or pouches. a8 wooden carved Japanese netsukes. aJapanese Netsuke Collection, ca. 1700-1899 (MS Thr 776). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aArt objects, Japanese. 0aNetsukes. 7aNetsukes.2aat 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 77603328ckcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101245004600124300003000170545012200200520058400322530006200906555008700968555010801055524012401163610003601287610004001323610002401363610002201387610002101409610002201430650004101452650003701493650003701530655004401567655004401611655001701655655003201672655004701704655004701751656002201798656002501820700003301845700003201878541030701910561017302217506004602390845038602436852002402822009131063-620130930095104.0030421i17901820mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm823170011 aMHAT03-A86 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aDrawings of English theaters,f1790-1820. a2 boxesa(.25 linear ft.) aJames Winston was actor and manager at the Richmond Theatre, Surrey in 1799. Samuel Beazley was an English architect. aIncludes James Winston's drawings of Portman Market Theatre, Plymouth Theatre, Queen's Theatre (Manchester), Richmond Theatre, and the Drury Lane Theatre, along with Samuel Beazley's drawings of the Theatre Royal, Birmingham and the Theatre Royal Rotunda, Dublin. Also contains drawings of the Drury Lane Theater, the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, and unidentified theaters by unidentified artists. Also includes drawings of various stage scenes as well as an architectural model of an interior section in cardboard, gilt and watercolor of the Drury Lane Theatre, among other items. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005408 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-32. aDrawings of English Theaters, 1790-1820 (MS Thr 344). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aTheatre-Royal (Dublin, Ireland)20aTheatre Royal (Birmingham, England)20aDrury Lane Theatre.20aPlymouth Theatre.20aPortman Theatre.20aRichmond Theatre. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and scenery. 0aTheaterszEnglandy18th century. 0aTheaterszEnglandy19th century. 7aDrawingszEnglandy18th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aModels.2aat 7aSet design drawings.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszEnglandy18th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aArchitects.2lcsh 7aSet designers.2lcsh1 aBeazley, Samuel,d1786-1851.1 aWinston, James,d1779-1843.0 cPurchase;aBernard Quaritch, Ltd.;b5-8 Lower John Street, Golden Square, London, WIR Englandd1980 Feb. 13;e79M-32;h$500, Mrs. Anna E. Crouse; $500.00, Miss Jean Richmond; $325.00, Books for Houghton; $2170.00, Francis W. Hatch Fund; $1,800, F. E. Chase fund; $4011.95, Theatre Aquisition fund;5the1 aPurchased with funds from Francis W. Hatch, F. E. Chase fund, Mrs. Anna E. Crouse, Miss Jean Richmond, Theatre Acquisition fund, and Books for Houghton fund, 1980.5the0 aCollection is open for research use.5the aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 34401253nrcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070100004400093245008000137300003000217520027200247524008200519546001600601650001800617655002700635655003400662655002600696655001700722655002600739655002300765541007200788561005000860506004200910852002300952013657691-520130412110359.0020710i18101850mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilson, Fredric Woodbridge,ecollector.10aFredric Woodbridge Wilson toy theater character collection,fca. 1810-1850. a2 boxesa(.25 linear ft.) aCollection includes many hand-colored, cut-out character engravings, to be used for toy theater play. A few also have added tinsel decorations. A few characters are for the play The silver palace (Ironspark character and others), but most are from unidentified plays. aMS Thr 955. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aToy theaters. 7aJuvenile drama.2local 7aCollages (visual works).2aat 7aNovelty works.2gmgpc 7aRealia.2aat 7aTinsel prints.2local 0aToy theaters.2aat0 cGift;aFredric Woodbridge Wilson;d2000;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Fredric Woodbridge Wilson, 2000.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 95501957nkcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006300093300002900156351007200185520040000257555008700657524014100744546001600885650002800901650003500929655002200964655004600986655003001032655002201062710009801084541013201182561015201314506004201466506012301508852002401631013170068-520130325075807.0020710i18701891mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of 19th-century folk costumes,fca. 1870-1891. a2 boxesa(.4 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by geographic location of subject of image. aCollection of 19th-century photographs primarily of people in regional folk costumes with many depicting tasks and chores typical to the time period along with a few portraits. Most of the photographs are from European countries with one from Russia. Includes cartes-de-visite (card photographs), cabinet photographs, and copy prints with most of them hand colored. Many photographs are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02304 aPhotographs of 19th-Century Folk Costumes, ca. 1870-1891 (MS Thr 845). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aCostumesy19th century. 0aEthnic costumesy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCopy prints.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 84502446ckcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002300099100004200122245006500164300003000229351005300259545006700312520046400379555008700843555009900930524014301029546001601172600003001188600004701218600004101265600004201306600004401348600004101392650004101433655002201474655002001496700005101516700003801567700005301605700004001658700004901698710004201747541010101789561004501890506004201935852002301977009541702-820131126122256.0050211i19151967mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm793921321 aMHAT05A5 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWarhol, Andy,d1928-1987,ecollector.10aAndy Warhol collection of photographs of actors,f1915-1967. a2 boxesa(.5 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by name of photographer. aAndy Warhol (1928-1987) was an American artist and film maker. a222 photographs collected by Warhol of American stage and screen actors and actresses, including Douglas Fairbanks, Greta Garbo, Lillian Gish, Norma Talmadge, Lana Turner and many others. Some are portrait photographs; others depict the actor in movie or theatrical scenes. There are also many photographs of unidentified subjects. Photographers include James Abbe, Robert W. Coburn, Ruth Harriet Louise, William J. Walling, White Studio, and Dorothy Wilding.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015718 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under 2003MT-155. aAndy Warhol Collection of Photographs of Actors, 1915-1967 (MS Thr 454). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWarhol, Andy,d1928-1987.10aFairbanks, Douglas,d1883-1939vPortraits.10aGarbo, Greta,d1905-1990vPortraits.10aGish, Lillian,d1893-1993vPortraits.10aTalmadge, Norma,d1897-1957vPortraits.10aTurner, Lana,d1921-1995vPortraits. 0aMotion picture actors and actresses. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aAbbe, James Edward,d1883-1973,ephotographer.1 aCoburn, Robert W.,ephotographer.1 aLouise, Ruth Harriet,d1903-1940,ephotographer.1 aWalling, William J.,ephotographer.1 aWilding, Dorothy,d1893-1976,ephotographer.2 aAlvin S. White Studio,ephotographer.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b825 Fifth Ave., New York, NY 10021;d1990 March 30;e2003MT-155.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1990.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 45403657ntcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005000108245009200158300003000250351022700280545123800507520029901745546008302044524013202127555008702259600003302346600005002379600003802429650001502467650001402482650004702496650001502543655003802558655001902596655004902615655003602664655003302700700003302733700003802766541010902804561013302913506004203046506012303088852002403211011503802-720110701072807.0020710i19131949mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612824330 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDana, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,d1881-1950.10aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana papers on Henri Barbusse and Sacco-Vanzetti, 1913-1949. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft. ) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana compositions; III. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana translations of Henri Barbusse; IV. Clippings; and V. Drawings and photographs. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow ("Harry") Dana, Harvard AB 1903, AM 1904, PhD 1910 taught English at the University of Paris (Sorbonne) from 1908 to 1910 and comparative literature at Columbia University from 1912 to 1917, when he was dismissed for pacifist activities. Thereafter he continued to teach compartive literature and Russian studies at a variety of educational institutions and was deeply involved in progressive political activities, particularly in advancing the cause of global socialism and supporting labor unions and worker education. Throughout his life he traveled widely, living in the Soviet Union from 1927 to 1928 and visiting major centers of European drama such as London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, and Budapest. The bulk of his literary oeuvre focused on Soviet drama; he also wrote a history of the Dana family, The Dana saga, and produced an edition of the novel of his paternal grandfather, Richard Henry Dana, Jr., Two years before the mast. Beginning in 1917, Dana was granted life tenancy of the Vassall-Craigie-Longfellow House at 105 Brattle St., Cambridge, Mass. and became its first curator when the residence was made a national monument and research center administered by the US National Park Service. aIncludes correspondence from Henri Barbusse, Bartolomeo Vanzetti, and others to Dana; articles and speeches by Dana on the Sacco-Vanzetti case and on Barbusse; speeches by Barbusse; clippings on Barbusse, socialism, and pacifism during the inter-war years; drawings and photographs of Barbusse. aCollection materials are predominantly in English and French; some in Russian. aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana Papers on Henri Barbusse and Sacco-Vanzetti (MS Am 2615). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0198310aBarbusse, Henri,d1873-1935.10aDana, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,d1881-1950.10aVanzetti, Bartolomeo,d1888-1927. 0aCommunism. 0aPacifism. 0aSacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921. 0aSocialism. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aDrawings.2aat 7aLetters (correspondence)y20th century.2aat 7aPhotographsy20th century.2aat 7aSpeechesy20th century.2aat1 aBarbusse, Henri,d1874-1935.1 aVanzetti, Bartolomeo,d1888-1927.0 cGift;aHenry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana;d1956eTransferred from Printed Books (56-1829) to 56M-230.5hou1 aGift of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana, 1956. Transferred from Printed Book Department to the Manuscript Department, 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 261501472ctcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002500108245005100133300002800184545011700212520036000329524010100689546001600790651007100806600002500877600002300902610006300925541010200988561005101090506004201141852002301183000602537-420111013105721.0860226i18611869mau ||| | eng d0 aocn612376806 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHuntington, William.10aWilliam Huntington family letters,f1861-1869. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.) aWilliam Huntington of Lebanon, Connecticut was a private in the 8th Connecticut Volunteers during the Civil War. aConsists of 107 letters from William Huntington to his family, chiefly to his sister Ellen. The bulk of the letters were written during the Civil War and detail Huntington's experiences with the 8th Connecticut Volunteers in service chiefly in Virginia. A few letters after the war were written from California where Huntington was in the lumber business. aWilliam Huntington Family Letters, 1861-1869 (MS Am 1725). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives.10aHuntington, William.30aHuntington family.10aUnited States.bArmy.bConnecticut Infantry Regiment, 8th.0 cGift.aMrs. A. F. Whittem;b11 Clement Circle, Cambridge 38, Mass.;ddate unknown;e62M-345.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. A. F. Whittem, date unknown.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172502352cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100041001300121100002500134245006600159300002900225351011300254545043000367520028000797524007501077546004601152555008701198555010801285600003401393600002501427650003701452650005101489655003801540655001601578655001601594700002101610700003401631700003501665541013801700561005101838506004201889852002301931006328211-920100318114013.0950705i19451983mau eng d0 aocn6126537841 aMAHV95A3 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aWagner, Jean,d1919-10aJean Wagner papers,f1945-1983 (inclusive)g1957-1963 (bulk). a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to and from Jean Wagner; II. Compositions and subject files. aWagner was a French scholar of American Studies, especially Afro-American poetry. He received his Doctorat d'Etat from the Sorbonne in 1963, having completed his thesis on American Afro-American poetry, entitled: Les poetes negres des Etas-Unis. This work eventually was translated and published in English as: Black poets of the United States from Paul Laurence Dunbar to Langston Hughes, University of Illinois Press, 1973. aThis collection of papers is Wagner's correspondence with colleagues, poets and librarians, working notes and subject files relating to the presentation of his thesis. There are a few original manuscripts by others, notably Langston Hughes, Alfred Kreymborg and Samuel Allen. aJean Wagner Papers (MS Am 2035). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIncludes materials in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1984-1985, under *84M-23.10aHughes, Langston,d1902-1967.10aWagner, Jean,d1919- 0aAfrican Americans in literature. 0aAmerican literaturexAfrican American authors. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aAllen, Samuel W.1 aHughes, Langston,d1902-1967.1 aKreymborg, Alfred,d1883-1966.0 cPurchased;aMichel Fabre (Paris);b12 Square Montsouris 75016 Paris France;d1985 December 10;e84M-23;hAmy Lowell fund ($500).5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1985.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 203502021npcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100002900121245010600150300002900256351003900285545026200324520017600586524011400762555008700876555010800963600002901071600003301100610003601133650003901169650003501208650003101243655002001274655001601294700003301310710003601343710004301379506004301422541005301465561009401518852002301612008435490-920090105134555.0000809i19671998mau eng d0 aocn6122434721 aMAHV00A9 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCorbett, William,d1942-10aWilliam Corbett archive for "A History of New Directions",f1967-1998 (inclusive),g1996-1997 (bulk). a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aIn 1996 James Laughlin, founder of the New Directions Publishing Corporation, contracted with American poet William Corbett to write a history of New Directions. Laughlin died in November of 1997 and the project was later cancelled by W.W. Norton & Company. aThis archive includes correspondence, manuscripts, notes, audiotapes, contracts, and other materials assembled by Corbett relating to his research and writing of the book. aWilliam Corbett Archive for "A History of New Directions" (MS Am 2092). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000758 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1998-1999, under *98M-28.10aCorbett, William,d1942-10aLaughlin, James,d1914-1997.20aNew Directions Publishing Corp. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aContracts.2aat 0aAudiotapes.1 aLaughlin, James,d1914-1997.2 aNew Directions Publishing Corp.2 aW.W. Norton & Company,ecorrespondent. aCollection open for research use.5hou0 d1998;e98M-28;aWilliam Corbett;cPurchase.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund from William Corbett through Granary Books, 1998.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 209203850ntcaa2200541 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245004000156300002900196351010500225545007400330520091100404524007901315555008701394555010501481544068901586600003402275610005002309611006302359650002702422650005602449650001902505650002102524650002102545651001902566651003302585655002502618655001602643655002202659656001802681656001702699700005402716700004902770700003502819700003702854700004402891700004102935700006402976710003503040541012003075561004803195506004203243852002303285008634316-520090109075358.0010504i19171956mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126989341 aMAHV01A15 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aSanger, Margaret,d1879-1966.10aMargaret Sanger papers,f1917-1959. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into three series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Photographs and ephemera. aSanger was a nurse, leader of the birth control movement, and author. aCollection primarily of correspondence formed by Margaret Sanger's biographer, Lawrence Lader, while researching The Margaret Sanger story, published in 1955. Largest groups of correspondence are from Sanger to Lader and to intimate friend and financial backer, Juliet Barrett Rublee. Other correspondents include Hugh De Sélincourt, Havelock Ellis, Anne Kennedy, James Noah H. Slee, and H. G. (Herbert George) Wells. Letters touch on Sanger's travels, conferences, and writing for the promotion of birth control, her periods of ill health, relationships with friends and lovers, and close working relationship with Lader. Brief essays or fragments in the compositions series concern family losses and other autobiographical matters. Photographs cover childhood in Corning, New York, schooling at Claverack College and Hudson River Institute, conferences, and international travel promoting birth control. aMargaret Sanger Papers (MS Am 2094). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001018 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1997-1998, under*97M-24. aClosely related collections are available at Harvard University and elsewhere: the American Birth Control League records, 1917-1934, are held by the Houghton Library, a substantial portion of which is available in microform; Lawrence Lader's papers, 1950-1990, are held by the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections of the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine; major collections of Margaret Sanger's papers are held by the Sophia Smith Collection at Smith College and the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress, both of which are available in microform editions. The Margaret Sanger Papers Project is sponsored by the Department of History at New York University.10aSanger, Margaret,d1879-1966.20aClaverack College and Hudson River Institute.20aAmerican birth control conferencen(1st : 1921 : New York) 0aBirth control clinics. 0aBirth control clinicszBrownsville (New York, N.Y.) 0aContraception. 0aSex instruction. 0aSocial advocacy. 0aCorning (N.Y.) 0aBrownsville (New York, N.Y.) 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aAuthors.2aat 7aNurses.2aat1 aDe Sélincourt, Hugh,d1878-1951,ecorrespondent.1 aEllis, Havelock,d1859-1939,ecorrespondent.1 aKennedy, Anne,ecorrespondent.1 aLader, Lawrence,ecorrespondent.1 aRublee, Juliet Barrett,ecorrespondent.1 aSlee, James Noah H.,ecorrespondent.1 aWells, H. G.q(Herbert George),d1866-1946,ecorrespondent.2 aAmerican Birth Control League.0 cGift;aLawrence Lader;b51 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10003;d1995 December; 1997 November;e95M-33; 97M-24.5hou1 aGift of Lawrence Lader, 1995 and 1997.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 209401653ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245005400159300002900213351007100242545005800313520014100371555008700512555012200599524010400721600003700825650002400862651003400886655001900920655002200939655002000961656002100981852004501002541011801047561004201165506004201207852005401249008897475-820120821134916.0020927i18661887mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm81933542 aMAHV02A101 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887.10aDorothea Lynde Dix additional papers,f1866-1887. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name, with some later additions at end. aDix was a humanitarian crusader for the mentally ill. aLetters to Dix, notes, documents, photographs, portraits, diploma, and lists relating to Dix. Also includes some items concerning Japan.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010848 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-837-846, 848-849. aDorothea Lynde Dix Additional Papers, 1866-1887 (MS Am 2157). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887. 0aMentally illxCare. 0aJapanxHistoryy19th century. 7aDiplomas.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aReformers.2lcsh8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 2157zItems (11) and (12)0 cGift;aMrs. Horatio Lamb;b260 Clarendon Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1944 Spring;e43M-837-846; 848-849.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Horatio Lamb, 1944.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2157zShelved with bMS Am 2156-216003096ctcaa2200457 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003500108245011600143300002900259351011500288545063300403520043701036555008701473524016501560546001601725610003801741610003901779600002201818600003301840650002501873650001801898650006001916650001601976655002301992656001902015700005302034700004902087700006502136700004602201700004902247700006202296700004902358541006902407561004602476506004202522852002202564561005202586008963736-420130312090431.0040505i18461852mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612737589 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHaynes, Watson G.,erecipient.10aLetters sent to Watson G. Haynes on the initiative to change regulations in the United States Navy,f1846-1952. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Letters and statements from individuals II. Documents from groups. aWatson G. Haynes was a seaman who, according to Charles Sumner, "started the movement against flogging in the Navy." Between December 1849 and June 1850 the United States Senate received 271 petitions from the citizens of various states urging the end of flogging. In September 1850 Congress abolished flogging in the Navy and merchant marine. On 3 March 1851, the commutation of the liquor ration was restricted to "officers and their attendants" only. On 31 August 1853, Congress repealed the 1851 law and the liquor privilege was once again opened up to the rank and file. Source: Website of the U.S. Navy Department Library. aThese papers are letters, statements, and petitions that are responses to Haynes' initiative to change the regulations of the United States Navy that permited corporal punishment (especially flogging) and allowed alcohol as part of the men's rations. Includes correspondents Henry Ward Beecher, Richard Henry Dana, Edward Everett, Ezra Stiles Gannett, Moses Grant, Horace Greeley, John Parker Hale, and Charles Sumner, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01483 aLetters Sent to Watson G. Haynes on the Initiative to Change Regulations in the United States Navy, 1846-1952 (MS Am 687). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aUnited States.bNavyxRum ration.10aUnited States.bNavyvRegulations.10aHaynes, Watson G.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aCorporal punishment. 0aFlagellation. 0aOperational rations (Military supplies)zUnited States. 0aTemperance. 7aTestimonials.2aat 7aSailors.2lcsh1 aDana, Richard Henry,d1787-1879,ecorrespondent.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aGannett, Ezra S.q(Ezra Stiles),d1801-1871,ecorrespondent.1 aGrant, Moses,d1785-1861,ecorrespondent.10aGreeley, Horace,d1811-1872,ecorrespondent.10aHale, John P.q(John Parker),d1806-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,ecorrespondent.0 cGift?;aSource unknown;dbefore 1942;eNo accession number.5HOU1 aDonor unknown; received before 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 6871 aPossibly formerly owned by Charles Sumner?5hou02606ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100002200123245006900145300002900214545051500243520024000758524010900998555008701107555011901194581018101313546001601494600002201510600003301532600004201565650003801607650003601645700006501681700005401746700003401800700003001834700003401864541015501898561007302053506004202126852005202168009214642-220100302095442.0031015i19161952mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612786674 aMAHV03A328 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aMasefield family.10aMasefield family letters to Florence Corliss Lamont,f1916-1952. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aConstance Masefield (1867-1960) was the wife of John Masefield (1878-1967), the British poet. Judith Masefield (b.1904) was the only daughter of Constance and John Masefield. Lewis Crommelin Masefield (1910-1942) was the only son of Constance and John Masefield and was killed in action in Africa in WW II. Florence Corliss Lamont (1872-1952) was the wife of Thomas W. (Thomas William) Lamont (1870-1948), the New York banker. John and Constance Masefield were longtime friends with Thomas and Florence Lamont. aLetters to Florence Lamont from various members of the family of British poet, John Masefield. Most letters to Florence Lamont, but some also sent to her husband, Thomas W. Lamont. Letters concern family affairs and events of the time. aMasefield Family Letters to Florence Corliss Lamont (MS Eng 1456). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-154, 155, 156. aSome letters published in: John Masefield. Letters of John Masefield to Florence Lamont, edited by Corliss Lamont and Lansing Lamont. New York: Columbia University Press, 1979. aIn English.30aMasefield family.10aMasefield, John,d1878-1967.10aLamont, Florence Corliss,d1873-1952. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors, Britishy20th century.1 aLamont, Thomas W.q(Thomas William),d1870-1948,erecipient.1 aLamont, Florence Corliss,d1873-1952,erecipient.1 aMasefield, Constance,d-1960.1 aMasefield, Judith,d1904-1 aMasefield, Lewis,d1910-1942.0 cDeposit, then gift;aChildren of Thomas W. Lamont;b23 Wall Street, New York, New York;d1956 Feb.; gift 1978 Jan. 1;e55M-154, 55M-155, 55M-156.5hou1 aDeposited by the children of Thomas W. Lamont, 1956; gift 1978.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1456zShelved with bMS Eng 1457.01824ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100005700125245010900182300002900291351018500320545003100505520013400536555008700670524018700757546001600944650004500960650004501005655001601050655002301066655002901089700004601118700005401164700005201218541010901270561002801379506004201407852002501449009569197-920131108132510.0050318i17691869mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793817831 aMHAT05-B10001 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSmith, William Henry Sedley,d1806-1872,ecollector.10aWilliam Henry Sedley Smith collection of prompt books, marked editions and manuscript sides,f1769-1869. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Prompt books; II. Part books and study books--printed texts; III. Manuscript sides; IV. Unmarked editions and miscellaneous; and V. Addenda. aSmith was a British actor. aCollection of prompt books, marked editions, and manuscript sides, including The blue devils, The love chase, and Village doctor.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01566 aWilliam Henry Sedley Smith Collection of Prompt Books, Marked Editions and Manuscript Sides, 1769-1869 (MS Thr 473). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy19th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aPrompt books.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat1 aColman, George,d1762-1836.tBlue devils.1 aKnowles, James Sheridan,d1784-1862.tLove chase.1 aWebster, Benjamin,d1797-1882.tVillage doctor.0 cPurchase;aBenjamin J. Tighe;bWorcester, Massachusetts;d1946 August;e2004MT-102.hno fund named.5hou1 aPurchase, 1946.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 47301912ckcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100004200125245006200167300002900229351004000258520018200298555008700480524011200567546001600679610005300695650001800748650001700766655005200783655005000835655005300885655005800938655005700996655004801053655004801101656002301149700003401172700003401206700003901240541010401279561005301383506004201436852002401478009732252-020120820114055.0050809i17561942maunnn||||||||||||kaeng|d0 aocm794640141 aMAHV05-F10012 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aField, William B. Osgood,ecollector.10aWilliam B. Osgood Field collection of prints,f1756-1942. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged in accession number order. aContains engravings and etchings by William Charles, wood engravings and woodblock prints by Rudolph Ruzicka, and colored lithographs by Edward Williams Clay, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01663 aWilliam B. Osgood Field Collection of Prints, 1756-1942 (MS Am 2818). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aCastle Garden (New York, N.Y.)xSongs and music. 0aSchottisches. 0aPiano music. 7aEngravingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEtchingszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aLithographszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aWood engravingszCzech Republicy20th century.2gmgpc 7aWood engravingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPrintszUnited Statesy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPrintszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aIllustrators.2aat1 aRuzicka, Rudolph,d1883-1978.1 aCharles, William,d1776-1820.1 aClay, Edward Williams,d1799-1857.0 cGift;aW. B. O. Field;bWestfield, Lake Mohegan, N.Y.;d1943-1944;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aGift of William B. Osgood Field, 1943-1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 281801969ntc a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245005300142300002900195351003800224545071200262520022900974555008701203524009101290546001601381600003401397650002501431655005201456541007001508561004801578506004201626852002301668010123824-X20131030133635.0061006s1858 mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612863886 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSwinton, William,d1833-1892.10aWilliam Swinton compositions,f1858 and undated. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aWilliam Swinton (1833-1892) was a journalist, travel writer, essayist, and war correspondent. He was the younger brother of famous labor activist, journalist and editor, John Swinton. The family emigrated from Scotland to Canada in 1843, and William was educated at Knox College in Canada, and at Amherst College in Massachusetts. Swinton was a teacher, a writer for magazines, a close friend of Walt Whitman, became a war correspondent for the New York Times during the American Civil War, and wrote several books on the conflict of the war. Later in life he was for a time a professor of English at the University of California, and also wrote school textbooks on geography, spelling, grammar and history. aIncludes autograph manuscript compositions by Swinton, including the following titles: Dies Bibliothecales, or rambles through the libraries. Number one Astor, Intimations from ethnology and history, and Rambles among words.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02468 aWilliam Swinton Compositions, 1858 (MS Am 1403). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSwinton, William,d1833-1892. 0aAmerican literature. 7aManuscripts for publicationy19th century.2aat0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eno accession number.5hou1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 140301832ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100001800123245005100141300002900192545030000221520028900521555008700810524010100897546001600998600001801014650003901032700004601071700004801117700004701165700003801212700006401250541007001314561005701384506004201441852002301483009126621-120130131123009.0030428i18681925mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm822510941 aMAHV03-A212 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aJames family.10aJames family miscellaneous papers,f1868-1925. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aHenry James was an American novelist, short story writer, critic and dramatist. William James was an American philosopher and psychologist, a leader of the philosophical movement of Pragmatism and of the psychological movement of functionalism. His wife was Alice Howe Gibbens James (1849-1922). aIncludes letters from Henry James to various correspondents, one letter from William James to [ ] Peabody, letters from William James's wife Alice Howe James to various correspondents, and 23 letters from Elizabeth Sherman Hoyt Lindsay to Olivia Cutting James and Mrs. Bayard Cutting.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01351 aJames Family Miscellaneous Papers, 1868-1925 (MS Am 1507). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aJames family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aJames, Henry,d1811-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, William,d1882-1961,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Oliva Cutting,erecipient.1 aLindsay, Elizabth Sherman Hoyt,d1885-1954,ecorrespondent.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 150703484nccaa2200613 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245006600123300002900189351007900218520020300297520055200500555008701052524014401139546006601283600001701349600003001366650001101396600003201407600002101439600003401460600003601494600001901530600003201549600002001581600003201601600003301633600003201666600004001698600002801738600004901766600003301815600005901848600004401907600003301951600003601984600004102020600003202061600003402093600003802127600003502165600002602200600002402226655002302250710009802273506012302371506004202494541013102536561015202667852005102819012879193-420120703085644.0020710i18521956mausgc n | |eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aengafre00aSheet music featuring contemporary personalities,f1852-1956. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aCollection is arranged alphabetically by associated personality last name. aThis collection includes printed sheet music featuring 19th and 20th century personalities who were associated with the pieces. Associated persons include singers, dancers, and actors, among others.8 aNotable persons associated with this collection are: Mary Anderson, Lucienne Boyer, Charlie Chaplin, Maurice Chevalier, Annie Clarke, Jimmy Durante, Deanna Durbin, Rosy Dolly, Jenny Dolly, Fanny Elssler, Carlotta Grisi, Rita Hayworth, Ellaline Hicks, Hildegarde, Henry Brodribb Irving, Lillie Langtry, Charles Augustus Lindbergh, Antoinette Sterling MacKinlay, Ilma de Murska, Christine Nilsson, Euphrosyne Parepa-Rosa, Mary Pickford, the Rousset family, Lillian Russell, William Shakespeare, Henriette Sontag, the Vokes family, among many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02204 aSheet Music Featuring Contemporary Personalities, 1852-1956 (MS Thr 711). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some material in French.10aDolly, Rosy.10aDolly, Jenny,d1892-1941. 0aSongs.10aAnderson, Mary,d1859-1940.10aBoyer, Lucienne.10aChaplin, Charlie,d1889-1977.10aChevalier, Maurice,d1888-1972.10aClarke, Annie.10aDurante, Jimmy,d1893-1980.10aDurbin, Deanna.10aElssler, Fanny,d1810-1884.10aGrisi, Carlotta,d1819-1899.10aHayworth, Rita,d1918-1987.10aHicks, Ellaline,cLady,d1871-1971.00aHildegarde,d1906-2005.10aIrving, H. B.q(Henry Brodribb),d1870-1919.10aLangtry, Lillie,d1853-1929.10aLindbergh, Charles A.q(Charles Augustus),d1902-1974.10aMacKinlay, Antoinette Sterling,d-1904.10aMurska, Ilma de,d1836-1889.10aNilsson, Christine,d1843-1921.10aParepa-Rosa, Euphrosyne,d1836-1874.10aPickford, Mary,d1892-1979.10aRussell, Lillian,d1861-1922.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.10aSontag, Henriette,d1806-1854.37aRousset family.2dacs37aVokes family.2dacs 7aSheet music.2aat.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 711zBoxes are portfolio-sized02147nccaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003600110245004700146300002900193351004300222545008700265520031200352555008700664524012500751546004100876650002000917650002900937600003600966655002301002650001301025650003101038650001701069710009801086700004301184700004701227506012301274506004201397541013101439561015201570852005101722012874949-020110902194217.0020710i18791927maumrc n | |eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aSousa, John Philip,d1854-1932.10aJohn Philip Sousa sheet music,f1879-1927. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by song title. aJohn Philip Sousa (1854-1932) was an American composer well-known for his marches. aThis collection includes printed sheet music, primarily marches, composed by John Philip Sousa. Lyricists include Harry Bache Smith and Charles Klein. An additional piece of sheet music composed by Abe Holzmann is included in this collection because it was performed by John Philip Sousa and the Sousa band.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02202 aJohn Philip Sousa Sheet Music, 1879-1927 (MS Thr 708). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aMarches (Piano) 0aMarches (Piano, 4 hands)10aSousa, John Philip,d1854-1932. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aMarches. 0aGuitar and mandolin music. 0aPiano music.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aKlein, Charles,d1867-1915,elyricist.1 aSmith, Harry Bache,d1860-1936,elyricist.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;32010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 708zBoxes are portfolio-sized02469nkcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245007700123300002900200351019400229520019500423520022300618555008700841524015400928546003001082600005201112600003401164655002601198655002701224655001901251655002201270710009401292710002601386710001901412710002401431710002701455710002501482710002401507710003801531710002901569541023601598561014801834506004201982852002302024013000419-720121212144413.0020710i18791927mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn768583922 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengaafr00aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan cigarette and trade cards,f1879-1927. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Cigarette cards, sized 7 x 3.5 cm.; II. Cigarette cards, other sizes; III. Trade cards with company names; and IV. Trade cards without company names. aCigarette cards, collecting cards, and trade cards (advertising) containing images relating to Gilbert & Sullivan operas, packaged by companies during the late 19th and early 20th-centuries.8 aIncludes companies: Clark Thread Company, J. & P. Coats, John Player & Sons, Max Cigarette Company, Nicolas Sarony & Co., Ogden's Cigarettes, Straiton & Storm Pinnacle Cigars, W. D. H. O. Wills (Firm), and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02247 aW. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan Cigarette and Trade Cards, 1879-1927 (MS Thr746). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and Afrikaans.10aGilbert, W. S.q(William Schwenck),d1836-1911.10aSullivan, Arthur,d1842-1900. 7aCigarette cards.2aat 7aCollection cards.2aat 7aEphemera.2aat 7aTrade cards.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection)2 aClark Thread Company.2 aJ. & P. Coats.2 aJohn Player & Sons.2 aMax Cigarette Company.2 aNicolas Sarony & Co.2 aOgden's Cigarettes.2 aStraiton & Storm Pinnacle Cigars.2 aW. D. H. O. Wills (Firm)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection);b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Gilbert and Sullivan (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 74600964ntcaa2200253 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100001700091245004000108300002800148351001700176500019500193546001600388600001700404600003700421655002200458655002100480700001800501506002300519541010400542561004100646852002300687013277370-820120705113423.0120703i18351991mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs3 aBell family.10aBell family papers,fca. 1835-1991. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes photographs, correspondence, genealogical material relating to the Bell and Bruce families, a scrapbook belonging to Louis V. Bell, and an appraisal of the estate of Harold W. Bell. aIn English.30aBell family.10aBell, H. W. (Harold Wilmerding). 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aScrapbooks.2aat3 aBruce family.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift;aJanet Bruce;b1868 Edgewood Lane, Charlottesville, VA 22903;d2012 June 27;e2011M-144.5hou1 aGift of Janet Bruce, 2012 June.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 280703802nccaa2200685 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245008900123300002900212351014600241520032100387520019700708555008700905524016700992546006601159610004901225600002601274600003801300600004701338600004101385600005701426600003501483600003401518600005401552600002901606600005001635600003801685600003301723600003301756600005201789600005201841600003401893600003501927600005301962600002002015600005802035600003702093600003902130600005002169600003602219600004402255600005302299600003302352650003102385650003202416650002002448650001802468650002602486655002302512650001102535710009802546506012302644506004202767541013102809561015202940852002403092013274847-920131126172045.0020710i18431981mausgc|||||||||n |||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aengafre10aSheet music featuring politicians, heads of state, and patriotic themes,f1843-1981. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Sheet music featuring politicians and heads of state; and II. Sheet music featuring patriotic themes. aCollection includes 19th and 20th-century political and patriotic sheet music. Featured individuals include U.S. presidents, U.S. politicians, and foreign heads of state. Featured patriotic topics include Decoration Day, now called Memorial Day, the American flag, and the signing of the declaration of independence.8 aProminent individuals include John A. Andrew, James Blaine, Jimmy Carter, Herbert Hoover, Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan, Theodore Roosevelt, Samuel J. Tilden, Woodrow Wilson, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02323 aSheet Music Featuring Politicians, Heads of State, and Patriotic Themes, 1843-1981 (MS Thr 862). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some material in French.10aUnited States.tDeclaration of Independence.10aCarter, Jimmy,d1924-10aArthur, Chester Alan,d1829-1886.10aAndrew, John A.q(John Albion),d1818-186710aBlaine, James Gillespie,d1830-1893.10aButler, Benjamin F.q(Benjamin Franklin),d1818-189310aCleveland, Grover,d1837-1908.10aCoolidge, Calvin,d1872-1933.10aEisenhower, Dwight D.q(Dwight David),d1890-196910aFisk, James,d1835-1872.10aGarfield, James A.q(James Abram),d1831-188110aHayes, Rutherford B.,d1822-1893.10aHoover, Herbert,d1874-1964.10aJackson, Andrew,d1767-1845.10aJohnson, Lyndon B.q(Lyndon Baines),d1908-197310aKennedy, John F.q(John Fitzgerald),d1917-196310aLincoln, Abraham,d1809-1865.10aMcKinley, William,d1843-1901.10aNixon, Richard M.q(Richard Milhous),d1913-199410aReagan, Ronald.10aRoosevelt, Franklin D.q(Franklin Delano),d1882-194510aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aSmith, Alfred Emanuel,d1873-1944.10aTilden, Samuel J.q(Samuel Jones),d1814-188610aWashington, George,d1732-1799.00aWilliambI,cGerman Emperor,d1797-188810aWillkie, Wendell L.q(Wendell Lewis),d1892-194410aWilson, Woodrow,d1856-1924. 0aPresidentszUnited States. 0aPoliticianszUnited States. 0aHeads of state. 0aMemorial Day. 0aFlagszUnited States. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 86201891nacaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245007500123300002900198351010300227520027900330555008700609524015300696546006600849650002500915650002800940650002100968655002800989710009801017506004301115506012301158541013101281561015301412852002401565013293625-920120718131452.0020710i19021986mau|||| |||| ||||||eng|d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre00aSouvenir programs of operas, operettas, and opera singers,f1902-1986. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Productions; and II. Companies, theaters, and individuals. aThis collection includes printed souvenir programs from 20th-century opera and operetta performances including those produced for television or film. Additional materials include programs specific to individual performers and theaters as well as 1 festival souvenir program.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02329 aSouvenir Programs of Operas, Operettas, and Opera Singers, 1902-1986 (MS Thr 872). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some material in French. 0aOperay20th century. 0aOperettay20th century. 0aOpera companies. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 aCollection is open for research.5the.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the.8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 87202164nacaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041000800110245006700118300002900185351016600214520017100380520011500551555008700666524014500753546004100898650001300939650001200952650001800964650001700982650001300999650001201012655002801024710002201052710002201074710005601096710004401152710009801196506012301294506004201417541013101459561015201590852002401742013307035-220120803190926.0020710i19011994mau|||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aeng00aSouvenir programs of popular entertainment events,f1901-1994. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Ice skating; II. Magic shows; III. Circuses; IV. Horse sports and rodeos; and V. Additional popular entertainment events. aThis collection includes souvenir programs from 20th-century popular entertainment events such as circuses, rodeos, ice skating exhibitions, magic shows, and parades.8 aShows include Ice Capades, Ice Follies, Cirque du Soleil, Ringling Brother Barnum and Bailey, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02333 aSouvenir Programs of Popular Entertainment Events, 1901-1994 (MS Thr 873). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aSkating. 0aCircus. 0aHorse sports. 0aMagic shows. 0aParades. 0aRodeos. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat2 aCirque du Soleil.2 aIce Capades, Inc.2 aRingling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows.2 aShipstads and Johnson Ice Follies, Inc.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 87302428nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245005300110300002900163351013300192545064700325520017900972555008701151524013101238546001601369544018901385650004301574600003801617650003401655650003901689655003201728655002201760700003801782700005301820740002401873541006201897561003401959506004201993852004302035013361858-720131017072928.0020710s1921 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn811422824 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPilgrim Tercentenary Pageant photographs,f1921. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Panoramic photographs; II. Photographs with titles; and III. Photographs without titles. aThe Pilgrim Tercentenary Pageant was an event held in Plymouth, Massachusetts in July and August of 1921 to celebrate the tercentenary of the landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth on December 21, 1620. The event took place at the State Reservation near Plymouth Rock and a pageant, written by Harvard professor George Pierce Baker, called The Pilgrim Spirit was performed. The pageant was organized by the Pilgrim Tercentenary Commission of Massachusetts. The official photographer of the pageant was commercial photographer George Hall Russell (1871-1944) from Lowell, Massachusetts. Russell specialized in large, panoramic, group photographs. aIncludes: photographs and panoramic photographs of the pageant and of the associated events. Some images are by photographer George Hall Russell and some by E. P. McLaughlin.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02362 aPilgrim Tercentenary Pageant Photographs, 1921 (MS Thr 903). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aThe Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division also holds some of these pageant photographs; the George Hall Russell photograph archive is held by the Lowell Historical Society. 0aPilgrims (New Plymouth Colony)vDrama.10aBaker, George Pierce,d1866-1935. 0aCentennial celebrations, etc. 0aPageantszMassachusettszPlymouth. 7aPanoramic photographs.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aMcLaughlin, E. P.,ephotographer.1 aRussell, George Hall,d1871-1944,ephotographer.42aThe Pilgrim spirit.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 903z1 box is PF-sized02306nacaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041002800110245006600138300002800204351014900232520031500381555008700696524014400783546010400927650001101031650001501042655002301057655004401080655001901124655002201143655002201165655002701187655001901214655003301233655002801266710009801294700004401392506012301436506004201559541013101601561015201732852002401884013394212-020121024085047.0020710i18331995mau||||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengaitaagerafrealat00aPrinted ephemera relating to music and musicians,f1833-1995. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by person, topic, or titlebUnless noted, original arrangement by collector Fredric Woodbridge Wilson has been retained. aThis collection contains printed material subject files related to music and musicians. Materials include, but are not limited to, programs, souvenir programs, drawings, book jackets, clippings (information artifacts), serials (publications), photographs, lithographs, and some non-printed manuscript material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02368 aPrinted Ephemera Relating to Music and Musicians, 1833-1995 (MS Thr 909). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are primarily in English. Some material in French, Italian, German, and Latin. 0aMusic. 0aMusicians. 7aBook jackets.2aat 7aClippings (information artifacts).2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPrinted ephemera.2aat 7aPrograms.2aat 7aSerials (publications).2aat 7aSouvenir programs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aWilson, Fredric Woodbridge,ecollector.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 90901541nccaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001800110245004700128300002900175351003900204520011800243555008700361524012500448546006100573650001300634655002300647650001100670710009800681506012300779506004200902541013100944561015201075852002401227013369590-520121011085847.0020710i18441917mausgc|||||||||n |||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aengafreager10aSheet music featuring animals,f1844-1917. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by animal. aThis collection includes printed sheet music from the 19th and 20th-centuries featuring animal images and themes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02360 aSheet Music Featuring Animals, 1844-1917 (MS Thr 904). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English, French, and German. 0aAnimals. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 90401912nacaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245006200123300002900185351014800214520020300362555008700565524014000652546005200792650002000844650003000864655002800894710003300922710003300955710003800988710009801026506012201124506004201246541012201288561015201410852002401562013318343-220120907191405.0020710i19461961mau|||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre00aSouvenir programs of French ballet companies,f1946-1961. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Ballets de Paris de Roland Petit; II. Ballets des Champs-Elysees; and III. Grand Ballet de Monte Carlo. aThis collection includes 20th-century seasonal souvenir programs from French ballet companies including Ballets de Paris de Roland Petit, Ballets des Champs-Elysees, and Grand Ballet de Monte Carlo.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02337 aSouvenir Programs of French Ballet Companies, 1946-1961 (MS Thr 881). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English and French. 0aBalletzFrance. 0aBallet companieszFrance. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat2 aGrand Ballet de Monte Carlo.2 aBallets des Champs-Elysées.2 aBallets de Paris de Roland Petit.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghon Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1915;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 88101943nccaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245009500110300002900205351004100234520021600275555008700491524017300578546004100751651004900792650002200841650001900863650000900882610003400891650001600925650002600941651001000967655002300977650001101000710009801011506012301109506004201232541013101274561015201405852002401557013378931-420121109192544.0020710i18241945mausgc|||||||||n |||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music featuring wars, military figures and groups, and patriotic themes,f1824-1945. a2 boxesa(.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by composer. aThis collection includes 19th and 20th-century sheet music featuring wars, including the American Civil War and World War I, divisions of the United States armed forces, military personnel, and patriotic themes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02366 aSheet Music Featuring Wars, Military Figures and Groups, and Patriotic Themes, 1824-1945 (MS Thr 907). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aUnited StatesxHistory Civil Wary1861-1865. 0aMilitary history. 0aNaval history. 0aWar.10aUnited States.tArmed Forces. 0aPatriotism. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918. 0aCuba. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance, and Music (Harvard Theatre Collecion).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 90701864nccaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041002300110245005800133300002900191351005300220520019500273555008700468524013600555546007000691655002300761650001100784655002200795710009800817700004200915700003900957700004200996506012401038506004201162541013101204561015201335852005101487012983939-620111209193346.0020710i18901942mau||c| n | |eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 ageraitaafreaeng10aSheet music featuring European composers,f1890-1942. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by composer's last name. aCollection contains printed sheet music written by or attributed to European composers such as Beethoven, Mozart, and Tchaikovsky, among others. Also includes dice game attributed to Mozart.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02234 aSheet Music Featuring European Composers, 1890-1942 (MS Thr 728). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English, French, Italian, and German. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs. 7aDice games.2aat.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aTchaikovsky, Peter Ilich,d1840-1893.1 aBeethoven, Ludwig van,d1770-1827.1 aMozart, Wolfgang Amadeus,d1756-1791.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the.0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 728zBoxes are portfolio-sized01640nccaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006900110300002900179351004100208520012800249555008700377524014700464546004100611651003900652650002800691655002300719650001100742710009800753506012300851506004200974541013101016561015201147852005101299013347167-520121005190343.0020710i19171928mausgc||||||||||||||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music featuring the Greenwich Village follies,f1917-1928. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by composer. aThis collection includes 20th-century sheet music of songs featured in annual productions of the Greenwich Village Follies.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02344 aSheet Music Featuring the Greenwich Village Follies, 1917-1928 (MS Thr 895). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aGreenwich Village (New York, N.Y.) 0aTheaterzUnited States. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 895zBoxes are portfolio-sized01760nccaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245008600123300002900209351003000238520017900268555008700447524016400534546005200698600003100750630002200781655002300803650001200826650001100838710009800849506012300947506004201070541013101112561015201243852005101395013324748-120120809101156.0020710i19071945mausgc|||||||||n |||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aengafre10aSheet music featuring Ziegfeld follies and other related productions,f1907-1945. a2 boxes (.5 linear ft.). bArranged chronologically. aThis collection includes 20th-century sheet music for songs featured in Ziegfeld follies stage revues, screen productions, and other productions associated with Flo Ziegfeld.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02339 aSheet Music Featuring Ziegfeld Follies and Other Related Productions, 1907-1945 (MS Thr 882). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English and French.10aZiegfeld, Flo,d1869-1932.00aZiegfeld follies. 7aSheet music.2aat. 0aRevues. 0aSongs.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 882zBoxes are portfolio-sized02134npcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100004100121245005600162300002900218351005400247545007800301520047500379524009600854555008700950555010601037546001601143600002901159600003101188650005501219655002501274700004701299700003101346700005001377700006801427700003501495700004301530541006501573561004401638506004201682852002401724005372924-220100317093722.0960109i19201979mau eng d0 aocn6124835461 aMAHV96A3 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aBertram, Anthony,d1897-erecipient.10aLetters from others to Anthony Bertram,f1920-1971. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. aBertram was an English novelist and writer on fine arts who died in 1978. aContains letters to Bertram in answer to his enquiries about the artist Paul Nash, of whom Bertram published a biography in 1955, and letters from literary and artistic friends and critics, some pertaining to Bertram's left-wing political novels of the 1920s and 1930s. Some letters are to Bertram's wife Barbara Randolph Bertram. Correspondents include Martin Donisthorpe Armstrong, Elsa Lanchester, Fr. C.C. (Cyril Charlie) Martindale, Muriel Spark, and Antonia White. aLetters from Others to Anthony Bertram (MS Eng 1387). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000330 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1983-1984, under *83M-69. aIn English.10aBertram, Anthony,d1897-10aBertram, Barbara Randolph. 0aPolitical fiction, EnglishxHistory and criticism. 7aCorrespondence.2aat1 aArmstrong, Martin Donisthorpe,d1882-1974.1 aBertram, Barbara Randolph.1 aLanchester, Elsa,d1902-1986,ecorrespondent.1 aMartindale, C. C.q(Cyril Charlie),d1879-1963,ecorrespondent.1 aSpark, Muriel,ecorrespondent.1 aWhite, Antonia,d1899-ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMiss Emily Driscoll;d1982 December 16;e83M-69.5hou1 aGift of Miss Emily Driscoll, 1982.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 138702408nkcaa2200469 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245005500123300002900178351006300207520038100270555008700651524013300738546002700871630001800898630001100916630001700927650004200944650004200986650003601028650003501064650003601099650001201135650001501147650001301162650001201175655002201187655004601209655003001255655003301285655002201318630002701340710009801367541013201465561015201597506004201749506012301791852002401914012983327-420111213114559.0020710i18651902mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager00aPhotographs of theatrical productions,f1865-1902. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of theatrical production. aCollection of scenes and portraits of actors in costume from theatrical productions, musicals, and ballets in the United States, England, France, and Germany. Includes photographs, cabinet photographs, photographic postcards, copy prints, and cartes-de-visite (card photographs). Notable productions include The Black Crook, Faust, Lady Windermere's Fan, and The Wizard of Oz.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02233 aPhotographs of Theatrical Productions, 1865-1902 (MS Thr 726). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German.00aWizard of Oz.00aFaust.00aBlack crook. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 0aTheaterzFrancey19th century. 0aTheaterzGermanyy19th century. 0aActors. 0aActresses. 0aDancers. 0aBallet. 0aPhotographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPhotographic postcards.2aat 7aCopy prints.2aat00aLady Windermere's fan.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 72602412npcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245010200093300002900195351013200224545034900356520016700705555008700872524016400959546001601123610004101139610005001180610004801230650004201278650004201320650003801362650004601400655002801446655001701474710009801491541013201589561015201721506004201873506012301915852002402038013108337-620130710110807.0020710i18991924mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aSouvenir programs and vocal scores of Harvard College student theatrical productions,f1899-1924. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Delta Upsilon Fraternity, Harvard chapter; and II. Pi Eta Society (Harvard University). aThe Harvard chapter of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity was founded in 1880. The Pi Eta Society was founded in November 1865 as a senior society; the constitution was adopted in January 1866. The Society was founded to promote social fellowship among its members with literary and dramatic inclinations, and produced theatricals in its own theater. aCollection consists of printed souvenir programs and vocal scores from theatrical productions of the Harvard student chapters of Delta Upsilon and Pi Eta Society.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02280 aSouvenir Programs and Vocal Scores of Student Theatrical Productions, 1899-1924 (MS Thr 818). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aHarvard University.bPi Eta Society.20aHarvard UniversityxStudentsxSocieties, etc.20aDelta Upsilon Fraternity.bHarvard Chapter. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aMusicalsvExcerptsvVocal scores. 0aCollege musicalsvExcerptsvVocal scores. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat 7aScores.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11;5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 81802377nccaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006000093300002900153351003800182545054200220520023800762555008701000524012601087546001601213650001301229650001101242650001401253650001701267650001101284655002201295700003601317700004601353700003001399710009801429541013201527561015201659506004201811506012301853852005101976013234317-720120830102233.0020710i18671916maumccd|||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTedacscMH-HT00aPopular music hall sheet music,f1867-1916 and undated. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aMusic hall is a type of theatrical entertainment that was popular from the 19th-century to the mid 20th-century, primarily in England. It involved a mixture of popular songs, comedy, speciality acts, and variety entertainment. Eventually it became so popular that specially made music hall theaters were built for performances. These new music hall theaters were designed so that the audience could eat, drink, and smoke in the auditorium during the performance, previous theaters had stalls for seating and a seperate area for drinking. aCollection includes popular printed sheet music from music halls. There are also a few sheet music covers. Notable composers include Alfred Lee (d. 1906), Irving Jones, and Albert Chevalier (1861-1923). Many of the items are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02318 aPopular Music Hall Sheet Music, 1867-1916 (MS Thr 858). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheater. 0aMusic. 0aMusicals. 0aMusic-halls. 0aSongs. 7aSheet music.2aat1 aLee, Albert,d-1906,ecomposer.1 aChevalier, Albert,d1861-1923,ecomposer.1 aJones, Irving,ecomposer.2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 858zBoxes are portfolio-sized01609nacaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245007300093300002900166351008900195520016600284555008700450524013900537546001600676650001100692650001300703655002800716710009800744541013200842561015200974506004201126506012301168852005201291013329928-720120830104224.0020710i19381972mau |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSouvenir programs of ethnic dance companies,f1938-1972 and undated. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by company or primary performer affiliated with the company. aCollection includes printed 20th-cenutry souvenir programs for ethnic dance companies from Spain, Russia, Japan, the United States, India, Indonesia, and Africa.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02341 aSouvenir Programs of Ethnic Dance Companies, 1938-1972 (MS Thr 884). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aDance. 0aTheater. 7aSouvenir programs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 884zOne box is portfolio-sized01427nccaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245004700093300002900140351004200169520005700211555008700268524012500355546001600480650001100496650001100507650001100518655002200529710009800551541013200649561015200781506004200933506012300975852005101098013324562-420120830104133.0020710i18751986mausgc |||||||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music for popular songs,f1875-1986. a2 boxesa(.6 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by performer. aCollection of printed sheet music for popular songs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02336 aSheet Music for Popular Songs, 1875-1986 (MS Thr 879). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aMusic. 0aDance. 0aSongs. 7aSheet music.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b23 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 879zBoxes are portfolio-sized01043ntcaa22002535a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003800124245009000162300003000252351004100282524014100323600003800464600003100502650003900533655003800572541007400610561003900684506004200723852002400765008300320-720130910105332.0000211q1870 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn6122364010 aocmMAHV00A3 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrown, Samuel Gilman,d1813-1885.10aSamuel Gilman Brown material collected for his "The Life of Rufus Choate",fca. 1870. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aCollection only partially processed. aSamuel Gilman Brown Material Collected for His "The Life of Rufus Choate", ca. 1870 (MS Am 34.20). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBrown, Samuel Gilman,d1813-1885.10aChoate, Rufus,d1799-1859. 0aLawyerszUnited StatesxBiography. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat0 cGift;aAlice V. Brown;d1937 September 22;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Alice V. Brown, 1937.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 34.2001947ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005800122245009200180300003000272520026700302555008700569555011100656524014200767546001600909600004800925600004600973650002901019700005301048700007001101700005701171700005601228740005001284740006401334541005601398561004401454506004201498852005701540008895090-520121218085136.0020927i19181938mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793220861 aMAHV02-A95 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862-erecipient.10aLetters to Flora Virginia Milner Livingston concerning Kipling collections,f1918-1938. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aLetters to Livingston from Ernest Walter Martindell, William Montelle Carpenter, Lloyd Horwitz Chandler, and Ellis Ames Ballard concerning Kipling collections for her books: Bibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling (1927); and Supplement to ...[same] (1938).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-24-27. aLetters to Flora Virginia Milner Livingston Concerning Kipling Collections, 1918-1938 (MS Am 2151). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKipling, Rudyard,d1865-1936xBibliography.10aLivingston, Flora Virginia Milner,d1862- 0aWomen authors, American.1 aBallard, Ellis Ames,d1861-1938,ecorrespondent.1 aCarpenter, W. M.q(William Montelle),d1866-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aChandler, Lloyd Horwitz,d1869-1947,ecorrespondent.1 aMartindell, E. W.q(Ernest Walter),ecorrespondent.0 aBibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling.0 aSupplement to Bibliography of the works of Rudyard Kipling.0 cGift;aFlora V. Livingston;d1947;e47M-24-27.5hou1 aGift of Flora V. Livingston, 1947.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 2151zShelved with MS Am 2152, box 1.01306ntcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245006200152300003000214545007800244520014000322524010100462555008700563600003000650655002200680700003000702700005500732700004400787541004700831561003900878506004200917852005700959008913605-520090923083940.0020517i18731915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127317921 aMAHV02A28 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James transcripts of letters to others,f1873-1915. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aJames was an American novelist, short story writer, critic and dramatist. aIncludes typescript transcripts of letters by James to Alice Howe Gibbens James, William James and others, annotated by Henry James II. aHenry James Transcripts of Letters to Others (MS Am 2176). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0015310aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aJames, Henry,d1879-1947.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,erecipient.1 aJames, William,d1842-1910,erecipient.0 cGift;aMr. Henry James II;d1941 May.5hou1 aGift of Henry James II, 1941.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2176zBox 2 also includes bMS Am 2177.03723ntcaa2200565 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001900123245003800142300003000180351013200210545102600342520037801368524007701746555008701823555010801910546001602018651005102034650001402085600001902099600002202118600002002140600002702160600002602187650002302213650002802236650002902264650004802293650004202341650003302383650003202416650003402448650002802482651004502510651003902555651006902594655001902663655002402682655002802706700002202734700002602756700002702782541018002809561010302989506004203092852002303134009134497-220091222121135.0030701i18581924mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612774339 aMAHV03A244 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aCarter family.10aCarter family papers,f1858-1924. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other family papers (A. Memorabilia, and B. Financial records). aThe Carter family was an African-American slave family from Virginia who survived the Civil War and went on to build a life in and around Richmond. Polly Carter (d.1872) originally lived on "Master Warner's" plantation in Gloucester County, Virginia, with her husband and two children, Albert and Alexander. Another son, Hamilton Carter, resided in nearby Richmond and was either a bondsman or a free man. During the Civil War Hamilton was employed as dining room servant to Henry C. Beuce, the proprietor of Irving Mills. In October of 1866, Hamilton was hired by Dr. George Ross, a prominent Richmond physician. In 1871 Hamilton married an African-American woman, Martha Glenn, who was originally also from Richmond. They had 6 children: Cassie, Alize, Pierce, Hamilton, Jr., Mattie, and one child who died in 1881. The family lived for many years in a home they owned on the corner of 9th and Abigail Streets in the Madison Ward section of Richmond. [See internal file for additional information regarding the family]. aIncludes autograph correspondence (and typescript transcripts) of the Carter family, but the majority is to Hamilton Carter. Letters mostly concern news of family and friends and events of the day. Also includes: Hamilton Carter's household bills and receipts and tax receipts, as well as invitations, a tintype portrait, notes on funeral plans, menu, and other miscellany. aCarter Family Papers (MS Am 2322). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002008 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1998-1999, under *98M-25. aIn English. 0aSouthern StatesxSocial conditionsy1865-1945. 0aFamilies.30aCarter family.10aCarter, Hamilton.10aCarter, Cassie.10aCarter, Polly,d-1872.10aCarter, Martha Glenn. 0aAfrican Americans. 0aFree African Americans. 0aFreedmenzUnited States. 0aAfrican AmericansxSocial life and customs. 0aAfrican AmericansxSocial conditions. 0aAfrican AmericanszVirginia. 0aAfrican AmericansxHistory. 0aAfrican AmericansvPortraits. 0aSlaveryzUnited States. 0aRichmond (Va.)xSocial life and customs. 0aVirginiaxSocial life and customs. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xAfrican Americans. 7aTintypes.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat1 aCarter, Hamilton.1 aCarter, Martha Glenn.1 aCarter, Polly,d-1872.0 cPurchase;aGlenn Horowitz Bookseller, Inc.;b19 East 76th Street, New York, NY 10021;d1998 Dec. 18;e98M-25;hHarmand Teplow Fund $4,000; W.E.B. DuBois Institute $4,000.5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Harmand Teplow Fund and from the W.E.B. DuBois Institute, 1998.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 232202081ntcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004200123245007500165300003000240351013100270545030000401520033300701555008701034524012601121546001601247600004201263600003401305650003501339650003901374655002001413655002201433655003801455700003401493541007301527561006501600506004201665852002401707009256796-720130910115911.0031215i18291928mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612795491 aMAHV03A398 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.10aGeorge Edward Woodberry papers concerning Edgar Allan Poe,f1829-1928. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to George Edward Woodberry; II. Compositions; and III. Clippings and ephemera. aWoodberry (1855-1930) was an American poet, critic, and teacher. He graduated from Harvard College in 1877, and was a professor of English at the University of Nebraska (1880-1882) and at Columbia University (1891-1904). He wrote scholarly biographies of Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne. aIncludes letters, copies of letters, research notes, clippings, photographs, writings on Poe, print, and other papers assembled by Woodberry during research for his books on American poet, Edgar Allen Poe. These books include: Edgar Allan Poe (1885); The works of Edgar Allan Poe (1894-1895); and Life of Edgar Allan Poe (1909).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00220 aGeorge Edward Woodberry Papers Concerning Edgar Allan Poe, 1829-1928 (MS Am 790.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.10aPoe, Edgar Allan,d1809-1849. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aPoe, Edgar Allan,d1809-1849.0 cGift;aMr. Charles Dane Woodberry;bBeverly, Mass.;d1931-1932.5hou1 aGift of Charles Dane Woodberry, (H.C. 1899), 1931-1932.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 790.500940ntcaa2200241 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002300108245004100131300003000172500001700202520016800219524009200387600002300479610001500502610001900517650003000536541006600566561004200632852002400674009875227-820130910122616.0060222i18151830mau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612801276 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPurinton, Ezekiel.10aEzekiel Purinton papers,f1815-1830. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aLetters, ships' records, accounts, and other materials concerning Purinton and his work as captain on the Paragon, May, and other vessels, sailing in the Atlantic. aEzekiel Purinton Papers, 1815-1830 (MS Am 800.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPurinton, Ezekiel.20aMay (Ship)20aParagon (Ship) 0aShippingzAtlantic Ocean.0 cGift;aCharles H. Taylor;d24 May 1835;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Charles H. Taylor, 1835.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.801647ctcaa2200277 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003200091245007900123300002900202351001700231545034800248520010100596546001600697555009600713500004600809600003200855610003600887700005000923700003300973710003601006852002401042541026001066506004301326011811672-X20110808104731.0090121i19401997mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNewth, Rebecca,ecollector.10aRebecca Newth material on New Directions Publishing Corp.,fca. 1940-1997. a2 boxes (.75 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aRebecca Newth is a poet and creative writing teacher. The New Directions Publishing Corporation, of New York City and Norfolk, Conn., was founded in 1936 by poet/publisher James Laughlin. Newth and husband John A. (John Arthur) Harrison (1936-2003) compiled A checklist of books published by New Directions Publishing from 1937 to 1997 (2008). aIncludes New Directions correspondence (mostly photocopies), ephemera, and exhibition materials. aIn English.0 aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02194 aRetrieval requires permission of curator.10aNewth, Rebecca,ecollector.20aNew Directions Publishing Corp.1 aHarrison, John A.q(John Arthur),d1936-2003.1 aLaughlin, James,d1914-1997.2 aNew Directions Publishing Corp.8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 27490 cGift;aRebecca Newth Harrison;b611 Oliver Avenue, Fayetteville, AR 72701;d2008 November 17, 18, 30, 2009 February 10;e2008M-66;nPrinted book (Published for James Laughlin: A New Directions List of Publications, 2008) removed to Rare Book Section.5hou aAccess requires permission of curator.02494ntcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002900122245003900151300003000190351016000220545017600380520036800556524008000924555008701004555011001091600002901201600003601230651002901266651005101295651003101346655001901377655002201396655002001418655002201438700005601460700003501516700005401551710004501605541006701650541008001717561008901797506003701886852002501923561011201948008601653-920090303092646.0010822i17681933mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126963801 aMAHV01A28 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aHamilton, Henry,d-1796.10aHenry Hamilton papers,f1768-1933. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Henry Hamilton papers; and II. Papers concerning the Henry Hamilton archive, A. Correspondence, B. Other materials. aHamilton (1734?-1796) was a British army officer in the American Revolutionary War. He was also Lieutenant-Governor and Governor of Detroit, Quebec, Bermuda, and Dominica. aCollection includes clippings, compositions, correspondence, drawings, notes, photographs, and transcripts. Series I. includes original material by and about Hamilton. Series II. includes materials about the donation of and research concerning the Hamilton archive, especially correspondence and research notes of Harvard College Librarian, William Coolidge Lane. aHenry Hamilton Papers (MS Eng 508.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001268 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 2001-2002, under *2001M-12.10aHamilton, Henry,d-1796.10aSchieffelin, Jacob,d1757-1835. 0aNorthwest, OldxHistory. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyRevolution, 1775-1783. 0aVincennes (Ind.)xHistory. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aLane, William Coolidge,d1859-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aPell, Howland,ecorrespondent.1 aRice, Caroline Isabella Hamilton,ecorrespondent.2 aHarvard College Library,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aCaroline Isabella Hamilton Rice;d1902;e2001M-12.5hou0 aGift;cHowland Pell, Mary S. Sayers, John Lawrence Schieffelin;d1933.5hou1 aOriginal Hamilton materials gift of Mrs. Caroline Isabella Hamilton Rice, 1902.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 508.11 aJacob Schieffelin materials gift of Howland Pell, Mary S. Sayers, and John Lawrence Schieffelin, 1933.5hou03071ntcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003200110245009300142300003000235351018600265545025800451520027600709520044100985555008701426524010201513546001601615581015001631600003201781600003601813650003601849656001701885700004201902700004901944700005201993700004902045700004402094700004802138700005802186700004602244700007502290700005602365700005602421541004202477561004102519506004202560852002302602012676455-720130116142427.0020710k17011779mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn701616990 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aGarrick, David,d1717-1779.10aDavid Garrick correspondence and other papers,f1701-1779 (bulk), 1701-1948 (inclusive). a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. David Garrick correspondence; II. Other Garrick-related papers; III. Garrick facsimiles; and IV. Materials concerning the Garrick collection. aDavid Garrick (1717-1779) was a English actor, playwright, and theater manager and producer. He was a pupil and friend of Dr. Samuel Johnson. From 1747 to 1776, he was a partner in the Drury Lane Theatre. He married Eva Maria Veigel (1724-1822) in 1749. aAutograph manuscript letters to and from David Garrick with friends, colleagues, and family. Also includes some Garrick family letters and documents, third-party letters concerning Garrick, facsimiles of letters to and from Garrick, and letters concerning the collection.8 aIncludes letters to or from Richard Cox, Robert Dodsley, Bernard Hale, Henri Louis Cain Lekain, Hannah More, Thomas Pelham-Holles Newcastle, Richard Brindsley Sheridan, Sir James Stonhouse, and others. Garrick family materials concern David Garric (grandfather of David Garrick), Arabella Garrick, George Garrick, Eva Maria Garrick, and Peter Garrick. Also included are multiple lists (item (44)) documenting Harvard's Garrick holdings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02137 aDavid Garrick Correspondence and Other Papers (MS Thr 658). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aLittle, David M.; and George M. Kahrl, eds. The Letters of David Garrick (Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1963).10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779.10aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822. 0aTheaterzEnglandy18th century. 7aActors.2aat1 aCox, Richard,d1718-1803,erecipient.1 aDodsley, Robert,d1703-1764,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrick, Eva Maria,d1724-1822,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrick, George,d1723-1779,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrick, Peter,d1685-1737,erecipient.1 aHale, Bernard,d1725?-1798,ecorrespondent.1 aLekain, Henri Louis Cain,d1728-1778,ecorrespondent.1 aMore, Hannah,d1745-1833,ecorrespondent.1 aNewcastle, Thomas Pelham-Holles,cDuke of,d1693-1768,ecorrespondent.1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816,erecipient.1 aStonhouse, James,cSir,d1716-1795,ecorrespondent.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates.5the1 aVarious sources, various dates.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 65802456nkcaa2200421 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001800110245012100128300002900249351015600278520032000434555008700754524019900841546007801040650002701118610002401145650003401169650001501203650001201218650001501230650001701245650002601262655002201288655002401310655004601334655003001380655002201410655003201432710009801464506012301562506004201685541013101727561015201858852002402010013097921-X20120502091531.0020710i18701893mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafreager00aPhotographs featuring 19th-century theatrical groups, companies, productions, and related personalities,f1870-1893. a2 boxes (.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Theatrical companies and groups; II. Theatrical personalities and celebrities; and III. Theatrical productions. aThis collection contains images, mainly cartes-de-visite and cabinet photographs, of 19th-century theatrical groups, personalities, and productions including minstrel groups, the Hasty Pudding club, the Oberammergauer Passionsspiel, and others. Photograph formats include photomontages, composites, and copy prints.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02278 aPhotographs Featuring 19th-Century Theatrical Groups, Companies, Productions, and Related Personalities, 1870-1893 (MS Thr 817). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some materials in French and German. 0aTheatery19th century.20aHasty Pudding Club. 0aOberammergauer Passionsspiel. 0aMinstrels. 0aActors. 0aActresses. 0aCelebrities. 0aTheatrical companies. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPhotomontages.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCopy prints.2aat 7aComposite photographs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 81702940nkcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245004600110300002900156351005200185545043000237520034100667555008701008524012401095546004101219600004301260600002101303600006101324600007401385600005501459600005701514600006001571600005401631600004601685650001501731650004201746650003601788655002201824655003001846655002801876655002001904710009801924506012302022506004202145541013102187561015202318852002402470013126572-520120308102315.0020710i18831888mau||| ||||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of Mary Anderson,f1883-1888. a2 boxes (.75 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by photographic studio. aMary Anderson (1859-1940) was an American stage actress whose acting career began in Kentucky in 1875 and continued until she retired in 1889 after suffering from exhaustion while on stage. Anderson is well known for her performances in As you like it, Sohn der Wildnis, Evadne, Romeo and Juliet, Pygmalion and Galatea, and Winter's tale, where she played the roles of both Perdita and Hermione for a London audience in 1887. aThis collection includes portraits and theatrical photographs of actress Mary Anderson. Includes cabinet photographs, panel photographs, and other photographs. Most images are undated. Notable productions include As you like it, Taming of the shrew, Ion, Sohn der Wildnis, Evadne, Romeo and Juliet, The lady of Lyons, and Winter's tale.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02289 aPhotographs of Mary Anderson, 1883-1888 (MS Thr 831). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aAnderson, Mary,d1859-1940vPortraits.00aEuripides.tIon.10aHalm, Friedrich,d1806-1871.tSohn der Wildnis.lEnglish10aLytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton,cBaron,d1803-1873.tThe lady of Lyons.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tAs you like it.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tRomeo and Juliet.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tTaming of the shrew.10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tWinter's tale.10aSheil, Richard Lalor,d1791-1851.tEvadne 0aActresses. 0aTheaterxUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterxEnglandy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aPanel photographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 83102277nkcaa2200385 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007000110300003000180351007700210520031600287555008700603524014000690546005100830600004800881600004700929600005500976600004301031600005801074600004601132650001101178650001201189655002201201655003001223655004601253655002001299710009801319506012301417506004201540541013301582561015201715852002401867013797313-620131108191633.0020710i19021989mau||| ||||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT00aPhotographs of dancers and dance productions,f1902-1989 undated. a2 boxesa(.75 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Productions; and II. Performers. aCollection includes photographs of ballet and other dance productions as well as portraits and studio photographs of performers. Performers in collection include Maria Bonfanti, Sofia Vasil'evna Fedorova, Loie Fuller, Vera Alekseevna Karalli, Marie S. Petipa, and Teresina Vestris. Many photographs are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02462 aPhotographs of Dancers and Dance Productions, 1902-1989 (MS Thr 989). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are primarily in English.10aVestris, Teresina,d1726-1808vphotographs.10aPetipa, Marie S.,d1836-1882vphotographs.10aKaralli, Vera Alekseevna,d1889-1972vphotographs.10aFuller, Loie,d1862-1928vphotographs.10aFedorova, Sofia Vasilʹevna,d1879-1963vphotographs.10aBonfanti, Maria,d1847-1921vphotographs. 0aDance. 0aBallet. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;a. Mr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 98903967ctcaa2200637 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041002300108245005800131300002900189351012600218545010800344520028800452520042400740524009301164555008701257544006801344546007201412600003301484650002701517610003701544651003901581651005801620700005701678700004801735700005301783700007501836700004801911700006901959700004002028700005602068700004802124700005302172700004902225700006702274700005602341700006302397700005002460700005002510700004402560700005402604700004402658700003302702700004602735700005502781700004702836700006902883700003902952700004202991506005303033561011703086541010303203852002303306009719775-020080423074425.0861030i18281912mau|||| |||| ||| ibeng d0 aocn612739407 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengaspaafreaita10aDocuments relating to Charles Sumner,fca. 1828-1912. a2 boxesa(.8 linear ft.) bOrganized into the following three series: I. Correspondence; II. Other manuscript documents; and III. Printed documents. aSumner was a Republican senator from Massachusetts and a principal figure in the anti-slavery movement. aDocuments from Charles Sumner's archive of correspondence that were excluded from the collection MS Am 1 ("Charles Sumner correspondence") as being not original letters to or from Sumner. Also included are a few other documents originating with Edward L. Pierce, Sumner's biographer. aCorrespondents include: Charles Francis Adams, Louis Agassiz, Nathaniel Bowditch, Lord Brougham and Vaux, Salmon P. Chase, Gustave Paul Cluseret, Caleb Cushing, Richard Henry Dana, Edward Everett, C. C. Felton, J. C. Fremont, S. G. Howe, Reverdy Johnson, Theodore Parker, George Palmer Putnam, George Sand, and Joseph Story. Authors of compositions and notes include George Earl of Carlisle and John Greenleaf Whittier. aDocuments relating to Charles Sumner (MS Am 1.67). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01963 aSee MS Am 1 for the main collection of Sumner's correspondence. aChiefly in English, with some items in French, Italian and Spanish.10aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874. 0aAntislavery movements.20aRepublican Party (U.S. : 1854- ) 0aUnited StatesxHistoryy1849-1877. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century.1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1807-1886,ecorrespondent..1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aBowditch, Nathaniel,d1773-1838,ecorrespondent.1 aBrougham and Vaux, Henry Brougham,cBaron,d1778-1868,ecorrespondent.1 aBurton, Warren,d1800-1866,ecorrespondent.1 aChase, Salmon P.q(Salmon Portland),d1808-1873,ecorrespondent.1 aCluseret, Gustave Paul,d1823-1900.1 aCogswell, Joseph Green,d1786-1871,ecorrespondent.1 aCushing, Caleb,d1800-1879,ecorrespondent.1 aDana, Richard Henry,d1815-1882,ecorrespondent.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aFelton, C. C.q(Cornelius Conway),d1807-1862,ecorrespondent.1 aFrémont, John Charles,d1813-1890,ecorrespondent.1 aHowe, S. G.q(Samuel Gridley),d1801-1876,ecorrespondent.1 aJohnson, Reverdy,d1796-1876,ecorrespondent.1 aParker, Theodore,d1810-1860,ecorrespondent.1 aPrescott, William Hickling,d1796-1859.1 aSumner, Charles Pinckney,d1776-1839,erecipient.1 aSumner, George,d1817-1863,erecipient.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874.1 aSand, George,d1804-1876,ecorrespondent.1 aPutnam, George Palmer,d1814-1872,ecorrespondent.1 aStory, Joseph,d1779-1845,ecorrespondent.1 aCarlisle, George William Frederick Howard,cEarl of,d1802-1864.1 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897.1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892. aCollection materials are open for research.5hou1 aChiefly the gift of Edward L. Pierce in 1874, with later additions from the Pierce family in 1918 and 1942.5hou0 cGift;aEdward L. Pierce and the Pierce family;d1874, 1918, 1942;e42M-506, 42M-556, 42M-563.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1.6701224ctcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004000029040002100069100003300090245004300123300002900166351001700195545008000212520020400292546001600496600003300512655001900545655002000564655002200584700002200606710004700628506002300675541009100698561005500789561006500844852002500909013731437-X20131018165124.0130717i19502002mau|||||||||||||||||engd aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGascoyne, David,d1916-2001.10aDavid Gascoyne papers,fca. 1950-2002. a2 boxesa(.8 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aDavid Gascoyne was an English poet associated with the Surrealist movement. aIncludes photographs, drawings, compositions, correspondence, a passport, printed items, ephemera, and typescript and galley proofs of a bibliography by Colin Benford, with correspondence of Benford. aIn English.10aGascoyne, David,d1916-2001. 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPassports.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBenford, Colin T.2 aJulio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou0 aOpen for research.0 cDeposit;aJulio Santo Domingo III;bGeneva, Switzerland;d2012 April;e2012M-189.5hou1 aDeposit, Julio Santo Domingo III, April 2012.5hou1 aForms part of the Julio Mario Santo Domingo Collection.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 174503063ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002300100100005000123245005500173300002800228351003900256546001600295545055000311520034400861555008701205555009401292524011001386581026801496544031101764600004002075600003802115650003902153655002302192655002002215655001602235700005202251710003202303506014002335541009202475561007002567852004002637010103830-520100607085233.0060914i18531936mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm84668322 aMHAT06B11 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm1 aRogers, Henry Munroe,d1839-1937,ecollector.10aRogers Memorial Collection: Pamphlets,f1853-1936. a2 boxes (1 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by author. aIn English. aHenry Munroe Rogers (1839-1937) was a Boston lawyer and a patron of local theater. He attended Harvard College (A.B. 1862; L.L.B. 1867) and served as a paymaster in the United States Navy during the Civil War. He became a successful Boston lawyer and a charter member in the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States. After his marriage in 1878 to the English opera singer Clara Kathleen Barnett (daughter of the English composer John Barnett), the couple entertained many theatrical, literary and musical luminaries in their home.0 aThis series contains annotated printed pamphlets from the Rogers Memorial Collection. Many have inscriptions from the author, or contain notes by Henry Munroe Rogers or Clara Kathleen Rogers. The pamphlets cover a wide range of subject matter, ranging from law to foreign policy to singing instruction, and include a large number of plays.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou019078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aRogers Memorial Collection: Pamphlets (MS Thr 470 (1176) - (1184)). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFor a description of the Rogers Memorial Collection, see The Rogers Memorial Room : an account of the nature, origin, and significance of the memorabilia presented to Harvard College in 1930 by Clara Kathleen & Henry Munroe Rogers ([Boston] : Cosmos Press, 1935). aThe Rogers Memorial Collection, of which this is Series VI, contains literary and historical material relating to mid-nineteenth-century America and memorabilia concerning the English composer John Barnett (1802-1890). A master list of the Rogers Memorial Collection series can be found in HOLLIS 10104119.10aRogers, Clara Kathleen,d1844-1931.10aRogers, Henry Munroe,d1839-1937. 0aVoice culturexStudy and teaching. 7aInscriptions.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aPlays.2aat1 aRogers, Clara Kathleen,d1844-1931,ecollector.2 aRogers Memorial Collection. aSeries open for research. This series is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff. cGift;aClara Kathleen Rogers and Henry Munroe Rogers;d1930;eno accession number.5hou aGift of Clara Kathleen Rogers and Henry Munroe Rogers, 1930.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 470 (1176) - (1184)03351ntdaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002500100100005000125245007400175300002800249351003800277546001600315545063000331520050100961544031101462555008701773555009401860524015701954581026802111600003802379610003802417610003202455610002602487655002102513655002602534710003202560740002602592506014502618541009202763561007002855852004002925010001638-320080909083005.0060623i19301966mau|||| |||| ||||||eng d0 aocm846683281 aMHAT06B12 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aRogers, Henry Munroe,d1839-1937,ecollector.10aRogers Memorial Collection: Rogers Memorial Room records,f1930-1966. a2 boxes (1 linear feet) bArranged alphabetically by title. aIn English. aHenry Munroe Rogers and Clara Kathleen Rogers amassed a substantial collection of theatrical and military memorabilia over the course of their long lives, mostly as part of their personal papers. In 1930, they donated these papers to Harvard College Library. The Rogers Memorial Room on the top floor of Widener Library was set aside to house the collection, and opened in 1935. The Rogers Memorial Room was relocated to the Harvard Theatre Collection's space in Lamont Library in 1949. Building renovations required that the room be vacated in 2006, but the Rogers Memorial Collection is still maintained as a unified whole. aThis collection consists of records kept by the Harvard Theatre Collection concerning the administration of the Rogers Memorial Collection, including bookplates, catalog cards, inventories, memoranda, a rubber stamp, and a visitors' book, as well as papers concerning the publication of "The Rogers Memorial Room. An Account of the Nature, Origin, and Significance of the Memorabilia Presented to Harvard College in 1930 by Clara Kathleen and Henry Munroe Rogers" ([Boston] : Cosmos Press, 1935).0 aThe Rogers Memorial Collection, of which this is Series IX, contains literary and historical material relating to mid-nineteenth-century America and memorabilia concerning the English composer John Barnett (1802-1890). A master list of the Rogers Memorial Collection series can be found in HOLLIS 10104119.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou019108 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aRogers Memorial Collection: Rogers Memorial Room Records (MS Thr 470 (1533) - (1545)). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFor a description of the Rogers Memorial Collection, see The Rogers Memorial Room : an account of the nature, origin, and significance of the memorabilia presented to Harvard College in 1930 by Clara Kathleen & Henry Munroe Rogers ([Boston] : Cosmos Press, 1935).10aRogers, Henry Munroe,d1839-1937.20aHarvard College LibraryxHistory.20aHarvard Theatre Collection.20aRogers Memorial Room. 7aBookplates.2aat 7aVisitors' books.2aat2 aRogers Memorial Collection.02aRogers Memorial Room. aSeries open for research. This series is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the cGift;aClara Kathleen Rogers and Henry Munroe Rogers;d1930;eno accession number.5the aGift of Clara Kathleen Rogers and Henry Munroe Rogers, 1930.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 470 (1533) - (1545)02156nkcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003700108245006400145300002900209351012000238545017800358520029400536555008700830524009900917544026201016546003001278600002501308650002301333650004201356650004201398655003801440655005101478655005101529655002001580541007901600561006001679506004201739852002501781011591307-620101013122625.0020710i18901930mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn663985197 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWells, George Doane,ecollector.10aWells collection of theatrical photographs,fca. 1890-1930. a2 boxesa(1 linear feet) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Portrait photographs; and II. Group photographs from stage productions. aGeorge Doane Wells was born in Ohio in 1872, and was an 1894 graduate of Harvard College. He spent most of his life in Boston, Massachusetts as a bookbinder and book dealer. aPrimarily portrait photographs of American actors and actresses. Some group portraits and a few photographs of scenes from stage productions. If the photographer is known, it is listed in the note. Many items include manuscript annotations on verso. Some images are photomechanical prints.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02002 aWells Collection of Theatrical Photographs (MS Thr 532). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aRelated materials held by the Harvard Theatre Collection include: the Wells collection on actors and actresses (*2004MT-44); and George Doane Wells Manuscripts (*93M-235). Wells manuscripts are also part of the collection of the Harvard University Archives. aMaterials are in English.10aWells, George Doane. 0aActorsvPortraits. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy19th century. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat0 cGift;aElizabeth Huidekouper Wells Stabler;d1945 May 15;e2004MT-44.5the1 aGift of Elizabeth Huidekouper Wells Stabler, 1945.5the aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 53202586ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002800108245003900136300002900175351004500204545078100249520028301030555008701313524007801400546003001478544015801508600002801666650005901694655005801753655002201811700005801833541010201891561003901993506007402032506013002106852002402236011974424-420090518080925.0020710i19711977mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612869692 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMebane, Mary E.,d1933-10aMary E. Mebane papers,f1971-1977. a2 boxesa(1 linear feet) aArranged alphabetically by folder title. aMary Elizabeth Mebane (1933-1992) was an African-American woman writer, primarily known for her autobiographical series about growing up in the American South, suffering from poverty, racism, and alienation from her family. She was born on the outskirts of Durham, North Carolina in 1933, her mother a tobacco factory worker, and her father sick most of the time. She received a B.A. from North Carolina College at Durham and a Ph.D. in English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She taught at the University of South Carolina and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and was a frequent contributor to the op-ed page of the New York Times. Her autobiographical works are: Mary (Viking Press, 1981) and Mary wayfarer; an autobiography (Viking Press, 1983). aPapers include 1971-1977 letters from others, especially journalist Harrison E. Salisbury; Mebane's diaries from 1973, 1976-1977; clippings of her articles in the New York Times; and biographical materials, including photographs, on Mebane and her mother, Carrie Brandon Mebane.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02031 aMary E. Mebane Papers (MS Am 2654). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aAdditional Mary Elizabeth Mebane papers are held by the Southern Historical Collection of the Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.10aMebane, Mary E.,d1933- 0aAfrican American womenzNorth CarolinazDurham County. 7aDiarieszUnited StateszNorth Carolinay20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aSalisbury, Harrison E.q(Harrison Evans),d1908-1993.0 cGift;aMary E. Mebane;bPO Box 1321, Columbia, South Carolina 29202;d1977 July 18;e77M-84.5hou1 aGift of Mary E. Mebane, 1977.5hou0 aCollection is open for research. Formerly restricted until 2002.5hou1 aCollection is housed off-site and delays should be expected. Contact Houghton Department of Public Services for details.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 265403519nkcaa2200481 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087245005400108300002900162351017400191545060800365520046500973520022601438520023301664530005301897555008701950524010402037546003002141651004802171610005402219610006202273610004402335650003002379650002502409655002202434710005602456710004002512710004802552710003102600710003902631710004902670710005002719710003502769710003802804710004202842740002802884541003502912561002502947506004202972852002303014012252965-020110510130652.0020710i19101932mau||| |||||||eng|d0 aocn663989491 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aPhotographs of the Chicago opera,fca. 1910-1932. a2 boxesa(1 linear feet) aOrganized into the following three series: I. Photographs of female opera performers; II. Photographs of male opera performers; and III. Other Chicago opera photographs. aThis collection is made up of photographs that are stamped with a variety of property stamps from groups who performed opera in Chicago, Illinois from about 1910 to 1932. The items that are actually dated are from 1916-1923, but research indicates there are earlier and later images: Chicago Grand Opera Company began performing in the fall of 1910 and was the first resident opera company in Chicago. The last performance was in the spring of 1914; Chicago Opera Association established in 1915 and continued until 1922; Chicago Civic Opera formed in 1922 and folded at the end of the 1931-1932 season. aCollection consists mainly of 10 x 8 inch black and white photographs of Chicago operatic performers. Most images have text on their versos, either stamped in ink or in manuscript hand, stating the name of performer, opera and role depicted in image, and company producing the opera. Most items are undated. Singers are primarily in character and usually solo, though there are a few depicting multiple persons in one image, and a few images in street clothes.8 aAlso included are a few photographs of conductors and directors of the operas. A few photographs are included of: scenes from The Marriage of Figaro, and the exterior and interior views of the Civic Opera House (Chicago).8 aPhotographic studios include: Chicago Architectural Photo Company, Daguerre (Chicago), Fernand de Gueldre (Chicago), H. A. Atwell Studio (Chicago), Matzene Studio, Moffett (Chicago), and Underwood & Underwood, among many others. aColor digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02055 aPhotographs of the Chicago Opera, ca. 1910-1932 (MS Thr 567). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. 0aChicago (Ill.)xBuildings, structures, etc.20aChicago Civic Opera (Chicago, Ill.)vPhotographs.20aChicago Grand Opera Company (Chicago, Ill.)vPhotographs.20aChicago Opera AssociationvPhotographs. 0aOperazIllinoiszChicago. 0aOperay20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat2 aChicago Architectural Photo Company,ephotographer.2 aChicago Civic Opera (Chicago, Ill.)2 aChicago Grand Opera Company (Chicago, Ill.)2 aChicago Opera Association.2 aDaguerre (Chicago),ephotographer.2 aFernand de Gueldre (Chicago),ephotographer.2 aH. A. Atwell Studio (Chicago),ephotographer.2 aMatzene Studio,ephotographer.2 aMoffett (Chicago),ephotographer.2 aUnderwood & Underwood,ephotographer.42aThe marriage of Figaro.0 cUnknown;aSource unknown.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 56701871cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100005000124245009900174300002800273545008700301520033200388555008700720555010800807524012300915600003801038630001501076650003801091650002601129650005701155700004901212700003401261700003601295541009301331561004401424506004201468852002301510000602302-920130124104615.0860820i19211951mau eng d0 aocn1226560411 aMAHV86-A488 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLeach, Henry Goddard,d1880-1970,erecipient.10aHenry Goddard Leach letters from various correspondents,f1921-1951 (inclusive),g1925 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft). aLeach was editor of the Forum magazine and a scholar of Scandinavian civilization. aConsists of letters to Leach from nearly 150 different correspondents, chiefly English writers (including Walter De La Mare, Ford Madox Ford, and E. M. Forster) and publishers. Most of the letters date from 1925 during a trip Leach made to England and deal with appointments, introductions, and proposed articles for the Forum.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-56. aHenry Goddard Leach Letters from Various Correspondents, 1921-1951 (MS Eng 854). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLeach, Henry Goddard,d1880-1970.40aThe Forum. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican periodicals. 0aVoyages and travelszEnglandxHistoryy20th century.1 aForster, E. M.q(Edward Morgan),d1879-1970.1 aFord, Ford Madox,d1873-1939.1 aDe la Mare, Walter,d1873-1956.0 cGift;aHenry Goddard Leach;b1021 Park Ave., New York 28;d1952 October 7;e52M-56.5HOU1 aGift of Henry Goddard Leach, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 85403039cpcaa2200541 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100005600121245007300177300002800250351003900278545024200317520043500559555008700994555010901081524009201190546001601282600005601298650001601354650001401370650002101384650001301405656002501418700003801443700003201481700003701513700004001550700003001590700003601620700003301656700003701689700004201726700002901768700004201797830008701839007001501926506006801941843020102009852001302210856008002223541005902303561007002362506004202432852002302474000601725-820121214081353.0851206i18311866mau eng d0 aocm861437321 aMAHV85A14 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGould, Augustus A.q(Augustus Addison),d1805-1866.10aAugustus A. Gould papers,f1831-1866 (inclusive),g1838-1852 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aGould, a naturalist and physician, was one of the great influences on the development of the study of conchology. He was a constant contributor to scientific journals and a joint author with Louis Agassiz of Principles of Zoology (1848). aConsists of professional correpondence to Gould concerning scientific work in the field of natural history particularly the study of shell specimens. Correspondents include Charles Baker Adams, Louis Agassiz, John Gould Anthony, John Bartlett, Hugh Cuming, James Dwight Dana, Charles Darwin, Louis R. Gibbes, Samuel Stehman Haldeman, James Hall, and Thaddeus William Harris. Also one letter by Gould and four unidentified letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009408 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-280. aAugustus A. Gould Papers, 1831-1866 (MS Am 1210). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGould, Augustus A.q(Augustus Addison),d1805-1866. 0aEntomology. 0aMollusks. 0aNatural history. 0aZoology. 7aConchologists.2lcsh1 aAdams, Charles Baker,d1814-1853.1 aAgassiz, Louis,d1807-1873.1 aAnthony, John Gould,d1804-1877.1 aBartlett, John Russell,d1805-1886.1 aCuming, Hugh,d1791-1865.1 aDana, James Dwight,d1813-1895.1 aDarwin, Charles,d1809-1882.1 aGibbes, Lewis Reeve,d1810-1894.1 aHaldeman, Samuel Stehman,d1812-1880.1 aHall, James,d1811-1898.1 aHarris, Thaddeus William,d1795-1856. 0aOpen Collections Program at Harvard University.pExpeditions and discoveries.5netcr|cn |||||a|p0 aNo restrictions on access copy.fUnrestricted online access5MH aElectronic reproduction.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Digital Imaging Group,d2009.f(Open Collections Program at Harvard University. Expeditions and discoveries).7s2009 maun s bNETcGEN4 3Digitized itemsuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00940?digital=y0 cGift;aWilliams College Library;d1948;e49M-280.5HOU1 aGift of Williams College Library, Williamstown, Mass., 1948.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 121001790cpcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003200122245006100154300002800215351003000243545016700273520022500440555008700665555010700752524011100859546001600970600003200986610004501018650002201063650002501085656003101110700004401141541014301185561005901328506004201387852002301429000601740-120120813081907.0851210i19231942mau eng d0 aocn1224687311 aMAHV85A28 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMoore, Charles,d1855-1942.10aCharles Moore letters to Dora Neill Raymond,f1923-1942. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aMoore was chairman of the National Commission of Fine Arts (1915-1937), served as overseer at Harvard University, and was author of works about George Washington. aConsists of 255 letters written by Moore to Dora (Neill) Raymond, professor of history at Sweet Briar College. The letters concern Moore's involvement in cultural affairs and his social activities in the 1920s and 1930s.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009568 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *49M-2. aCharles Moore Letters to Dora Neill Raymond, 1923-1942 (MS Am 1137). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMoore, Charles,d1855-1942.20aUnited States.bCommission of Fine Arts. 0aArtsxManagement. 0aArtszUnited States. 7aArts administrators.2lcsh1 aRaymond, Dora Neill,d1889-erecipient.0 cGift;aDora Neill Raymond;bSweet Briar College, Sweet Briar VA;d11 Dec. 1944, 12 Nov. 1945, 15 July 1949;e44M-316, 45M-495, 49M-2.5hou1 aGift of Dora Neill Raymond, 1944, 1945, and 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 113701649cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100004200121245007100163300002800234351003000262545005700292520023800349555008700587555010900674524012100783546001600904600004200920650003900962651005001001700004001051700003201091541009301123561004201216506004201258852002301300000601753-320130107110304.0851204i19061930mau eng d0 aocn6123652341 aMAHV85A4 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930.10aGeorge Edward Woodberry letters to the Kellogg family,f1906-1930. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWoodberry was an American poet, critic, and teacher. aConsists of Woodberry's letters to Mr. and Mrs. George Sawyer Kellogg and their son, Irving. The letters concern personal and social matters with some information about Woodberry's travels in the Mediterranean, lectures and writings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-259. aGeorge Edward Woodberry Letters to the Kellogg Family, 1906-1930 (MS Am 1295). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWoodberry, George Edward,d1855-1930. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aMediterranean RegionxDescription and travel.1 aKellogg, George Sawyer,erecipient.1 aKellogg, Iving,erecipient.0 cGift (Transferred from Woodberry Poetry Room);aIrving A. Kellogg;d1953;e52M-259.5HOU1 aGift of Irving A. Kellogg, 1953.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 129501385cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003100124245004100155300002800196545004200224520012800266555008700394555010900481524009200590546001600682600003100698650003800729650003400767655003800801655001600839655002400855541005900879561005500938506004200993852002401035000602389-420111220093326.0860915q19431952mau eng d0 aocn1225563941 aMAHV86-A534 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aKirkup, James,d1918-2009.10aJames Kirkup papers,f1943-ca. 1952. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aKirkup was a British poet and author. aIncludes notebooks, workbooks, drafts of poems, other writings, proofs, printed ephemera, and one folder of correspondence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-212. aJames Kirkup Papers, 1943-ca. 1952 (MS Eng 1157). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aKirkup, James,d1918-2009. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat0 cDeposit;aWoodberry Poetry Room;d1961;e60M-212.5HOU1 aDeposited by the Woodberry Poetry Room, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 115702041ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100003800136245006000174300002800234545004200262520037000304555008700674555010800761524009900869546004600968650004301014600003801057650003801095650003401133650003801167650003401205655003801239655001601277700004801293700003801341700002001379541012701399561005101526506004201577852002401619000602391-620111220094325.0860915q19101918mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn1225812971 aMAHV86A536 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengaben1 aTagore, Rabindranath,d1861-1941.10aRabindranath Tagore papers,fca. 1910-1918 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aTagore was a Bengali author of India. aChiefly literary manuscripts including poetical works Gitanjali and The Crescent Moon and the plays Chitra and The King [of the Dark Chamber]. Some include revisions by Sir William Rothenstein and William Butler Yeats as well as Tagore. Also includes translations and compositions by Snehalata Sen and others. Some of Tagore's poems are in both Bengali and English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007978 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1961-1962, under *61M-68. aRabindranath Tagore Papers, ca. 1910-1918 (MS Eng 1159). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIncludes material in English and Bengali. 0aIndic poetry (English)zIndiazBengal.10aTagore, Rabindranath,d1861-1941. 0aBengali literaturey20th century. 0aBengali poetryy20th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aEnglish poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aYeats, W. B.q(William Butler),d1865-1939.1 aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945.1 aSen, Snehalata.0 cPurchase;aElkin Mathews, Ltd.;bTakely, Bishops Stortford, England;d1961 Sept.;e61M-68;h$2380.00 Amy Lowell Fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 115902402cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003900121245006700160246002300227300002800250351014500278545012800423520036200551555008700913555010901000524011701109546001601226600003601242600003901278630003601317650001601353650005001369650003901419651005501458655001701513655004501530700002001575700002901595700003101624541013201655561012801787506004201915852002301957000601787-820130124091537.0851205i18461871mau eng d0 aocn1226092421 aMAHV85A7 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.10aJames Russell Lowell and Sydney Howard Gay papers,f1846-1871.12aLowell-Gay papers. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters; II. Literary contributions, mainly in verse; and III. Essays for the Anti-Slavery Standard. aSydney Howard Gay was the editor of the weekly National Anti-Slavery Standard. Lowell became a contributing editor in 1846. aCollection consists of Lowell's letters to Sydney Gay during their association on the Anti-Slavery Standard and after; most of Lowell's contributions in prose and verse; and a few letters by Lowell or his wife Maria (White) Lowell to Gay's wife Elizabeth (Neall) Gay. Maria Lowell's letters discuss the care of her children and her fears for their survival.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *51M-156. aJames Russell Lowell and Sydney Howard Gay Papers, 1846-1871 (MS Am 1246). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGay, Sydney Howard,d1814-1888.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.00aNational Anti-Slavery Standard. 0aChild care. 0aSlaveryxAnti-slavery movementsxPeriodicals. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1845-1861. 7aEssays.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat1 aGay, Elizabeth.1 aGay, Sydney,erecipient.1 aLowell, Maria,d1821-1853.0 cDeposit, gift;.aElizabeth Willcox Kidwell, Henry Willcox, Carroll Dwight, and Mrs. Sydney Willcox;.d1951-1952;e51M-156.5HOU1 aDeposited by Elizabeth Willcox Kidwell, Henry Willcox, Carroll Dwight, and Mrs. Sydney Willcox, 1951-1952; gift, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 124603036cpcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245006300154300002800217351014400245545039900389520048700788555008701275555010901362524011501471600003101586600003401617600005001651610005801701610002401759610003901783650002301822650001401845650002201859650003701881650003701918650004101955651005001996651005802046655001802104655001902122655002402141656002402165700004902189700004402238700004402282541009402326561004302420506004202463852002502505000601796-720120208101816.0860227i18501915mau eng d0 aocn1224687371 aMAHV86A102 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHamlin, Cyrus,d1811-1900.10aCyrus Hamlin additional family correspondence,f1850-1915. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence of Cyrus Hamlin and George Washburn; and II. Letters to Henrietta (Hamlin) Washburn. aCyrus Hamlin was a Congregational clergyman and missionary to Turkey for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. He was founder and president of Robert College, Constantinople (1860-1877). George Washburn was a Congregational clergyman, missionary to Turkey, professor, and president of Robert College (1878-1903). He was married to Henrietta Hamlin, daughter of Cyrus Hamlin. aLetters of Cyrus Hamlin and George Washburn to various correspondents. Letters address topics such as Robert College in Constantinople, religion, missionary life, personal finance, life at a college, health, travels through Boston, the Russian revolution, and Middlebury College. Letters also discuss an earthquake in Constantinople, the assassination of President McKinley, and post office difficulties in Constantinople. Also included in the collection is a fragment of a journal.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008538 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-113. aCyrus Hamlin Additional Family Correspondence, 1850-1915 (MS Am 1729.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHamlin, Cyrus,d1811-1900.10aWashburn, George,d1833-1915.10aMcKinley, William,d1843-1901xAssassination.20aAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.20aMiddlebury College.20aRobert College (Istanbul, Turkey). 0aFinance, Personal. 0aReligion. 0aMissionszTurkey. 0aCongregational churchesxClergy. 0aPostal servicezTurkeyxHistory. 0aEarthquakeszTurkeyzConstantinople. 0aSoviet UnionxHistoryyRevolution, 1917-1921. 0aBoston (Mass.)xDescription and travely20th century. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aJournals.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aMissionaries.2lcsh1 aWashburn, George,d1833-1915,ecorrepondent.1 aWashburn, George H.,d1843-erecipient.1 aWashburn, Henrietta Hamlin,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Basil D. Hall;b1878 Main Rd., Westport Point, MA;dNov. 1964;e64M-113.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Basil D. Hall, 1964.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1729.102211cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100002000124245008400144300002800228351003900256545023300295520037600528555008700904555010900991524009201100600002001192600001801212650004801230655002401278656001801302700001801320700003901338700005401377700005001431700003301481700004701514541011901561561008001680506004201760852002301802000601816-520090611144135.0860314i18021872mau eng d0 aocn6123663371 aMAHV86-A120 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aAllen, William.10aWilliam Allen family correspondence,f1802-1872 (inclusive),g1802-1850 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aWilliam Allen of Rondout, N.Y. was the father of Julia Allen, the wife of William Henry Channing, Unitarian minister, and of Frances Allen, the first wife of Jared Sparks, Unitarian minister, historian, and president of Harvard. aLetters to William Allen from family members and others, together with other family correspondence. Includes 82 letters, 1836-1853, from William Henry Channing to his wife Julia Allen Channing and 16 letters from Jared Sparks to William Allen and to Julia Allen Channing. Also includes letters to William Ellery Channing from his uncle William Ellery and from his sister.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006958 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1964-1965, under *64M-240. aWilliam Allen Family Correspondence (MS Am 1755). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aAllen, William.30aAllen family. 0aUnitarian churchesxClergyxCorrespondence. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh3 aAllen family.3 aChanning, Julia Allen,erecipient.3 aChanning, William Ellery,d1780-1842,erecipient.1 aChanning, W. H.q(William Henry),d1810-1884.3 aEllery, William,d1727-1820.3 aSparks, Jared,d1789-1866,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchased;aWilliam P. Wreden;bBox 56, Palo Alto, California;d1965;e64M-240;h$1150 (Keller), $375 (Hyde).5HOU1 aPurchased with the Keller and Hyde funds from William P. Wreden, 1965.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 175502549cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100002500124245003600149300002800185351019100213545005300404520053900457555008700996555010901083524008601192546001601278600005501294600004801349600002501397600003701422600003301459600002901492610003701521650003901558650003501597655002101632655004601653655002201699656001701721700004801738700003701786700003301823700002901856700003501885541004601920561003601966506004202002852002302044000601822-X20120502110345.0860320i19561965mau eng d0 aocn1223573261 aMAHV86-A126 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHall, Donald,d1928-10aDonald Hall papers,f1956-1965. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. T.S. Eliot; II. Archibald MacLeish; III. Marianne Moore; IV. Ezra Pound; and V. President Eisenhower's "Program for people to people partnership." aHall is an American poet, essayist, and teacher. aPapers relating to Hall's interviews with T. S. Eliot, Archibald MacLeish, Marianne Moore, and Ezra Pound. Includes correspondence with these four poets as well as correspondence with editors and others; transcripts of the interviews with autograph corrections; typed copies of five letters, 1914-1933, from Pound to Louis Untermeyer; and a typescript with autograph corrections of Cantos CX-CXVI by Pound. Also includes correspondence and papers concerning President Dwight D. Eisenhower's "Program for People to People Partnership."0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-182. aDonald Hall Papers, 1956-1965 (MS Am 1810). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aEisenhower, Dwight D.q(Dwight David),d1890-1969.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns0,d1888-1965.10aHall, Donald,d1928-10aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.10aMoore, Marianne,d1887-1972.10aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.20aPeople-to-People (Organization). 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aInterviews.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century..2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.1 aMacLeish, Archibald,d1892-1982.1 aMoore, Marianne,d1887-1972.1 aPound, Ezra,d1885-1972.1 aUntermeyer, Louis,d1885-1977.0 cGift;aDonald Hall;d1967;e66M-182.5HOU1 aGift of Donald Hall, 1967.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 181001982cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003000123245006900153300002800222351002900250545016500279520032600444555008700770555010800857524010800965546001601073600003301089600004901122610003001171650005501201655002401256655002001280655002801300655001901328541016001347561004801507506004201555852002301597000601836-X20110128080226.0860403i18831904mau eng d0 aocn1226092471 aMAHV86A139 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs2 aDante Society of America.10aDante Society of America correspondence and records,f1883-1904. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aThe Dante Society of America, based at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., was an association of Dante scholars, mostly professors at American universities. aChiefly correspondence to officers of the society concerning memberships, dues, attendance at meetings, society publications, and the Dante prize given annually for the best essay on Dante. Also contains financial accounts, copyright reports, acknowledgements of gifts to the Harvard College Library, and an address book.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1966-1967, under *66M-90. aDante Society of America Correspondence and Records (MS Am 1794). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aDante Alighieri,d1265-1321.10aDante Alighieri,d1265-1321xSocieties, etc.20aDante Society of America. 0aLearned institutions and societieszUnited States. 7aAddress books.2aat 7aCopyright.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat0 cBequest;aFred Norris Robinson;bFrancis H. Brooks, Esq., executor, State Street Bank and Trust, 111 Franklin St., Boston, Mass.;dNov. 1966;e66M-90.5hou1 aBequest of Fred Norris Robinson, 1966.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 179401572cpcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004200124245007400166300002800240351003000268545008800298520009300386555008700479555010800566524012400674546001600798600004200814600004100856650003800897650003400935655001600969700005300985541010601038561002501144506004201169852002301211000602479-320130122090634.0861017i18401852mau eng d0 aocn1225813011 aMAHV86-A615 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSouthey, Caroline Bowles,d1786-1854.10aCaroline Bowles Southey letters to Mary Ann Watts Hughes,f1840-1852. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSouthey, an English poet, was the second wife of poet and historian Robert Southey. aConsists of 99 personal letters from Southey to her friend Mary Hughes, and a few poems.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012358 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1951-1952, under *51M-22. aCaroline Bowles Southey Letters to Mary Ann Watts Hughes, 1840-1852 (MS Eng 814). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSouthey, Caroline Bowles,d1786-1854.10aHughes, Mary Ann Watts,d1770?-1853. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish poetryy19th century. 7aPoems.2aat1 aHughes, Mary Ann Watts,d1770?-1853,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aElkin Mathews, Ltd.;bTakely, Bishop Stratford Herts. England;d1951;e51M-22;h£35.5HOU1 aPurchase, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 81402741cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001800123100003000141245006700171300002800238351013200266545035500398520067600753546006601429555008701495555010901582524007501691530006201766600003001828600005001858610003801908610004201946610004101988650002602029655002002055656002802075700003702103541009702140561004102237506004202278852002302320000601860-220111025124029.0860415i18921940mau eng d0 aocn6123669681 aMAHV86A160 aMH-HcMH-Heappm aengagerafre1 aHowe, Lucien,d1848-1928.10aLucien Howe papers,f1892-1940 (inclusive),g1907-1931 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Lucien Howe; II. Letters to Elizabeth Mehaffey Howe; and III. Other letters. aHowe, an ophthalmologist, was founder of the Buffalo Eye and Ear Infirmary (1876), author of the New York State Howe Law that first made prophylaxis of the eyes of the newborn compulsory, author of a standard text on ocular muscles, and donor-in-chief and first director of the Howe Laboratory of Ophthalmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. aChiefly correspondence; 98 letters to Howe were either written in thanks for his books, mainly Muscles of the Eye (1907-1908), or were written in 1925 to congratulate him on the celebration of his 50 years in the practice of medicine. Letters by Howe mostly respond to the 1925 event; a few discuss his laboratory. The 50 letters to his wife express sympathy on his death or thank her for the book she wrote about him. Third party correspondence pertains to the 1925 celebratory dinner for Howe. Also contains a few articles and abstracts by Howe, correspondence with Mrs. Howe concerning the Lucien Howe Library of Ophthalmology, memorials, and a scrapbook of clippings. aPrimarily in English but some materials in German and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006848 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-218. aLucien Howe Papers (MS Am 1756). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aHowe, Lucien,d1848-1928.10aHowe, Lucien,d1848-1928xAnniversaries, etc.20aHarvard UniversityxLaboratories.20aLucien Howe Library of Ophthalmology.20aMassachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary. 0aMedical laboratories. 7aClippings.2aat 7aOphthalmologists.2lcsh1 aHowe, Elizabeth Mehaffey,d1860-0 cGift;aMrs. Lucien Howe;b14 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1940;e63M-218.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Lucien Howe, 1940.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 175602799cpcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004400123245005000167300002800217351009500245520055000340524008900890530006200979545004801041555008701089555010801176546001601284600003201300600004401332650003901376650003901415650003501454650003501489650001601524655002801540655001901568655001601587655001601603655004501619655002201664700003201686700004501718541004801763561005401811506004201865845039901907852002302306000601862-920100608122149.0860415i18961924mau eng d0 aocn6123669881 aMAHV86A162 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.10aJosephine Preston Peabody papers,f1896-1924. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters; II. Compositions; and IV. Printed matter. aCorrespondence consists primarily of 82 letters, 1899-1908, of friendship and love from Kahlil Gibran to Peabody; also drafts of two letters she wrote to him, and a long autobiographical letter she wrote to Frederic Fairchild Sherman in 1898. Compositions consist of poems and plays by Peabody including drafts of her comedy, The chameleon; two pencil drawing portraits she did; her notes on her talks with Gibran; two pencil drawing portraits he did of her; and a poem by Gibran. Also the privately printed sheet music of five songs by Peabody. aJosephine Preston Peabody Papers (MS Am 1990). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPeabody was an American poet and dramatist.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1977-1978, under *77M-79. aIn English.10aGibran, Kahlil,d1883-1931.10aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aFriendship. 7aDrafts (documents)2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aSheet music.2aat1 aGibran, Kahlil,d1883-1931.1 aSherman, Frederic Fairchild,d1874-1940.0 cGift;aUnknown;dDate unknown;e77M-9.5hou1 aManuscripts acquired from an unknown source.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 199002665cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003600123245010400159300002800263351003900291545022000330520058000550524011301130530007101243555008701314555010801401546001601509651008301525600001901608600001701627600003601644650002001680651005001700655002201750655001601772656002001788700003101808700003901839541011501878561010901993506013002102852002302232000601879-320110727101602.0860421i18521947mau eng d0 aocn1224688191 aMAHV86A178 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aShaw, Robert Gould,d1837-1863.10aRobert Gould Shaw letters to his family and other papers,f1852-1947 (inclusive)g1855-1863 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aShaw, of Massachusetts, was colonel of the first black regiment to serve with the Union Army during the Civil War. He and over half his regiment were killed in battle at Fort Wagner, South Carolina on July 18, 1863. aThe bulk of the collection consists of letters by Robert Gould Shaw to his family, including 98 letters to his mother, 31 to his father, and some to his sisters and brothers-in-law. Most were written during the Civil War, though some to his parents are from his pre-war days when he traveled in Europe and was a student at Harvard. Also contains a memorial poem to Shaw by James Russell Lowell, correspondence and genealogical notes of the Barlow family (one of Shaw's sisters married Francis Channing Barlow), and a box of notes for a biography of Shaw by Louisa Barlow Jay. aRobert Gould Shaw Letters to his Family and Other Papers (MS Am 1910). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aColor digital images of collection are available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006498 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-57. aIn English. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xParticipation, African American.30aBarlow family.30aShaw family.10aShaw, Robert Gould,d1837-1863. 0aFamily records. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aSoldiers.2lcsh1 aJay, Louisa Barlow,d1873-1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.0 cGift;aGarrison, Mrs. Lloyd K., Mrs. Alexander D. Harvey, Frances Jay, Mrs. Lawrence Fox;d1975;e74M-57.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Lloyd K. Garrison, Mrs. Alexander D. Harvey, Frances Jay, and Mrs. Lawrence Fox, 1975.5hou1 aAccess to original material if restricted. Entire collection has been digitized and readers must use digital surrogates.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 191001490cpcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003500122245004100157300002800198351013200226545006000358520013700418555008700555555010900642524009100751546001600842600003500858600004100893650002100934650002900955656002700984541004901011561003901060506004201099852002301141000602520-X20120111100638.0860224i19011914mau eng d0 aocn1225641211 aMAHV86A79 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGay, Ernest Lewis,d1874-1916.10aErnest Lewis Gay papers,f1901-1914. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Ernest Lewis Gay; II. Letters from Ernest Lewis Gay; and III. Other letters. aGay was a librarian and book collector of Boston, Mass. aChiefly letters to Gay from booksellers, mainly concerning Gay's collection of the works of the English poet and dramatist John Gay.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008308 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-346. aErnest Lewis Gay Papers, 1901-1914 (MS Am 1726). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aGay, Ernest Lewis,d1874-1916.10aGay, John,d1685-1732xBibliography. 0aBook collectors. 0aAntiquarian booksellers. 7aBook collectors.2lcsh0 cGift;aunknown source;d1962;e62M-346.5HOU1 aGift of unknown source, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172603420ckcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004600122245004300168300002800211351018400239545053900423520068600962546002701648555008701675555012501762510017501887524010902062600004602171650001602217650005302233650003902286650003202325650001202357650001402369650001302383655004902396655004402445655003502489655003702524655001502561656002102576656002102597656002202618700004002640541013602680561004902816506004202865852003102907000602531-520130102113310.0860225i17951812mau||| | || k|fre d0 aocn1225058761 aMAHV86A89 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRumford, Benjamin,cGraf von,d1753-1814.10aBenjamin Rumford drawings,f1795-1806. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1550: Drawings by Benjamin Rumford; and II. MS Am 1550.1: Drawings by Georg Reichenbach for Benjamin Rumford and collateral material. aRumford, an applied physicist and inventor, as well as a soldier of fortune, and philanthropist, was born in Massachusetts, but after siding with the British in the American Revolution, lived mostly in England, Bavaria, and France. He studied heat, gunpowder, cooking equipment, lamps, wheels and other equipment and phenomena. Rumford was knighted in England, made a Count of the Holy Roman Empire by the Elector of Bavaria, founded the Royal Institution of Great Britain, and was active in various academic societies and institutes. aConsists of 39 of Rumford's drawings in pen and watercolor of his inventions; 24 drawings for him by Georg von Reichenbach, a Bavarian army engineer; maps; and engravings including some of the English Garden in Munich designed by Rumford and of plans for a military post near Dublin. Rumford's drawings are of a hackney carriage with wooden springs, coffeepots, portable stoves, fireplaces, chimneys, and mantelpieces. Reichenbach's drawings are of flint-lock muskets and other small firearms, field cannons, and military uniforms. Also contains drawings and engravings of miscellaneous scientific and architectural apparatus, by various hands, possibly not connected with Rumford. aMaterial is in French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011808 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-128PF and *58M-68PF.4 aFor reproductions and description see Brown, Sanborn C., "Scientific Drawings of Count Rumford at Harvard," Harvard Library Bulletin,cIX, 1955, p. 350-364, plates I-XVI. aBenjamin Thompson Rumford Drawings, 1795-1806 (MS Am 1550-1550.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRumford, Benjamin,cGraf von,d1753-1814. 0aFireplaces. 0aGardens, EnglishzGermanyzMunichy19th century. 0aInventionszGermanyy19th century. 0aMilitary uniformszBavaria. 0aStoves. 0aUniforms. 0aWeapons. 7aArchitectural drawingsy19th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawingszGermanyy19th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawingsy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravingsy19th century.2gmgpc 7aMaps.2aat 7aEngineers.2lcsh 7aInventors.2lcsh 7aPhysicists.2lcsh1 aReichenbach, Georg von,d1771-1826.0 cGift;aDavid P. Wheatland;b11 Gray Gardens West, Cambridge, Massachusetts;d1953 November 20, and 1958;e53M-68PF, 58M-128PF.5hou1 aGift of David P. Wheatland, 1953, 1958.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 1550-1550.102610cpcaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101041001300126100003600139245005500175300002800230351023300258500008100491545010500572520026900677546003700946555006200983555010001045524010901145600003601254600004701290650001201337650005101349650004501400655002001445655002301465655003801488655001601526655002201542655001601564655002301580655001901603655002901622656001701651656002101668541015201689561004501841561004801886561004701934561005201981852002302033583003602056000603173-020070503134157.0860826i18041938mau eng d0 aocm810044601 aMHAT86-A19 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm0 aengafre1 aPayne, John Howard,d1791-1852.00kPapers,f1804-1938 (inclusive),g1819-1851 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from John Howard Payne; II. Letterbooks; III. Letters to John Howard Payne; IV. Papers concerning John Howard Payne; V. Scripts; VI. Poems and actor's sides; and VII. Other papers. aSome of this material has not been located (May 2007). See also TS 1237.351. aPayne was an American actor, playwright, newspaper journalist, and U.S. Consul to Tunis (1842-1852). aCollection contains 9 letterbooks and other correspondence of Payne, manuscripts of plays and poems by him, actor's sides, the manuscript of a biography of Payne, and miscellaneous material, including photograph portraits, programs, receipts, notes, and clippings. aMaterials in English and French.0 aElectronic finding aid under revision (May 2007) hou015568 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-143. aJohn Howard Payne Papers (MS Thr 442). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPayne, John Howard,d1791-1852.10aPayne, John Howard,d1791-1852vPortraits. 0aActing. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy19th century. 7aClippings.2aat 7aLetter books.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPrompt books.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aActors.2aat 7aDramatists.2aat cGift, and purchase;aRobert Gould Shaw, Evert Jansen Wendell, Mrs. Robert Gould Shaw;d1915, 1918, 1931, 1943;e2003MT-143;hF. E. Chase fund.5the aGift of Robert Gould Shaw, 1915.5the aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5the aGift of Mrs. Robert Gould Shaw, 1931.5the aPurchased with the F. E. Chase Fund, 1943.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 442 3PapersaSurvey/eec05/28/86kft02064cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245004300153300002800196351009800224545022200322520034600544555008700890555010800977524008401085600001701169600003001186655004701216655002401263655004501287655001801332655001601350700005701366541012101423561010301544506004201647852002501689000601918-820110114104140.0860505i17961857mau eng d0 aocn1224193291 aMAHV86A212 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839.10aSamuel Ward family papers,f1796-1857. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Compositions and miscellanea. aJulia Rush Cutler Ward (1796-1824), of Boston, an author of occasional poems, married Samuel Ward, a New York City banker and philanthropist, in 1812. They were the parents of seven children including Julia Ward Howe. aConsists chiefly of correspondence among family members namely correspondence between Samuel Ward and Julia Rush Cutler Ward. Also contains poems by family members, including poems written by Samuel for Julia; prayers, religious journals, notes, and verse by Julia; a journal by Samuel; a few receipts; a will; and miscellaneous manuscripts.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006288 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under *73M-15. aSamuel Ward Family Papers (MS Am 1869.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aWard family.10aWard, Samuel,d1786-1839. 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPrayers.2aat 7aWills.2aat1 aWard, Julia Rush Cutler,d1796-1824,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMr. Robert L. Gale;bDept. of English, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260;d2 Oct. 1973;e73M-15.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Robert L. Gale, Department of English, University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1869.101963cpcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245005300153300002800206351003000234545027300264520029200537555008700829555009700916524010301013546001601116544009201132600003001224600004101254650003901295655002201334700004301356700005801399541005001457561004101507506004201548852002301590000601936-620130520125103.0860509i18991915mau eng d0 aocn6123676451 aMAHV86A228 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James letters to Jessie Allen,f1899-1919. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. In Venice in 1899 he met Jessie Allen, descendant of a distinguished British family. They became good friends and regular correspondents, and James was a frequent visitor at her home in London. aConsists of 221 letters, 1899-1915, from James to Jessie Allen; 2 letters, [1909-1912], to James from Ariana Curtis; and 8 letters, 1910-1919, to Jessie Allen from Alice Howe James, Margaret James, and Percy Lubbock. Also includes a photograph of Henry James by E. O. (Emil Otto) Hoppé.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, under *57M-41. aHenry James Letters to Jessie Allen, 1899-1919 (MS Am 1540). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aAnother copy of the photograph can be found at Houghton as *2001-624 (HOLLIS: 8827343).10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916vPortraits. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aAllen, Jessie,d1845-1918,erecipient.1 aHoppé, E. O. (Emil Otto),d1878-1972,ephotographer.0 cGift;aEllinor M. Allen;d1957;e57M-41.5hou1 aGift of Ellinor M. Allen, 1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 150401990cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004000122245004600162300002800208351003900236545024600275520038900521555008700910555010900997524009601106546001601202600004001218650004201258651005001300655001901350655001901369655001801388656002001406700003901426541005401465561004401519506004201563852002301605000602535-820120111101247.0860225i18621866mau eng d0 aocn6123767951 aMAHV86A92 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHooper, Edward William,d1839-1901.10aEdward William Hooper papers,f1862-1866. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHooper was treasurer of Harvard College (1876-1898). During the Civil War he served as additional aide-de-camp on the staff of General Rufus Saxton, Department of the South, and on the staff of General John Adams Dix, Department of the East. aPapers relating to Hooper's military service during the Civil War in South Carolina and in New York. Chiefly financial reports, invoices, receipts, and other papers documenting Hooper's term of service from 1862 to 1865. Includes a few letters, among them three from Edward L. Pierce to Salmon P. Chase, Secretary of the Treasury, concerning work with the freedmen at Port Royal, S.C.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008318 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-347. aEdward William Hooper Papers, 1862-1866 (MS Am 1727). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHooper, Edward William,d1839-1901. 0aFreedmenzSouth CarolinazPort Royal. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 7aInvoices.2aat 7aReceipts.2aat 7aReports.2aat 7aSoldiers.2lcsh1 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897.0 cGift;aMrs. John B. Potter;d1962;e62M-347.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. John B. Potter, 1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172702802cpcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001300122050001300135100005200148245007500200300002800275351002900303545015000332520070100482555008701183555010901270524012701379546001601506600004001522630002001562630002101582650002201603651005001625651006201675651007101737656002301808656002001831700003901851700004901890700005301939700004201992700005602034710004102090541009002131561004402221506004202265852002502307000601948-X20130117090951.0860128i18191889mau eng d0 aocn1222975951 aMAHV86A24 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS70-51010aMS81-4691 aClapp, William Warland,d1826-1891,erecipient.10aWilliam Warland Clapp letters from various correspondents,f1819-1889. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aClapp was a journalist and author. He was editor of the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette (1847-1865) and editor of the Boston Journal (1865-1891). aLetters to Clapp from Henry A. Delille, Edward Everett, Jonas Hanot French, Alexander Hamilton Rice, Benjamin Penhallow Shillaber and others. Letters mostly address topics on the Army during the Civil war, including Army Desertion, the Army and President Lincoln's plans and maneuvers, and various personal accounts of soldiers fighting in the Civil War. Letters also concern letters to the editor of the Evening Gazette and Boston Gazette about war stories that readers wanted published, and angry letters about publications. Collection also contains a letter of thanks to Clapp from the Armory of the Boston Light Infantry, a signature of Seminole Chief Bobby Bow Legs, and various invitations.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012808 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1957-1958, under *57M-264. aWilliam Warland Clapp Letters from Various Correspondents, 1819-1889 (MS Am 1518.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aClapp, William Warland,d1826-1891.00aBoston Gazette.00aEvening Gazette. 0aSeminole Indians. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xDesertions. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 7aJournalists.2lcsh 7aSoldiers.2lcsh1 aDelille, Henry A.,ecorrespondent.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865,ecorrespondent.1 aFrench, Jonas H.q(Jonas Hanod),ecorrespondent.1 aRice, Alexander Hamilton,d1818-1895.1 aShillaber, B. P.q(Benjamin Penhallow),d1814-1890.0 aArmory of the Boston Light Infantry.0 cGift;aMrs. James H. Means;b60 Mt. Vernon St., Boston 8 Mass.;d1957;e57M-264.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. James H. Means, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1518.101849cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003100123245005400154300002800208351003900236520035700275524009300632555008700725555010800812546001600920600001900936655002100955655001900976655002200995700005001017541020301067561020001270506004201470852002301512000601974-920100427095355.0860521i17911873mau eng d0 aocn6123679371 aMAHV86A263 aMH-HcMH-Hedacx1 aHemenway, Amy,ecollector.10aAmy Hemenway collecton of autographs,f1791-1873. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aThis autograph collection consists primarily of letters by American authors and politicians, but includes letters by scientists, philosophers, and historians, and by prominent Europeans, particularly British. A number of letters are to Nathaniel Hawthorne. Also contains a few manuscripts, photographs, signatures, a drawing, and three pieces of money. aAmy Hemenway Collecton of Autographs (MS Am 2010). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004568 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1982-1983, under *82M-65. aIn English.10aHemenway, Amy. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aHawthorne, Nathaniel,d1804-1864,erecipient.0 cGift and Purchase;aBartol, George M.; Janet Belash; Priscilla B. Grace; Ann Bartol Sutcliffe; and Phyllis N. Bartol;baddress;d1982;e82M-65;hAmy Lowell Fund from Phyllis N. Bartol.5hou3Papers.1 aGift of Amy Hemenway's grandchildren, George M. Bartol, Janet Belash, Priscilla B. Grace, and Ann Bartol Sutcliffe, 1982; and purchased with the Amy Lowell fund from Phyllis N. Bartol, 1982.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 201002553ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245005300142300002800195351005300223545073900276520036401015555008701379524010401466546001601570544009101586600003401677650003901711655003801750650004301788655004901831655001901880655003801899740003501937541012201972561004302094506004202137852002402179000602209-X20120111080401.0860728s1895 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn612370779 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aEverett, William,d1839-1910.10aWilliam Everett compositions,f1895 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of composition. aWilliam Everett (1839-1910) was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, the son of Charlotte Gray Brooks and Edward Everett (orator, Massachusetts governor, and US Secretary of State). He received an AB at Harvard College in 1859, and an LLB in 1865. He was a tutor at Harvard in Latin (1870-1873), and an assistant professor of Latin (1873-1877). Everett became master of Adams Academy, Quincy, Massachusetts in 1878-1893 and then was a U. S. House Representative from Massachusetts’ 7th district (Democrat) from April 1893 through March 1895. He ran unsuccessfully for governor of Massachusetts in 1897, losing to Roger Wolcott. Everett returned to his post as master at Adams Academy in 1897 and remained there until his death in 1910. aIncludes autograph manuscripts, 1 typescript, and clippings of the writings by William Everett. Includes his complete 1904 Lowell Lectures on Italian poets since Dante, many juvenile stories, and other writings. Many of the stories are incomplete (some are marked in manuscript as "incomplete"), many have autograph manuscript revisions, and most are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02257 aWilliam Everett Compositions, 1895 and undated (MS Am 800.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aAdditional papers of William Everett are held by the Massachusetts Historical Society.10aEverett, William,d1839-1910. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 0aItalian poetryxHistory and criticism. 7aJuveniliazUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aLectures.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat4 aThe Italian poets since Dante.0 cGift;aAugustus P. Loring;b82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1934 January 18;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Augustus P. Loring, 1934.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.401952cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100004000136245008800176300002800264351015000292545011100442520032800553555008700881555010900968524008501077600004001162650001701202650001601219655001601235656001701251700005101268700003801319700004701357700003501404541003601439561003801475506004201513852002301555000602328-220110126092159.0860131i17961927mau eng d0 aocn1225058411 aMAHV86-A51 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-6481 aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923.10aWilliam Roscoe Thayer additional papers,f1796-1927 (inclusive),g1877-1927 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following seres: I. Letters to various persons; II. Letters to Elizabeth Thayer; III. Unrelated material; and IV. Manuscripts. aThayer was a biographer and historian. From 1892 to 1915 he was editor of the Harvard Graduates' Magazine. aLetters to and from Thayer, together with manuscripts of poems by Thayer. Includes 64 letters, 1879-1905, from Thayer to his college friend Harrison O. Apthorp; and 28 letters (chiefly condolence letters), 1923-1927, to Elizabeth Thayer. Also includes a facsimile of a letter, 1796, of Vittorio Alfieri to Antonio Montucci.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006808 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-194. aWilliam Roscoe Thayer Papers (MS Am 1634). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aThayer, William Roscoe,d1859-1923. 0aBiographers. 0aHistorians. 7aPoems.2aat 7aPoets.2lcsh1 aAlfieri, Vittorio,d1749-1803,ecorrespondent.1 aApthorp, Harrison O.,erecipient.1 aMontucci, Antonio,d1762-1829,erecipient.1 aThayer, Elizabeth,erecipient.0 cGift;aUnknown;.e60M-194.5HOU1 aGift from an Unknown Source.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 163403518cpcaa2200493 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245006700166300002800233545004800261520091200309530006201221555008701283555010801370524012401478650006201602600004901664600003201713600003101745610002201776650003501798650005701833656001701890656002301907700005301930700005501983700004702038700004302085700004802128700004902176700004502225700005902270700004802329700004702377541009102424561003802515506004202553852003002595845039902625000602525-020111220092051.0860224i19001958mau eng d0 aocn1225210021 aMAHV86A83 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968,erecipient.10aWitter Bynner letters from various correspondents,f1900-1958. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aBynner was an American poet and translator. aChiefly letters to Bynner from literary friends and associates such as Mary Austin, Minnie Maddern Fiske, Robert Frost, Kahlil Gibran, Vachel Lindsay, Amy Lowell, William Sydney Porter (O. Henry), E. A. Robinson, Carl Sandburg, Sara Teasdale, and many others, on American literary criticism. Mary Austin's letters compliment Bynner's works and contain critical interpretations of their peer's works. The correspondence from Willa Cather divulges information about her youth as the starting point for her knowledge of western life. Frost's letters are personal in nature and inquire about family life while reminiscing on past encounters. Many letters from Laurence Housman discuss his own works, particularly the creation of his brother's (A.E. Housman) Memoirs. Laurence often discusses American politics, particulary the Second World War. Amy Lowell's letters discuss Bynner's reviews in The New Republic. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007838 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-83. aWitter Bynner Letters from Various Correspondents, 1900-1958 (MS Am 1629-1629.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAmerican literaturexHistory and criticismy20th century.10aHousman, A. E.q(Alfred Edward),d1859-1936.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aCather, Willa,d1873-1947.20aThe New Republic. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xSocial aspectszUnited States. 7aPoets.2lcsh 7aTranslators.2lcsh1 aAustin, Mary Hunter,d1868-1934,ecorrespondent.1 aFiske, Minnie Maddern,d1865-1932,ecorrespondent.1 aFrost, Robert,d1874-1963,ecorrespondent.1 aHenry, O.,d1862-1910,ecorrespondent.1 aGibran, Kahlil,d1883-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aLindsay, Vachel,d1879-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aLowell, Amy,d1874-1925,ecorrespondent.1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935,ecorrespondent.1 aSandburg, Carl,d1878-1967,ecorrespondent.1 aTeasdale, Sara,d1884-1933,ecorrspondent.0 cGift;aWitter Bynner;b342 Buena Vista Rd., Santa Fe, NM;d30 Nov. 1960;e60M-83.5hou1 aGift of Witter Bynner, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1629-1629.1 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou02115cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002300102100003200125245006900157300002800226351017700254545029300431520027900724500006301003555008701066555010001153524011601253546001601369600003201385600001901417610004501436650004501481655002201526655002901548656001701577656003101594541002601625561002501651506004201676852002301718000603154-420130912083015.0851125i18351886mau eng d0 aocn1225064281 aMHAT85-A44 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aPhelps, Samuel,d1804-1878.10aSamuel Phelps papers,f1835-1886 (inclusive),g1843-1871 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; III. Personal materials; IV. Theatrical materials; and V. Uncatalogued editions and prompt copies. aEnglish actor/manager Phelps, a noted tragedian, took over the management of Sadler's Wells Theatre, London, in 1843, and presented a series of major Shakespearean revivals. His productions were notable for their pageantry as well as for Phelps' efforts to restore the Shakespearean text. aContains correspondence, both professional and personal, the great bulk being to his wife and children; manuscript actors' sides; promptbooks; printed scripts and part books; writings by Phelps; and miscellaneous material relating to his theatrical career and personal life. aA portion of this collection is uncataloged (Series IV-V).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015588 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-145. aSamuel Phelps Papers, 1835-1886 (MS Thr 444). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPhelps, Samuel,d1804-1878.30aPhelps family.20aSadler's Wells Theatre (London, England) 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy19th century. 7aPromptbooks.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat 7aActors.2aat 7aTheatrical managers.2lcsh0 cGift?;aUnknown.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 44402482cpcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002500102100003200127245006700159300002800226351002900254545010800283520040300391555008700794555010900881524013400990600002001124650003601144650003601180650002101216655002801237655002101265656001801286700004801304700006701352700005501419700004801474700004901522700003801571700004701609700005301656700005001709541014101759561007101900506004201971852002302013000603193-520110105084625.0860929i17071869mau eng d0 aocn1225652891 aMHAT86-A37 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aWharton, Betty,ecollector.10aBetty Wharton collection of theatrical autographs,f1707-1869. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aWharton (1911-1980) was an American actress and the wife of American lawyer and writer John F. Wharton. aIncludes theatrical letters, particularly from the 18th- and 19th-century English stage, collected by Wharton. Correspondence includes letters of Colley Cibber, Robert William Elliston, John Fawcett, David Garrick, Dorothy Jordan, Adelaide Kemble, Frances Anne Kemble, John Philip Kemble, and Charles Mathews, among others. Also includes manuscript and printed documents and signed printed tickets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005048 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1980-1981, under *80M-447. aBetty Wharton Collection of Theatrical Autographs (MS Thr 357). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWharton, Betty. 0aTheaterzEnglandy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandy19th century. 0aActors, English. 7aAdmission tickets.2aat 7aAutographs.2aat 7aActors.2lcsh1 aCibber, Colley,d1671-1757,ecorrespondent.1 aElliston, R. W.q(Robert William),d1774-1831,ecorrespondent.1 aFawcett,cMr.q(John),d1768-1837,ecorrespondent.1 aGarrick, David,d1717-1779,ecorrespondent.1 aJordan, Dorothy,d1761-1816,ecorrespondent.1 aKemble, Adelaide,ecorrespondent.1 aKemble, Fanny,d1809-1893,ecorrespondent.1 aKemble, John Philip,d1757-1823,ecorrespondent.1 aMathews, Charles,d1776-1835,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aKathleen Fisher Greenacre & Martyn Greenacre;b14 Fore St., Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL7 5AH England;d1981 Apr. 13;e80M-47.5HOU1 aGift of Kathleen Fisher Greenacre and Martyn Greenacre, 1981.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 35701885cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004400123245004900167300002800216351003000244545026300274520018500537555008700722555010900809524011300918600004401031600003401075650003901109650003901148650003501187650003501222650002301257655002001280655002201300655004601322655002001368541005501388561004501443852002301488000601805-X20081117152514.0860313i18911920mau eng d0 aocn122468796 aMAHV86A110 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.00kLettersbto Abbie Farwell Brown,f1891-1920. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aPeabody was an American poet, dramatist, pacifist and feminist. She was a special student at Radcliffe College (1894-1896). Abbie Farwell Brown (1871-1927), her friend, was a poet, author of children's books, and leader in the New England literary community. aConsists of 142 letters, photographs, postcards, and clippings from Peabody to Brown concerning their writings and personal matters. Also includes some poems sent with the letters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016978 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1943-1944, under *43M-408. aJosephine Preston Peabody Letters to Abbie Farwell Brown (MS Am 1673). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPeabody, Josephine Preston,d1874-1922.10aBrown, Abbie Farwell,d-1927. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aFemale friendship. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century..2aat 7aPostcards.2aat cGift;aProfessor L.S. Marks;d1943;e43M-408.5hou aGift of Professor L.S. Marks, 1943.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 167301952cpcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101050001300122100004000135245006100175300002800236351003900264545005800303520036400361555008700725524011100812546001600923600001900939600004000958600005500998610003801053610003401091650002301125650003901148650003501187655002201222655002201244700003901266700004501305541007001350561005701420506004201477852002301519000601919-620130131120328.0860506i18251894mau eng d0 aocm806171611 aMAHV86A213 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-5511 aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.10aOliver Wendell Holmes miscellaneous letters,f1825-1894. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHolmes was an essayist, poet, and teacher of anatomy. aCatch-all box includes Holmes' letters to various correspondents and a few other items, including genealogy, photographs, and a vita found with the letters. Letters reflect a wide range of topics including his views on issues in medicine and education, comments on student days at Harvard and his literary work, such as the origin and purpose of Elsie Venner.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01332 aOliver Wendell Holmes Miscellaneous Letters, 1825-1894 (MS Am 1163). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aHolmes family.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,d1809-1894.10aHolmes, Oliver Wendell,tElsie Venner.d1809-1894.20aHarvard Medical SchoolxStudents.20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aMedical education. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat1 aHedge, Frederic Henry,d1805-1890.1 aSumner, Charles,d1811-1874,erecipient.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 116301973cpcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100003300124245002600157300002800183545018000211520036600391555008700757555010800844524008900952600003301041650004001074650003001114650001501144655001801159656002101177541008101198561007601279852002301355506028101378000601958-720030521105943.0860515i18551898mau eng d0 aocn1224687831 aMAHV86-A249 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHopkins, Jerome,d1836-1898.00kJournals,f1855-1898. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCharles Jerome Hopkins (1836-1898) was an American composer and musician. He wrote for musical and other papers under his own name and those of Timothy Trill and Joseph Swift. aIncludes 22 volumes of journals, 1855-1867, covering Hopkins' musical and social life in New York as church organist, pianist, composer, and organizer of music festivals as well as journalist; and 4 manuscripts: "Dreams at Clover Hill," 1873-1898; "Thoughts and Mem[oranda]," 1894-1898, "Diary Once a Week," 1878, 1883; and "Notes and Incidents," 1878 and 1896.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005448 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1978-1979, under *78M-50. aCharles Jerome Hopkins Journals (bMS Am 1993). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHopkins, Jerome,d1836-1898. 0aMusiczUnited Statesy19th century. 0aMusicianszUnited States. 0aOrganists. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aMusicians.2lcsh cGift;aMrs. Harwood Ellis, and Sylvia Wright Mitarachi;d1979;e78M-50;5HOU aGift of Mrs. Harwood Ellis and Mrs. Sylvia Wright Mitarachi, 1979.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1993 aRestriction: (Concerns publication) Permission to quote from these manuscripts must be obtained from Sylvia Wright Mitarachi, who reserves the right to publish all or large parts of the journals.If no publication plans have been made, this right will be reviewed in June 1984.01936cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100004300123245008500166300002800251351003900279545015600318520026000474555008700734555010800821524012700929546001601056600004301072600003401115600002201149650003901171650003501210655004501245656001901290700003501309700004501344700005701389541005101446561004201497852002301539000601961-720121109122642.0860516i18881921mau eng d0 aocn1225901541 aMAHV86A251 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aBianchi, Martha Dickinson,d1866-1943.10aMartha Dickinson Bianchi letters to Theodore Longfellow Frothingham,f1888-1921. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aBianchi was an American poet and novelist. She was the niece of Emily Dickinson and edited her poems and letters. Frothingham was a lawyer in New York. aIncludes 318 letters by Martha Gilbert Dickinson Bianchi to Theodore L. Frothingham, some letters including original poems by her. Also includes 79 letters by her brother Edward Dickinson and 26 letters by their mother Susan Dickinson, all to Frothingham.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1980-1981, under *80M-40. aMartha Dickinson Bianchi Letters to Theodore L. Frothingham, 1888-1921 (MS Am 1996). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBianchi, Martha Dickinson,d1866-1943.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.30aDickinson family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican poetryy19th century. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aEditors.2lcsh1 aDickinson, Edward,d1861-1898.1 aDickinson, Susan Huntington,d1830-1913.1 aFrothingham, Theodore Longfellow,d1863-erecipient. cGift;aMrs. Hubert Moore;d1981;e80M-40;5HOU aGift of Mrs. Hubert Moore, 1981.5HOU8 bHOUcBhMS Am 199602406cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003700122245007300159300002800232351008000260545005400340520056900394530006200963524008201025555008701107555011001194600003701304650002101341650003601362650002501398655003801423656002301461656002601484656002801510700004601538700004101584700003101625700003701656700003201693740003001725541008901755561006301844506004201907852002301949000602083-620130921103605.0860129i18131880mau eng d0 aocn6123703991 aMAHV86A36 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAudubon, John James,d1785-1851.10aJohn James Audubon papers,f1813-1880 (inclusive)g1828-1855 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence and II. Miscellanea. aAudubon was an American artist and ornithologist. aContains professional correspondence, mostly letters from Audubon to Robert Havell, Jr., the English engraver for The Birds of America; John Bachman, the naturalist with whom Audubon collaborated on Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America; and Thomas Mayo Brewer, the ornithologist and oölogist; also letters from Audubon's wife, Lucy, and son, Victor, to Havell and Bachman; letters from Brewer to Bachman; and some correspondence with other naturalists. Also includes a few manuscript drafts by Audubon for his Ornithological Biography and some financial papers. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aJohn James Audubon Papers (MS Am 1482). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003258 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-2089.10aAudubon, John James,d1785-1851. 0aBirdsxResearch. 0aNatural historyzUnited States. 0aVoyages and travels. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNaturalists.2lcsh 7aOrnithologists.2lcsh 7aWildlife artists.2lcsh1 aAudubon, Lucy Green Bakewell,d1788-1874.1 aAudubon, Victor Gifford,d1809-1860.1 aBachman, John,d1790-1874.1 aBrewer, Thomas Mayo,d1814-1880.1 aHavell, Robert,d1793-1878.0 aOrnithological biography.0 cDeposit;aMuseum of Comparative Zoology;bHarvard University;d1941;e42M-2089.5hou1 aDeposited by the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 1941.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 148202676ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003700122245007900159300002700238351031000265545046400575520057701039524012701616546004201743555008701785600003701872600002301909600001801932650001601950650002401966651006101990656002802051700003902079541009702118561004602215506004402261852002102305000602210-320131029161253.0860729i18201884mau ||| | eng d0 aocm786958651 aMAHV86A403 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887.10aDorothea Lynde Dix letters to Anne E. Heath and other letters,f1820-1884. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Dix to Anne E. Heath; II. Letters from Dix to Abby Barnett; III. Letters from Dix to others; IV. Letters from Anne E. Heath to Dix; V. Letters from Nancy W. Burnap to Dix; VI. Letters from others to Dix; VII. Other correspondence; VIII. Other material. aAfter an early career as a Boston schoolteacher and author of children's books, Dix became concerned with the plight of the mentally ill in the United States, especially the indigent. She traveled widely in North America and Britain to investigate hospital conditions and subsequently became politically active, petitioning state and national legislatures for reforms. She was also appointed superintendent of female army nurses during the American Civil War. aConsists of approximately 500 letters from Dix to Anne E. Heath concerning Dix's work and travels, as well as the activities of mutual friends and the Boston social scene. Also contains a small number of letters from Heath to Dix; from Dix to Heath's sister, Abby Barnett (spelled variously by Dix as Barrnet/Barnet/Barnett); from Dix to her brother, Joseph; and from Dix to Anne's brother, Charles. NB: Some letters are accompanied by envelopes bearing short notes regarding contents, date, and other relevant information; presumably these notes are in Anne Heath's hand. aDorothea Lynde Dix Letters to Anne E. Heath and Other Letters, 1820-1884 (MS Am 59). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollections materials are in English. aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0243710aDix, Dorothea Lynde,d1802-1887.10aHeath, Anne Eliza.30aHeath family. 0aFriendship. 0aMentally illxCare. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xHospitals. 7aSocial reformers.2lcsh1 aHeath, Anne Eliza,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. William H. White;bWellesley Hills;d1937 January 28;eno accession number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. William H. White, 1937.5hou0 aMaterial is open for research use.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 5901554cpcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003500123245004200158300002700200500001700227520020100244524009400445544011800539545029100657600003500948650003100983650004601014655001801060656001801078541006601096561007701162852002501239000602322-320130910122133.0860827i17891803mau eng d0 aocn6123732841 aMAHV86A504 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aGriswold, Stanley,d1763-1815.10aStanley Griswold sermons,f1789-1803. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aConsists of approximately 450 sermons by Griswold. The sermons are annotated with the place and date of delivery. Sermons delivered during his pastorate at New Milford, Conn., about 450 in number. aStanley Griswold Sermons, 1789-1803 (MS Am 800.15). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThere are additional Stanley Griswold papers in Manuscripts and Archives, Baker Library, Harvard Business School. aGriswold was a Congregational clergyman in New Milford, Conn. (1789-1803). His Republican political sympathies made life uncomfortable in Federalist Connecticut. He left the ministry in 1803 and served as secretary of Michigan territory and as a circuit judge in the Illinois territory.10aGriswold, Stanley,d1763-1815. 0aChristianityzConnecticut. 0aCongregational churchesxClergyxSermons. 7aSermons.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh cPurchase;aHarvard Business School;d1937;hBright fund.5hou aPurchased from Harvard Business School, 1937, with the Bright fund.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.1502310cpc a2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004900122245007700171300002800248351005400276545003500330520030900365520019500674524011800869555008700987555010201074600003701176600004301213610002201256650003901278650003501317655002501352655001801377655002201395655001901417700004601436700003201482700003901514700004301553700003501596541012501631561005301756506004201809852002501851007481206-820090109140158.0970715i18961984mau eng d0 aocn6121933161 aMAHV97A11 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aAnderson, Wallace Ludwig,d1917-ecollector.10aWallace Ludwig Anderson Edwin Arlington Robinson collection,f1896-1984. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author, then by title. aRobinson was an American poet. aContains manuscripts, letters to friends and colleagues, photographs of family and friends and the MacDowell Colony, printed material relating to Robinson, sketch and etching of Robinson, and correspondence between collector Wallace Ludwig Anderson and others concerning the acquisition of this material. aRobinson's letters were sent to: William Stanley Braithwaite, Percy MacKaye, William Vaughn Moody, Louis Untermeyer, and others. His manuscripts include: Archibald's example; and The Garden. aWallace Ludwig Anderson Edwin Arlington Robinson Collection (MS Am 1337.7). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000178 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1988-1989, under *88M-40.10aAnderson, Wallace Ludwig,d1917-10aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.20aMacDowell Colony. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aEtching.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSketches.2aat1 aBraithwaite, William Stanley,d1878-1962.1 aMacKaye, Percy,d1875-1956.1 aMoody, William Vaughn,d1869-1910.1 aRobinson, Edwin Arlington,d1869-1935.1 aUntermeyer, Louis,d1885-1977. cGift;aMrs. Wallace Ludwig Anderson;b1929 North Natoma Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60635;d1988 October 13;e88M-40.5hou aGift of Mrs. Wallace Ludwig Anderson, 1988.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1337.703078ckcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245004000140300002800180545044000208520014400648520051100792500011301303524009201416530005301508555008801561600004901649600003101698600004601729600003201775610003501807650003601842655002201878655004501900655002501945655002201970655003801992655002002030700004202050541005802092561004002150506004202190852002502232845039902257007483063-520130910130919.0921027i18591880mau||| |||||| |k|eng|d0 aocn612194422 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, William,d1842-1910.10aWilliam James drawings,f1859-1868. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aWilliam James (1842-1910) was an American philosopher and psychologist, a leader of the philosophical movement of Pragmatism, and of the psychological movement of functionalism. James studied painting in the studio of William Morris Hunt during 1859-1860, but he soon abandoned this career direction. By 1861 he had entered the Lawrence Scientific School of Harvard University and by 1864 he was studying at the Harvard Medical School. aOver 60 pen and pencil matted drawings and 3 sketchbooks. Most mats are annotated by Henry James III (1879-1947), the son of William James.8 aIncludes: juvenilia; photograph of James's portrait of Katherine "Kitty" Temple Emmet and drawings of Newton Dexter and Francis James Child; three pocket notebooks used by James in Bonn and Cambridge, containing notes and sketches; drawings from the Nathaniel Thayer and Louis Agassiz Brazil expedition of 1865-1866; sketches from his Lawrence Scientific School and Harvard Medical School days; and various self-portraits, landscapes, images of animals, and caricatures and portraits of family and friends. aFormer item no. 51 recataloged in MS Am 1092.1. Formerly housed in green cloth portfolio; now stored in box. aWilliam James Drawings, 1859-1868 (MS Am 1092.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aColor digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid available:uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0206610aChild, Francis James,d1825-1896vPortraits.10aDexter, NewtonvPortraits.10aEmmet, Katherine Kitty TemplevPortraits.10aJames, William,d1842-1910.20aThayer Expeditiond(1865-1866) 0aScientific expeditionszBrazil. 7aCaricatures.2aat 7aDrawingsxAmericany19th century.2gmgpc 7aSelf-portraits.2aat 7aSketchbooks.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aJuvenilia.2aat1 aJames, Henry,d1879-1947,eannotator.0 cGift;aHenry James;d1942 December 23;e42M-386.5hou1 aGift of Henry James III, 1942.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1092.2 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou02025ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245006800166300002800234351003900262545008600301520014700387520007300534520021700607524011000824555008700934555010101021650003901122650003701161650003901198655002501237655001601262656001801278700003801296700002901334700003901363700003201402561005601434506004601490541006501536852002601601007529079-020090623101946.0970721i18681960mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6121984131 aMAHV97A19 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aReeves, John Knight,d1907-ecollector.10aJohn Knight Reeves William Dean Howells collection,f1868-1960. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by author. aWilliam Dean Howells was an American novelist and editor of the Atlantic Monthly. aIncludes letters about and by Howells; Howells holograph manuscripts; correspondence and notes by collector John Knight Reeves; and clippings. aCorrespondents include: Mary Elizabeth Burt, Kate Field, and others. aHowells manuscripts include autograph manuscripts, typescripts and stats of: Editor's easy chair; Emile Zola; In August; My literary passions; A pair of patient lovers; Their wedding journey; and World of chance. aJohn Knight Reeves William Dean Howells Collection (MS Am 1784.15). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000138 aUnpublished print finding aid available in Houghton Accession Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-90. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aNovelists, Americany19th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aStats.2aat 7aEditors.2aat1 aBurt, Mary Elizabeth,d1850-1918.1 aField, Kate,d1838-1896.1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.1 aReeves, John Knight,d1907- aBequest of Estate of John Knight Reeves, 1984.5hou aCollection is open for research use.5hou d1984;e87M-90;aEstate of John Knight Reeves;cBequest.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1784.1501752npcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002800122245005000150300002800200351003900228545010800267520016200375524008700537555008700624555010300711600002800814610003200842610002900874610003800903650003400941650003900975650002101014650003501035655002201070655002501092655002401117700002001141700001801161541005201179561004401231506004201275852002501317007536600-220090129092531.0970725i19441956mau eng d0 aocn6121990841 aMAHV97A29 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLang, V. R.d1924-1956.10aV. R. Lang additional papers,fca. 1944-1956. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aLang was an American poet, playwright, actress, and a founder of the Poets' Theatre in Cambridge, Mass. aIncludes letters to Mike Goldberg and Helen Wells, watercolor costume designs, holograph manuscripts, printed material on Lang and various theater companies. aV. R. Lang Additional Papers (MS Am 1951.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001128 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1989-1990, under *89M-8.10aLang, V. R.d1924-1956.20aArtists' Theatre, New York.20aBrattle Theatre Company.20aPoets' Theatre (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetry. 0aPoets, Americany20th century. 7aWatercolors.2aat 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aShort stories.2aat1 aGoldberg, Mike.1 aWells, Helen.0 cGift;aBradley S. Phillips;d1990;e89M-8.5hou1 aGift of Bradley S. Phillips, 1990.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1951.202193npcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245005600161300002800217351003800245545008600283520053000369520009100899524009800990555008701088555010301175600001901278600003901297600001901336600003101355650003901386650003701425650003901462655002101501655001601522656001801538700002301556700003101579506004501610561004601655541005601701852002601757007529037-520090713013718.0970721i18581937mau eng d0 aocn6121982931 aMAHV97A18 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aWilliam Dean Howells additional papers,f1858-1937. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aWilliam Dean Howells was an American novelist and editor of the Atlantic Monthly. aIncludes autograph and typescript manuscripts of the following titles: The American James; A confession of St. Augustine, Fla.; Editor's easy chair; Eighty years and after; A hazard of new fortunes (intro.); The landlord at Lion's head; The leather-wood god; An old Venetian friend; Pride and prejudice (intro.); Priest or painter, dramatization of A forgone conclusion (with revisions by William Poel); Priscilla; Sketch of Winnie's life (containing poems by Winifred Howells); and To the memory of Joseph Alexander Howells. aOther materials included are: 1858 ambrotype portrait of Howells and his brother John. aWilliam Dean Howells Additional Papers (MS Am 1784.16). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000158 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accession Records, 1987-1988, under *87M-91.30aHowell family.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aHowells, John.10aHowells, Joseph Alexander. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aNovelists, Americany19th century. 7aAmbrotypes.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aEditors.2aat1 aHowells, Winifred.1 aPoel, William,d1852-1934. aCollection is open for reseach use.5hou1 aGift of William White Howells, 1986.5hou0 d1986;e*87M-91;aWilliam White Howells;cGift.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1784.1603045cpcaa2200553 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003900122245006800161300002800229351021500257545024000472520027500712520027500987524009501262544003601357555008701393555010401480600001701584600003901601600002101640610003001661610003901691650002801730650004601758655002501804655002201829656002001851656001801871700004001889700003301929700003401962700002601996700003002022700004502052700003102097700003602128700004002164700004702204710002202251710006102273506004202334561004202376541005002418852002302468007529103-720090108132656.0970722i18361977mau eng d0 aocn6121984571 aMAHV97A23 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1823-1895.10aHenry Oscar Houghton additional papers,f1836-1977 (inclusive). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Houghton family and business correspondence, ca. 1813-1977; and II. Letters to Francis Stewart Kershaw of the Department of Asiatic Art of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. aHoughton was an American printer and publisher, proprietor of the Riverside Press in Cambridge, Mass. and partner, successively, in the publishing firms of Hurd and Houghton; Houghton, Osgood & Company; and Houghton, Mifflin & Company. aIncludes: correspondence; manuscripts; notes; materials on the Clay and Houghton families and the Atlantic Monthly Contributor's Dinner for 1874; and printed materials. Letters to Kershaw relate to ceramics (Kershaw was the husband of Justine Houghton, daughter of HOH). aCorrespondents include: Edward Everett; Charles William Eliot; Henry Oscar Houghton (1856- ); Nanna Wyer Houghton; Houghton family members; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow; James Parton; Edna Dean Procter; Horace Elisha Scudder; Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward; and many others. aHenry Oscar Houghton Additional Papers (MS Am 2048). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee related item bMS Am 2048.1.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000918 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-94.30aClay family.10aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1823-1895.30aHoughton family.20aHoughton Mifflin Company.20aRiverside Press (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited States. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aPublisher.2aat 7aPrinter.2aat1 aEliot, Charles William,d1834-1926.1 aEverett, Edward,d1794-1865.1 aHoughton, Henry Oscar,d1856-1 aHoughton, Nanna Wyer.1 aKershaw, Francis Stewart.1 aLongfellow, Henry Wadsworth,d1807-1882.1 aParton, James,d1822-1891.1 aProcter, Edna Dean,d1829-1923.1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902.1 aWard, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps,d1844-1911.2 aAtlantic Monthly.2 aMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston.bDepartment of Asiatic Art. aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aGift of Alexander W. Dole, 1986.5hou0 d1986;e86M-94;aAlexander W. Dole.cgift5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 204801891cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100002900122245004600151300002800197351002900225545012200254520024100376555008700617555010800704524008600812546001600898600002900914650003400943650003900977650002101016650003501037655002501072655001901097655002201116700003001138700003701168700002901205700003501234710003601269541005301305561004401358506004201402852002501444007537662-820100427185718.0970725i19471956mau eng d0 aocn6121991571 aMAHV97A30 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLang, V. R.,d1924-1956.10aV. R. Lang additional papers,f1947-1956. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aViolet Ranney Lang was an American poet, playwright, actress, and a founder of the Poets' Theatre in Cambridge, Mass. aIncludes correspondence, drawings, holograph manuscripts, photographs, and printed materials about Lang. Correspondents include: John Ciardi, Gorham Bert Munson, New Directions Publishing Corp., Henry Rago, Karl Jay Shapiro, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003478 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-69. aV.R. Lang Additional Papers (MS Am 1951.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLang, V. R.,d1924-1956. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetry. 0aPoets, Americany20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aCiardi, John,d1916-1986.1 aMunson, Gorham Bert,d1896-1969.1 aRago, Henry,d1915-1969.1 aShapiro, Karl Jay,d1913-2000.2 aNew Directions Publishing Corp.0 cGift;aBradley S. Phillips;d1987;e86M-69.5hou1 aGift of Bradley S. Phillips, 1987.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1951.102277ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100004300125245006500168300002800233351003000261545036500291520037200656555008701028555010301115524014501218546001601363600004301379610003801422610002701460610002301487610003701510650006601547655003801613700004101651700003801692541006301730561004301793506004201836852002501878008146842-320120813084114.0050421i19311956mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793922111 aMHAT05-B10007 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAnderson, Robert Woodruff,d1917-2009.10aRobert Woodruff Anderson letters to his parents,f1931-1956. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aRobert Woodruff Anderson was born in New York City on April 28, 1917, the son of Myra and James Anderson. He was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy (1931-35), and at Harvard University, where he received both his A.B. (magna cum laude) in 1939 and his M.A. in 1940. He became a prolific playwright, remembered chiefly for All Summer Long and Tea and Sympathy. aA collection of 255 letters written by Robert Anderson to his parents, James Hewston Anderson and Myra Grigg Anderson, 1931, 1935-1956. Most of the letters describe Anderson's academic and extra-curricular activities while an undergraduate at Harvard University, 1935-1939, especially in Dunster House productions, the Harvard Dramatic Club and the Harvard Glee Club.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009718 aUnpublished finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, 2003-2004, under *2003MT-193. aRobert Woodruff Anderson Letters to his Parents, 1931-1956 (MS Thr 210.1). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAnderson, Robert Woodruff,d1917-2009.20aHarvard UniversityxStudent life.20aHarvard Dramatic Club.20aHarvard Glee Club.20aDunster House (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aCollege and school drama, AmericanzMassachusettszCambridge. 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aAnderson, James Hewston,erecipient.1 aAnderson, Myra Grigg,erecipient.0 cGift;aRobert W. Anderson;d7 Oct. 1986;e2003MT-192.5the1 aGift of Robert W. Anderson, 1986.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 210.103088ntcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004500122245006200167300002800229351014700257545048400404520055700888524011201445544009201557530006201649555008701711555010601798600002001904610007401924650003901998650003102037651008302068651006202151651007102213655001802284655001602302700004502318700003602363740002302399541009402422561008502516506004202601852002302643008590385-X20120523094352.0010326i17791910mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6126941881 aMAHV01A10 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHigginson, Thomas Wentworth,d1823-1911.10aThomas Wentworth Higginson additional papers,f1779-1910. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; III. Diaries; IV. Other papers; and V. Papers found at a later date. aHigginson, born in Cambridge, Massachusetts to Stephen Higginson and Louisa (Storrow) Higginson, graduated from Harvard Divinity School in 1847 and became a pastor first in Newburyport and then in Worcester, Massachusetts. He was actively involved in the abolitionist movement and served as colonel of the first regiment of African Americans in the Civil War. After the war, Higginson published biographies, essays, poetry, and histories, including Army life in a black regiment. aThese additional papers contain correspondence of Thomas Wentworth Higginson as well as of his father Stephen Higginson and other members of the Higginson family. There are compositions by Thomas Wentworth Higginson including articles about the South Carolina Loyal Regiment, poems, and a draft of Monarch of dreams. There is also a diary kept by Higginson during his army service and diaries kept by his mother describing daily life in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Finally, there are texts of Negro spirituals transcribed by Higginson, among other items. aThomas Wentworth Higginson Additional Papers, 1779-1910 (MS Am 2101). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aFor other papers of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, see bMS Am 784 and bMS Am 1162-1162.10. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001108 aUnpublished print finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1994-1995, under *94M-82.30aHiggins family.10aUnited States.bArmyxAfrican American troopsxHistoryy19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aSpirituals (Songs)xTexts. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xParticipation, African American. 0aCambridge (Mass.)xSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aPoems.2aat1 aHigginson, Louisa (Storrow),d1786-1864.1 aHigginson, Stephen,d1770-1834.0 aMonarch of dreams.0 cGift;aMary Potter Thatcher Higginson and Margaret Higginson Barney;d1938;e94M-82.5hou1 aGift of Mary Potter Thatcher Higginson and Margaret Higginson Barney, 1938.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 210101835ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245006300152300002800215351003000243545026300273520013400536555008700670555010800757524011500865546001600980600003000996650003901026700005901065700003701124700006201161700004401223541010801267561005501375506004201430852002501472008736804-820130910130544.0010924i19061915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127067511 aMAHV01A38 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James letters to George Walter Prothero,f1906-1915. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged chronologically. aHenry James was an American novelist, short story writer, critic and dramatist. George Prothero was a professor, editor, and publisher, and he and James were neighbors in Rye. His wife was Lady Margaret (Fanny) Butcher Prothero, also a friend of Henry James. aIncludes letters to Fanny Prothero from Margaret James (1914), and letters from Alice Howe Gibbens James to the Protheros (1916).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1958-1959, under *58M-51. aHenry James Letters to George Walter Prothero, 1906-1915 (MS Am 1094.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century.1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Margaret,ecorrespondent.1 aProthero, G. W.q(George Walter),d1848-1922,erecipient.1 aProthero, Margaret Frances,erecipient.0 cGift;aC. W. (Charles William) Crawley;bTrinity Hall, Cambridge, England;d1958 October;e58M-51.5hou1 aGift of C.W. (Charles William) Crawley, 1958.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1094.301649ntcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245006200152300002800214545018600242520013700428530006700565555008700632555011300719524011400832546001600946600002500962600003000987650003901017700002501056740002701081541011701108561003601225506003701261852002501298008743327-320130404100636.0011003i19141916mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127074611 aMAHV01A46 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James papers for The sense of the past,f1914-1916. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. Theodora Bosanquet (1887?-1961) became secretary to Henry James in 1907. She was also a critic and editor. aTypescript copies of this novel, some with autograph manuscript revisions by Henry James. Also includes notes by Theodore Bosanquet. aColor digital images of collection available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-456-460. aHenry James Papers for The Sense of the Past, 1914-1916 (MS Am 1237.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBosanquet, Theodora.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century.1 aBosanquet, Theodora.42aThe sense of the past.0 cGift;aHenry James Esq;b522 Fifth Ave., New York, NY;d1944;e44M-456; 44M-457; 44M-458; 44M-459; 44M-460.5hou1 aGift of Henry James, 1944.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.803122ckcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100004400122245008300166300002800249351007400277545013200351520055500483520028601038524011801324510016201442555008701604544008601691530006201777600003901839600004401878600003801922650003601960655002201996655001902018700005002037740002202087740001202109541008402121561006102205506003702266852002302303845038602326008755499-220090304105326.0011019q18371839mau||| ||||||| k|eng d0 aocn6127090681 aMAHV01A50 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aCranch, Christopher Pearse,d1813-1892.10aChristopher Pearse Cranch illustrations of the New Philosophy,fca. 1837-1839. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bDrawings are arranged as they were ordered in the original scrapbook. aCranch was a Unitarian minister, poet, author, artist, editor, humorist, and member of the New England transcendentalist group. aInk drawings, created in Louisville, Kentucky, with autograph captions. These are humorous illustrations, sometimes called cartoons or caricatures, relating to New England transcendentalist Ralph Waldo Emerson. Originally drawn by Cranch on loose sheets, but later mounted into a bound blank-book (22 leaves) sometimes called the "transcendental scrapbook," or the "new philosophy scrapbook." Drawings mounted into volume and given titlepage and date of 1835 (probably incorrect) by James Freeman Clarke. See Miller volume for additional information. aIncludes drawings associated with Emerson's works The American Scholar and Nature. Drawings in original scrapbook were photographed prior to being removed for conservation in 2001; original housing retained as part of collection (see item (25)). Photographs filed in internal file. aChristopher Pearse Cranch Illustrations of the New Philosophy (MS Am 1506). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aFrederick De Wolfe Miller, "Christopher Pearse Cranch and his caricatures of New England transcendentalism" (Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, 1951).0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00137 aSee also Autograph File under Cranch for additional drawings relating to Emerson. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888.10aCranch, Christopher Pearse,d1813-1892.10aEmerson, Ralph Waldo,d1803-1882. 0aTranscendentalism (New England) 7aCaricatures.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat1 aClarke, James Freeman,d1810-1888,ecompiler.0 aAmerican Scholar.0 aNature.0 cDeposit, then gift;aJames Freeman Clark;baddress;d1946; 1956;e45M-182.5hou1 aDeposited by James Freeman Clarke, 1946; gift 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1506 aImages linked to this collection's finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01988ntcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003400122245007200156300002800228351003900256545025800295520026700553555008700820524011400907600001801021600003001039610002901069600002101098650002101119650003101140655001901171655002001190700005901210700004601269700003401315710004101349541010201390561004701492506003701539852002601576008738984-320090304110307.0010926i19051930mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127071021 aMAHV01A43 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPinker, James B.,erecipient.10aLetters sent to James B. Pinker concerning Henry James,f1905-1930. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aHenry James (1843-1916) was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. James Brand Pinker (1863-1922) was his literary and dramatic agent. Pinker was founder of the firm James B. Pinker and Son, a firm of literary agents in London. aLetters, telegrams, and receipts to James B. Pinker (and to his firm after his death in 1922), concerning the publication of the works of Henry James. Includes a few letters from members of the James family, including Alice Howe Gibbens James and Henry James II.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00139 aLetters Sent to James B. Pinker Concerning Henry James (MS Am 1237.14). Houghton Library, Harvard University.30aJames family.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.20aJames B. Pinker and Son.10aPinker, James B. 0aLiterary agents. 0aPublishers and publishing. 7aReceipts.2aat 7aTelegrams.2aat1 aJames, Alice Howe Gibbens,d1849-1922,ecorrespondent.1 aJames, Henry,d1879-1947,ecorrespondent.3 aJames family,ecorrespondent.2 aJames B. Pinker and Son,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aMyers & Co;d1946 December 12;eFriends of the Library fund (35 pounds);h46M-85.5hou1 aGift of Friends of the Library, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1237.1401771ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005100123245006600174300002800240351003900268545019600307520029500503555008700798555010800885524010500993600003901098650003901137650003901176650002901215655002101244541008501265561004201350506004201392852002301434008755313-920100318080836.0021113i17021952mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm830950951 aMAHV02-A220 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908,erecipient.10aLetters to Charles Eliot Norton and other papers,f1702-1952. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aNorton was an American author, editor, and teacher; coedited the North American Review (1864-1868) and helped found The Nation (1865). He was professor of the history of fine arts at Harvard. aPossibly an autograph collection of letters from famous literary, cultural, and political figures, some of which are addressed to Charles Eliot Norton. Others are addressed to a variety of correspondents. Also includes cut signatures, books, pamphlets, clippings and other printed material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003358 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1986-1987, under *86M-26. aLetters to Charles Eliot Norton and Other Papers (MS Am 2034). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAutographsxCollections. 7aAutographs.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Donald Starr;b198 Beacon St., Boston MA 02116;d1987;e86M-26.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Donald Starr, 1987.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 203401608ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005900122245006700181300002800248520018900276555008700465555011300552524011700665600005900782650001300841650001800854655002200872655002300894656002000917700004800937541011600985561010201101506004201203852004901245008907649-420120307144518.0020509i19111920mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm797527081 aMAHV02-A25 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBowditch, Charles P.q(Charles Pickering),d1842-1921.10aCharles Pickering Bowditch papers on cryptography,f1911-1920. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aIncludes correspondence between Bowditch and George Fabyan, typescript transcript translations of books on cryptography by others, Bowditch's notes on cryptography, and other material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014078 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-606-611. aCharles Pickering Bowditch Papers on Cryptography, 1911-1920 (MS Am 2171). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBowditch, Charles P.q(Charles Pickering),d1842-1921. 0aCiphers. 0aCryptography. 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aCryptographers.1 aFabyan, George,d1867-1936,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. Franklin G. Balch, Mrs. Ingersoll Bowditch, and Mrs. Ernest Amory Codman;d1946;e45M-606-611.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Franklin G. Balch, Mrs. Ingersoll Bowditch, and Mrs. Ernest Amory Codman, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2171zShelved with bMS Am 217202286ctcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003300123245004000156300002800196351003000224545017900254520060800433544008201041555008701123555010901210524009001319546001601409600003301425600002301458610003601481650002301517650002701540651003601567651004601603651004301649655001801692656001801710541005201728561004301780506004201823852002301865008907212-X20130212093343.0021002i18591918mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm814739501 aMAHV02-A112 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aStillman, James,d1850-1918.10aJames Stillman diaries,f1859-1918. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aStillman was an American financier and banker whose presidency of National City Bank of New York made it one of the most powerful financial institutions in the United States. aForty-eight volumes of diaries and personal account books. These diaries describe Stillman's appointments, his commute, and his general health. Some detail conversations and meetings regarding his position at the National City Bank of New York while others simply describe the weather and the births and deaths of family and friends in New York. Stillman often describes his sojourns in Europe as well as his domestic travel. Many of the diaries mention his business relationship with the Rockefellers and enumerate a variety of loans, payments, investments and expenditures both personal and corporate. aFor typescript transcripts of these diaries, see MS Am 2041 (HOLLIS #6967603)0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1944-1945, under *44M-439. aJames Stillman Diaries, 1859-1918 (MS Am 2173). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aStillman, James,d1850-1918.30aRockfeller family.20aNational City Bank of New York. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aCorporationsxFinance. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xSocial life and customs. 0aUnited StatesxDescription and travel. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aBankers.2aat0 cGift;aDr. E.G. Stillman;d1945;e44M-439.5HOU1 aGift of Dr. E. G. Stillman, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 217301651ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005600123245004900179300002800228351003800256545003900294520014500333555008700478555011300565524010400678546001600782600005500798650003900853650003900892655003800931655001700969740002100986740001901007740001801026740002001044541008401064561006401148506004201212852002301254008920754-820130212085333.0021004i18881907mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm803624321 aMAHV02-A118 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrawford, F. Marion,q(Francis Marion),d1854-1909.10aF. Marion Crawford compositions,f1888-1907. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aCrawford was an American novelist. aAutograph manuscript novels in the hand of Crawford, including the titles: The diva's ruby, Fair Margaret, Greifenstein, and The primadonna.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013928 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957, under *56M-195-198. aFrancis Marion Crawford Compositions, 1888-1907 (MS Am 2185). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCrawford, F. Marionq(Francis Marion),d1854-1909. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNovels.2aat4 aThe diva's ruby.0 aFair Margaret.0 aGreifenstein.4 aThe primadonna.0 cGift;aCountess Eleonora Marion-Crawford Rocca;d1957;e56M-195 - 56M-198.5HOU1 aGift of Countess Eleonora Marion-Crawford Rocca, 1957.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 218501779ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100004500124245008500169300002800254545022400282520012800506555008700634555011600721524012700837546001600964600003300980600001801013600003201031610003301063650004001096650003701136655002001173656002301193700003201216541005901248561004201307506004201349852002601391009065287-820100318080334.0021115i18761931mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127563831 aMAHV02-A240 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,ecollector.10aSamuel Henshaw collection of newsclippings concerning Gilbert White,f1876-1931. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aHenshaw was an entomologist and director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University (1912-1927). He undertook a study of the British naturalist Gilbert White, author of "The Natural History of Selborne." aNewspaper and magazine clippings concerning Gilbert White, the White family, nature and naturalists, and Selborne, England.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1942-1943, under *42M-1810-1815F. aSamuel Hensaw Collection of Newsclippings Concerning Gilbert White (bMS Eng 731.14). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.30aWhite family.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aNatural historyzEnglandzSelborne. 0aNaturalistszEnglandxBiography. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNaturalists.2lcsh1 aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.0 cBequest;aSamuel Henshaw;d1943;e42M-1810-1815F.5HOU1 aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, 1943.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 731.1402906ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005000123245007800173300002800251351002900279545003600308546003600344520107700380555008701457555010901544524011601653546001601769600005001785600007601835650001501911650003801926650003801964650001602002650003802018650001402056650004202070651005802112651004302170651003602213655001902249541010002268561003902368506004202407852002302449009071474-120130102112206.0021206i19151929mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm831578171 aMAHV02-A281 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930.10aD. H. Lawrence letters to various correspondents,f1915-1929 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aLawrence was an English author. aLetters in Italian and English. aCollection consists of negative photostats of letters written by D. H. Lawrence to various correspondents. Letters discuss philosophy, political science, and the structure of government. Also included are copies of Lawrence's notes on an outline. In addition, letters discuss World War I, Lawrence's health, Lawrence's travels in and impressions of the United States and Mexico, and the upkeep of the Lawrences' New Mexico ranch. Letters also discuss astrology and various collaborations on articles and the book Dragon of Revelation, politics, religion, literary discussions, travel plans, and the difficult distribution of Lady Chatterley's Lover. Letters to Lawrence's Italian publisher and agent discuss the difficulties surrounding the publication, censorship and distribution of Lady Chatterley's Lover, as well as some description of Lawrence's daily life, including frequent mentions of his ill health. Mixed in are letters written in Italian and letters from various readers and booksellers ordering copies, frequently with Lawrence's instructions in the margins.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011748 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions records, 1950-1951, under *50M-560. aD. H. Lawrence Letters to Various Correspondents, 1915-1929 (MS Eng 832). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930.10aLawrence, D.H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930.tLady Chatterley's Lovers. 0aAstrology. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aPhilosophy. 0aPublishers and publishingzItaly. 0aReligion. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918xPublic opinion. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty20th century. 0aUnited StatesxDescription and travel. 0aMexicoxDescription and travel. 7aOutlines.2aat0 cGift;aHarry K. Wells;b263 Hammond Street, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts;d1936;e50M-560.5HOU1 aGift of Harry K. Wells, 1936.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 83201769ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003500123245004700158300002800205351012300233545008900356520019400445555008700639555010900726524009700835546001600932600003500948600004200983650003901025650002801064655001701092655002401109655001601133656001901149700004201168541006501210561005501275506004201330852002301372009059780-X20120111101405.0021113i19241948mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm810038261 aMAHV02-A229 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSpencer, Theodore,d1902-1949.10aTheodore Spencer compositions,f1924-1948. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Essays, short stories, and plays; II. Works by other people; and III. Letters. aTheodore Spencer was an American poet, essayist, playwright, and short story writer. aIncludes 62 autograph and typescript essays, short stories, and plays by Theodore Spencer, together with two pieces by William Ellery Sedgewick and Spencer's correspondence with publishers.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008328 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-348. aTheodore Spencer Compositions, 1924-1948 (MS Am 1728). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSpencer, Theodore,d1902-1949.10aSedgwick, William Ellery,d1899-1942. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 7aEssays.2aat 7aShort stories.2aat 7aPlays.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aSedgwick, William Ellery,d1899-1942.0 cGift;aProfessor Theodore Spencer;d1949 ca.;e62M-348.5HOU1 aGift of Professor Theodore Spencer, ca. 1949.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172803016cpcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002500121100003800146245005600184300002800240351003900268545006100307520048000368555008700848555010800935524011101043546001601154544002501170600003801195650004101233651004601274651004401320655001801364655003701382655003801419655001701457655002201474656002501496700004401521700003401565700003401599541060901633561026202242506004302504852002302547009097797-120120229111555.0rnnn | | qn030401i18931964mau | eng d0 aocn6127653981 aMHAT03-A70 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966.10aEdward Gordon Craig papers,f1893-1964 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCraig was an English scene designer, producer and actor. aIncludes annotated books of Craig, a wooden model stage, a box of wooden model screens, and 12 cardboard model screens. Correspondence includes letters from Craig to Bernard Miles and letters from Nelly Craig to Bernard and Josephine Miles, among others. Also contains drawings by Craig (in ink and pencil), Craig's autograph manuscript notebook of Florence and daybook of Venice, an unsigned typescript of Bernard Miles' E.G.C. as I saw him in October 1961, and photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-34. aEdward Gordon Craig Papers (MS Thr 345). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also MS Thr 825.10aCraig, Edward Gordon,d1872-1966. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and scenery. 0aFlorence (Italy)xDescription and travel. 0aVenice (Italy)xDescription and travel. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aDrawingszEnglandy19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aModels.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSet designers.2lcsh1 aMiles, Bernard,d1907-1991,erecipient.1 aCraig, Nelly,ecorrespondent.1 aMiles, Josephine,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aBarry Bingham, Sr.; Edwin Binney, 3rd; Anna E. Crouse, Iris M. Fanger; Gannett Newspaper Foundation; Magowan Family Fund, Inc.; Emily L. McGregor, Jean Richmond, Arnold Rood, Waldo E. Stuart, Helen D. Willard;bfrom Winifred A. Myers (Autographs) Ltd., 91 St. Martins Lane, Suite 52, London WC2;d1979 May 1;e79M-34;hBarry Bingham, Sr. $2,750, Edwin Binney III $4,000, Anna E. Crouse $350, Iris M. Fanger $200, Crannet Newspaper Foundation $3,000, Emily L. McGregor $100 (in honor of Jean Richmond), Jean Richmond $1,000, Arnold Rood $500, Waldo E. Stuart $1,000, Helen D. Willard $100.5the1 aPurchased with the assistance of Barry Bingham, Sr.; Edwin Binney, 3rd; Anna E. Crouse, Iris M. Fanger; Gannett Newspaper Foundation; Magowan Family Fund, Inc.; Emily L. McGregor, Jean Richmond, Arnold Rood, Waldo E. Stuart, and Helen D. Willard, 1979.5the0 aCollection open for research use.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 34502737ctcaa2200493 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002500100100003500125245005500160300002800215351002900243545006700272520063900339555008700978555010801065524012101173610003801294610004001332600002301372650002301395650002701418655002201445655002001467656001801487656002101505700005101526700005101577700005201628700003701680700004301717700003401760700004901794700003501843700003501878700006301913700005701976541010402033561004102137506004202178852002302220009092662-520110105085408.0030317i19171961mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807102851 aMHAT03-A0 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aWagner, Frederick,ecollector.10aFrederick Wagner autograph collection,f1917-1961. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aWagner was an English professor at Hamilton College, New York. aLetters written to Mary Ward and John Sayre Crawley primarily from Dame Sybil Thorndike, Madeleine Carroll, Todd Duncan, Daniel Frohman, Julie Harris, Eva La Gallienne, Rolle Peters, Edward Hugh Sothern, Margaret Webster, and other various correspondents. Letters from Thorndike address such topics as personal finance, family news, summer activities, travel plans to the United States, the Playhouse Theater in London, and the Old Vic Theater in London. Letters from others are thank you notes for gifts received from the Crawley's, letters about casting the Crawleys in play productions, Christmas cards, postcards, and photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-37. aFrederick Wagner Autograph Collection (MS Thr 346). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University20aOld Vic Theatre (London, England)20aPlayhouse Theatre (London, England)10aWagner, Frederick. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aActorszUnited States. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aActors.2lcsh 7aActresses.2lcsh1 aWebster, Margaret,d1905-1972,ecorrespondent.1 aLe Gallienne, Eva,d1899-1991,ecorrespondent.1 aCarroll, Madeleine,d1906-1987,ecorrespondent.1 aCrawley, John Sayre,erecipient.1 aCrawley, Mary Ward Holton,erecipient.1 aDuncan, Todd,ecorrespondent.1 aFrohman, Daniel,d1851-1940,ecorrespondent.1 aHarris, Julie,ecorrespondent.1 aPeters, Rolle,ecorrespondent.1 aSothern, E. H.q(Edward Hugh),d1859-1933,ecorrespondent.1 aThorndike, Sybil,cDame,d1882-1976,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick Wagner;bEnglish Dept., Hamilton College, Clinton, NY;d1979 Jun 25;e79M-37.5the1 aGift of Frederick Wagner, 1979.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 34601674ckcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100004900123245003900172300002800211545003500239520036400274555008700638555010800725524008300833600004900916655004500965655004801010655004801058541012601106561008401232506004201316852002601358009035919-420110114085314.0021108i19uu19uumau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm778183841 aMAHV02-A215 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCummings, E.E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings drawings,fundated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCummings was an American poet. aContains 518 sheets of drawings, two vols. of drawings, seven watercolors, and two folders of photographs. Portraits are of Anne Barton, Marion Morehouse, and Scofield Taylor, among others as well as self-portraits. Subjects of drawings include figures of women and men, scenes from France, and landscapes. Photographs are of Cummings, his family, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005688 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-40. aE. E. Cummings Drawings (MS Am 1892.14). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E.E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962. 7aDrawingszAmericany20th century.2gmgpc 7aPhotographszAmericany20th century.2gmgpc 7aWatercolorszAmericany20th century.2gmgpc0 cPurchase;aMrs. Edward Estlin Cummings;b4 Patchin Place, New York NY 10011;d1977 March;e76M-40.hAmy Lowell fund.5HOU1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell Fund from Mrs. Edward Estlin Cummings, 1977.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1892.1402234ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100005500123245005300178300002800231545005100259520056000310555008700870555011900957524010301076546001601179600005501195650003901250650006901289655003801358655004301396655002001439655002001459700006801479700003701547710004501584541011901629561004701748506004201795852002301837008943656-320121218082429.0030423i18701912mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm778496861 aMAHV03-A183 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJanvier, Thomas A.q(Thomas Allibone),d1849-1913.10aThomas A. Janvier additional papers,f1870-1912. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aJanvier was an American journalist and author. aCorrespondence of Janvier discusses topics such as publishing his papers, letters of introduction for Janvier, letters from Charles Scribner's sons, a letter from Archbishop John M. Farley concerning a newspaper article, and a United States Department of State letter of safe passage for Janvier. Collection also contains a poem that appeared in the Dublin University Magazine, Ballad of Eleanore; an article, Captain Kidd Not a Pirate by John D. Champlin, Jr.; pencil sketches; various literary manuscripts; newspaper clippings; and a recipe for pudding.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou014978 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-595, *45M-322. aThomas A. Janvier Additional Papers, 1870-1912 (MS Am 2216). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJanvier, Thomas A.q(Thomas Allibone),d1849-1913. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century. 7aSketches.2aat. 7aClippings.2aat1 aChamplin, John Denison,d1834-1915.tCaptain Kidd Not a Pirate.1 aFarley, John M.,ecorrespondent.2 aCharles Scribner's Sons,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aDr. Cecil Kent Drinker;b64 Colbourne Crescent, Brookline, Massachusetts;d1946 February 19;e45M-595.5HOU1 aGift of Dr. Cecil Kent Drinker, 1946.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 221601920ckcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005000122245006400172300002800236545003500264520030000299555008700599555010800686524009400794600005000888600005800938650004200996650004301038655005001081655006001131655005101191655005901242655006101301541009901362561004001461506004201501852002701543009060106-820110105085856.0030124i19381947mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm845071061 aMAHV03-A14 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings additional drawings,f1938-1947 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCummings was an American poet. aIncludes a watercolor drawing of Mt. Chocorua, an oil painting of wildflowers in a pale green vase, an oil painting of a peony in a yellow vase, a portrait in oil of Rebecca Haswell Clarke Cummings, a glazed and framed oil painting of a nude, and two glazed and framed drawings in ink of a lady.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005118 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1979-1980, under *79M-16. aE. E. Cummings Additional Drawings (MS Am 1892.18). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aCummings, Rebecca Haswell Clarke,d1859--vPortraits. 0aDrawingy20th centuryzUnited States. 0aPaintingy20th centuryzUnited States. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aLandscape drawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPaintingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPortrait drawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aStill life drawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc0 cGift;aEric R. Fox;b1700 Pennsylvania Av., NW, Washington DC 20006;d1979 Dec.;e79M-16.5HOU1 aGift of Mr. Eric R. Fox, 1979.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 1892.1801652ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002300101100003700124245004900161300002800210351003800238545008300276520018400359555008700543555010800630524012700738546001600865600003700881610003400918650004200952650001700994655001601011656002201027740002101049740000901070541009801079561004801177506004201225852002301267009097784-X20121126101012.0030331q1969 mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm785447971 aMHAT03-A65 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aVan Itallie, Jean Claude,d1936-10aJean Claude Van Itallie plays,fbefore 1969. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aVan Itallie is a Belgian-born American playwright and Harvard graduate (1958). aIncludes notes, early drafts, scripts, and miscellaneous fragments of the play America hurrah, produced in 1966, and various typescript drafts of the play T.V., among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou010248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *69M-57. aJean Claude Van Itallie Plays, before 1969 (MS Thr 235). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aVan Itallie, Jean Claude,d1936-20aHarvard UniversityxStudents. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aPlaywriting. 7aPlays.2aat 7aDramatists.2lcsh0 aAmerican hurrah.0 aT.V.0 cGift;aJean Claude Van Itallie;b35 W. 9th St., New York NY 10011;d1969 April;e69M-57.5the1 aGift of Jean Claude Van Itallie, 1969.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 23501001ctm a2200253 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087100002600112245006000138300002800198520014600226524008400372600002600456650003300482655001600515655002400531655003800555656004600593541004700639561003700686852002400723009097912-520050824121416.0030401s1964 xx |||| |||| ||| d eng d0 aocn612765506 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aBentley, Eric,d1916-14aThe life of the drama :kmanuscript,f1964 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aIncludes a typescript with autograph manuscript corrections and galley proofs with autograph manuscript corrections of The life of the drama. abMS Thr 99.1. Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBentley, Eric,d1916- 0aEnglish dramay20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aTheatrical producers and directors.2lcsh cGift;aEric Bentley;d1964;e64M-112.5the aGift of Eric Bentley, 1964.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 99.103036ctcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245005200153300002800205351002900233545039900262520056200661555008701223555010901310524010201419600003101521610005801552610003901610650002201649650002301671650001401694650003701708650002601745651004401771651005501815651005801870651005101928651005101979651004602030655002802076655002402104656002902128656003202157700005002189700004402239700004402283541009602327561004202423506004202465852002302507009214409-820120111103221.0030929i18501915mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm823312021 aMAHV03A308 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHamlin, Cyrus,d1811-1900.10aCyrus Hamlin family correspondence,f1850-1915. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aCyrus Hamlin was a Congregational clergyman and missionary to Turkey for the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. He was founder and president of Robert College, Constantinople (1860-1877). George Washburn was a Congregational clergyman, missionary to Turkey, professor, and president of Robert College (1878-1903). He was married to Henrietta Hamlin, daughter of Cyrus Hamlin. aCorrespondence of Hamlin and Washburn concerning the politics and government of the United States, United Kingdom, and Turkey. Letters discuss in detail Robert College in Constantinople, including the idea to start a science school in Turkey, a business plan and outline, fundraising for the college, and donations to the school. Also discussed is personal finance, daily life in Turkey, trips to Boston, and religion. Also included in the collection is a financial statement of the college, a funeral address, and a biographical article about Cyrus Hamlin.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou008418 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-209. aCyrus Hamlin Family Correspondence, 1850-1915 (MS Am 1729). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHamlin, Cyrus,d1811-1900.20aAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.20aRobert college (Istanbul, Turkey). 0aMissionszTurkey. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aReligion. 0aCongregational churchesxClergy. 0aFund raisingzTurkey. 0aBoston (Mass.)xDescription and travel. 0aGreat BritainxPolitics and governmenty1837-1901. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 0aTurkeyxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 0aTurkeyxSocial life and customsy19th century. 0aUnited StatesxForeign relationszTurkey. 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aEducatorszTurkey.2lcsh 7aMissionarieszTurkey.2lcsh1 aWashburn, George,d1833-1915,ecorrespondent.1 aWashburn, George H.,d1843-erecipient.1 aWashburn, Henrietta Hamlin,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs Basil D. Hall;b1878 Main Rd., Westport Point, MA;d28 Aug. 1963;e63M-209.5hou1 aGift of Mrs Basil D. Hall, 1963.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 172902547ctcaa2200505 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003500122245006600157300002800223351002900251545005800280520061500338555008700953555010901040524011801149546001601267600003501283600002601318600001101344600003301355630002001388610001801408650001401426650002301440650004901463651003001512655003801542655001601580655002001596655002301616655001601639656002301655740002201678740001601700740001101716740003001727541012901757561008801886506004201974852002502016009217073-020130919114930.0031006i18411940mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm825586051 aMAHV03A316 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aJohn Jay Chapman correspondence and compositions,f1841-1940. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aChapman was an American essayist, poet, and reformer. aContains letters from various friends to Chapman, mostly praising his books and translations, in particular his Dante translation. Letters also discuss book reviews by Chapman, a London Times article about his work, poets, religion, and finances. Collection also contains a letter Chapman wrote to the editor of the New York Times, and a sermon about Chapman. Also includes compositions by Chapman, including translations of Sophocles' Antigone, and Lucian's the Free Lance and Death, Lucian Attacks Pederasty, and Lucian and Plato. Collection also includes poems, clippings, translations, lectures, and notes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009578 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-191. aJohn Jay Chapman Correspondence and Compositions, 1841-1940 (MS Am 1854.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933.10aLucian,cof Samosata.10aPlato.10aDante Alighieri,d1265-1321.00aNew York times.20aLondon Times. 0aReligion. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aClassical literaturexHistory and criticism. 0aGreecexMoral conditions. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aTranslators.2lcsh0 aLucian and Plato.0 aFree Lance.0 aDeath.0 aLucian attacks pederasty.0 cGift;aMr. W. Stephen Thomas;bRochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, 657 East Ave., New York;d16 Dec. 1948;e48M-191.5hou1 aGift of Mr. W. Stephen Thomas, 1948, in memory of William Sturgis Thomas, M.D.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1854.202370ctcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002500100100003400125245009200159300002800251351003000279530006200309545025900371520045300630546005401083555008701137555009401224524014301318600003401461650003701495650002901532650002901561650003101590656002101621710002901642710003001671700004001701700001901741710002001760710003301780541006701813561005701880852002301937009220721-920110419122846.0041118i19251938mau|||||||||||||| ||rus d0 aocm800956801 aMHAT04A15 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929.00kCorrespondencebrelating to book collecting,f1925-1938 (inclusive),g1925-1929 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aSerge Diaghilev was a Russian ballet impresario, the founder, producer and artistic director of Ballets Russes. In his late years he turned to book and manuscript collecting. He built up a collection of rare Russian printed books, manuscripts and scores. aThe collection contains letters, telegrams and notes from Serge Diaghilev to booksellers in Paris, Berlin, London, Warsaw and Moscow (including Karl W. Heirsmann, Otto Harrassowitz, and Mezhdunarodnaia kniga), and a letter from the notable Pushkin scholar Modest Hofmann. Letters are primarily in Diaghilev's and Boris Kochno's hands. The collection encompasses the last four years of Diaghilev's life, except for one unidentified letter from 1938. aIncludes materials in Russian, German and French.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017088 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection Reading Room. aSerge Diaghilev Correspondence Relating to Book Collecting (MS Thr 428). Harvard Theatre Collection. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDiaghilev, Serge,d1872-1929. 0aAntiquarian booksellerszEurope. 0aBook collectingzEurope. 0aBook collectorszRussia. 0aPrivate librarieszRussia. 7aCollectors.2aat2 aOtto Harrassowitz (Firm)2 aKarl W. Hiersemann (Firm)1 aHofmann, M.q(Modeste),d1887-1959.1 aKochno, Boris.2 aBallets russes.2 aMezhdunarodnai︠a︡ kniga.0 cPurchase;aSotheby's;d1998;e2003MT-112;hRothschild fd.5the1 aPurchased with Howard D. Rothschild fund, 1998.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 42801481ntcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005000122245007600172300002800248351004600276545009400322520007900416555008700495555010800582524011800690600003800808650002200846656003100868656002000899710004200919541007700961561006101038506004201099852002601141009227768-320110126092337.0031015i19001945mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm843174161 aMAHV03A333 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945,erecipient.10aLetters to William Rothenstein from various correspondents,f1900-1945. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aRothenstein was an English painter and president of the Royal College of Art (1920-1935). aLetters to Rothenstein concerning both his professional and personal life.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006818 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1963-1964, under *63M-83. aLetters to William Rothenstein from Various Correspondents (MS Eng 1148.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRothenstein, William,d1872-1945. 0aArtsxManagement. 7aArts administrators.2lcsh 7aPainters.2lcsh2 aRoyal College of Art (Great Britain).0 cGift;aCurt H. Reisinger;b730 Fifth Av., New York;d1963;e63M-83.5hou1 aGift of Mr. Curt H. Reisinger, class of 1912, 1963.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1148.101790ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001400106040002300120100003800143245008600181300002800267351007600295545010100371520012500472555008700597555010800684524013500792546001600927600003800943600002900981650004101010655005001051655002201101655002001123655002201143656002501165541011301190561004501303506004201348852002601390009250661-520130116141614.0knnn| ||||| |||az031112i19111946mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127943511 aMHAT03A92 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.10aRobert Edmond Jones additional papers,f1911-1946 (inclusive),g1941-1946 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Drawings; and II. Other papers. aJones graduated from Harvard in 1910 and was an American theatrical and motion picture designer. aIncludes ten set designs for various plays, portrait drawings of family members, and a small amount of printed material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006478 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1974-1975, under *74M-45. aRobert Edmond Jones Additional Papers, 1911-1946 (MS Thr 201.7). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.30aJones familyvPortraits. 0aTheatersxStage setting and scenery. 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aScenography.2aat 7aSet designers.2lcsh0 cGift;aMiss Elizabeth Jones;bRochester Manor Nursing Home, Rochester NH 03867;d15 Nov. 1974;e74M-45.5the1 aGift of Miss Elizabeth Jones, 1974.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 201.703333ntcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001300086040002100099100004500120245002400165300002800189351010600217545064800323520054300971555008701514524009101601600003001692600004801722600004101770600004501811600005601856610002001912610002401932650003901956650003901995650003002034650003802064650003802102650001702140655003802157655003602195655002102231655004002252656002202292656004102314700003002355541027302385561018102658852002402839009258585-X20060228084114.0060221i19011969mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm79489635 aMAHV06B1 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aKingdon, Mary Kathleen Weld,d1874-1953.00kPapers,f1901-1969. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Printed materials. aMary Kathleen Weld Kingdon, also known as "May" (1874-1953), was a professional typist, one of the principal secretaries to American-born author and literary critic Henry James (1843-1916). She worked for James from 1901 April 16 through the summer of 1904 when she left to be married (1905 Feb. 14). Kingdon was his secretary during the period between secretaries William MacAlpine and Theodora Bosanquet. James dictated his literary works of this period to Kingdon, who typed them as he spoke, including his novels: Wings of the dove (1902), The golden bowl (1904), and the last part of The ambassadors (1903). Kingdon was also a bookbinder. aPrimarily letters from Henry James to Mary Kathleen Weld Kingdon (MKWK) 1901-1908 and correspondence between MKWK and others concerning James. Also includes MKWK's pocket diaries for 1901-1904, kept during the years she worked with James and annotated with her comments about the work they did together and his activities at the time. All other materials are about Henry James or Lamb House including: fliers, leaflets, pamphlets, clippings, obituaries, and photographs. Materials dated after Kingdon's death were assembled by her family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01793 aMary Kathleen Weld Kingdon Papers (MS Eng 1579). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916xHomes and haunts.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916vPortraits.10aKingdon, Mary Kathleen Weld,d1874-1953.10aKingdon, Mary Kathleen Weld,d1874-1953vPortraits.20aKingdon family.20aLamb House, Sussex. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aBookbindingvPhotographs. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aSecretaries. 7aClippingszEnglandy20th century. 7aDiarieszEnglandy20th century. 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographszEnglandy20th century. 7aBookbinders.2aat 7aSecretaries (clerical workers).2aat1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. cPurchase;aChristopher Edwards Antiquarian Books & Manuscripts;bHatch Gate Farmhouse, Lines Road, Hurst, Berkshire RG10 0SP, England;d2003 Dec. 17; 2004 Jan. 13; 2005 Nov. 18;e2003M-38;h$24,050 ($10,000 Appell fd., $14,000 Kilgour fd.) + $6,954 (Kilgour fd.).5hou aPurchased with the Louis J. Appell Junior Fund for British Civilization in the Harvard College Library and the Bayard Livingston and Kate Gray Kilgour Fund, 2003 and 2004.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 157902609ctcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003300121245003200154300002800186351011500214530006200329545012000391520042200511555008700933555011301020524009301133600003301226600002001259650003901279650006501318650006801383655003801451655002301489656002901512656002201541700005101563700004901614700005901663700006201722700005201784700005601836710005101892710003201943541008301975561006302058852003002121009302122-420111028123552.0040219i18501898mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm803979301 aMAHV04-A4 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aBellamy, Edward,d1850-1898.00kCorrespondence,f1850-1898. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1181: Correspondence; and II. MS Am 1181.1-1181.3: Other papers. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aBellamy was an American author, best known for the utopian romance, Looking Backward: 2000-1887, published in 1888. aCorrespondence is primarily with Bellamy family members and with literary figures. Correspondents include Sylvester Baxter, Emma Augusta Sanderson Bellamy, Frederick Putnam Bellamy, Maria Louisa Putnam Bellamy, Houghton Mifflin Company, Walter Hines Page, and Horace Elisha Scudder, among others. Also contains a minute book of the New Nation publishing company and a typescript article by Bellamy, among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou016428 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1948-1949, under *48M-299-302. aEdward Bellamy Correspondence (MS Am 1181-1181.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBellamy, Edward,d1850-1898.30aBellamy family. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited StateszBostony19th century. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StateszBostony19th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aMinute books.2aat 7aAuthors, American.2lcsh 7aPublishers.2lcsh1 aBaxter, Sylvester,d1850-1927,ecorrespondent.1 aBellamy, Emma Augusta Sanderson,erecipient.1 aBellamy, Frederick Putnam,d1847-1929,ecorrespondent.1 aBellamy, Maria Louisa Putnam,d1816-1892,ecorrespondent.1 aPage, Walter Hines,d1855-1918,ecorrespondent.1 aScudder, Horace Elisha,d1838-1902,ecorrespondent.2 aHoughton, Mifflin and Company,ecorrespondent.2 aNew nation (Boston, Mass.). cGift;aArthur E. Morgan;bYellow Springs, Ohio;dNov. 1947;e48M-299-302.5hou aGift of Arthur E. Morgan, Yellow Springs, Ohio, 1947.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1181-1181.301535ckcaa2200289 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102245009100123300002800214520030000242530006200542555008600604524012800690600005000818600004300868650003700911651002700948651003500975655002201010541006101032561005701093506004201150852005301192009212283-320130917163153.0031010i18891894mau|||||||||||||||kneng|d0 aocn612786320 aMAHV03A327 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aMiscellaneous photographs of Celia Thaxter and Appledore Island (Me.),fca. 1889-1894. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aThis collection of photographs, received from various sources at various times, portrays Celia Thaxter, her gardens near her cottage on the island of Appledore in the Isles of Shoals, Me., and people including visitors, her grandson, her mother, and an unidentified man (probably her son, Karl). aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availbleuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00209 aMiscellaneous Photographs of Celia Thaxter and Appledore Island (Me.) (MS Am 1272.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894xHomes and haunts.10aThaxter, Celia,d1835-1894vPortraits. 0aAuthors, Americany19th century. 0aAppledore Island (Me.) 0aIsles of Shoals (Me. and N.H.) 7aPhotographs.2aat0 cGift;aVarious;dVarious;e42-2413,42-2412,42-2411.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1272.2zShelved with bMS Am 1272.102915ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003900122245006500161300002800226351003000254545018000284520074000464555008701204555010901291524011501400546001601515600003901531600004001570610002101610610002401631650006901655650002301724650005501747650002901802650004101831650005801872650003501930651005801965651006002023651005002083655002402133656002502157700004102182541010702223561005002330506004202380852002302422009214422-520130122101807.0030929i18941919mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm806016131 aMAHV03A298 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aWilliam Dean Howells letters to Mildred Howells,f1894-1919. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aWilliam Dean Howells was a novelist and man of letters, United States consul in Venice (1861-1865), editor of The Atlantic Monthly (1871-1881) and of Cosmopolitan (1891-1892). aCollection consists of letters written from William Dean Howell to his daughter Mildred. Letters discuss Mildred's travels in Europe and Bermuda, travel from Paris to New York City, language lessons in France, life in Kittery Point, Maine, and life in New York and what plays they have seen on Broadway. William also write extensively about Mildred's writing, including comments and critiques of poetry, getting the poems published in Scribner's and Harper's Bazaar, and settling financial matters with these publishing companies. William also writes of his finances, decorating and selling apartments in New York, personal finance and retirement, Mildred's garden in Maine, getting Mildred's wisdom teeth removed, and author Bjornson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012638 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1950-1951, under *51M-236. aWilliam Dean Howells Letters to Mildred Howells, 1894-1919 (MS Am 1251). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920.10aBjornson, Bjornstjerne,d1832-1910.20aHarper's Bazaar.20aScribner's monthly. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aTheaterzNew York (State)zNew Yorky20th century. 0aGardeningy20th century. 0aOcean travelxHistoryy20th century. 0aApartmentszNew York (State)zNew Yorky20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aKittery (Me.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aBermuda IslandsxSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aEuropexDescription and travely20th century. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aHowells, Mildred,d1872-erecipient.0 cDeposit;aMiss Mildred Howells;b63 Pine St., Peterborough New Hampshire;d1952 May 29;e51M-236.5hou1 aDeposited by Miss Mildred Howells, 1952.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 125101664ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003000123245005300153300002800206351003800234545003700272520022500309555008700534555010800621524009400729546001600823600003000839650003900869655002300908655002300931655003800954740002900992541017001021561006801191506004201259852002501301009206475-220100412081728.0030917i19791982mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127857101 aMAHV03A288 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHawkes, John,d1925-1998.10aJohn Hawkes additional compositions,f1979-1982. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aHawkes was an American novelist. aConsists primarily of manuscripts by Hawkes, particularly various drafts with corrections and revisions of his ninth novel, Virginie, Her Two Lives. Also contains notes, fragments, jacket covers, and blurbs for Virginie.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004438 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1981-1982, under *81M-80. aJohn Hawkes Additional Compositions (MS Am 1998.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aHawkes, John,d1925-1998. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aBook jackets.2aat 7aFirst drafts.2aat 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat0 aVirginie, her two lives.0 cPurchase;aJohn Hawkes;bvia Paul Grinke Rare Books Ltd., 38 Devonshire Place, London WIN IPE;d15 and 17 June 1983;e81M-80;h(no price given) Amy Lowell fund.5hou1 aPurchased from John Hawkes with the Amy Lowell Fund, 1983.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1998.203838ntcaa2200445 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001900123245004900142300002800191351033100219530006200550545074000612520024201352581020201594555008701796524009001883546001601973600001901989610003802008610008902046610008802135610004602223650002902269651007202298651007202370655002402442655003802466700005702504700005202561700005602613541015202669561010502821506004202926845039902968852002503367009217019-620100608150846.0031017i18561864mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn612787504 aMAHV03A344 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aAbbott family.10aAbbott family Civil War letters,f1856-1864. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged into the following five series: I. Letters from Edward Gardner Abbott to his family; II. Letters from Fletcher Morton Abbott to his family; III. Letters from Henry Livermore Abbott to his family; IV. Miscellaneous papers concerning Edward Gardner Abbott; and V. Miscellaneous papers concerning Henry Livermore Abbott. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPapers include letters from the following men, all sons of Josiah Gardner Abbott (1814-1891) (Harvard College AB 1832) and Caroline Livermore Abbott (ca.1816-1887): Edward Gardner Abbott (1840-1862) received an AB from Harvard College in 1860 and was an officer with the 2nd Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. He was killed at the battle of Cedar Mountain on Aug 9, 1862. Fletcher Morton Abbott (b.1843) was an officer with the 2nd Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry who resigned from duty due to ill health on Dec. 23, 1863. Henry Livermore Abbott (1842-1864) received an AB from Harvard College in 1860 and was an officer with the 20th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry (sometimes known as the Harvard Regiment). He was killed in battle. aAutograph letters from the three Abbott sons to their family. Some letters written while they were students at St. Paul's School (Concord, New Hampshire) and Harvard College, and some while serving in the Union army during the Civil War. aSome letters published in: Henry Livermore Abbott. Fallen leaves: the Civil War letters of Major Henry Livermore Abbott, edited by Robert Garth Scott. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1991.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00213 aAbbott Family Civil War Letters (MS Am 800.26). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aAbbott family.20aSt. Paul's School (Concord, N.H.)10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 20th (1861-1865)xBiography.10aUnited States.bArmy.bMassachusetts Infantry Regiment, 2nd (1861-1864)xBiography.20aHarvard College (1780- ).bClass of 1860. 0aSoldierszMassachusetts. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xRegimental histories. 0aMassachusettsxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865xRegimental histories. 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local1 aAbbott, Henry Livermore,d1842-1864,ecorrespondent.1 aAbbott, Fletcher Morton,d1843-ecorrespondent.1 aAbbott, Edward Gardner,d1840-1862,ecorrespondent.0 cDeposit as permanent loan;aDr. John Adams Abbott and Mrs. Helen F. Abbott;bConcord, Mass and East Greenwich, Rhode Island;d1939 October 11.5hou1 aDeposited as permanent loan from Dr. John Adams Abbott and Mrs. Helen F. Abbott Washburn, 1939.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 800.2602156ctcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004500122245006800167300002800235351004600263545003500309520055500344555008700899555010800986524012101094600003301215610004901248610003501297655002201332655002601354700009601380700004901476700007401525541009701599561004201696506004201738852002601780009227806-X20111220085004.0031016i19581967mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm837151821 aMAHV03A341 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSitwell, Osbert,d1892-1969,erecipient.10aOsbert Sitwell letters from various correspondents,f1958-1967. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent. aSitwell was an English author. aLetters inform Sitwellof his election as Governor of the British Institute of Florence, including an explanation of aims and objectives of the Institute, and thank-you cards for books written by Sitwell that he sent to friends. There are also several Christmas cards to Sitwell from the royal family, including family pictures. Also includes a letter from friend William Turner Walton of his difficulty with his second symphony, and of the death of Walton's father-in-law in Italy. Also contains 7 pictures of the Castello di Montegufoni in Florence.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007738 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-62. aOsbert Sitwell Letters From Various Correspondents, 1958-1967 (MS Eng 1293.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aSitwell, Osbert,d1892-1969.20aCastello di Montegufoni (Italy) photographs.20aBritish Institute in Florence. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aChristmas cards.2aat1 aElizabeth,cQueen, consort of George VI, King of Great Britain,d1900-2002,ecorrespondent.1 aWalton, William,d1902-1983,ecorrespondent.1 aMaugham, W. Somersetq(William Somerset),d1874-1965,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b101 West 12th St., New York, NY 10011;d9 May 1973;e72M-62.5hou1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 1293.101917ntcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101110002600126245002500152300002800177351004000205545040500245520023200650555008700882555010000969524011301069610002601182610002201208650004101230655001801271655002001289655002801309655002801337655002901365541012101394561004101515852002301556009545589-220050512114638.0050225i19671971mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793921201 aMHAT05-A21 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm2 aCentre Theatre Group.00kRecords,f1967-1971. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically by season. aThe Centre Theatre Group is a theater company in Los Angeles, California, that opened in 1964 in a partnership with the County of Los Angeles which owns the facilities. Since this time, it has shared space in the Music Center (Mark Taper Forum and Ahmanson Theatre) with three other resident companies, including the Los Angeles Opera, the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Los Angeles Master Chorale. aPapers pertain to the promotion and organization of the Centre Theatre Group and its Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles. Includes subscription solicitations, campaign outlines, budget and sales projections and production programs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015838 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Harvard Theatre Collection, under *2003MT-135. aCentre Theatre Group Records (MS Thr 435). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aCentre Theatre Group.20aAhmanson Theatre. 0aTheaterszUnited StateszCalifornia. 7aBudgets.2aat 7aCampaigns.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aSouvenir programs.2aat 7aSubscription lists.2aat cGift;aElliot Martin;bElliot Martin Productions, 152 W. 58th St., New York, NY 10019;d1984 Oct.;e2003MT-135.5hou aGift of Elliot Martin, 1984.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 43502019ctcaa2200325 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104110002300125245004200148300002800190545031700218520028000535555008700815555011800902524009901020610002301119650006001142650005701202700003201259700005001291700004901341700007101390700006901461561004901530541009101579852002301670009513719-X20050505113855.0050420i19231953mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm793904601 aMAHV05-B10028 aMH-HeappmcMH-H2 aHarper & Brothers.10aEditorial correspondence,f1923-1953. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aThe New York publishing firm of Harper & Brothers was founded in 1833 and entered periodical publishing with serialized novels with their Harper's New Monthly Magazine in 1850 and Harper's Bazaar in 1867. In 1962, Harper & Brothers merged with Row, Peterson, & Company to become Harper & Row (now HarperCollins). aContains autograph and typescript correspondence between various Harper & Brothers editors, including Cass Canfield (1897-1986), John Farrar (1895-1974), and Eugene F. Saxton (1884-1943) with prospective and signed writers, notably John Dos Passos and William Leonard Langer.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou017228 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1962-1963, under *62M-210-*62M-221. aHarper & Brothers Editorial Correspondence (MS Am 2366). Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aHarper & Brothers. 0aPublishers and publishingzUnited Statesy20th century. 0aAuthors and publisherszUnited Statesy20th century.1 aCanfield, Cass,d1897-1986.1 aDos Passos, John,d1896-1970,ecorrespondent.1 aFarrar, John Chipman,d1896-ecorrespondent.1 aLanger, William L.q(William Leonard),d1896-1977,ecorrespondent.1 aSaxton, Eugene F.q(Eugene Francis),d1884-1943,ecorrespondent. aGift of Harper & Row, Publishers, 1963.5hou cGift;aHarper & Row, Publishers;b49 East 33d Street;dNew York 16;e62M-210-221.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 236601791ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001400086040002100100100003400121245007700155300002800232351015500260545013200415520010000547555008700647555010800734524011700842546001600959610003500975600003401010600004501044610003701089610003001126655002201156655001801178656001801196541009901214561004901313506004201362852002501404009516279-820130712103130.0041210i18311901mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm793901051 aMAHV04A93 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.10aPhillips Brooks correspondence and compositions,f1831-1901 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Phillips Brooks; II. Letters to Phillips Brooks; III. Other correspondence; and IV. Compositions. aBrooks was an Episcopal clergyman. He was rector of Trinity Church, Boston (1868-1893) and bishop of Massachusetts (1891-1893). aConsists of correspondence, compositions, drafts of sermons and photographs of Phillips Brooks.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015208 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1970-1971, under *70M-63. aPhillips Brooks Correspondence and Compositions, 1831-1901 (MS Am 1594.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aTrinity Church (Boston, Mass.)10aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893.10aBrooks, Phillips,d1835-1893vPortraits.20aEpiscopal churchzMassachusetts.20aEpiscopal ChurchxClergy. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSermons.2aat 7aClergy.2lcsh0 cGift;aMrs. Raymond W. Albright;b43 Linnaean St., Cambridge MA;d30 March 1971;e70M-63.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Raymond W. Albright, 1971.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1594.202498ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001800087040002100105100003400126245010000160300002800260351003000288545016200318520012500480555008700605555014400692524015200836546001600988581011501004530006201119600003401181655004501215656001601260656002501276700006201301700005501363541010601418561004901524506012701573852002501700845039901725009596857-120130712120357.0050406i18531886mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn6128701141 aMAHV05-B10014 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.10aEmily Dickinson letters to Josiah Gilbert Holland and Elizabeth Chapin Holland,fca. 1853-1886. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aDickinson was an American poet. Josiah Gilbert Holland, assistant of Samuel Bowles of the Springfield Republican, and his wife Elizabeth were family friends. aAutograph and typescript copies of letters, frequently accompanied by her poems, to Dr. and Mrs. Josiah Gilbert Holland.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou015348 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1949-1950, under *1949M-248; and 1954-1955, under *1954M-116. aEmily Dickinson Letters to Josiah Gilbert Holland and Elizabeth Chapin Holland, ca. 1853-1886 (MS Am 1118.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aTheodora Van Wagenen Ward. Emily Dickinson's letters to Dr. and Mrs. Josiah Gilbert Holland (Cambridge, 1931). aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886. 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoets.2aat 7aWomen authors.2lcsh1 aHolland, J. G.q(Josiah Gilbert),d1819-1881,erecipient.1 aHolland, Elizabeth Luna Chapin,d1823-erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Theodora V. W. Ward;b32 Healey Street, Cambridge 38, Mass.;d8 June 1950;e49M-248.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Theodora V. W. Ward, 1950.5hou1 aReaders are expected to use the facsimiles available. Access to the originals requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1118.2 aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou01693ntcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004500108245008400153300002800237545011200265500003100377520025900408524013700667600003200804600003300836600002300869600001800892650004000910650002600950651002300976655003000999655004601029655002001075655002101095655002201116655002001138700003201158561004201190541006101232852002601293009706201-420130930113748.0020710q17201943mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612892192 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,ecollector.10aSamuel Henshaw collection concerning Gilbert White of Selborne,fca. 1720-1943. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aGilbert White (1720-1793) was a pioneering British naturalist who is regarded as England's first ecologist. aCollection is unprocessed. aIncludes cabinet photographs, cartes-de-visite, printed materials, prints, autograph manuscripts, engravings, images of birds, portraits of famous persons, and clippings concerning Gilbert White, the Holt-White family, and the town of Selbourne, England. aSamuel Henshaw Collection Concerning Gilbert White of Selborne, ca. 1720-1943 (MS Eng 731.13). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.30aHolt-White family.30aWhite family. 0aNatural historyzEnglandzSelborne. 0aNaturalistszEngland. 0aSelborne (England) 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aEngravings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat1 aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793. aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, 1943.5hou cBequest;aMr. Samuel Henshaw;d1943 June;e47M-379.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 731.1301431ntcaa2200301 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004500108245007200153300002800225545017400253500003100427520021700458524012400675600003200799600003300831600001800864651002300882655002400905655002000929700003200949700001800981561004200999541006101041852002701102009707137-420050712082615.0020710q16001800mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612892620 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941,ecollector.00kCollectionbconcerning the White family of Selborne,fca. 1600-1800 a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOne of the prominent members of the White family of Selborne was Gilbert White (1720-1793), a pioneering British naturalist who is regarded as England's first ecologist. aCollection is unprocessed. aAutograph documents and manuscripts about the White family of Selborne England, including 21 documents on vellum. Many documents in the hand of Gilbert White or signed in the hand of a member of the White family. aSamuel Henshaw Collection Concerning the White family of Selborne (MS Eng 731.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.10aHenshaw, Samuel,d1852-1941.30aWhite family. 0aSelborne (England) 7aFamily papers.2aat 7aDocuments.2aat1 aWhite, Gilbert,d1720-1793.3 aWhite family. aBequest of Samuel Henshaw, 1943.5hou cBequest;aMr. Samuel Henshaw;d1943 June;e47M-376.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 731.201980ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001800086040002100104100003900125245007000164300002800234351003900262545012100301520025300422555008700675555010800762524013400870600004801004600005101052600003901103600004301142600005001185700007401235700005801309700010601367541009601473561005001569852002301619009726715-520070720162423.0050802i19301963mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocm794639451 aMAHV05-B10056 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aWard, Theodora Van Wagenen,d1890-00kNotes and correspondencebconcerning Emily Dickinson,f1930-1963. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chiefly by correspondent. aWard lived in Cambridge, MA, and was the author of Emily Dickinson's Letters to Dr. and Mrs. Josiah Gilbert Holland. aIncludes correspondence and notes concerning Ward's edition of Emily Dickinson's Letters to Dr. and Mrs. Josiah Gilbert Holland, and Thomas Herbert Johnson's editions of Emily Dickinson: an Interpretive Biography and The Letters of Emily Dickinson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou018098 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1969-1970, under *70M-33. aTheodora Van Wagenen Ward Notes and Correspondence Concerning Emily Dickinson (MS Am 2380). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886y20th century.10aDickinson, Emily,d1830-1886.tCorrespondence.10aWard, Theodora Van Wagenen,d1890-10aHolland, Elizabeth Luna Chapin,d1823-10aHolland, J. G.q(Josiah Gilbert),d1819-1881.1 aJohnson, Thomas Herbert.tEmily Dickinson: an interpretive biography.1 aJohnson, Thomas Herbert.tLetters of Emily Dickinson.1 aWard, Theodora Van Wagenen,d1890-tEmily Dickinson's Letters to Dr. and Mrs. Josiah Gilbert Holland. cGift;aTheodora Van Wagenen Ward;b34 Healy St., Cambridge, Mass.;d1970 May;e70M-33.5hou aGift of Theodora Van Wagenen Ward, 1970.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 238002222ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002100104100004600125245007100171300002800242351002900270545018000299520043300479555008700912524014300999650004001142600002201182600004601204610003301250650002001283650003801303655003801341655001601379655003701395655002201432710008101454700002201535700002401557561005601581506004201637541012101679852002401800009750722-920090810115928.0050902s1985 mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612755147 aMHAT05B10019 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWard, John M.q(John Milton),d1917-2011.10aJohn Milton Ward research materials concerning the theatre,f1985. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically. aJohn Milton Ward is the Harvard University William Powell Professor of Music, Emeritus, and Honorary Curator of Dance and Music for the Theatre in the Harvard College Library. aMemorandums and autograph notes by research assistant Mark Evan Bonds, produced for Harvard University professor John Milton Ward. Research materials include photocopies of pages from British and Russian periodicals concerning Russian ballet, British pantomine, and other theatrical topics. Also includes typescript composition by Bonds and one by Roland John Wiley. Some materials include autograph annotations by John M. Ward.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01951 aJohn Milton Ward Research Materials Concerning the Theatre (MS Thr 486). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aTheaterszEnglandzEnglandzLondon.10aBonds, Mark Evan.10aWard, John M.q(John Milton),d1917-2011.20aHarvard UniversityxFaculty. 0aBalletzRussia. 0aPantomimexHistory and criticism. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aNotes.2aat 7aResearch (document genres).2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat2 aJohn Milton and Ruth Neils Ward Collection (Harvard Theatre Collection)5the1 aBonds, Mark Evan.1 aWiley, Roland John.1 aGift of John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward, 2003.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aProf. John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward;d2003;e2005MT-16 (transferred from Printed Books: 2005 Aug. 31).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 48601249ntm a2200277 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004400108245022200152300002700374500005300401500002000454500006300474581003600537524005400573600004700627655005400674655002200728700003300750700003300783541008100816561005100897852002300948010070622-320060801124140.0060801i19331934vp |||| |||| 000|m eng d0 aocn612841547 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPerkins, Percival Densmore,d1897-1963.10aLafcadio Hearn :ba bibliography of his writings / by P.D. and I.B. Perkins ; with an introduction by Sanki Ichikawa, Professor of English Literature, Tokyo Imperial University :ktypescript,kpage proofs,f1933-1934. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) aTypescript, unsigned, and corrected page proofs. aPrinter's copy. aPrinted in Japan by the Kenkyusha printing company, Tokyo. aBoston: Houghton Mifflin, 1934. aMS Am 2481. Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aHearn, Lafcadio,d1850-1904xBibliography. 7aBibliographieszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat1 aPerkins, Ione Bendel,d1897-1 aIchikawa, Sanki,d1886-1970.0 cGift;aHarris Kennedy;d1935;erecat. from Hearn 75.19, Hearn 75.19.5*.5hou1 aGift of Harris Kennedy (A.B. 1894), 1935.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 248100732ntc a2200181 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100004700108245007400155300002800229500003100257520007900288524010400367541005400471852002500525010093557-520060911165320.0060830i18uu19uumau|||| |||| ||||m eng d0 aocn612849579 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aChapman, John Jay,d1862-1933,ccollector.10aJohn Jay Chapman collection of printed material,f[ca. 18---ca. 19--] a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed. aContains ephemera, clippings and other material, some authored by Chapman. aJohn Jay Chapman Collection of Printed Material (MS Am 1242). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 cGift;ano source;dno date;eno acc. number.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 124202205npcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001800110100003200128245003800160300002800198351009300226545041000319520025500729555008700984524010501071546003401176600004701210600004401257600004401301600003401345600003201379655005101411655004501462700004801507541006501555561003401620506004201654506012301696852002401819010165268-220110504082807.0061201i19281980mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn702923930 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aengagreafre1 aCromwell, John,d1914-1979.10aJohn Cromwell papers,f1928-1980. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters; II. Compositions; and III. Photographs. aJohn Cromwell (1914-1979) was an actor and a playwright in New York. His father, Seymour L. Cromwell, was a president of the New York Stock Exchange. John Cromwell attended Harvard College to study business but left after two years to pursue an acting career. He made his Broadway debut in 1935 in the play The Old Maid. He wrote several plays and two novels. Cromwell died in London on September 1, 1979. aIncludes: letters written by Aldus Huxley addressed to John Cromwell; typescript and printed plays by John Cromwell; and photograph portraits of John Cromwell and other actors including Ethel Barrymore, John Gielgud, Lillian Gish, and Raymond Massey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02136 aJohn Cromwell Papers (MS Thr 654). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English, Greek and French.10aBarrymore, Ethel,d1879-1959vPhotographs.10aGielgud, John,d1904-2000vPhotographs.10aGish, Lillian,d1893-1993vPhotographs.10aMassey, RaymondvPhotographs.10aCromwell, John,d1914-1979. 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPlayszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aHuxley, Aldous,d1894-1963,ecorrespondent.0 cOld gift;asource unknown;ddate unknown;e2006MT-119r.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 65403037ntcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100003200121245005800153300002800211545093700239520046901176555008701645524010901732546002701841600003201868600003401900600004901934600002101983650002602004655004902030700003402079700006102113700003302174541019302207561008502400506004202485506012302527852002502650010142604-620111215093112.0061101i19071960mau |||||||||||||fre|d0 aocn745597886 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 afreaeng1 aGeoffroy-Dechaume, Charles.10aCharles Geoffroy-Dechaume correspondence,f1907-1960. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCharles Geoffroy-Dechaume (1877-1944) was a French artist, born in Paris. He was educated at the Lycée Henry IV and at the Ecole des Beaux Arts where he met Neville Lytton, who became a close friend. In 1907, Geoffroy-Dechaume and his wife, Geneviève, went to live in England near Crabbet Park, the home of Lytton and his wife, Judith. Although exempt from military service, Geoffroy-Dechaume returned to France in 1914 to join the army as a volunteer. He was wounded in his first engagement which resulted in the loss of his leg. He returned to the front with the British as a "peintre des Armées." After the war, Geoffroy-Dechaume and his family moved to Valmondois, Seine et Oise, but kept up a steady correspondence with his English acquaintances. His paintings can be found in galleries in Britain and France, including the War Museum, the Fitzwilliam, and the Royal Collection. Geoffroy-Dechaume died at Valmondois in 1944. aThis collection contains letters and postcards to Charles Geoffroy-Dechaume and to Geneviève Geoffroy-Dechaume from various correspondents, from the Geoffroy-Dechaumes to Sydney Cockerell and Dorothy Walker and others, and between the Geoffroy-Dechaume children and the Cockerell family and Dorothy Walker. The correspondence concerns mostly family and social matters, but also discuss the wars, Charles Geoffroy-Dechuame's injury, and his art and art in general.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02185 aCharles Geoffroy-Dechaume Correspondence, 1907-1960 (MS Eng 1675). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French and English.10aGeoffroy-Dechaume, Charles.10aGeoffroy-Dechaume, Genevieve.10aCockerell, Sydney Carlyle,cSir,d1867-1962.10aWalker, Dorothy. 0aWorld War, 1914-1918. 7aLetters (correspondence)y20th century.2aat1 aGeoffroy-Dechaume, Genevieve.10aCockerell, Sydney Carlyle,cSir,d1867-1962,erecipient.10aWalker, Dorothy,erecipient.0 cPurchase;aBernard Quaritch Ltd;b8 Lower John Street, Golden Square, London W1F 9AU, UK;d2006 November 1;e2006M-30;h$17,567.82 (Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization).5hou1 aPurchased with the Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization, 2006.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 167502810nkcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110003300110245009900143246003200242300002800274351004600302545090200348520032301250546001601573524013601589530006201725555008701787600003701874600003501911610004201946610003301988655004502021700002302066710003002089740002802119541006502147561003502212506012302247506004202370852002402412010282570-X20120403113915.0070413i18761893mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn681068084 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT2 aBoston Museum Stock Company.10aBoston Museum Stock Company Kate Ryan Nolan collection of photographs,f1876-1893 and undated.33aKate Ryan Nolan collection. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of actor. aThe Boston Museum Theatre was conceived by Moses Kimball, who purchased the old New England Museum. It was opened on June 14, 1841. The Boston Museum Stock Company gave its first performance on September 4, 1843, and thereafter remained one of the nation's finest ensembles. The Stock Company's favorite performers were William Warren, who first acted there in 1847, and Mrs. J. R. Vincent, but at one time or another in its long career many great artists of the era appeared, either as members of the troupe or as guest stars. The subterfuge of housing a theater in a museum was not uncommon, for it allowed many otherwise puritanical people to enjoy play-going. The theatre closed in 1893, the museum in 1903. Kate Ryan Nolan (born 1857) was a Boston stage actress with the Boston Museum Stock Company. She married actor James Nolan in 1873. She wrote a memoir in 1915: "Old Boston Museum Days." aPrimarily cabinet photographs of Kate Ryan, James Nolan, George Wilson and other actors from the Boston Museum Stock Company. Some images are "in-character" and some are in street clothes. Also includes a few photographic prints. Some images were used as illustrations for Ryan's 1915 memoir, "Old Boston Museum Days." aIn English. aBoston Museum Stock Company Kate Ryan Nolan Collection of Photographs (MS Thr 629). Harvard Theatre Collection, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0211810aNolan, James,d-1894xPortraits.10aRyan, Kate,d1857-xPortraits.20aBoston Museum (1847-1903)xPortraits.20aBoston Museum Stock Company. 7aCabinet photographszMassachusetts.2aat1 aRyan, Kate,d1857-2 aBoston Museum (1847-1903)02aOld Boston Museum days.0 cOld gift;asource unknown;ddate unknown;e2006MT-219r.5the1 aGift from unknown source.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 62903776ntcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003800108245007000146300002800216351008900244545026800333545041300601520063301014520025601647524010901903555008702012544028902099546004102388544006502429600003102494600003802525610004402563650006002607650006402667650005802731655002302789655002402812700003102836710004402867740001902911541015302930561005403083852002403137506004603161506013503207010282849-020090603140936.0020710i19441973mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612788807 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWessen, Ernest James,d1887-1974.10aErnest James Wessen correspondence with Jacob Blanck,f1944-1973. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following two series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other materials. aErnest "Ernie" James Wessen (1887-1974) was a bibliographer and an antiquarian book dealer, proprietor of the Midland Rare Book Co. (Mansfield, Ohio). His particular interest lay in Americana and the company's series of dealer catalogs was known as Midland Notes. aJacob Nathaniel Blanck (1906-1974) was the rare book editor of Publishers Weekly and Antiquarian Bookman (1936-1952), bibliographer in Americana at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. (1939-1941), consultant on bibliography at the Indiana Historical Society, Indianapolis (1942), and editor of the Bibliography of American Literature (BAL, 1943-1974). Blanck was a friend and colleague of Ernie Wessen. aThe bulk of this collection is correspondence between bibliophiles Blanck and Wessen, documenting a thiry-year personal friendship and professional relationship. During most of this time (1950-1974), Blanck's BAL project was housed at Harvard University in the Houghton Library. The letters are chatty, frank, quite personal, and full of detailed information and comments on the antiquarian book trade, both business and people. Some of the additional letters included here were sent to Blanck by Wessen, detailing what Wessen thought were his amusing, though often controversial, interactions with collectors and other dealers. aOther materials included are clippings, photographs, radio scripts, and essays about Wessen, as well as issue no. 89 of Wessen's rare materials catalog, Midland Notes, a few of Blanck's typescript essays, and microopaque card samples of Midland Notes. aErnest James Wessen Correspondence with Jacob Blanck (MS Am 2541). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou018761 aAn additional collection of Wessen's letters are at the Archives and Special Collections of Ohio University, Athens, Ohio. Published as: Ernest James Wessen. Rare book lore: selections from the letters of Ernest J. Wessen, edited by Jack Matthews. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1992. aCollection materials are in English. aSee also Houghton Library copies of Midland Notes, *65-213F.10aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974.10aWessen, Ernest James,d1887-1974.20aMidland Rare Book Co. (Mansfield, Ohio) 0aAntiquarian booksellerszUnited StatesvCorrespondence. 0aBooksellers and booksellingzUnited StatesvCorrespondence. 0aRare booksxCollectors and collectingzUnited States. 7aMicroopaques.2aat 7aRadio scripts.2aat1 aBlanck, Jacob,d1906-1974.2 aMidland Rare Book Co. (Mansfield, Ohio)02aMidland notes. cGift; Bequest;aJacob Blanck;b19 Reservoir Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 02167;d1970 October; 1974; 1977 March;e70M-13, 74M-36, 76M-50.5hou aGift and bequest of Jacob Blanck, 1970-1977.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 25410 aMaterials are open for research use.5hou1 aCollection is housed off-site and delays in retrieval are likely. Contact Houghton Department of Public Services for details.5hou02108ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003200110245003800142300002700180545033400207520054300541555008701084524011601171546001601287650003501303650003501338600003201373650002201405700005101427541007901478506012301557561006001680506004201740852002401782010467387-720111206073421.0070525i17331871mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn740238390 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWinston, James,d1773-1843.10aJames Winston papers,f1733-1871. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) aJames Winston (1773-1843) was an English actor and manager of several minor London theaters. He also worked as a theater architect and served as the secretary of the Garrick Club from its inception in 1831 until his death. Over the course of his life, he compiled notes and clippings for a projected history of the English stage. aThe bulk of the papers are manuscript notes, probably autograph, and clippings arranged by Winston under subject headings, usually the name of a theater or actor, but also general topics such as "Balloons." These have been arranged in folders alphabetically by subject. There are some letters to Wilson, the bulk from Edmund John Eyre, and other correspondence to or from actors contemporary to Wilson. Also includes a manuscript document concerning the rights of play authors to free admission to performances and part of a printed poem.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02181 aJames Winston Papers, 1733-1871 (MS Thr 697). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aActorszEnglandy19th century. 0aActorszEnglandy18th century.10aWinston, James,d1773-1843. 0aTheaterzEngland.1 aEyre, Edmund John,d1767-1816,ecorrespondent.0 cPurchase;d1945-1946 and unknown;e2006MT-248r;hFrank E. Chase fund.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou1 aPurchased with the Frank E. Chase fund, 1945-1946.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 69702059ntcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005800108245006700166300002800233351015500261545011000416520038500526555008700911524010600998546003001104600004601134600005501180600005801235610004301293655005401336700004601390700002601436541004601462506012301508561002401631506004201655852002401697011576183-720081006122123.0020710i19351966mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612834897 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.10aWilliam A. Jackson papers concerning publications,f1935-1966. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Papers concerning Thomas Frognall Dibdin; and II. Papers concerning the Carl H. Pforzheimer Library catalogue. aJackson was a bibliographer and librarian. He was the first librarian of the Houghton Library at Harvard. aIncludes galley and page proofs of the Carl H. Pforzheimer Library catalogue (work of Jackson and Emma Virgina Unger). Also includes notes and other papers concerning Jackson's An annotated list of the publications of the Reverend Thomas Frognall Dibdin, D.D. ..., including correspondence between Jackson and W. H. Bond and others concerning the publication of Jackson on Dibdin.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01995 aWilliam A. Jackson Papers Concerning Publications (MS Am 2630). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aBond, W. H.q(William Henry),d1915-2005.10aDibdin, Thomas Frognall,d1776-1847vBibliography.10aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964.20aCarl H. Pforzheimer LibraryvCatalogs. 7aGalley proofszUnited States.y20th century.2aat1 aBond, W. H.q(William Henry),d1915-2005.1 aUnger, Emma Virginia.0 cDonor unknown.eno accession number.5hou aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou1 aDonor unknown.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 263002188ntcaa22003375a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087110003000112245013600142300002800278351007300306545035700379520032300736524015801059546001601217555008701233610003001320600003401350650003101384650005201415655001901467655002001486710004601506700004901552506003301601541012901634561006401763852002301827011735942-420100525140254.0081106|19231983mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn635882627 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aSylvester & Harris (Firm)10aSylvester & Harris correspondence concerning publication of Romola Nijinsky's "Nijinsky"f1923-1983 (inclusive),g1931-1951 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent and chronologically within. aRomola Nijinsky was the wife of legendary Russian dancer Waslaw Nijinsky. Sylvester & Harris was American law firm who acted on Romola Nijinsky's behalf in the United States, negotiating her contracts with publishers Simon ans Schuster, literary agents, petitioning with the US Immigrations authorites for visas, and taking care of other legal matters. aIncludes correspondence of attorneys Charles L. Sylvester and Sydney Harris with Romola Nijinsky and others concerning publication of her biography of her husband, and other legal matters. Also includes contracts, and affidavits, Waslaw Nijinsky's plan for his last ballet, and a signed copy of Romola Nijinsky's book. aSylvester & Harris Correspondence Concerning Romola Nijinsky's "Nijinsky" (MS Thr 534). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0201024aSylvester & Harris (Firm)10aNijinsky, Waslaw,d1890-1950.20aBallets russesvBiography.20aBallet dancerszRussia (Federation)vBiography. 7aContracts2aat 7aAffidavits2aat2 aSimon and Schuster, inc.,ecorrespondent.1 aNijinsky, Romola de Pulszky,ecorrespondent. aCollection open to research.0 cGift;aWarshaw Burstein Cohen Schesinger & Kuh;b555 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10017;d2007 May 27;e2007MT-097.5the1 aGift of Warshaw Burstein Cohen Schesinger & Kuh, 2007.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 53403755ntcaa2200469 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100002800108245004600136300002800182351008200210545082600292520045601118520051301574555008702087524008502174546003002259600002802289600002802317600004102345600005202386600002002438600002602458650002802484650002502512650005802537651004502595650002802640655001802668655002202686700005602708700002802764700004102792700004902833506011002882541014502992561008703137506003703224852002403261011998485-720090610133848.0020710i18771922mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612872485 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aNichols, Rose Standish.10aRose Standish Nichols papers,f1877-1922. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; and II. Other papers. aRose Standish Nichols (1872-1960) was one of America's first professional female landscape and garden designers, a writer of garden history and criticism, a lifelong pacificist, and a women's rights activist. She was the daughter of Dr. Arthur Howard Nichols (1840-1923) and Elizabeth Fisher Homer Nichols (1844-1929) of Boston, Massachusetts. She published three books and many articles on European garden design, helped found the Woman's International League for Peace and Freedom, and remained unmarried her entire life. She was a favorite niece of American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens; he encouraged her interest in garden design and she became his confidante through a rich correspondence. Augusta F. Homer Saint-Gaudens, the wife of Augustus, was also close to Rose Nichols and they frequently wrote each other.2 aThis collection primarily concerns the close relationship between Rose Standish Nichols and her uncle, sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and also relates his wife Augusta F. Homer Saint-Gaudens, and their family. Includes correspondence, a diary belonging to Rose Nichols, numerous photographs of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and other materials. There is also an incomplete autograph manuscript draft (by Nichols) of a biographical sketch of Saint-Gaudens.8 aCorrespondence includes a large group of letters from Saint-Gaudens to Rose Nichols (but none from her) concerning his life and work. Includes autograph manuscript transcripts of these letters compiled by Nichols. Also with: a large group of letters from Augusta Saint-Gaudens to Nichols; a few letters from friends and colleagues to Augustus Saint-Gaudens including Henry James (copy only), Henry Adams (copy only), Daniel Chester French, and others; and one letter from Homer Saint-Gaudens to Rose Nichols.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02035 aRose Standish Nichols Papers (MS Am 2656). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aNichols, Rose Standish.10aSaint-Gaudens, Augusta.10aSaint-Gaudens, Augustus,d1848-1907.10aSaint-Gaudens, Augustus,d1848-1907vPortraits.30aNichols family.30aSaint Gaudens family. 0aLandscape architecture. 0aLandscape gardening. 0aUpper class familieszMassachusettszBostonxHistory. 0aBoston (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 0aWomen social reformers. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aFrench, Daniel Chester,d1850-1931,ecorrespondent.1 aSaint-Gaudens, Augusta.1 aSaint-Gaudens, Augustus,d1848-1907.1 aSaint-Gaudens, Homer,d1880-ecorrespondent.1 aShelved off-site, delays can be expected in retrieval. Contact Houghton Public Services for details.5hou0 cBequest;aRose Standish Nichols, through Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Homer;bMain Street, Sherborn, Massachusetts;d1960 November 9;e60M-228.5hou1 aBequest of Rose Standish Nichols, through Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Homer, 1960.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 265602419ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003700110245006800147300002800215351021500243530006200458545020800520520030900728555008701037524010701124546003001231544011101261600003701372600005001409600002101459650004201480655002201522700003701544541027801581506004601859506009401905561004701999852002302046012115924-820130116142125.0020710i19181980mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612253594 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams correspondence and other papers,f1918-1980. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Tennessee Williams to others; II. Letters from others to Tennessee Williams; III. Third party letters; and IV. Other materials concerning Tennessee Williams. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aCollection contains primarily correspondence of Williams with colleagues, friends, and family, and also includes some third party letters. Other items are Williams-related materials: check stubs, autograph manuscript notes and notebooks, grades and transcripts, a driver's license, and a few photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02046 aTennessee Williams Correspondence and Other Papers (MS Thr 552). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983vPhotographs.30aWilliams family. 0aTheaterzUnited Statesy20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aWilliams family,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b825 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10024;d1985 June 17; 1986 June 3;eno accession numbers.h(1986 gift purchased by Koch funds at Sotheby's sale 5432, 14 Feruary 1986, lot 525; Hammer price $6,500; auction premium 10% $650; total $7150).5the0 aCollection is open for research use.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch, 1985-1986.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 55203299cpcaa2200481 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003300123245006400156300002800220351014700248545003500395520107300430555008701503555010801590524011501698546001601813600003301829600005201862650003801914650002801952651005001980651005802030651005202088651006002140655003802200655001602238655002202254655002002276700005102296700008902347700004502436700005402481700004402535700003602579541009702615561003902712506004202751852002402793000602493-920120802092854.0861030i19501967mau eng d0 aocn1224051901 aMAHV86A628 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aSitwell, Osbert,d1892-1969.10aOsbert Sitwell correspondence and compositions,f1950-1967. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Edith Sitwell; II. Letters to Sir Osbert Sitwell; III. Other letters; and IV. Compositions. aSitwell was an English author. aContains letters written to Osbert Sitwell, his sister Edith, and to other Sitwell family members. Letters mention Edith's poetry anthology book, a disrespectful article about Edith in the journal Isis, questions and thoughts about the poetry collection The Creative Encounter, and a description of the Quaker College Haverford in Pennsylvania. Also contains many letters from Baroness Christabel Aberconway to Edith concerning travels in Russia and Paris, meeting with Ambassadors in London, and a trip on the ship S.S. United States. Osbert received letters from Lorna Andrade who was managing business while he was away in Florence and also wrote him about current art shows. Letters also express sympathy for the death of Edith, life in New York city, and the Vietnam war. There is also a letter recommending Osbert for Commander of the Order of the British Empire. Also include two letters from Gore Vidal concerning the death of Edith, letters from Osbert's brother Sacheverell, and a letter from James Whittaker asking for a letter on his behalf for knighthood.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007718 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1972-1973, under *72M-46. aOsbert Sitwell Correspondence and Compositions, 1950-1967 (MS Eng 1293). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aSitwell, Osbert,d1892-1969.10aLutyens, David Bulwer,tThe Creative Encounter. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 0aVietnam War, 1961-1975. 0aRussiaxDescription and travely20th century. 0aParis (France)xDescription and travely20th century. 0aEnglandxSocial life and customsy20th century. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoems.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aClippings.2aat1 aSitwell, Edith,cDame,d1887-1964,erecipient.1 aAberconway, Christabel Mary Melville Macnaghten, McLaren,cBaroness,ecorrespondent.1 aVidal, Gore,d1925-2012,ecorrespondent.1 aSitwell, Sacheverell,d1897-1988,ecorrespondent.1 aWhittaker, James, 1891-ecorrespondent.1 aAndrade, Lorna,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aFrederick R. Koch;b101 W. 12th St., New York, NY 10011;d29 Mar. 1973;e72M-46.5hou1 aGift of Frederick Koch, 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 129302587ntcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003700110245005400147300002800201351010600229545020800335520052900543555008701072524013201159546003001291544011101321600003701432655002701469655005201496740002401548740003201572740004801604740002101652740002501673740002201698740002401720740001701744740003201761740003001793740002801823740001401851541007101865561004601936506004201982506009402024852002302118012164489-820100304102801.0020710i19451984mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612814289 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983.10aTennessee Williams additional papers,f1945-1984. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; and III. Printed materials. aThomas Lanier Williams III (1911-1983), who published as Tennessee Williams, has often been called America's most prominent playwright. He was also a prolific author of essays, poetry, and short stories. aIncludes a 1962 circular letter from Tennesse Williams; typescript carbons or mimeographs of: Boom. A screenplay, The catastrophe of success, The coming of something to the widow Holly, The important thing, Kingdom of earth, The knightly quest, Notes on the filming of "Rose tattoo", Praise to assenting angels, Rubio Y Morena (A story), The two-character play, The vine; added material: "Glass Menagerie" film script, Dissolve to "The spider web"; and various copies of printed plays, and books, some inscribed by Williams.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02052 aTennessee Williams Additional Papers, 1945-1984 (MS Thr 555). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional collections of Tennessee Williams papers held by the Houghton Library.10aWilliams, Tennessee,d1911-1983. 7aCircular letters.2aat 7aManuscripts for publicationy20th century.2aat02aBoom. A screenplay.42aThe catastrophe of success.42aThe coming of something to the widow Holly.02aGlass menagerie.42aThe important thing.02aKingdom of earth.42aThe knightly quest.02aRose tattoo.02aPraise to assenting angels.02aRubio Y Morena (A story).42aThe two-character play.42aThe vine.0 cUnknown;aDonor unknown;dDate unknown.eNo accession number.5the1 aNo accession number; source unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aCopyright in the works of Tennessee Williams is held by the University of the South.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 55502293ctcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100002200123245006800145300002800213351003900241545028100280520022200561555008700783555010900870524011800979546001601097600001901113600002001132600002201152600002001174655001801194655002801212655002401240700005701264700001901321700004101340700002001381700005101401700005701452700002201509700006101531700005201592700002001644541005201664561004201716506004201758852002301800008924326-920130204141135.0021009i18001900mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm780759731 aMAHV02-A130 aMH-HedacscMH-H3 aTwisleton family.10aTwisleton-Dwight-Parkman-Vaughan family papers,fca. 1800-1900. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aCollection includes both British and American family correspondents. Edward Twisleton (1809-1874) was a British public official who served on several government commissions. His wife Ellen Dwight Twisleton was the aunt of Henry Parkman (1850-1924), a Boston lawyer and banker. aCorrespondence of Ellen Dwight Twisleton, her husband Edward Turner Boyd Twisleton, William Warren Vaughan, Ellen Twisleton Parkman Vaughan, Mary Eliot Dwight Parkman, Elizabeth Dwight Cabot, and other correspondents.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013708 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-179. aTwisleton-Dwight-Parkman-Vaughan Family Papers, ca. 1800-1900 (MS Am 2197). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.30aDwight family.30aParkman family.30aTwisleton family.30aVaughan family. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aCommonplace books.2aat 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aCabot, Elizabeth Dwight,d1830-1901,ecorrespondent.3 aDwight family.1 aParkman, Mary Eliot,ecorrespondent.3 aParkman family.1 aTwisleton, Edward,d1809-1874,ecorrespondent.1 aTwisleton, Ellen Dwight,d1828-1862,ecorrespondent.3 aTwisleton family.1 aVaughan, Ellen Twisleton Parkman,d1853-ecorrespondent.1 aVaughan, William Warren,d1848-ecorrespondent.3 aVaughan family.0 cGift;aMrs. L. P. Marvin;d1952;e52M-179.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. L. P. Marvin, 1952.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 219702143ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004200122245005600164300002800220351002900248545012100277520050300398555008700901555010800988524009701096600004201193611005701235610003601292650001401328651003401342655002001376656002001396700004901416700005401465700004101519541008101560561006101641506004201702852002501744009222060-620110105081941.0031008i18121878mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm833173591 aMAHV03A318 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858.10aMatthew Calbraith Perry correspondence,f1812-1878. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aPerry was an American naval officer, best known for negotiating the treaty that opened Japan to trade with the West. aContains letters to Perry, many pertaining to naval affairs and letters to him from U.S. presidents concerning his expedition to Japan and his 3 volume published report on it; and copies of presidential documents of appointment and on international treaties that reflect the work of Perry and his relatives who also served as naval officers and diplomats. Also includes the correspondence of family members August Belmont, Caroline Slidell (Perry) Belmont, and Jane Slidell Perry among other items.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou004878 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1968-1969, under *68M-23. aMatthew Calbraith Perry Correspondence (MS Am 1815.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aPerry, Matthew Calbraith,d1794-1858.20aUnited States Naval Expedition to Japand(1852-1854)10aUnited States.bNavyxOfficers. 0aTreaties. 7aJapanxHistoryy19th century. 7aDocuments.2aat 7aDiplomats.2aat1 aBelmont, August,d1813-1890,ecorrespondent.1 aBelmont, Caroline, Slidell Perry,ecorrespondent.1 aPerry, Jane Slidell,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aMrs. August Belmont;dDeposit July 1968, gift May 1969;e68M-23.5hou1 aDeposited by Mrs. August Belmont, 1968; gift, 1969.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1815.101855ckcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101100004600126245008300172300002800255351004500283545004100328520018300369555008700552555010800639524014800747600004600895600004400941600003800985600004501023650002301068655005301091655005301144656002901197541015201226561006701378506003701445852002301482009097766-120111212075322.0030331q1809 mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocn612799166 aMHAT03A59 aMH-ThredacscMH-Thr1 aRoberts, James,d1753-approximately 1809.10aJames Roberts portrait drawings of English actors and actresses,fbefore 1809. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by actor's name. aJames Roberts was an English artist. aIncludes 28 portrait drawings in pencil of English actors and actresses, including Cecilia Davies, Jane Pope, and William Smith as well as some drawings of unidentified subjects.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1976-1977, under *76M-66. aJames Roberts Portrait Drawings of English Actors and Actresses (MS Thr 320). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aRoberts, James,d1753-approximately 1809.10aDavies, Cecilia,d?1750-1836vPortaits.10aPope, Jane,d1742-1818vPortaits.10aSmith, William,d?1730-1819,vPortraits. 0aActorsvPortraits. 7aPortrait drawingszEnglandy18th century.2gmgpc 7aPortrait drawingszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPortrait painters.2lcsh0 cPurchase;aThomas Agnew & Sons, Ltd.;b43 Old Bond St., London WIX 4BA England;d1976;e76M-66;hF. E. Chase and E. Sheldon funds ($2,249.00).5the1 aPurchased with the F.E. Chase and E. Sheldon funds, 1976.5the0 aCollection is open for research.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 32001912cpcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100003100122245006200153300002800215351003000243545004400273520022600317555008700543555011300630524011200743546001600855650004200871600003100913600003600944650003900980650004201019655002201061656002201083600004301105700005601148700007001204700003001274541010201304561004301406506004201449852002301491000601798-320120813083845.0860311i18611920mau eng d0 aocm801808051 aMAHV86A104 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAdams, Brooks,d1848-1927.10aBrooks Adams correspondence with Henry Adams,f1861-1920. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged chronologically. aBrooks Adams was an American historian. aAlso includes a lengthy critique by Henry Adams of an unpublished biography by Brooks Adams of John Quincy Adams, miscellaneous correspondence of Brooks Adams, letters from Charles Francis Adams to Brooks and Henry Adams.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009698 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1947-1948, under *47M-120-135. aBrooks Adams Correspondence with Henry Adams, 1848-1927 (MS Am 1751). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aPresidentszUnited StatesvBiography.10aAdams, Brooks,d1848-1927.10aAdams, John Quincy,d1767-1848. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aHistorianszUnited StatesxBiography. 7aBiographies.2aat 7aHistorians.2lcsh10aAdams, Brooks,d1848-1927,erecipient.1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1835-1915,ecorrespondent.1 aAdams, Charles F.q(Charles Francis),d1866-1954,ecorrespondent.1 aAdams, Henry,d1838-1918.0 cGift;aMrs. Robert Homans;b280 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.;d5 Jan. 1948;e47M-120 - 47M-135.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Robert Homans, 1948.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 175101846cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003100122245007500153300002800228351003900256545014300295520028600438555008700724555010900811524012500920546001601045600003101061600003701092650003901129651002401168655001801192655002201210655002201232700004001254700002101294541004901315561004301364506004201407852002301449000601859-920130102103714.0860106k17861847mau eng d0 aocn1222975921 aMAHV86A16 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBryant, Peter,d1767-1820.10aLetters of Peter Bryant and diaries of Sarah Snell Bryant,g1786-1847. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aSarah Snell Bryant, of Cummington, Mass., was the mother of William Cullen Bryant. Her husband, Peter Bryant, was a physician and surgeon. aContains diaries of Sarah Bryant from 1795 to 1847 (lacks 1809) describing the weather and daily activities of her family. Also includes letters, 1786-1787, of Peter Bryant; a typed manuscript by Beatrice Jones based on Sarah Bryant's diaries; and photographs of Cummington scenes.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011568 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-249. aLetters of Peter Bryant and Diaries of Sarah Snell Bryant, 1786-1847 (MS Am 1438). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aBryant, Peter,d1767-1820.10aBryant, Sarah Snell,d1766-1847. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aCummington (Mass.). 7aDiaries.2aat 7aManuscripts.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBryant, William Cullen,d1794-1878.1 aJones, Beatrice.0 cGift;aGrinnell Jones;d1956;e55M-249.5HOU1 aGift of Grinnell Jones Jr., 1956.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 143802956ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100003200136245003800168300002800206351013200234545058900366520068700955555008701642524008701729600003201816610002501848610004001873630004301913630005101956650003602007650002502043650007302068651005502141651003902196655001702235655003802252655004502290656002702335656001802362506004202380541003902422561003902461852002202500000602221-920130919105033.0860730i17831815mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn6123709981 aMAHV86A413 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs00aMS81-4931 aDennie, Joseph,d1768-1812.10aJoseph Dennie papers,f1783-1815. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged in four series: I. Letters from Joseph Dennie; II. Letters to Joseph Dennie; III. Other letters; and IV. Compositions. aAmerican essayist and editor, Dennie (Harvard College A.B. 1790) wrote for weekly papers in Walpole, N.H., Boston, Mass., and Philadelphia, Pa. He was closely associated with the Farmer's Weekly Museum of Walpole, for which he wrote "Lay Preacher" which under his editorship (1796- ) became a strong Federalist organ read throughout the union; and The Port Folio, a weekly devoted to literature and politics which he established in 1801 in Philadelphia with bookseller Asbury Dickins. This magazine was considered without rival until the founding of the North American Review in 1815. aThe bulk of the collection is letters to Dennie from literary and political colleagues; readers and subscribers of his various newspapers, especially the Farmer's Museum; and his Harvard classmates during his rustication, 1790, when he lived under a chaplain's supervision in Groton, Mass. Letters by Dennie are mostly to his parents and contain detailed accounts of his life from his school days throughout his career. Manuscripts consist of essays, poems, verse translations, college and school notes and exercises, and fragments by Dennie. Includes an original manuscript of his first Farrago essay. Third-party correspondence is mostly to his mother, much of it after his death.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00108 aJoseph Dennie Papers, 1783-1815 (MS Am 715). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aDennie, Joseph,d1768-1812.20aFederal Party (U.S.)20aHarvard College (1780- )xStudents.00aFarmer's Weekly Museum (Walpole, N.H.)40aThe Port Folio (Philadelphia, Pa. : 1801-1827) 0aAmerican literaturey1783-1850. 0aAmerican newspapers. 0aCollege disciplinezMassachusettszCambridgexHistoryy18th century. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1783-1809. 0aWalpole (N.H.)xIntellectual life. 7aEssays.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aPoemszUnited Statesy18th century.2aat 7aCollege students2lcsh 7aEditors.2aat aCollection is open for research.5hou0 cGift;aMary H. Dennie;d1913.5hou1 aGift of Mary H. Dennie, 1913.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 71501442ctcaa2200313 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005100122245008900173300002800262520014400290555008700434524012600521546001600647600005100663650003900714650003900753655003800792656001900830700005700849700003100906541007900937561004801016506004201064852002201106008837826-820130910111616.0020918q18521889mau|||| | ||| | eng d0 aocm813601561 aMAHV02-A70 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWendell, Evert Jansen,d1860-1917,ecollector.10aEvert Jansen Wendell collection of literary manuscripts,fca. 1852-1889 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aCompositions authored mostly by 19th- and 20th-century American writers, including Jane Andrews and John Herbert A. Bone; most are undated.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00663 aEvert Jansen Wendell Collection of Literary Manuscripts, ca. 1852-1889 (MS Am 187). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWendell, Evert Jansen,d1860-1917,ecollector. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aAuthors.2lcsh1 aBone, J. H. A.q(John Herbert Aloysius),d1830-1906.1 aAndrews, Jane,d1833-1887.0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell, AB 1882;d1918;eno accession number.5HOU1 aBequest of Evert Jansen Wendell, 1918.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 18703189ctcaa2200517 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001600087040002100103100005400124245006600178300002800244545005900272520060000331555008700931530006201018555011001080524011601190500014301306600004301449650002901492655004401521655004601565655003501611655004701646655002001693700004601713700005601759700005501815700004801870700005701918700004801975700006102023700004202084730003702126007001502163506003202178845011302210852001302323856006602336541012302402561008102525506004202606852002302648009071708-220130117090559.0021115i15521890mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127592681 aMAHV02-A236 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLocker-Lampson, Frederick,d1821-1895,ecompiler.10aLocker-Lampson, Warburg, Grimson autograph album,f1552-1890. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aLocker-Lampson was an English poet and book collector. aIncludes letters, compositions, engravings, drawings and other documents by European literary and historical figures as well as mezzotint, lithograph or engraved portraits of them. Autographs include Jane Austen, Johann Sebastian Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven, William Blake, Michelangelo Buonarotti, Martin Luther, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Franȯis Marie Arouet de Voltaire, among many others. The album is sometimes referred to as the Great Album of Frederick Locker. All published references to material from this album must employ the title The Locker-Lampson - Warburg - Grimson Album.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01278 aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.8 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1952-1953, under *52M-268F. aLocker-Lampson, Warburg, Grimson Autograph Album, 1552-1890 (MS Eng 870). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe following items are not listed in the first Rowfant catalogue (1886): 4, 23, 37C, 39, 67, 78C, 79B, 79C, 83A, 97, 98, 99B, 100A, 100B.10aLocker-Lampson, Frederick,d1821-1895. 0aAutographsxCollections. 7aDrawingszEnglishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aEngravingszEnglishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aLetters (correspondence).2aat 7aLithographsxEnglishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aPortraits.2aat1 aAusten, Jane,d1775-1817,ecorrespondent.1 aBach, Johann Sebastian,d1685-1750,ecorrespondent.1 aBeethoven, Ludwig van,d1770-1827,ecorrespondent.1 aBlake, William,d1757-1827,ecorrespondent.1 aMichelangelo Buonarroti,d1475-1564,ecorrespondent.1 aLuther, Martin,d1483-1546,ecorrespondent.1 aGoethe, Johann Wolfgang von,d1749-1832,ecorrespondent.1 aVoltaire,d1694-1778,ecorrespondent.0 aGreat album of Frederick Locker.cr||n |||||||| aNo restrictions on use.5MH aPermission to publish or reproduce should be obtained from the appropriate curator in Houghton Library.5hou bNETcGEN40uhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:3708515zBibliography0 cGift;aSamuel and Bettina W. Grimson;b130 E. 67th St., NYC;ddeposit 1953 June 25, gift 1960 Jan. 12;e52M-268F.5HOU1 aDeposited by Samuel B. Grimson, 1953; gift of Bettina W. Grimson, 1960.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 87001756ctcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100005200122245009600174300002800270351003900298545005100337520013200388555008700520555010800607524014600715530006200861546001600923600004000939600003700979600004801016655002201064655002201086656002301108656002201131700005301153541006301206561004801269506004201317852002301359009031007-120120502112101.0021101i19011928mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm852108791 aMAHV02A197 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBishop, Joseph Bucklin,d1847-1928,erecipient.10aJoseph Bucklin Bishop letters from Theodore Roosevelt and other correspondents,f1901-1928. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aBishop was a biographer of Theodore Roosevelt. aLetters to Joseph Bucklin Bishop, including 130 from Theodore Roosevelt, together with three photographs of Theodore Roosevelt.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou009338 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1945-1946, under *45M-49. aJoseph Bucklin Bishop Letters from Theodore Roosevelt and Other Correspondents, 1901-1928 (MS Am 1514). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aIn English.10aBishop, Joseph Bucklin,d1847-1928.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xPortraits. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aBiographies.2aat 7aBiographers.2lcsh 7aPresidents.2lcsh1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aWilliam Brewster Bishop;d1945 Aug 2;e45M-49.5HOU1 aGift of William Brewster Bishop, 1945.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 151402127ckcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002500101100002200126245006900148300002800217545004400245520029800289555008700587555010900674524012400783610005700907600002200964650002100986650003901007650003401046655005901080655005501139655004401194656002901238656002501267730003301292700001901325700004801344740003601392740002701428541013701455561005201592506003701644852002401681009097769-620120430142720.0030331i19211928mau||| | || k|rus d0 aocm814077981 aMHAT03-A60 aMH-ThrcMH-Thredacs1 aExter, Alexandra.10aAlexandra Exter set and costume designs,f1921-1928 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aExter (1882-1949) was a Russian artist. aDrawings include signed and unsigned set and costume designs in gouache and pencil for Elsa Kruger's ballet Le cirque, costume designs in gouache for First studio of Moscow Art Theatre's The death of Tarelkin, and signed set and costume designs in gouache possibly for a production of Othello.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006138 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1975-1976, under *75M-112. aAlexandra Exter Set and Costume Designs (MS Thr 329). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.20aMoskovskiĭ khudozhestvennyĭ akademicheskiĭ teatr.10aExter, Alexandra. 0aBalletxCostume. 0aBalletxStage-setting and scenery. 0aBalletzRussiay20th century. 7aCostume design drawingsxRussiany20th century.2gmgpc 7aSet design drawingsxRussiany20th century.2gmgpc 7aGouachesxRussiany20th century.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2lcsh 7aSet designers.2lcsh0 aOthello (Choreographic work)1 aKrüger, Elsa.1 aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tOthello.3 aLe cirque (Choreographic work).4 aThe death of Tarelkin.0 cPurchase;aLucien Goldschmidt;b1116 Madison Av., New York 28, NY;d1957 Jan. 22;e75M-112;h$495.00 with the F. E. Chase fund.5the1 aPurchased with the F. E. Chase fund, 1957.5the0 aCollection is open for research.8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 32901970ctcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100002000122245004600142300002800188351018700216545019200403520022300595555008700818555010800905524008701013600002001100610004301120650001501163650003601178650002001214650004301234655002401277700003801301700004401339541010601383561005201489506004201541852002501583009217020-X20110105084347.0030929i19421966mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807099781 aMAHV03A311 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aIshill, Joseph.10aJoseph Ishill correspondence,f1942-1966. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters to Joseph Ishill; II. Letters to Rose Freeman-Ishill; III. Letters to Crystal (Ishill) Mendelsohn; and IV. Letters from Joseph Ishill. aJoseph Ishill (1888-1966) was a printer, publisher, typographer, and a collector of radical, anarchist, and libertarian literature. He conducted the Oriole Press in Berkeley Heights, N.J. aLetters to Ishill primarily pertaining to publications of the Oriole Press and to his research and collecting interests. Also includes letters to his wife Rose Freeman-Ishill and his caughter Crystal Ishill Mendelsohn.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou005028 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1980-1981, under *80M-28. aJoseph Ishill Correspondence (MS Am 1614.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aIshill, Joseph.20aOriole Press (Berkeley Heights, N.J.). 0aAnarchism. 0aBook collectingzUnited States. 0aLibertarianism. 0aPublishers and publishingzNew Jersey. 7aFamily papers.2aat1 aFreeman-Ishill, Rose,erecipient.1 aMendelsohn, Crystal Ishill,erecipient.0 cGift;aCrystal (Ishill) Mendelsohn;b1330 Erickson Av., Columbus OH 43227;d8 May 1981;e80M-28.5hou1 aGift of Crystal (Ishill) Mendelsohn, 1981.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1614.203053ntcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100004000127245007200167300002800239351013300267545034600400520070900746520015801455555008701613524011101700546001601811544009501827500005201922600004001974600002202014600003302036650002502069655004902094655005102143700002202194700003302216740002502249541013402274561004602408506004202454506012302496852002402619010137933-120110411115449.0k|||||||||||||||||061027i19351941mau|||| |||| ||||0 eng d0 aocn612868650 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPowell, Lawrence Clark,d1906-2001.10aLawrence Clark Powell papers concerning John Steinbeck,f1935-1941. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Compositions; III. Subject files; and IV. Photographs and negatives. aJohn Steinbeck (1902-1968) was an American author. Lawrence Clark Powell (1906-2001) was University Librarian at the University of California at Los Angeles and director of their William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. Among his other interests, Powell conducted bibliographical studies on Steinbeck and collected Steinbeck's first editions. aPapers assembled for Powell's bibliographic research on author John Steinbeck. Correspondence is between Powell and Steinbeck's friends, editors, publishers, collectors of his books, etc... Includes a typescript volume of unpublished poems and illustrations by Carol Steinbeck (his first wife) and three 1935 issues of The Monterey Beacon, including verse by Carol Steinbeck. Also includes other Steinbeck-related materials: Powell's manuscripts and printed copies of his articles on Steinbeck; reviews, articles, advertisements, and announcements of Steinbeck's books; clippings concerning The Grapes of Wrath, Of Mice and Men, The Long Valley, and others; and other bibliographic and biographical data.8 aWith photographs of John Steinbeck and many of Powell's book collection and a 1938 Los Angeles Public Library exhibition of Powell's Steinbeck materials.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02139 aLawrence Clark Powell Papers Concerning John Steinbeck (MS Am 1532). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also: John Steinbeck Letters to Lawrence Clark Powell and Essays (fMS Am 1190-1190.1). aSee curatorial file for additional information.10aPowell, Lawrence Clark,d1906-2001.10aSteinbeck, Carol.10aSteinbeck, John,d1902-1968. 0aAmerican literature. 7aClippingszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat 7aPhotographszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aSteinbeck, Carol.1 aSteinbeck, John,d1902-1968.42aThe Monterey Beacon.0 cGift;aMr. Lawrence Clark Powell;bUniversity Library, UCLA, Los Angeles, California;d1941 October 8;eno accession number;5hou1 aGift of Lawrence Clark Powell, 1941.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 153202047nkcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100002600110245006500136300002800201351012600229545011000355520027200465520039300737555008701130524009201217546003001309600002601339650002001365655005001385655002201435541006201457561002501519506004201544506012301586852002401709012568265-420100915085151.0020710i18841885mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn664675037 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aChasemore, Archibald.10aArchibald Chasemore costume designs,f1884-1885 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Sheets with single costume designs; and II. Sheets with multiple costume designs. aWilliam Harry Archibald Chasemore (b.1844), was an English cartoonist, illustrator, and costume designer. a104 original costume designs in ink, pencil, and watercolor on board. One series has the boards pasted onto an additional sheet. Most are signed: A. Chasemore. Many have autograph manuscript annotations about the design details. A few designs include fabric swatches.8 aDesigns are for theatrical productions such as pantomimes, burlesques, plays, and ballets, including: Blue Beard, Coppelia, Der Freyschütz, Dick, Forty thieves, Giselle, Little Jack Sheppard, Mazeppa, Our Helen, Pocahontas, School for scandal, Very little Hamlet, and many others. Productions were staged at London theaters: the Empire Theatre, the Gaiety Theatre, and the Globe Theatre.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02101 aArchibald Chasemore Costume Designs (MS Thr 607). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aChasemore, Archibald. 0aCostume design. 7aCostume designsxDrawingsy19th century.2aat 7aWatercolors.2aat0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 60701059nrcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001800093100003600111245007000147300002700217351001700244500017200261500003900433500004600472546003600518600003600554655001700590655002200607655002300629506004300652541007400695852002400769012550827-120100816134518.0100816i19611989mau||| |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafreager1 aBernstein, Leonard,d1918-1990.10aLeonard Bernstein awards and memorabilia,f1961-1989 and undated. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aIncludes Emmy, Tony, and Grammy awards; French Legion of Honor certificate; various medals; a Harvard and one other sweat shirt; a Harvard tie; and a Radcliffe jacket. aSee internal file for itemization. aRetrieval requires permission of curator. aIn English, French, and German.10aBernstein, Leonard,d1918-1990. 7aAwards.2aat 7aMemorabilia.2aat 7aSweat shirts.2aat1 aAccess requires permission of curator.0 cGift;aLeonard Bernstein Foundation;d2010 January 7;e2009MT-915the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 59202317nkcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100001900110245006400129300002800193351004800221545049900269520018700768555008700955524013601042546003001178544014501208600001901353650003501372650003401407650003901441650004301480655005001523655001901573656002801592740002401620541015801644561008201802506004601884852002501930012553073-020100914090713.0020710s1921 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn660230446 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aPeters, Rollo.10aRollo Peters costume designs for The Pilgrim Spirit,f1921. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aArranged numerically in plate number order. aCharles Rollo Peters III (1892-1967) was born in Paris, but moved to California when he was five. He was an actor, scenic designer, director, producer and co-founder of the New York Theatre Guild. He designed the costumes for George Pierce Baker's 1921 The Pilgrim Spirit: a pageant in celebration of the tercentenary of the landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth, Massachusetts, December 21, 1620. The pageant was performed at the State Reservation near Plymouth Rock, in July and August of 1921. a185 watercolor and pencil costume design drawings. Includes details of type and color of fabrics, titles of drawings, number of costumes needed, character wearing each design, etc...0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02092 aRollo Peters Costume Designs for The Pilgrim Spirit (MS Thr 597). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. aAdditional Rollo Peters papers are held by the Arts Library of Yale University. See Hollis for addtional materials relating to this pageant.10aPeters, Rollo. 0aCostume designzUnited States. 0aCentennial celebrations, etc. 0aPageantszMassachusettszPlymouth. 0aPilgrims (New Plymouth Colony)xDrama. 7aCostume designsxDrawingsy20th century.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aCostume designers.2aat42aThe Pilgrim spirit.0 cGift;aPilgrim Tercentenary Commission, via William Carroll Hill;b73 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts;d1921 October 19;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Pilgrim Tercentenary Commission, via William Carroll Hill, 1921.5the0 aCollection is open for research use.5the8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 59703527nkcaa2200517 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002300106245011000129300002800239351019200267545085800459520042501317555008701742524015101829546003001980600003802010600003502048600003102083610002102114610003202135650006902167655002502236655003602261655003102297655002202328655003202350656002802382656002402410655002202434710002102456700003802477700003502515700003402550700003102584700002502615710003202640740006102672541006202733561002502795506004202820506012302862852002402985012548721-520101103142839.0t|||||||||||||||||020710i19151954mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn659816966 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPapers for Three designers for the contemporary theatre exhibition,f1915-1954 (inclusive),g1950 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. General papers on the exhibition and designers; II. Papers on Robert Edmond Jones; III. Papers on Donald Oenslager; and IV. Papers on Lee Simonson. aIn 1950, the Harvard Theatre Collection and the Fogg Art Museum cooperated on a join exhibition of original materials of Harvard graduates who were theater designers. The exhibition was entitled: Three designers for the contemporary theatre: Robert Edmond Jones, Class of 1910, Donald Oenslager, Class of 1923, and Lee Simonson, Class of 1909. The exhibition physically was located in the Fogg Art Museum, Lamont Library, and in the foyer of Widener Library from October 16 through November 25, 1950. The exhibition, curated by William Van Lennep, Curator of the Theatre Collection, included 200+ drawings, models, and photographs, all lent from individual artists and the Museum of the City of New York, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Stanford University Libraries, none came from Harvard collections. [see foreward to exhibition catalog, item (2)]. aIncludes exhibition catalogs, posters, fliers, lecture notes by William Van Lennep, and photographs of original costume and set designs. Many, but not all of the photographs of set and costume designs in this collection depict the original materials that were displayed in the exhibit. Many of the photographs were taken by Will Rapport. Includes some unidentified materials including a copper printing plate and proofs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02088 aPapers for Three Designers for the Contemporary Theatre Exhibition (MS Thr 589). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.10aOenslager, Donald,d1902-1975.10aSimonson, Lee,d1888-1967.20aFogg Art Museum.20aHarvard Theatre Collection. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and sceneryzUnited StatesvExhibitions. 7aCostume design.2aat 7aCostume design drawings.2gmgpc 7aExhibitions catalogs.2aat 7aScenography.2aat 7aSet design drawings.2gmgpc 7aCostume designers.2aat 7aScenographers.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat2 aFogg Art Museum.1 aJones, Robert Edmond,d1887-1954.1 aOenslager, Donald,d1902-1975.1 aRapport, Will,ephotographer.1 aSimonson, Lee,d1888-1967.1 aVan Lennep, William.2 aHarvard Theatre Collection.02aThree Designers for the Contemporary Theatre Exhibition.0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58902245nkcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245008500110300002800195351011400223545029100337520046000628555008701088524015701175546003001332610003701362650004201399655005001441656002801491700003001519700004201549740002801591740001201619541006201631561002501693506004201718506012301760852002401883012547791-020100915191552.0020710s1873 mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn659812768 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aCostume designs by Mr. Phillips for the Gaiety Theatre (London, England),f1873. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into two series: I. Costume designs for Don Giovanni in Venice; and II. Costume designs for Martha. aCostume designs, drawn by a designer listed only as Mr. Phillips, for two productions in 1873 at the Gaiety Theatre in London, England. Both were burlesque "operatic extravaganzas" produced by Robert Reece, Don Giovanni in Venice , for February 17, 1873, and Martha, for April 14, 1873. aDesigns are ink, pencil, and watercolor on paper of varying size, and each design was later mounted on a 38 x 28 cm. sheet. Most designs include annotations on the mat (probably added later) concerning details: actor's or actresses's name, role, production name, date of production, and name of theatre. Some designs include manuscript annotations, probably by Phillips, commenting on color, fabrics to be used, etc... One design includes fabric swatches.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02086 aCostume Designs by Mr. Phillips for the Gaiety Theatre (London, England) (MS Thr 587). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.20aGaiety Theatre (London, England) 0aTheaterzGreat Britainy19th century. 7aCostume designsxDrawingsy19th century.2aat 7aCostume designers.2aat1 aPhillips,cMr,edesigner.1 aReece, Robert,d1838-1891,eproducer.02aDon Giovanni in Venice.02aMartha.0 cSource unknown;dDate unknown;eNo accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 58703145nkcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110100006200123245009500185246003300280300002800313351004700341545055600388520046700944520030501411524015001716555008701866546002701953600003901980600006202019600003602081600006402117600004302181600005302224600003802277610003902315610005402354650002002408655004402428656001702472740007002489541006202559561002502621506004202646852002302688012642427-620121022114301.0020710i17691773mau||| | |||||||fre|d0 aocn694355697 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT afreaeng1 aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1778.10aEngravings based on the drawings of Johann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch,f1769-1773 and undated.13aJean Louis Fesch engravings. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title of print. aFäsch was a Swiss painter, illustrator, miniaturist, and portraitist, born in Basel ca. 1738 and died in Paris in 1778. Fäsch studied law but soon became a painter. He later moved to Paris and also completed portraits in London. He was known under a number of names including: Jean Louis Fesch and Johann Ludwig Wernhard Faesch, as well as de Fesch, Foech, and Foesch. Fäsch is the first artist to be said with certainty to have drawn his subjects directly from actual performance. Fäsch's work was published as engravings by various London firms. aThis collection of engravings, based on the miniature drawings of Johann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch, includes prints dated from 1769 to 1773, all published in London. Many appear to be from Robert Sayer and John Smith's Dramatic characters, or different portraits of the English stage. Other London firms involved in either printing or publishing include Marty, Laurie & Whittle, and Jefferys & Faden. Many engravings are hand-colored and some are in black ink only.8 aSubjects of the engravings are actors and actresses in various roles from the Comédie-Française, Comédie-Italienne (Paris, France), and other companies, including theaters in London. Actors and actresses depicted include: Brizard, Mlle Dumesnil, Garrick, Lekain, Molé, Préville, and many others. aEngravings Based on the Drawings of Johann Ludwig Wernhard Fäsch (MS Thr 647). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02133 aIn French and English.10aMolé, François RenévPortraits.10aFäsch, Johann Ludwig Wernhard,dapproximately 1738-1773.10aBrizard,d1721-1791vPortraits.10aDumesnil,cMlleq(Marie-Françoise),d1713-1803vPortraits.10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779vPortraits.10aLekain, Henri Louis Cain,d1728-1778vPortraits.10aPréville,d1721-1799vPortraits.20aComédie-Françaisey18th century.20aComédie-Italienne (Paris, France)y18th century. 0aTheater in art. 7aEngravingszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aActors.2aat02aDramatic characters, or different portraits of the English stage.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 64703581ntcaa2200397 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004200110245009800152300002800250351018000278545071600458520050801174520019001682555008701872524015301959546001602112544043402128600004202562600005302604600002502657650002702682650004202709655002102751655002202772655002002794656001702814700003702831541008002868561004602948506004202994506012303036852002403159012702076-420110331135249.0020710i19021939mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn705558265 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940.10aMrs. Patrick Campbell letters to Bertha von Zastrow and other papers,f1902-1939 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Mrs. Patrick Campbell to Bertha von Zastrow; II. Other letters; and III. Biographical miscellany on Mrs. Patrick Campbell. aMrs. Patrick Campbell [Beatrice Rose Stella Tanner Campbell] (1865-1940) was a prominent British actress. Bertha von Zastrow came as a child oftwo to the United States from Germany with her mother in 1887 and settled in Warren, Pennsylvania where they lived until 1900. From Warren, the mother and daughter moved to New York City where they lived together until Mrs. von Zastrow’s death in 1938. Miss von Zastrow apparently never married. Among other activities, Miss von Zastrow was an actress, which is likely how she and Mrs. Patrick met one another. The two played together in some productions. Miss von Zastrow lived in New York City until at least 1954. See the finding aid for more biographical detail. aAutograph manuscript letters primarily from Mrs. Patrick Campbell to Bertha von Zastrow decribing Mrs. Patrick's theatrical performances, travel, finances and family. Many letters are concerned with Mrs. Patrick's perfomances and society life and include newspaper clippings, several photographs, playbills, fliers and programs. Of particular interest are Mrs. Patrick's letters concerning her early experiences in Hollywood and her thoughts on the social/political situation leading up to World War II.8 aAlso includes third party letters concerning both women and a final series of biographical materials on Mrs. Patrick Campbell, including clippings, obituaries, reviews, and photographs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02140 aMrs. Patrick Campbell Letters to Bertha von Zastrow and Other Papers (MS Thr 662). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aOther collections of Mrs. Patrick’s correspondence are also held by the British Library, the Bodleian Library, the Victoria and Albert Museum Department of Theatre and Performance, and University of Chicago Special Collections. A letter from Mrs. Patrick, listed under the name Stella West, to Bertha von Zastrow is part of the Katherine S. Dreier/Société Anonyme Papers at Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.10aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940.10aCampbell, Patrick,cMrs.,d1865-1940vPortraits.10aZastrow, Bertha von. 0aTheatery20th century. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945xSocial aspects. 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aActors.2aat1 aZastrow, Bertha von,erecipient.0 cGift;aMr. Frederick R. Koch '55;d1985 January;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Frederick R. Koch '55, 1985.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 66202151nacaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007200110300002800182351002900210520045600239555008700695524012200782546001600904610002300920610004100943610002300984610003001007610002601037610002601063610002601089610002301115610005601138610002701194610001901221650002101240655002401261655003001285655001901315655001901334541006201353561003401415506004201449506007901491506012301570852002401693012815122-620111107073413.0020710i18511918mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn734000259 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aCircus playbills, programs, and other printed material,f1851-1918. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically. aCollection includes: advertisements, articles, clippings, newsletters, pamphlets, playbills, programs, and songbooks. Circuses and shows represented include: Adam Forepaugh & Sells Bros. Circus, Barnum and Bailey, Barnum's American Museum, Bertram Mills Circus, Great Forepaugh Show, John Robinson Circus, P.T. Barnum (Firm), Ringling Brothers, Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows, Sig Sautelle's Circus, Sparks Circus, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02179 aCircus Playbills, Programs, and Other Printed Material, 1851-1918 (MS Thr 696). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aP.T. Barnum (Firm)20aAdam Forepaugh & Sells Bros. Circus.20aBarnum and Bailey.20aBarnum's American Museum.20aBertram Mills Circus.20aGreat Forepaugh Show.20aJohn Robinson Circus.20aRingling Brothers.20aRingling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Combined Shows.20aSig Sautelle's Circus.20aSparks Circus. 0aCircusxHistory. 7aAdvertisements2aat 7aBroadsides (notices)2aat 7aPlaybills2aat 7aPrograms.2aat0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aItem (40) is restricted due to fragility. Consult curator for access.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 69603081ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100005100108245005700159300002800216351012700244545106200371520035401433555008701787524010701874546001601981544013901997581005802136600003402194600005102228650002302279650002002302650004902322650002302371655002002394655002002414655002202434541008202456561006302538506008302601852002302684012877042-220121214111824.0020710i18801951mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn793181704 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aQuimby, P. P. (Phineas Parkhurst),d1802-1866.10aP. P. Quimby manuscript transcripts,fca. 1880-1951. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Manuscript transcripts of Phineas Parkhurst Quimby writings; and II. Other papers. aPhineas Parkhurst Quimby (1802-1866) was a New England mesmerist, teacher, and mental healer who lived in Belfast, Maine. He developed an original healing philosophy related to mesmerism and Swedenborgianism which essentially was "a belief system that included the tenet that illness originated in the mind as a consequence of erroneous beliefs and that a mind open to God's wisdom could overcome any illness." Upon his death Quimby left behind only loosely organized and unpublished manuscripts which were later publicized by his patient-disciples, especially Annetta Seabury Dresser, Julius Dresser, and Warren Felt Evans, who developed Quimby's teachings into the New Thought or Mind Cure philosophy. A fourth disciple, Mary Baker Eddy, transformed her interpretation of the Quimby manuscripts into the basis for the Church of Christ, Scientist. Quimby is thought by some to have been the first secular psychotherapist to practice in the United States. Source: Robert C. Fuller. "Quimby, Phineas Parkhurst", American National Biography Online, Feb. 2000. aCollection includes manuscript transcripts of selections from Quimby's original writings. These notebook transcripts concerning Quimby's works were possibly copied by Emma G. Ware, Sarah Ware, George A. Quimby (his son), and others(?). The dates of Quimby's work in transcript form are from 1859-1865. Also includes various printed related material.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02308 aP. P. Quimby Manuscript Transcripts, ca. 1880-1951 (MS Am 2800). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aQuimby manuscripts are also held by the Manuscript Collection of the Library of Congress and Special Collections at Boston University. aSee the Quimby manuscripts, ed. H. W. Dresser, p. 17.10aEddy, Mary Baker,d1821-1910.10aQuimby, P. P. (Phineas Parkhurst),f1802-1866. 0aChristian Science. 0aMental healing. 0aReligion and sciencexHistoryy19th century. 0aSpiritual healing. 7aClippings.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat0 cGift;aMalcolm Dresser and Dorothea D. Reeves;d1957 October 1;e57M-38.5hou1 aGift of Malcolm Dresser and Dorothea D. Reeves, 1957.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use. Formerly restricted; lifted in 1996.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 280002157ntcaa2200325 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245006000141300002800201351008700229545054000316520024100856555008701097524011001184546001601294600003301310650002501343655002001368655003301388655002201421655002201443541012101465561005601586506004201642506012301684852002401807012877082-120130411075652.0020710i18941960mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn795832346 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRichardson, Harriette Taber.10aHarriette Taber Richardson literary papers,f1894-1960. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Poems; II. Prose; and III. Other material. aHarriette Taber Richardson (1874-1953) was an amateur historian, translator, author, and philanthropist. She was the daughter of Anis Phinney Beard and Robert Barney Taber, and the wife of Frederick Albert Richardson. They had two children, Philip Richardson and Frederika Richardson Powell. Harriette Richardson was a resident of Cambridge, Massachusetts and summered in the Annapolis Royal area of Nova Scotia, Canada. She is credited with having been a major force behind the creation of the Port Royal National Park in Nova Scotia. aIncludes autograph and typescript manuscripts of poems, plays, and stories. Also includes 2 copyright certificates for her work, some clippings, a 1929 letter from the Gorham Press, and a photograph of a man with a giant ball of string.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02322 aHarriette Taber Richardson Literary Papers, 1894-1960 (MS Am 2803). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aRichardson, Harriette Taber. 0aAmerican literature. 7aClippings.2aat 7aCopyright certificates.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aTypescripts.2aat0 cGift;aMrs. Fredrika R. Powell c/o David Powell;b2000 Thompson Lane, El Sobrante, California;d1959;e59M-288.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Fredrika Richardson Powell, 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 280302462ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087041001300108100003100121245008000152300002800232351003800260545056200298520031100860555008701171524012101258546002701379544010301406600003801509600003101547650003701578650003701615650003701652650003701689655002401726655001601750541009301766561004001859506004201899506012301941852002402064012864038-320120420113547.0020710s1892 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn792758158 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengafre1 aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926.10aGrace Norton lecture notes on French art and literature,f1892 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aGrace Norton (1834-1926) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the daughter of Andrew Norton and Catherine Eliot Norton, and the sister of American author and Harvard professor, Charles Eliot Norton. She was privately educated in Cambridge, and developed a great love for the literature of France, especially that of the French essayist, Montaigne. Norton became a Montaigne expert, translating, writing, and lecturing on his works, as well as those of other French authors. Many of her articles appeared in World Literature, Nation, and other publications. aIncludes autograph manuscript notes and essays for lectures and/or books. All on topic of French literature, history, and art. Titles for notes were taken from envelopes or covers, in the hand of Grace Norton. A few items include annotations by Norton from a later date explaining what the notes were from.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02303 aGrace Norton Notes on French Art and Literaure, 1892 and undated (MS Am 2797). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn French and English. aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additonal Grace Norton papers held by Houghton and Schlesinger Libraries.10aMontaigne, Michel de,d1533-1592.10aNorton, Grace,d1834-1926. 0aFrench literaturey16th century. 0aFrench literaturey17th century. 0aFrench literaturey18th century. 0aFrench literaturey19th century. 7aLecture notes.2aat 7aNotes.2aat0 cGift;aErnest R. Green;b38 East Wheelock, Hanover, New Hampshire;d1953;e52M-300.5hou1 aGift of Ernest R. Green, 1953.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 279702674ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100004400110245008800154300002800242351018400270545031400454520055500768555008701323524015501410546001601565500006201581544017101643600002901814600005801843600004401901600003501945610002401980655001602004655002602020541016702046561004602213506004202259852002302301013094794-620120302141225.0020710i17681825mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn777410826 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aRichard Brinsley Sheridan papers connected with the Drury Lane Theatre,f1768-1825. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Letters from Sheridan to others; II. Thomas Shaw's claims; III. Deeds and agreements; and IV. Miscellaneous letters to Sheridan and others. aRichard Brinsley Sheridan was born in Dublin, Ireland and raised in London. He became the manager and part-owner of the Drury Lane Theatre in 1776. He wrote several plays, including the comedies The Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1780). He also served as a Minister of Parliament from 1780 to 1812. aIncludes autograph manuscript letters and typescript transcripts of letters from Richard Brinsley Sheridan to others; manuscript legal documents supporting Thomas Shaw's claims again the management of Drury Lane Theatre; manuscript deeds, grants, agreements, and other legal documents concerning Drury Lane Theatre, some on vellum; and miscellaneous other manuscript letters to Sheridan and others about the theater. Among persons represented here are: Sir Robert Barclay, Richard Peake, Thomas Shaw, John Grubb, George Coleman, and Samuel Whitbread.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02281 aRichard Brinsley Sheridan Papers Connected with the Drury Lane Theatre (MS Thr 816). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSome of this material was included in Phillipps MS.25786. aSee also: Sheridan-Grubb Papers Concerning the Drury Lane Theatre (MS Thr 527); and check HOLLIS and OASIS for additional Sheridan materials held by Houghton Library.10aGrubb, John,d1751-1812.10aShaw, Thomas,dapproximately 1760-approximately 1830.10aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aWhitbread, Samuel,d1764-1815.20aDrury Lane Theatre. 7aDeeds.2aat 7aLegal documents.2aat0 cPurchase;aat Sotheby sale, 25 May 1954 lot 274, through Maggs Brothers;b50 Berkeley Square, London W.1, England;d1954 July;e54M-287;hChase fund (£572).5the1 aPurchased with the Chase fund, 1954.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 81602337nacaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245009900123300002700222351007700249520027600326555008700602524016500689546006600854650001100920650002200931650002800953650003600981650003601017650002901053650002901082650004001111655003401151655002201185655002801207655002001235655003201255655001901287655002701306710009801333506012301431506004201554541013101596561015201727852002401879013239375-120120706195323.0020710i19461965mau|||| |||| ||||| eng d0 aocn754366792 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengafre00aPromotional materials for theater, music, dance, and film productions,f1946-1965 and undated. a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by production, person, theater, or company name. aThis collection includes promotional materials for 20th-century theater, dance, music, and film productions consisting primarily of ticket order forms. Other types of materials include postcards, pitcure postcards, fliers (printed matter), stickers, and theater programs.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02316 aPromotional Materials for Theater, Music, Dance, and Film Productions, 1946-1965 (MS Thr 854). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. Some material in French. 0aDance. 0aTheaterzEngland. 0aTheaterzUnited States. 0aMotion pictureszUnited States. 7aDance companieszUnited States. 7aDance companieszRussia. 7aDance companieszIsrael. 7aMusical performancezUnited States. 7aFliers (printed matter).2aat 7aOrder forms.2aat 7aPicture postcards.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aPromotional materials.2aat 7aStickers.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 85401688ckcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001600086040002100102100003100123245005300154300002800207351003800235545021100273520012800484530006200612555008700674524010400761600003100865650006300896655005000959655004901009656002401058700005001082852002501132541007001157561005701227506004201284852002401326009126540-120120822081547.0030429i18781897mau||| | || k|eng d0 aocm800530581 aMAHV03-A221 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915.10aWalter Crane miscellaneous drawings,f1878-1897. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aCrane was an English illustrator, painter, and designer primarily known for his imaginative illustrations of children's books. He was also a political cartoonist and director of several English art schools. aInk and watercolor or pen drawings for book illustrations. Includes several for the 1894-1897 edition of The Faerie Queene. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01010 aWalter Crane Miscellaneous Drawings, 1878-1897 (MS Eng 1145). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aCrane, Walter,d1845-1915. 0aIllustrated children's bookszGreat Britainy19th century. 7aDrawingszGreat Britainy19th century.2gmgpc 7aFrontispieceszEnglandy19th century.2gmgpc 7aIllustrators.2lcsh1 aSpenser, Edmund,d1552?-1599.tFaerie queene.8 bHOUcPFhMS Eng 11450 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5hou1 aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 114502226nrcaa2200313 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070245004400091300002800135545035200163520011300515520062900628524012201257546001601379610004101395600005901436600003001495600003701525650001201562655002801574655002801602655003201630655001701662541011001679561005801789506004201847852002301889013349768-220121005190534.0020710i18141900mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aShylock box collection,fca. 1814-1900. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aEdmund Kean (1787-1833) and his son, Charles Kean (1811-1868), were English actors who both played Shylock in various productions of William Shakespeare's play, Merchant of Venice. Edmund Kean was especially known for his portrayal of Shylock in the 1814 production at Drury Lane Theatre in London, which established his career as a leading actor. aCollection includes metal scales and weights, dagger knife, and paper bond used as stage props by the Keans.8 aAlso includes a glass and wood display cabinet (49 x 54 cm.; that formerly housed all items during sale), lined with red velvet. Box now includes only bond with seal, and metal case label with text: Relics of Edmund & Charles Kean / Shylock's Bond, Scale, Weight & Knife. Verso of case includes a clipping concerning the Augustin Daly Sale of March 20, 1900. Full transcribed text of clipping is now housed with relics: "... Particularly interesting among the relics were the bond, scales and knife used by Edmund and Charles Kean in Shylock. They were bought by Mr. Sydney Herbert, formerly of Daly's company, for $115 ..." aShylock Box Collection, ca. 1814-1900 (MS Thr 899). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.20aDrury Lane Theatre (London, England)10aShakespeare, William,d1564-1616.tMerchant of Venice.10aKean, Edmund,d1787-1833.10aKean, Charles John,d1811?-1868. 0aActors. 7aBalances (scales).2aat 7aDaggers (weapons).2aat 7aProps (object genres).2aat 7aRealia.2aat0 cPurchase;aat auction from Estate of Augustin Daly;bNew York;d1900 March 20;eno accession number.5the1 aPurchase from the Estate of Augustin Daly, 1900.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcZhMS Thr 89901845nkcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245008200110300002700192351005100219520029500270555008700565524016100652546004100813650002300854650002900877650002500906655002200931655002000953710009800973506012301071506004201194541013101236561015201367852002401519013359939-620121005190742.0020710i19111991mau||| |||||eng d0 aocn763624623 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aPhotographs of 20th-century musicians, conductors, and performers,f1911-1991 a2 boxes (1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by photograph subject. aThis collection includes photographs of notable classical musicians, composers, and performers from the 20th-century. Most pictures are black and white and are undated. Several images are signed by the subject. Aside from photographs, this collection also includes a menu and two pamphlets.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02356 aPhotographs of 20th-Century Musicians, Conductors, and Performers, 1911-1991 (MS Thr 898). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English. 0aConductors (Music) 0aMusiciansy20th century. 0aOperay20th century. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the0 cGift;aMr. Thomas Garrett;b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 89802368nkcaa2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245006100110300002800171351023800199545054000437520028200977555008701259524013901346544011401485546001601599650002601615650002901641650002201670650004101692650001801733655003501751655004101786655002301827541007401850561004101924506004201965852002302007013622425-320131030115126.0020710i18111855mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn828977277 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aToy theater prints of characters and scenes,f1811-1855. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Toy theater prints of characters and scenes, by title (regular size); II. Toy theater prints of scenes, by publisher (regular size); III. Toy theater prints of characters and scenes (oversize). aToy theaters were especially popular as English children’s toys in the first half of the 19th-century. They were also called paper theaters and model theaters. By the late 19th-century popularity waned and publishing of these materials declined. Individual character portrait prints known as "penny plains" and "twopence coloureds" were collected and often used in toy theaters, as were these engraved prints of multiple characters and scenery. Performing scripts were written especially for children to be used with these materials. aIncludes engravings of scenes, as well as items depicting multiple characters, from English theatrical productions. Some items are hand-colored, most published in London. Published by Dyer, J. K. Green, O. Hodgson, A. Park, B. Pollack, Skelt, W. West, and W. Webb among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02404 aToy Theater Prints of Characters and Scenes, 1811-1855 (MS Thr 944). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSee also: bMS Thr 933 and bMS Thr 942 and HOLLIS and OASIS for additional materials relating to toy theaters. aIn English. 0aActorsy19th century. 0aActressesy19th century. 0aChildren's plays. 0aTheatersxStage-setting and scenery. 0aToy theaters. 7aEngravingsy19th century.2aat 7aPrints (visual works)y19th century. 7aToy theaters.2aat0 cGifts of various sources;dvarious dates;eno accession numbers.5the1 aVarious sources, various dates.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 94402487ctcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089035001500106040002100121100003700142245007500179300002800254351007800282545007600360520028500436555008700721555017300808524017800981530006201159500017201221546001601393650004201409600003701451600005801488600006301546655001901609655002801628655001901656655002001675655001901695700005301714730005801767541007901825561005901904506004201963852004802005009132859-420130311134412.0k||| | || ||020801i18671922mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocn6127741211 aMAHV02-A57 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aTheodore Roosevelt juvenilia and childhood correspondence,f1867-1922. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by correspondent, followed by Theodore Roosevelt. aTheodore Roosevelt was the twenty-sixth president of the United States. aIncludes letters to Theodore Roosevelt as a child, notably from Theodore Roosevelt, Sr., ancestral mss., juvenile natural history writings and drawings, and from later periods, correspondence with prominent persons, and drafts of addresses, periodical articles, and book chapters.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:trc000248 aUnpublished printed finding aids available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection, or in the Houghton Accessions Records, under *43M-828 (2-22) and *43M-829. aTheodore Roosevelt Juvenilia and Childhood Correspondence, 1867-1922 (MS Am 1541 (1)-(35), (277)-(304)). Theodore Roosevelt Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aPart of the Harvard College Library's Theodore Roosevelt Collection. For context see: Theodore Roosevelt Collection: manuscripts--Theodore Roosevelt papers (008177696) aIn English. 0aDrawingzUnited Statesy19th century.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xChildhood and youth.10aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1858-1919xViews on natural history. 7aArticles.2aat 7aDrafts (Documents)2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aJuvenilia.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat1 aRoosevelt, Theodore,d1831-1878,ecorrespondent.0 aTheodore Roosevelt Collection manuscript inventories.0 cDeposit;aTheodore Roosevelt Estate;d1943;e43M-828 (2-22); 43M-829.5hou1 aDeposited by the Theodore Roosevelt Estate, 1943.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcTRCBhMS Am 1541 (1)-(35), (277)-(304)02632nacaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001300110245005700123300002800180351020000208520036000408520051900768555008701287524013501374546002701509650001601536650001401552650001501566650003501581650002701616650001701643655001901660655002001679655004801699655002101747655001901768655001701787655002001804655002201824655002001846655002001866541007001886561004101956506004201997506012302039852002402162013605716-020130205083544.0020710i17761953mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn826452223 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager00aPopular entertainment printed materials,f1776-1953. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Printed items concerning panoramas, exhibitions, cycloramas, wax-works, and dioramas; and II. Miscellaneous printed items concerning popular entertainment. aSeries I includes printed advertising materials including broadsides, catalogs, fliers, handbills, pamphlets, leaflets, playbills, for artistic exhibitions, dioramas, cycloramas, panoramas, and wax-work exhibitions. Also includes panoramas for Japanesen Spiel in Switzerland, and letters and clippings concerning panorama exhibitions and panorama artists.8 aSeries II are folders that were originally set-up in the Harvard Theatre Collection as "catch-all" folders for printed ephemeral items concerning popular entertainment. Includes a variety of formats such as: clippings (most with illustrations), prints, lithographs, etchings, engravings, handbills, playbills, and photomechanical prints. Topics are wide ranging including: apes, carnival, cats, elephants, fairs, fencing, horses, oxen, Paris Exhibition, robots, serpents, showboats, trees, zebras, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02395 aPopular Entertainment Printed Materials, 1776-1953 (MS Thr 941). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German. 0aCycloramas. 0aDioramas. 0aPanoramas. 0aPopular culturey19th century. 0aTheatery19th century. 0aWax figures. 7aCatalogs.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aEphemerazUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aEngravings.2aat 7aEtchings.2aat 7aFliers.2aat 7aHandbills.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat 7aPanoramas.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;evarious accession numbers.5the1 aVarious sources, various dates.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 94101799nrcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093100003100106245006500137300002800202351008500230545008400315520043500399555008700834524013100921546002701052600001901079650001801098655002701116655001701143655001801160655002301178710002701201710003201228541006301260561003701323506004201360852002301402852002401425013657121-220130712192150.0020710i19461949mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengadan1 aMcGoun, Ralph,ecollector.10aRalph McGoun toy theater collection,f1946-1949 and undated. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. Some larger items boxed at end of finding aid. aRalph McGoun (1905-1988) received an AB with the Class of 1927 Amherst College. aCollection includes printed colored toy theater scenery, characters, top borders, and play scripts. Companies are Pollock's Toy Theater and Green's. Also includes miscellaneous props, brackets, sets, a photograph, and 2 assembled Danish toy theaters for: open air Chinese Pantomime Theatre in Tivoli Amusement Park in Copenhagen; and Alfred Jacobsen's reproduction of the Theatre Royal in Copenhagen, with motto: Ei Blot Til Lyst.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02423 aRalph McCoun Toy Theater Collection, 1946-1949 (MS Thr 954). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and Danish.10aMcGoun, Ralph. 0aToy theaters. 7aJuvenile drama.2local 7aRealia.2aat 7aScripts.2aat 0aToy theaters.2aat2 aAlfred Jacobsen (Firm)2 aPollock's Toy Theatres Ltd.0 cGift;aMr. Ralph McGoun;d1986;eno accession number.5the1 aGift of Ralph McGoun, 1986.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 9548 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 95402026cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101050001400122100005100136245010500187300002900292351003900321545015000360520028300510555008700793555010900880524012400989546001601113600003901129610003701168651005501205656001901260700005001279700004001329700003701369700004201406700003101448541005301479561004301532506004201575852002301617000602462-920130402081919.0860219i18501895mau eng d0 aocn1224689411 aMAHV86A60 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS84-19221 aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897,erecipient.10aEdward Lillie Pierce letters from various correspondents,f1850-1895 (inclusive),g1852-1878 (bulk). a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aPierce, a lawyer, held many civil offices in Massachusetts, was active in Republican politics, and was the official biographer of Charles Sumner. aConsists of letters to Pierce on political and legal affairs, some in response to the speeches and writings that he mailed to friends and colleagues. Correspondents include Charles Francis Adams, Richard Henry Dana, James Miller McKim, John Greenleaf Whittier, and Henry Wilson.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou012718 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1955-1956, under *55M-303. aEdward Lillie Pierce Letters from Various Correspondents, 1850-1895 (MS Am 1495). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aPierce, Edward Lillie,d1829-1897.20aRepublican Party (U.S. : 1854- ) 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty1849-1877. 7aLawyers.2lcsh1 aM'Kim, J. Millerq(James Miller),d1810-1874.1 aAdams, Charles Francis,d1807-1886.1 aDana, Richard Henry,d1815-1882.1 aWhittier, John Greenleaf,d1807-1892.1 aWilson, Henry,d1812-1875.0 cGift;aEdward P. Hamilton;d1951;e55M-303.5HOU1 aGift of Edward P. Hamilton, 1951.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 149502196cpcaa2200433 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100005000136245005800186300002900244351003900273545009300312520034000405555008700745555010900832524009700941544014501038546001601183600005001199650002501249650002401274651002801298651005801326655002101384655004401405655003801449655003901487700001701526700003001543700003101573541004901604561004401653506004201697852002301739000601886-620121204101307.0860428i15981945mau eng d0 aocn1224050221 aMAHV86A184 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS83-9381 aHoar, George Frisbie,d1826-1904,ecollector.10aGeorge Frisbie Hoar autograph collection,f1598-1945. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.). bArranged alphabetically by author. aGeorge Frisbie Hoar (1826-1904) was a Republican Senator from Massachusetts (1877-1904). aA collection of letters, manuscripts, and documents chiefly of eighteenth and nineteenth century American and English literary and political figures. Approximately 175 persons are represented in the collection. Most of the papers were collected by Sen. George Frisbie Hoar. Includes some early documents, 1653-1769, of the Hoar family.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou006768 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1960-1961, under *60M-106. aGeorge Frisbie Hoar Autograph Collection (MS Am 1622). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCorrespondence of George Frisbie Hoar is at the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Mass. (Transferred from Houghton Library in 1961). aIn English.10aHoar, George Frisbie,d1826-1904,ecollector. 0aAmerican literature. 0aEnglish literature. 0aUnited StatesxHistory. 0aUnited StatesxPolitics and governmenty19th century. 7aAutographs.2aat 7aDrawingsxEnglishy19th century.2gmgpc 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aPoemszEnglandy19th century.2aat3 aHoar family.1 aHoar, Samuel,d1778-1856.1 aProut, Samuel,d1783-1852.0 cGift;aFrances Foster;d1961;e60M-106.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Frances Foster, 1961.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 162202162nkcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245009600110300002900206351011000235520029700345520011200642555008700754524017400841546004101015600004301056600004501099600004001144600003101184600002901215650004301244650004401287655003801331655003601369655003401405655003701439541007101476561005201547506004201599506012301641852002401764013009469-220111221085458.0020710i18001899mau|||| |n |||eng d0 aocn712906911 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aSheet music covers featuring theater and circus illustrations and portraits,f19th-century. a2 boxesa(1 linear ft.). bOrganized into the following series: I. Sheet music covers by actor; and II. Sheet music covers by title. aPrinted 19th-century song sheet music covers with theater and circus illustrations and portraits. Includes colored lithographs, three-tone lithographs, and black and white lithographs. Also includes a typescript list of these materials, item (1), with additional information about each cover.8 aIncludes images of Mary Anderson, Sarah Bernhardt, Dan Bryant, Jules Leotard, Willie Pape, and many others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02253 aSheet Music Covers Featuring Theater and Circus Illustrations and Portraits, 19th-century (MS Thr 753). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aCollection materials are in English.10aAnderson, Mary,d1859-1940vPortraits.10aBernhardt, Sarah,d1844-1923vPortraits.10aBryant, Dan,d1833-1875vPortraits.10aLeotard, JulesvPortraits.10aPape, WillievPortraits. 0aCircusy19th centuryvPictorial works. 0aTheatery19th centuryvPictorial works. 7aIllustrationsy19th century.2aat 7aLithographsy19th century.2aat 7aPortraitsy19th century.2aat 7aSheet musicy19th century.2aat.0 cPurchase;d1963 October;e63T-3;hF. E. Chase fund ($456.40).5the1 aPurchased with the F. E. Chase fund, 1963.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 75302708cpcaa2200457 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100001900122245004800141300003000189351010500219520062700324524008700951545037501038555008701413555010801500600003501608600002901643600001901672600004001691600002001731600001801751600002301769650002201792651007101814655002201885655001901907655001901926700002901945700004101974700004002015700002302055700001802078541004902096561004002145506004202185852002302227008633579-020090129085824.0010501i18611924mau eng d0 aocn1225601201 aMAHV01A14 aMH-HcMH-Heappm3 aCarter family.10aCarter and White family papers,f1861-1924. a2 boxesa(1.0 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Visual materials; and III. Other papers. aThese family papers contain correspondence of Carter and White family members, including letters from John Eaton White to his fiancee, Lucy Nichols, written while he was serving in the Civil War, as well as letters from Charles Morland Carter to the ornithologist, Ruthven Deane, describing a hunting trip in Nebraska. There is a sketch and photograph of John Eaton White, a tintype depicting William Brewster, Charles Morland Carter, and Daniel Chester French, and a pencil sketch of Charles Morland Carter done by Daniel Chester French. Finally, there are writings about the Nichols' family genealogy, among other items. aCarter and White Family Papers (MS Am 2104). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aThe Carter and White families of Cambridge, Massachusetts, are related by marriage. In 1864, Robert Carter (1819-1879), author and editor, married his second wife Susan Nichols. Susan Nichols' sister, Lucy Nichols, married John Eaton White, a captain in the 99th New York Infantry. Charles Morland Carter is the son of Robert Carter and his first wife, Ann Augusta Gray.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou001188 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1989-1990, under *89M-55.10aBrewster, William,d1851-1919.10aCarter, Charles Morland.30aCarter family.10aFrench, Daniel Chester,d1850-1931.30aNichols family.30aWhite family.10aWhite, John Eaton. 0aHuntingxHistory. 0aUnited StatesxHistoryyCivil War, 1861-1865vPersonal narratives. 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aSketches.2aat 7aTintypes.2aat1 aCarter, Charles Morland.1 aDeane, Ruthven,d1851-1934,eartist.1 aFrench, Daniel Chester,d1850-1931.1 aWhite, John Eaton.3 aWhite family.0 cGift;aGeorge N. White;d1990;e89M-55.5hou1 aGift of George N. White, 1990.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 210401714ntcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003000122245005000152300003000202545007900232520015100311530006200462555008700524524010300611546001600714600003000730650003400760655001600794655002900810700007000839700003200909740001600941541008400957541012401041561004901165561006801214506004201282852002801324008743250-120130917154724.0011003q19091909mau|||||||||||||| ||eng |0 aocn6127074371 aMAHV01A45 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJames, Henry,d1843-1916.10aHenry James papers for The outcry,fca. 1909. a2 boxesa(1.5 linear ft.) aJames was an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, and dramatist. aTypescript copies of James's play, some with his autograph manuscript revisions. Also includes a 1949 letter from Alan Wade to William A. Jackson. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00132 aHenry James Papers for The Outcry, ca. 1909 (MS Am 1237.12). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aJames, Henry,d1843-1916. 0aAmerican dramay20th century. 7aPlays.2aat 7aScripts (documents)2aat1 aJackson, William A.q(William Alexander),d1905-1964,erecipient.1 aWade, Alan,ecorrespondent.42aThe outcry.0 cPurchase;eno accession number;d1949 November 3;hFrank E. Chase Bequest.5hou0 cGift;aHenry James, Esq.;bFifth Ave., New York, NY;e44M-448; 44M-449; 44M-450; 44M-451; 44M-452; 44M-453;d1944.5hou1 aItems (1-6): Gift of Henry James, 1944.5hou1 aItem (7): Purchased with the Frank E. Chase Bequest, 1949.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1237.1203714ntcaa2200553 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087110002300110245006600133300002900199351007500228545048700303520023300790520042901023520029801452524013301750555008701883546001601970544012701986610002302113610003502136610003202171650002502203655004102228700003202269700002902301700003302330700003502363700003502398700003402433700003402467700001702501700003102518700003502549700001702584700002102601700003302622700003502655700003102690700003902721710008102760506012302841541006502964561006503029506004203094852002403136011544068-220090106122404.0080821i19171973mau |||||||ita|d0 aocn612830178 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs2 aTeatro alla Scala.10aTeatro alla Scala business letters and contracts,f1917-1973. a2 boxes (1.5 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by artist name. Unidentified items are at end. aThe Teatro alla Scala was founded under the auspices of the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria, to replace the Royal Ducal Theatre which was destroyed by fire on 26 February 1776 and had, until then, been the home of opera in Milan. La Scala, the more common name, opened on 3 August 1778 with Antonio Salieri's opera L'Europa riconosciuta, to a libretto by Mattia Verazi. La Scala today continues as one of the world's most famous opera houses. Source: http://www.teatroallascala.org aApproximately 380 documents and letters concerning the engagement of singers (primarily) as well as conductors and repetiteurs for the Teatro alla Scala [La Scala, Milan]. Also includes some materials concerning other personnel. aMaterials include: contracts that specify the terms of the engagement and are signed by the artists; extensions or modifications of contracts; 'regolamenti del teatro' or printed regulations of the theatre, also signed by the artists; letters sent to La Scala from the artists (only two artists' files include letters from La Scala); and some miscellaneous items including receipts for music borrowed from the Scala library. aIncludes the names: Franco Alfano, Gina Cigna, Toti Dal Monte, Manuel de Falla, Giuseppe De Luca, Victor De Sabata, Beniamino Gigli, Tito Gobbi, Vittorio Gui, Italo Montemezzi, Luigi Nono, Ettore Panizza, Tullio Serafin, Siegfried Wagner, Bruno Walter, Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari, among many others. aTeatro alla Scala Business Letters and Contracts (MS Thr 530). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01992 aIn Italian. aSee also the John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward Collection of the Harvard Theatre Collection itemized in the HOLLIS database.20aTeatro alla Scala.20aTeatro alla ScalaxManagement.20aTeatro alla ScalaxHistory. 0aOperazItalyzMilan. 7aContractszItalyy20th century.2aat1 aAlfano, Franco,d1875-1954.1 aCigna, Gina,d1900-2001.1 aDal Monte, Toti,d1898-1975.1 aDe Luca, Giuseppe,d1876-1950.1 aDe Sabata, Victor,d1892-1967.1 aFalla, Manuel de,d1876-1946.1 aGigli, Beniamino,d1890-1957.1 aGobbi, Tito.1 aGui, Vittorio,d1885-1975.1 aMontemezzi, Italo,d1875-1952.1 aNono, Luigi.1 aPanizza, Ettore.1 aSerafin, Tullio,d1878-1968.1 aWagner, Siegfried,d1869-1930.1 aWalter, Bruno,d1876-1962.1 aWolf-Ferrari, Ermanno,d1876-1948.2 aJohn Milton and Ruth Neils Ward Collection (Harvard Theatre Collection)5the aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou0 cDeposit;aJohn Milton Ward;d2008 August 5;e2008MTW-1.5the1 aFrom the collection of John Milton and Ruth Neils Ward.5the aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 53002761ntcaa2200409 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003200108245006000140300003000200351018000230545028400410520059300694520011901287555008701406524011101493546001601604600003201620600002301652600003201675610003501707650004501742655002201787655002901809655002201838655003801860655003701898700004901935700003501984541009902019561004302118506004202161506012302203852002502326012877039-220120425073937.0020710i19251926mau|||||||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn792758164 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aMcElwain, Alexander,d1897-10aAlexander McElwain papers on George Sandys,f1925-1956. a2 boxesa(1.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Correspondence of Alexander McElwain; II. Compositions and research notes; and III. Papers given to Harvard professor James Buell Munn. aAlexander McElwain (born 1897) received a Harvard AB with the Class of 1921 and attended the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. McElwain as a scholar and was especially interested in George Sandys (1578-1644), who was an English traveller, American colonist, and poet. aCorrespondence concerns McElwain's gathering research on George Sandys from various persons and libraries apparently for graduate work at Harvard's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Compositions include McElwain's autograph manuscript and typescript research notes and drafts of writings, as well as some of his school papers for English 74 and 186 at Harvard. Some materials seem to have been given to Harvard professor James Buell Munn. There are also manuscript transcripts and notes in other hands; a printed map dated 1867, and genealogies on the Sandys family among other items.8 aIncludes correspondence with Edward Seton Sandys, G. O. Sandys, Karl Schmutzler, Richard Beale Davis among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02306 aAlexander McElwain Papers on George Sandys, 1925-1956 (MS Eng 1685). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aMcElwain, Alexander,d1898-10aMunn, James Buell.10aSandys, George,d1578-1644.20aHarvard UniversityxCurricula. 0aPoets, EnglishyEarly modern, 1500-1700. 7aGenealogies.2aat 7aMapsy19th century.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aHarvard students' essays.2local1 aSandys, Edward Seton,d1872-ecorrespondent.1 aSandys, G. O.,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aAlexander McElwain;b1196 Central Avenue, Needham, Massachusetts;d1956;e56M-167.5hou1 aGift of Alexander McElwain, 1956.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Eng 168501524ctcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100002200091245007600113300005000189351001700239545023300256520020000489500005400689546001600743600002200759610005800781651002500839651003100864655001700895656002300912700002600935506002300961541011600984845008201100852004001182012880438-620130905164906.0110901i19251944mau |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aRobinson, Hugh L.10aHugh L. Robinson and Olga Olsen Robinson missionary papers,f1925-1944. a2 boxesa(1.65 linear ft.) +eDVD-R (4700 MB) aUnprocessed. aDr. and Mrs. Robinson were stationed in China from 1925-1941; from 1941-1944, Mrs. Robinson and their children were at the Missionary Home in Newton (Mass.) while Dr. Robinson was interned by the Japanese in Manila, Philippines. aIncludes correspondence during their employment by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (1925-1944); printed and ephemeral materials; and digital copies of the correspondence. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: DVD-R. aIn English.10aRobinson, Hugh L.20aAmerican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. 0aChinay20th century. 0aPhilippinesy20th century. 7aDVD-Rs.2aat 7aMissionaries.2aat1 aRobinson, Olga Olsen.0 aOpen for research.0 cGift (includes copyright);aJohn S. Robinson;b330 Chemung Road, Meredith, NH;d2011 August 31;e2011M-34.5hou aSpecial equipment or surrogate required; consult Houghton staff (DVD-R).5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 2754zDVD-R in box 202107ctcaa2200337 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001500086040002100101100004900122245007000171300002800241545009800269520057600367555008700943555016301030524012201193600004901315650004601364655002001410655002201430655002101452656002301473700004301496700004001539541007001579561005301649506004201702852002501744009233764-320121218105727.0031023i19081960mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d0 aocm807752811 aMAHV03A363 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aLivingstone, Richard Winn,cSir,d1880-1960.10aSir Richard Winn Livingstone letters to Lucien Price,f1908-1960. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) aLivingstone was a British educational philosopher. Lucien Price was an author and journalist. aLetters document their long-standing and warm friendship, and are primarily written from Corpus Christi College and while on lecture tours in the U.S. and Canada. Letters are peppered with references to Greek and Roman literature, as well as discussions of Classical literature and philosophy, especially Plato. Includes numerous clippings from newspapers and magazines, particularly articles written by Livingstone, and a few family photographs. Also includes letters from other members of the Livingstone family to Price that deliver family news and personal greetings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou011298 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records: 1956-1957, under 56M-203; 1960-1961, under 60M-85; and 1962-1963, under 62M-111. aSir Richard Winn Livingstone Letters to Lucien Price, 1908-1960 (MS Am 1760.1). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aLivingstone, Richard Winn,cSir,d1880-1960. 0aClassical literaturexStudy and teaching. 7aClippings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 7aQuotations.2aat 7aPhilsophers.2lcsh1 aPrice, Lucien,d1883-1964,erecipient.3 aLivingstone family,ecorrespondent.0 cGift;aLucien Price;d1957, 1961;e56M-203, 60M-85, 62M-111.5hou1 aGift of Lucien Price, 1957, 1961, and 1962.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1760.102255nrm a2200337 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070100003200091245004400123300002800167545022400195520032300419520010800742524009400850546001600944581021200960544005801172600003201230650002401262650002301286655003301309655001701342655004501359710002501404541013401429561007901563561017601642506004201818852005701860013086614-820121025085401.0020710s1784 mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aJeffries, John,d1745-1819.10aJohn Jeffries balloonist's suit,f1784. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) aJohn Jeffries (1745-1819) was a Boston physician, surgeon, scientist, and the first man (with Jean-Pierre-François Blanchard) to fly a balloon across the English Channel between England and France (on January 7, 1785). aGarments include: a fur cap, waistcoat, under-waistcoat, 2 separate sleeves, under-shirt, 2 stockings, 1 shoe buckle, and a handkerchief. Includes another sleeved under-waistcoat, probably constructed at a later date. Outer coat was lost; it is said to have been thrown out of the car as balloon descended too rapidly.8 aAlso with 34 color slides of this costume, taken for use in Kidwell article in "Costume" journal, 1977. aJohn Jeffries Balloonist's Suit, 1784 (MS Am 2789). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aKidwell, Claudia. Apparel for ballooning with speculations on more commonplace garb. From Costume. The Journal of the Costume Society, No. 11, 1977, p.73-87. (Copy in curatorial file under this call-number). aSee also MS Am 1220-1220.25 for John Jeffries Papers.10aJeffries, John,d1745-1819. 0aBalloon ascensions. 0aBalloonszEngland. 7aCostumesy18th century.2aat 7aRealia.2aat 7aSlides (photographs)y20th century.2aat2 aZ-Closet Collection.0 cDeposit, then gift;aDr. and Mrs. James H. Means;b60 Mt. Vernon St., Boston, Massachusetts;d1951; gift 1951-1953;e50Z-10.5hou1 aDeposited (with papers) by Dr. James H. Means, 1951; gift, 1951-1953.5hou1 aGarments passed to family and eventually to Marion Jeffries, John Jeffries' great-grand-daughter. Marion Jeffries was the first wife of Dr. James H. Means, the donor.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 2789zShelved in stacks, not Z closet03326ntcaa2200397 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001600070035001700086040002100103100005600124245006400180300002800244351003900272545114800311520045201459555008701911524012101998600003602119600005602155600004502211600003102256600003802287610003602325650003902361650004702400650004402447655002002491655002202511700006502533700004302598700005002641561004302691541017002734852002402904009759051-720050922102753.0020710i19211927mau |||||||eng|d0 aocm79458327 aMAHV05B10065 aMH-HeappmcMH-H1 aLowell, A. Lawrenceq(Abbott Lawrence),d1856-1943.00kPapersbconcerning the Sacco and Vanzetti case,f1921-1927. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aNicola Sacco (1891-1927) and Bartolomeo Vanzetti (1888-1927) were Italian immigrants who were tried and executed for robbery and murder of payroll guards Frederick Albert Parmenter and Alessandro Berardelli. The case of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Sacco and Vanzetti quickly became one of America's most complicated and notorious political trials. They were found guilty on July 14, 1921, but the legal struggle to save them extended until 1927. By April 9, 1927, all appeals in the Massachusetts courts had failed and the men were sentenced to death. Alvan T. Fuller, the governor of Massachusetts, appointed a three person advisory committee to look into the case. The committe was known as the "Lowell Commission," so-called because the most prominent member was A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard University. Other members of the commitee were Judge Robert A. Grant and Massachusetts Institute of Technology president Samuel Stratton. In its report of July 27, 1927, the committee decided that clemency was not warranted and the governor refused to commute the sentences. Sacco and Vanzetti were executed on August 23, 1927. aIncludes: complete typescript carbon of the 1921 trial and motion for new trial transcripts, prepared for A. Lawrence Lowell for his work on the Lowell advisory committee; two copies of the committee procedings of July 14-21, 1927; letters from Governor Alvan T. Fuller to Lowell conveying documents and outlining the committee work; 2 telegrams from Sacco and Vanzetti supporters sent to the committee; and other transcripts from the first trial.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01789 aA. Lawrence Lowell Papers Concerning the Sacco and Vanzetti Case (MS Am 2383). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aBerardelli, Alessandro,d-1920.10aLowell, A. Lawrenceq(Abbott Lawrence),d1856-1943.10aParmenter, Frederick Albert,d1874-1920.10aSacco, Nicola,d1891-1927.10aVanzetti, Bartolomeo,d1888-1927.20aHarvard UniversityxPresidents. 0aAnarchismzUnited StatesxHistory. 0aSacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass., 1921. 0aTrials (Murder)zMassachusettszDedham. 7aTelegrams.2aat 7aTranscripts.2aat1 aFuller, Alvan T.q(Alvan Tufts),d1878-1958,ecorrespondent.1 aSacco, Nicola,d1891-1927,edefendant.1 aVanzetti, Bartolomeo,d1888-1927,edefendant. aGift of A. Lawrence Lowell, 1931.5hou cGift;aPresident A. Lawrence Lowell;bCambridge;d1931 Nov. 5;erecat. from Soc 3009.16.40, Soc 3009.16.35, Soc 3009.16.55; item (4) removed from Soc 3009.16.4.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 238301908npcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002100070041001800091100002600109245006200135300002700197351001700224545009500241520025000336555009600586546003900682500005200721600002600773650002500799655002400824651001100848651002200859651001100881655002300892655001500915655002200930506002300952506011800975541018301093541011801276541011601394852002401510012848406-320120426133420.0110808i19721978mau||| |||||||||||||eng|d aMH-HcMH-Hedacs0 aengachiajpn1 aGarrard, John Gordon.10aChina after Mao :f1972-1978.kcolor slides and ephemera, a2 boxes (2 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aJohn Gordon Garrard is Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at the University of Arizona. aIncludes color slides, photographs, coins, maps, printed material, and other ephemera associated with China and Japan in 1978. Slides are accompanied by a catalog with thumbnail prints, a separate listing of the shots, and two CDs of the images.0 aElectronic PRELIMINARY box list availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02307 aIn English, Chinese, and Japanese. aIncludes audiovisual and/or digital media: CDs.10aGarrard, John Gordon. 0aAmerican literature. 7aCoins (money).2aat 0aChina. 0aHong Kong (China) 0aJapan. 7aColor slides.2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat0 aOpen for research.1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.0 cGift (includes copyright in these images given to Harvard);aJohn & Carol Garrard;b7050 E. Sunrise Drive, Unit 2104, Tucson, AZ 85750;d2011 August 8, October 5;e2011M-19.5hou0 cGift;aJohn & Carol Garrard;b7050 E. Sunrise Drive, Unit 2104, Tucson, AZ 85750;d2012 April 10;e2011M-19.5hou0 cGift;aJohn & Carol Garrard;b7050 E. Sunrise Drive, Unit 2104, Tucson, AZ 85750;d2012 May 17;e2011M-19.5hou8 bHOUcHDhMS Am 279901742nrcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070041001300093245005100106300002800157351003800185520029200223555008700515524011700602546002700719544002600746650001500772650001100787655001700798710009800815710003300913740003700946541024000983561015201223506004201375852002301417013064993-720120830102118.0020710i19572001mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs0 aengager00aMagic and joke realia,f1957-2001 and undated. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aIncludes magic tricks, joke tricks, and related ephemera. Includes hot gum and pepper candy, mystic smoke, rubber pencil, squirting nickels, Steven Zorn's The little book of magic tricks, and others. Many of the joke materials were made by the S. S. Adams Company of Neptune, New Jersey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02263 aMagic and Joke Realia, 1957-2001 (MS Thr 772). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English and German. aSee also bMS Thr 779. 0aNovelties. 0aMagic. 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)2 aS. S. Adams Company,emaker.42aThe little book of magic tricks.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 77201796nrcaa2200289 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245006200093300002800155351003800183520027300221555008700494524012800581546001600709544002600725650001500751650001100766655001700777710009800794710003300892541024000925561015201165506004201317506012301359852002401482013072862-420120830101626.0020710i19571997mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aMagic and joke additional realia,f1957-1997 and undated. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by title. aIncludes magic tricks, joke tricks, and related ephemera. Includes belch powder, card games, dribble glass, invisible ink, sneezing powder, whoopee cushion, and many other items. Many of these joke materials were made by the S. S. Adams Company of Neptune, New Jersey.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02265 aMagic and Joke Additional Realia, 1957-1997 (MS Thr 779). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aSee also bMS Thr 772. 0aNovelties. 0aMagic. 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)2 aS. S. Adams Company,emaker.0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 77901756nrcaa2200265 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029040002300070245005700093300002800150351005200178545021700230520022900447555008700676524009500763546001600858650002700874655001700901655001700918710009800935541024001033561015201273506004201425852002301467013059259-520120830101417.0020710i19002001mau||| | |||||||eng|d aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs10aButton badge collection,fca. 1900-2001 and undated. a2 boxesa(2 linear ft.) aArranged alphabetically by text on each button. aA button badge is a round flat badge displaying information and suitable for pinning onto a garment. A metal tab button badge is a single piece of metal with a fold down tab for adhering to a garment. Arrangement aA miscellaneous collection of button badges, and a few metal tab button badges, concerning primarily theatrical events, clubs, and topics, but also includes American popular culture, American political buttons, among others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02261 aButton Badge Collection, ca. 1900-2001 (MS Thr 770). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. 0aTheatery20th century. 7aBadges.2aat 7aRealia.2aat2 aFredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection)0 cGift;aThomas Garrett; Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).b32 Shepard Street, apt. 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-1519;d2010 October 9;e2010MT-11.5the1 aGift of Thomas Garrett, 2010. Forms part of the Fredric Woodbridge Wilson Collection of Theater, Dance and Music (Harvard Theatre Collection).5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 77002615ntcaa2200349 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100003200110245007300142300002900215351016600244545046100410545025700871520031501128555008701443524014001530546001601670600003201686600003201718650003201750650005101782655002201833655003801855655001501893740003601908541020501944561005102149506004202200852002302242012735081-020110407081518.0020710i18511867mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn713373674 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs1 aWinsor, Justin,d1831-1897.10aJustin Winsor papers for Garrick and his contemporaries,f1851-1867. a2 boxes (2.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Manuscript volumes for Garrick and his contemporaries; and II. Other materials concerning Garrick and his contemporaries. aJustin Winsor (1831-1897) was a librarian and historian. He received an AB from Harvard College in 1853, was the Superintendent of the Boston Public Library from1868–1877, Librarian of Harvard College from 1877 until his death, and the first president of the American Library Association, 1876-1885. Winsor published numerous historical books and articles and planned this massive, exhaustive biography of actor David Garrick, but it never was published. aDavid Garrick (1717-1779) was a British actor, writer, theater manager, entrepreneur, and international celebrity. David Garrick revolutionized acting and the English stage in the eighteenth century and also was a pupil and friend of Dr Samuel Johnson. aAutograph manuscript draft text, research notes, cuttings, and bibliography for Winsor's book on the life of David Garrick titled: Garrick and his contemporaries. Winsor had the habit of taking notes on tiny slips of paper and most of the notes are on very small, unsorted slips. Includes some hand-drawn maps.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02150 aJustin Winsor Papers for Garrick and His Contemporaries (MS Thr 669). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aWinsor, Justin,d1831-1897.10aGarrick, David,d1717-1779. 0aActorszEnglandvBiography. 0aTheaterzGreat BritainxHistoryy18th century. 7aBiographies.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aMaps.2aat02aGarrick and his contemporaries.0 cBequest;aJustin Winsor AB 1853;d1899 March 31;eNo accession number; recataloged from Thr 477.1.2; Thr 477.1.2.3; Thr 477.1.2.6; Thr 477.1.2.7; Thr 477.1.2.8; Thr 477.1.2.9; and Thr 477.1.8.10.5the1 aBequest of Justin Winsor (AB 1853), 1899.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 66901780ntcaa2200301 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087100005000110245004200160300002800202351001700230545042000247520014200667500004300809555009500852524012400947546001601071600003601087610002701123700001801150541006901168561004601237506012301283506004801406852002401454013183541-620120608190655.0020710i19091977mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn793951380 aMH-HTedacscMH-HT1 aLieberson, Goddard,dapproximately 1911-1977.10aGoddard Lieberson papers,f1909-1977. a2 boxesa(3 linear ft.) aUnprocessed. aGoddard Lieberson (1911-1977) was president of Columbia Records, and composer by training. In the 1940s, he introduced to the American public the long-playing records of classical repertoire and Broadway productions. His greatest legacy was original recordings of Broadway musicals and other productions, as well as studio cast recordings of major Broadway hits. He was married to ballerina and actress Vera Zorina. aIncludes correspondence, compositions, music scores, medical records, passports, photographs, awards, publicity material and other items. aAccess requires permission of curator.0 aElectronic PRELIMINARY box listavailableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02314 aGoddard Lieberson Papers, ca. 1909-1977 (MS Thr 851). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLieberson, Goddard,d1911-1977.20aColumbia Records, Inc.1 aZorina, Vera.0 cBequest;aEstate of Vera Zorina;d2009 June 1;e2008MT-103.5the1 aBequest of Vera Zorina Estate, 2009.5the1 aThis collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Check with Houghton Public Services staff.5the aAccess requires permission of curator.5the8 bTHEcHDhMS Thr 85102845npcaa2200433 4500001001200000005001700012006001900029008004100048035001700089040002100106100001800127245006000145300007400205351003700279545077900316520043601095555008701531524011001618546003001728600006901758600001801827610004501845655002501890655002101915655002401936655001801960655002201978655003802000655004802038700001802086700005102104710004502155740003002200852002802230541005102258561003602309506004202345852002402387011833794-720121023142203.0j|||||||||||||||||020710s1987 mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612854787 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aUpdike, John.10aJohn Updike papers for Howells as anti-novelist,f1987. a2 boxese2 audiocassettes; 1 reel-to-reel audiotapea(.5 linear feet) bArranged in chronological order. aJohn Updike (1932-2009) was a novelist, critic, short story writer, poet, essayist, and dramatist. He graduated from Harvard College with an AB in 1954. On May 1,1987, Updike gave the keynote address, Howells as anti-novelist, at Harvard University for the sesquicentennial celebration of William Dean Howells' birth. Author's notes state: "talk [was] given at the invitation of the William Dean Howells Memorial Committee ... in Emerson Lecture Hall ... as part of the two-day celebration of the 150th anniversary of Howells' birth. It was then published, somewhat amplified and altered, in The New Yorker of July 13, 1987 ..." The text was then printed in a limited edition of 150 copies by the Committee later in 1987 [see *AC95.Up174.987h for completed printed version]. aPapers assembled for John Updike's text, Howells as anti-novelist. Includes typescripts, typescript photocopies with revisions in multiple hands (including printer's markings by Greer Allen), galley proofs, page proofs, and layouts for this address and the later publication by the Committee. Also includes two audiocassettes of Updike's address and a letter from Updike to Roger E. (Roger Eliot) Stoddard of the Howells Committee.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02018 aJohn Updike Papers for Howells as Anti-novelist, 1987 (MS Am 2650). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English.10aHowells, William Dean,d1837-1920xCriticism and interpretation.10aUpdike, John.20aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial Committee. 7aAudiocassettes.2aat 7aAudiotapes.2aat 7aGalley proofs.2aat 7aLayouts.2aat 7aPage proofs.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aSpeecheszUnited Statesy20th century.2aat1 aAllen, Greer.1 aStoddard, Roger E.q(Roger Eliot),erecipient.2 aWilliam Dean Howells Memorial Committee.0 aHowells as anti-novelist.8 bHOUcBhMS Am 2650 (1a)0 cGift;aJohn Updike;d1987 July;e87M-108.5hou1 aGift of John Updike, 1987.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcPFhMS Am 265003220cpcaa2200469 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102041001300123100003900136245007500175300005200250351003900302545039500341520078800736524009401524530006201618544008801680546005601768555008701824555009701911600003902008650005802047650003902105651004402144651006702188651005102255651004102306651004202347655001902389655002002408655002002428655001902448656002002467656002302487541006902510561010702579506004202686852002202728000602288-X20130910115703.0860819i18331858mau eng d0 aocn6123728601 aMAHV86A474 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs aengaspa1 aQuitman, John Anthony,d1798-1858.10aJohn Anthony Quitman papers,f1833-1858 (inclusive)g1847-1858 (bulk). a2 boxes and 1 oversize volumea(1.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by author. aQuitman (1799-1858), a lawyer, soldier, statesman, and Southern planter, championed states' rights for his adopted state of Mississippi. He was a brigadier general in the Mexican War and appointed governor, then major-general of Mexico City. He served briefly as governor of Mississippi, was involved in the movement to annex Cuba, and spent his last years, 1855-1858, in the U.S. Congress. aCollection is concerned chiefly with the movement in the 1850s among prominent political and military leaders in the South to invade and capture Cuba and northern Mexico in order to extend slave territory. It consists primarily of over 250 letters to Major-General Quitman who was to lead the annexation movement. Most of the letters are dated 1854-1858, some are from 1847 when Quitman was in Mexico City. Also includes 10 letters by Quitman, 2 printed copies of his speeches in Congress, accounts of money raised for the annexation effort, pamphlets, newspapers covering the 1850 trials in New Orleans in which Quitman was indicted for alleged neutrality violations because of his support for the Lopez expeditions to Cuba, and letters to Quitman requesting autographs or speeches. aJohn Anthony Quitman Papers, 1833-1858 (MS Am 796). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aThere is related Quitman material in the Mississippi State Archives, Jackson, Miss. aPrimarily in English; two pamphlets are in Spanish.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003858 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection.10aQuitman, John Anthony,d1798-1858. 0aSlaveryzUnited StatesxExtension to the territories. 0aStates' rights (American politics) 0aCubaxHistoryyInsurrection, 1849-1851. 0aMexico City (Mexico)xHistoryyAmerican occupation, 1847-1848. 0aMississippixPolitics and governmentyTo 1865. 0aSouthern StatesxHistoryy1775-1865. 0aUnited StatesxTerritorial expansion. 7aAccounts.2aat 7aClippings.2aat 7aPamphlets.2aat 7aSpeeches.2aat 7aGenerals.2lcsh 7aPoliticians.2lcsh0 cGift and purchase;aMcNealus, Virginia Quitman;d1931-1932.5hou1 aPurchased from and given by Virginia Quitman McNealus, granddaughter of J. A. Quitman, 1931-1932.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 79604596ntcaa2200529 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003600108245006400144300004900208351036100257530006200618545048500680520046501165520045401630520006302084524010402147555008702251546001602338544012202354581017702476600005102653600003302704600003302737600002402770650003402794651002202828655003002850655004602880655002502926655001902951655002102970655002202991700003303013700003903046700006403085700003303149700002403182700003303206541019703239541033703436561005103773561021803824852002404042011934157-320110419121552.0090413i18251988mau |||||||||||||eng|d0 aocn612865026 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aStevens-Cox, James,ecollector.10aJames Stevens-Cox collection of William Barnes,f1825-1988. a2 boxes and 1 portfolio boxa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. James Stevens-Cox papers on William Barnes; II. William Turner Levy papers on William Barnes; III. Printed materials concerning William Barnes; and IV. William Barnes papers: A. William Barnes correspondence, B. William Barnes compositions, C. Images of William Barnes, D. Other materials relating to William Barnes. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid. aWilliam Barnes (1801-1886) of Dorset was a self-educated schoolmaster, clergyman, philologist, artist, and poet. He married Julia Miles in 1827. Barnes did write poetry in "standard" English, but is known especially for his dialect poems. James Stevens-Cox (1910-1997) was an author and antiquarian who collected materials on William Barnes. William Turner Levy (1922-2008) was an educator and author. He wrote: William Barnes : the man and the poems. Longmans (Dorchester), 1960. aPapers of William Barnes that were part of the sale of the James Stevens-Cox collection. Collection includes original Barnes materials: autograph manuscript music; autograph manuscript letters to family, friends, and colleagues; proofs of wood engravings; original drawings; and images of Barnes and related locales created by others. Image materials include: photographs, cartes-de-visite, cabinet photographs, daguerreotypes, drawings, and printed materials.8 aIncludes correspondence and other papers about William Barnes collected by antiquarian and dealer, James Stevens-Cox, and correspondence assembled by author William Turner Levy as he wrote William Barnes: the man and the poems. Levy's papers include replies to his inquiries about Barnes, a letter from T. S. Eliot, and an essay by Mark Van Doren intended as a prefatory note for the book. Also with clippings and photographs related to Levy's book.8 aAlso includes letters from Charles William Dale to Barnes. aJames Stevens-Cox Collection of William Barnes (MS Eng 1647). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02064 aIn English. aOther printed portions of this purchase were accessioned as *2008-1500-1775, and were cataloged separately in HOLLIS. aFor detailed listing of the James Stevens-Cox collection see: Maggs Bros. William Barnes, 1801-86: the James Stevens-Cox collection, 2008. *EC85.B2638.Q2008m and MS Ref-90.10aBarnes, William,d1801-1886vMusical settings.10aBarnes, William,d1801-1886.10aLevy, William Turner,d1922-10aStevens-Cox, James. 0aPoets, Englishy19th century. 0aDorset (England). 7aCabinet photographs.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aDaguerreotypes.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aEngravings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat1 aBarnes, William,d1801-1886.1 aDale, Charles William,d1851-1906.1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965,ecorrespondent.1 aLevy, William Turner,d1922-1 aStevens-Cox, James.1 aVan Doren, Mark,d1894-1972.0 cPurchase;aMaggs Bros. Ltd.;b50 Berkeley Sq, London W1J 5BA, England;d2008 October 16;e2008M-32;nremoved from *EC85.B2638.A878d.36 letters from Charles William Dale to William Barnes5hou0 cPurchase (with 2008-1500-1775, 2008M-89 (see 11589551));aMaggs Bros. Ltd;b50 Berkeley Sq, London W1J 5BA England;d2008 October 16;e2008M-90;h($58000.00 the lot); Amy Lowell Trust; Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization in the Harvard College Library; Livingston fund; Edward and Bertha C. Rose Acquisition Fund.5hou1 aFrom the collection of James Stevens-Cox.5hou1 aPurchased with funds from the Amy Lowell Trust, Louis J. Appell Jr. Fund for British Civilization in the Harvard College Library, the Livingston fund, and the Edward and Bertha C. Rose Acquisition Fund, 2008.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Eng 164702484cpcaa2200361 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003900121245004500160300002100205520071300226524011900939545035101058555011701409600003901526650003901565650002801604650002001632650004701652651003601699650004701735655001801782655003001800655001901830561004501849561004501894561006301939541008202002852003802084000601789-420041116115027.0851205q18291891mau eng d0 aocn1225057921 aMAHV85A8 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.00aBusiness and family papers,f1829?-1891. a2 boxes and 1 v. aCollection contains a journal, 1851-1852, of European travels which includes drafts of verse fragments; a diary, 1854, marked private and purely personal; three "diaries", 1862-1866, of meetings of his whist club in Cambridge; an address book he kept while serving as a foreign minister in Spain; engagement books from his service in London; galley proofs, 1889, of How I Consulted the Oracle of the Goldfishes, with his manuscript corrections; a statement of account, 1850, with Ticknor & Company including copyright payments; receipts for books, magazines, and other subscriptions; real estate records including tax and water rate receipts; receipts for personal and family items; and financial statements. aJames Russell Lowell Business and Family Papers (MS Am 1239, 1239.2-1239.3). Houghton library, Harvard University. aLowell was an author, poet, educator and diplomat. He was professor of French and Spanish languages and literatures at Harvard (1855-1886) succeeding Longfellow; editor of the Atlantic Monthly (1857-1861), and with Charles Eliot Norton, the North American Review (1864- ); and was U.S. ambassador to Spain (1877-1880), and to England (1880-1885).0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions nos.: *43M-775, 783 to 785, 862 to 865; *42-5161PF.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aFamily records. 0aHome economicszMassachusettsxAccounting. 0aEuropexDescription and travel. 0aDiplomatic and consular service, American. 7aDiaries.2aat 7aJournals (notebooks)2aat 7aReceipts.2aat aGift of Lois Burnett Rantoul, 1944.5hou aGift of James Burnett Lowell, 1944.5hou aGalley proofs were deposited by Talbot Aldrich, 1943.5hou 3Papers.aRantoul, Lois Burnett, 1944; James Burnett Lowell, 1944.cGift.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1239, 1239.2-1239.302558cpcaa2200385 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102050001300123100003800136245007500174300004100249351012000290545016600410520034600576555008700922555010901009524011101118650002701229600004201256600003801298600005001336655005401386655004501440656002501485700003901510700003101549541005501580561009101635506004201726852003101768845037301799000602279-020130910134205.0860815i18301941mau eng d0 aocn1224688541 aMAHV86A466 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs10aMS81-4921 aDavis, Edward Morris,d1811-1887.10aEdward Morris Davis papers,f1830-1941 (inclusive),g1837-1850 (bulk). a2 boxes and 1 volumea(1 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1054: Letters and compositions; and II. MS Am 1054.5: Daguerreotypes. aDavis, a Philadelphia Quaker, son-in-law of Lucretia Mott, and a director of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was active in the American anti-slavery movement. aConsists primarily of letters to Davis from prominent abolitionists concerning the anti-slavery movement. Also contains some business and family correspondence, letters introducing Davis to European abolitionists, a poem by James Russell Lowell, a small amount of printed material, and daguerreotypes, 1845, of Lowell and Maria White Lowell.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007618 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1971-1972, under *71M-116. aEdward Morris Davis Papers, 1830-1941 (MS Am 1054 and MS Am 1054.5). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAntislavery movements.10aLowell, Maria,d1821-1853vPortraits.10aDavis, Edward Morris,d1811-1887.10aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891vPortraits. 7aDaguerreotypeszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh1 aLowell, James Russell,d1819-1891.1 aLowell, Maria,d1821-1853.0 cGift;aMrs. F. S. Churchill;d1941;e71M-116.5HOU1 aGift of Lucretia Mott (Mrs. F. S.) Churchill, granddaughter of E. M. Davis, 1941.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1054, 1054.5 aImages linked to this finding aid are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou03027cpcaa2200493 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100005000123245006900173300004400242351019700286545003500483520071700518555008701235555014601322524012601468546001601594600005001610610003601660650003901696650002301735650002601758650003501784651005801819651003601877651005901913651006001972655002502032655001902057655001902076655002002095656001602115700005802131700004402189700002102233740003002254541009702284561005302381506006902434852003002503000601821-120130808075316.0860320i19171963mau eng d0 aocn122574996 aMAHV86a125 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.10aE. E. Cummings letters to Elizabeth Cummings Qualey,f1917-1963. a2 boxes and 1 volumea(1.01 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. MS Am 1765: Letters to Elizabeth Cummings Qualey; II. MS Am 1765.1: When I was a little girl; and III. MS Am 1765.2: Letter to Rebecca Haswell Cummings. aCummings was an American poet. aCollection contains letters from E. E. Cummings to his sister, Elizabeth. Letters are mostly stream of consciousness, oftentimes resembling poetry or quotes from others. Letters are often accompanied by pen or pencil sketches and drawings to illustrate a point in the letter. Correspondence also contains advice from E. E. Cummings to Elizabeth, descriptions of Paris, New Hampshire and New York, personal finance issues, art at the Whitney museum, and a trip to the Rockies and Mount Wilson. Letters also discuss E. E. Cummings' Christmas and holiday plans, employment opportunities, World War II and Hitler, and difficulties he faced with his mother. Also included are postcards and cartoons by E. E. Cummings.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou007248 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1965-1966, under *65M-32 and *65M-34; 1969-1970, under *70M-15. aE. E. Cummings Letters to Elizabeth Cummings Qualey, 1917-1963 (MS Am 1765-1765.2). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aCummings, E. E.q(Edward Estlin),d1894-1962.20aWhitney Museum of American Art. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aFinance, Personal. 0aWorld War, 1939-1945. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aParis (France)xDescription and travely20th century. 0aMount Wilson Wilderness (Ariz.) 0aRocky MountainsxDescription and travely20th century. 0aNew York (N.Y.)xSocial life and customsy20th century. 7aIllustrated letters. 7aCartoons.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPostcards.2aat 7aPoets.2aat1 aCummings, Rebecca Haswell Clarke,d1859--erecipient.1 aQualey, Elizabeth Cummings,erecipient.3 aCummings family.02aWhen I was a little girl.0 cGift;aMrs. Carlton C. Qualey;b100 Nevada St., Northfield, MN;d12 July 1965;e65M-34.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. Carlton C. Qualey, 1965, 1970.5hou0 aCollection is open for research use. [Formerly restricted].5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1765-1765.202106cpcaa2200349 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001300087040002100100100003100121245003700152300004400189351031700233545003600550520031300586524008500899555008700984555011701071546001601188600003101204650003901235650003601274655003801310740002701348541014501375561004101520506004201561852003201603561007001635561005101705001384795-320100412075221.0870401i19161975mau eng d0 aocn6123022421 aMAHV87A0 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938.10aThomas Wolfe papers,f1916-1975. a2 boxes anda12 volumesa(7 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: MS Am 1883.5: Of time and the river; bMS Am 1883.6: Material concerning the dramatization of Of time and the river; bMS Am 1883.7: Materials relating to the Thomas Wolfe 75th anniversary celebration; and bMS Am 1883.8: The judgement in heaven and letters to Margaret Roberts. aWolfe was an American novelist. aIncludes autograph manuscript of A judgement in heaven, letters from Wolfe to Margaret Roberts, a photocopy autograph manuscript of Of time and the river, material concerning the dramatization of Of time and the river, and materials relating to the Thomas Wolfe 75th anniversary celebration in Asheville, NC. aThomas Wolfe Papers (MS Am 1883.5-1883.8). Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou003148 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records under *73M-93, *75M-81, and *77M-1. aIn English.10aWolfe, Thomas,d1900-1938. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican fictiony20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat0 aOf time and the river.0 cGift, purchase;aWisdom, William B., 1947; other sources, 1938-1979d1947; 1938-1979;e73M-93, 75M-18, 77M-1;hAmy Lowell fund ($3000).5hou1 aGift of O. M. Brack, Jr., 1973.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1883.5-1883.81 aGift of the University of North Carolina at Asheville, 1975.5hou1 aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1977.5hou02269cpcaa2200421 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002100104100003600125245005300161300004600214545005200260520016600312520014700478555008700625555010900712524010500821546001600926600003600942650003900978650002801017650003101045651004601076655002401122655004701146655002801193655004501221655005301266852006001319561006601379541011601445561010101561506004201662852002801704561011501732000601752-520120123082346.0851213i18491887mau eng d0 aocn6123652150 aocmMAHV99A35 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888.10aLouisa May Alcott additional papers,f1849-1887. a2 boxes anda14 volumesa(1.5 linear ft.) aLouisa May Alcott was a female American author. aCollection includes diaries, account books, financial records relating to publishing, and autograph compositions of the Concord (Mass.) writer Louisa May Alcott. aCompositions by LMA include: poems; short stories; a novel: Jo's boys; chapters from "unpublished romances"; and fragments of verse and prose.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou000578 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, 1959-1960, under *59M-309. aLouisa May Alcott Addtional Papers, 1849-1887 (MS Am 1130.13). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aAlcott, Louisa May,d1832-1888. 0aAmerican literaturey19th century. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aPublishers and publishing. 0aConcord (Mass.)xSocial life and customs. 7aAccount books.2aat 7aDiarieszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aFinancial records.2aat 7aPoemszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat 7aShort storieszUnited Statesy19th century.2aat8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1130.13zItems (20)-(26) are shelved as b1 aLMA novel: Jo's boys; item no. (25), is a deposit, 1994.5hou0 cDeposit, later purchased;aMrs. F. Wolsey Pratt;d1960 deposit; 1992 purchase;e59M-309;hAmy Lowell fund.5hou1 aPresented by Mrs. F. Wolsey Pratt; deposit, 1960; purchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1992.5hou aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Am 1130.131 aLMA novel: A modern Mephistopheles, or The fatal love chase; item no. (18), returned to the family, 1991.5hou02009cpcaa2200409 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101100003200122245004400154300004300198351003600241545004800277520030800325555008700633555013900720524009000859546001600949600001100965600003200976600003901008600005001047600004901097650003901146650003501185655003801220655002301258700004701281700003901328740001301367541009201380561005501472506004201527852003001569009462013-X20100305082648.0860224i19151957mau eng d0 aocn612837010 aMAHV86A82 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aWitter Bynner compositions,f1915-1957. a2 boxes anda2 volumesa(1 linear ft.) aOrganized in call number order. aBynner was an American poet and translator. aManuscripts of works by Bynner including: Journey with Genius: Recollections and Reflections concerning the D. H. Lawrences, and The Way of Life according to Laotzu. Also includes a translation of Euripides' Iphigenia in Tauris and an incomplete text of the Spectra poems done with Arthur Davison Ficke.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou002788 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in Houghton Accessions Records, 1956-1957 and 1959-1960, under *56M-74 to 76, 158; *59M-107. aWitter Bynner Compositions (MS Am 1445-1445.4). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.00aLaozi.10aBynner, Witter,d1881-1968.10aFicke, Arthur Davison,d1883-1945.10aLawrence, D. H.q(David Herbert),d1885-1930.10aLawrence, Frieda von Richthofen,d1879-1956. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat 7aTranslations.2aat0 aEuripides.tIphigenia in Tauris.lEnglish.1 aFicke, Arthur Davison,d1883-1945.2 aSpectra.0 cGifts;aMr. Witter Bynner;d1956-1957 and 1959;e56M-74, 56M-76, 56M-158; 59M-107.5hou1 aGifts of Witter Bynner, 1956, 1957, and 1959.5hou0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1445-1445.402897ntcaa2200529 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087040002300104041001300127245005600140300004900196351009600245520088100341530006201222555008701284524013401371546005101505600001801556600003801574600003701612600003201649600004501681600003901726650002501765650002501790650001501815650001301830650001601843650003501859650003501894650002001929655002101949655002201970655002001992655002002012655001802032655002702050656003502077700004102112541006202153561003402215506004202249852002402291852005202315013348001-120130917165313.0020710i18001936mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn8105499380 aocn810088141 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengager00aPlaybills and posters concerning magic,f1800-1936. a2 boxes and 43 ppf foldersa(1.5 linear ft.) bArranged alphabetically by name of primary performer, or title. Oversized materials at end. aCollection topics concern entertainment related primarily to magicians performing in the United States and England (plus a few outside of these areas), but also include ventriloquists, "fire kings", dwarfs, necromancers, illusionists, mesmerists, mediums, phrenologists, jugglers, and others. Materials are mainly playbills and posters, but also include some advertisements, programs, periodicals, postcards, clippings, lithographic portraits, a letterhead, and an etching. Playbills include "true" playbills (long sheets, printed on only one side) and also printed advertisements, and programs (printed on both sides). Prominent names associated with this collection are: Alexander Herrmann, Lieut. Walter Cole, John Nevil Maskelyne and George Alfred Cooke, Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin, and many others, including a poster from the Zirkus Busch signed by Harry Houdini in 1916. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02357 aPlaybills and Posters Concerning Magic, 1800-1936 (MS Thr 897). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMaterials are in English. A few are in German.10aCole, Walter.10aCooke, George Alfred,d1825-1905.10aHerrmann, Alexander,d1843-1896.10aHoudini, Harry,d1874-1926.10aRobert-Houdin, Jean-Eugène,d1805-1871.10aMaskelyne, John Nevil,d1839-1917. 0aMagicy19th century. 0aMagicy20th century. 0aMagicians. 0aMediums. 0aPhrenology. 0aPopular culturey19th century. 0aPopular culturey20th century. 0aVentriloquists. 7aBroadsides.2aat 7aLithographs.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aat 7aPortraits.2aat 7aPosters.2aat 7aTheater programs.2aat 7aMagicians (illusionists).2aat1 aHoudini, Harry,d1874-1926,esigner.0 cSource unknown;ddate unknown;eno accession number.5the1 aSource and date unknown.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 8978 bTHEcPPFhMS Thr 897zShelved at P1.C2.02.17-1802635nkcaa2200361 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087245007600110300004300186351010600229545056300335520043700898555008701335524014201422546001601564544020601580650002001786655002501806655004601831655002101877655003501898655001801933655004101951700006201992541006402054561004102118506004202159852002302201852002502224852002402249013737357-020130819073907.0020710i18521953mau||| | |||||||eng|d0 aocn854503102 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs00aUncle Tom's Cabin playbills and other material,f1852-1953 and undated. a2 boxes and 8 foldersa(.5 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Playbills, by date; II. Playbills, undated; and III. Posters. aUncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly is an anti-slavery novel by American author Harriet Beecher Stowe. The text was initially released in serial format in the National Era, a weekly newspaper, from June 5, 1851-April 1, 1852, and then published in 1852 as a two volume book. It became the best-selling novel of the 19th-century, translated into dozens of languages. Stage plays based on the novel called "Tom shows" began to appear while the novel was still being serialized, however Stowe refused to actually authorize any dramatization of her work. aCollection includes original printed playbills, programs, posters, and advertisements for dramatic productions of Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly. Also includes: carte-de-viste (card photograph); obituaries; and booking letters. Playbills are for theaters in Boston, London and other cities in England, New York, Philadelphia, Providence, San Francisco, among others, as well as for theaters in many unidentified cities.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou02447 aUncle Tom's Cabin Playbills and Other Material, 1852-1953 (MS Thr 970). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English. aThe Harvard Theatre Collection has additional playbills relating to Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly in other series within the repository. See public services staff for further information. 0aMinstrel shows. 7aAdvertisements.2aat 7aCartes-de-visite (card photographs).2aat 7aObituaries.2aat 7aPlaybills.2aaty19th century. 7aPosters.2aat 7aTheater programsy19th century.2aat1 aStowe, Harriet Beecher,d1811-1896.tUncle Tom’s cabin.0 cVarious sources;dvarious dates;eno accession number.5the1 aVarious sources, various dates.5the0 aCollection is open for research.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 9708 bTHEcPPFhMS Thr 9708 bTHEcPFhMS Thr 97005877ctcaa2200721 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002500087100004400112245006100156246002300217300004100240351003500281545038800316520063100704520075401335520014002089530006202229555009002291524014102381544006902522544013202591581010202723600003202825600003702857600003202894600003202926600005802958600004403016600004003060610005103100610002403151610003703175610004003212650001903252650003103271650004503302650002403347655003903371655004403410655004403454655005103498655002603549656002203575700005603597700004303653700003403696700006603730700006903796541006603865541009903931541007804030541011304108541009204221541007704313541007404390541006304464561008304527506004204610845039904652852010405051000603178-120120305110752.0860826i17711809mau|||||||||||||| ||eng|d0 aocn612379237 aMH-ThredacscMH-Thr1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aRichard Brinsley Sheridan additional papers,f1771-1809.3 aPhillipps MS 10857 a2 boxes and 8 volumes (2 linear ft.) bArranged in call-number order. aRichard Brinsley Sheridan (1751-1816) was a playwright, theatre proprietor, and politician. He was born in Dublin, Ireland and later moved to London. He became the manager and part-owner of the Drury Lane Theatre in 1776. He wrote several plays, including the comedies The Rivals (1775) and The School for Scandal (1780). He also served as a Minister of Parliament from 1780 to 1812. aIncludes manuscript copies of: August von Kotzebue's Pizarro. The Spaniards in Peru; or, The death of Rolla. A tragedy in five acts... English translation (1799) with annotations by Sheridan (Phillipps MS 10857); School for scandal prompt books from Drury Lane Theatre (1777-1779); School for scandal manuscript copy (17--) from Theatre, Smoke Alley, Dublin; School for scandal manuscript copy from Drury Lane Theatre (ca. 1809); School for scandal manuscript copy (before 1785); Sheridan's 1771 autograph manuscript of poem, Clio's protest; Beggar's Opera alterations by Sheridan and Wiliam Hopkins; and many other materials. aTwo bound volumes include voluminous numbers of documents, prints, and letters by, sent to, and between third parties concerning Sheridan. Volume I mostly concerns his theatrical career, while Volume II is primarily letters written to Sheridan in his capacity as a member of the House of Commons, requesting some favor or service. Includes: portrait engravings; financial records (contracts, bills, receipts); legal documents; theater related compositons, watercolor drawings, and printed broadsides; petitions to the government; House of Commons speeches; some Sheridan family materials (Charles Francis Sheridan (1750-1806), Thomas Sheridan (1775-1817), and others); items concerning the King's Theatre and the Drury Lane Theatre; and many others. aSome persons associated are: George Coleman, John Philip Kemble, Thomas Linley, Richard Peake, Thomas Shaw, Richard Wilson, and others. aSelected color digital images available; see finding aid.0 aElectronic finding aid is availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01964 aRichard Brinsley Sheridan Additional Papers, 1771-1809 (MS Thr 5-5.8). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.1 afMS Thr 5.9 is cataloged as a single item, see HOLLIS 009252419.1 aSee HOLLIS and OASIS for additional Sheridan material owned by the Houghton Library, but cataloged under separate call-numbers. aThe Letters of Richard Brinsley Sheridan, edited by Cecil Price (Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1966).10aColman, George,d1732-1794.10aKemble, John Philip,d1757-1823.10aLinley, Thomas,d1732-1795.10aPeake, Richard,d1792-1847.10aShaw, Thomas,dapproximately 1760-approximately 1830.10aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.10aWilson, Richard,dactive 1774-1792.10aGreat Britain.bParliament.bHouse of Commons.20aDrury Lane Theatre.20aKing's Theatre (London, England)20aRoyal Opera House (London, England) 0aEnglish drama. 0aPlaywritingy18th century. 0aTheaterzEnglandxHistoryy18th century. 0aTheater management. 7aEngravingszEnglandy19th century. 7aBroadsideszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aBroadsideszEnglandy19th century.2aat 7aFinancial recordszEnglandy18th century.2aat 7aLegal petitions.2aat 7aPlaywrights.2aat1 aPhillipps, Thomas,cSir,d1792-1872,eformer owner.1 aSheridan, Charles Francis,d1750-1806.1 aSheridan, Thomas,d1775-1817.1 aKotzebue, August von,d1761-1819.tSpanier in Peru.lEnglish.1 aSheridan, Richard Brinsley,d1751-1816.tThe school for scandal.0 cBequest;aGabriel Wells, Esq;d1947 April 15;e46M-261F.5the0 cGift;aMr. Arthur Rogers;d1948 March 19;e47M-204;hChester Noyes Greenough fund (£15).5the0 cBequest;aEvert Jansen Wendell;d1918;eRecataloged from TS 4601.45.5the0 cPurchase with bequest;aAnna Elizabeth Fort;d1939 February 28;eRecataloged from MS Eng 258.20 (£50).5the0 cGift;aMr. H.P. Vincent and anonymous;d1932 April 15;eRecataloged from Ph M 15F.5the0 cPurchase;d1944 May 26;eno accession number;hFrank E. Chase fund.5the0 cGift;aMr. Robert Gould Shaw;d?eRecataloged from TS 939.5.3.2.5the0 cGift;aMr. E. H. Gay, Esq.;d1927 June 15;e50M-124F.5the1 aGift and purchase from various sources. See finding aid for full details.5the aCollection is open for research.5the aImages linked to the finding aid describing this collection are intended for public access and educational use. This material is owned and/or held by the Houghton Library, and is provided solely for the purpose of teaching or individual research. Any other use, including commercial reuse, mounting on other systems, or other forms of redistribution requires the permission of the curator.5hou8 bTHEcGENhMS Thr 5-5.8z1 volume is bMS; 2 volumes are PF; MS Thr 5.1 is shelved on Curator's cart.01732ctcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001500070040002100085100004800106245005000154300003800204351003900242545005500281520016300336555008700499524010200586600005900688600004800747650003900795650003500834650003700869650005100906655002500957655001900982655002301001655005901024655005001083700003501133700002701168700003501195561005701230852007101287009128158-X20121212144019.0970721i19101973mau|||||||||||||| ||eng d1 aMAHV97-A21 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965.00aT. S. Eliot miscellaneous papers,f1910-1979. a2 boxes, 1 pf box (1 linear foot) aArranged alphabetically by author. aEliot was an American poet, dramatist, and critic. aIncludes correspondence, compositions, drawings, and photographs of T. S. Eliot, Henry Ware Eliot, Theresa Garrett Eliot, Theodora Eliot Smith, and others.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01362 aT. S. Eliot Miscellaneous Papers, 1910-1979 (MS Am 1691.3). Houghton Library, Harvard University.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965xPortraits.10aEliot, T. S.q(Thomas Stearns),d1888-1965. 0aAmerican literaturey20th century. 0aAmerican poetryy20th century. 0aAuthors, Americany20th century. 0aTheaterzUnited StatesxHistoryy20th century. 7aCorrespondence.2aat 7aDrawings.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat. 7aPortrait drawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc 7aDrawingszUnited Statesy20th century.2gmgpc1 aEliot, Henry Ware,d1879-1947.1 aSmith, Theodora Eliot.1 aEliot, Theresa Garrett,d1884- aReceived from various sources at various times.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1691.3zSee also material shelved as pfMS Am 1691.3.03431ntcaa2200445 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002100101041001800122100003900140245005600179300004600235351026500281545047200546520066601018546007601684555008701760524009501847630002701942610003001969600003301999600002902032600003902061610005902100650002902159650001802188655004102206655005402247655006202301655001902363655003802382656001902420730002702439561017102466541025302637506007202890852002302962010106987-120070130142420.0060918i18511922mau|||| |||| ||||m eng|d0 aocn6128557121 aMAHV06B59 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aengalatager1 aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.10aCharles Eliot Norton additional papers,f1851-1922. a2 boxes, 1 pf box, and 6v. (2 linear ft.) aOrganized into the following series: I. Compositions and notes by Charles Eliot Norton; II. Biographical miscellany concerning Charles Eliot Norton; III. Charles Eliot Norton-related materials; and IV. Materials not located from Treasure Room (September 2006). aBorn in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Norton was an American scholar and teacher (Harvard AB 1846). He was a professor of the history of art at Harvard University from 1874-1898, co-edited the North American Review (1864-68), and was one of the founders of the journal the Nation (1865). Norton also wrote on art and edited collections of poetry, notably that of John Donne (1895-1905). He is best known for his prose translation of Dante's The Divine Comedy (1891-1892). aIncludes: Norton's autograph manuscript drafts for essays, articles, lectures, and speeches, many later published in the North American Review; a record book listing miscellany concerning the publishing of the North American Review, 1863-1868; autograph notes for Norton's various research interests, especially Cluny, Dante, John Donne, and many others; transcript summaries of lecture notes from Fine Arts 3, 1897-1898; and diplomas and awards given to honor Norton. Also includes some Norton-related materials that were given to him and later were donated to the Harvard College Library; and some items not located during the recataloging of this collection. aMaterials predominantly in English, but also includes Latin and German.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou01935 aCharles Eliot Norton Additional Papers (MS Am 2507). Houghton Library, Harvard University.00aNorth American review.20aCluny (Benedictine abbey)00aDante Alighieri,d1265-1321.10aDonne, John,d1572-1631.10aNorton, Charles Eliot,d1827-1908.20aHarvard University.bDepartment of Fine ArtsxFaculty. 0aArtxStudy and teaching. 0aArtxHistory. 7aEssayszUnited Statesy19th century. 7aLectureszMassachusettszCambridgey19th century. 7aManuscripts for publicationzUnited Statesy19th century. 7aDiplomas.2aat 7aHarvard graduates' papers.2local 7aEditors.2lcsh0 aNorth American Review. aRecataloged from a portion of the Norton Collection, formerly part of the Treasure Room of Widener Library. See finding aid for specific acquisition information.5hou cGift;avarious donors;dvarious dates;eNor 1005, Nor 1013, Nor 4501, Nor 5257.25, Nor 5257.34, Nor 5257.35, Nor 5257.36, Nor 5257.37, Nor 5257.50, Nor 5258.63, Nor 5258.64, Nor 5260.12, Nor 5261.16, Nor 5261.20, Nor 5300.1, Norton Diploma PF.5hou aThere are no restrictions on physical access to this material.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 250701525ntcaa2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003400108245004800142300006000190351011300250545015400363520023300517520003800750524010100788600004400889650007000933650003101003651003701034541011401071561004801185852002601233009875943-420130910120112.0060223i18991921mau|||| |||| 001|m eng d0 aocn612801390 aMH-HedacscMH-H1 aDavison, Ellen Scott,d-1921.10aEllen Scott Davison papers,fca. 1899-1921. a2 boxes, 1 portfolio, 3 card catalogsc(1.5 linear ft.) aCollection is unprocessed; see curatorial file for original cataloging entries from Old Widener finding aid. aDavison received a Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1907. Her thesis, Some forerunners of St. Francis of Assisi, was posthumously published in 1927. aNotes, papers and bibliographical references in manuscript and typescript concerning medieval life and history, in particular St. Francis and his forerunners. Also contains notes on 19th- and 20th-century international politics.8 aIncludes three essays by Davison. aEllen Scott Davison Papers, ca. 1899-1921 (MS Am 787-789). Houghton Library, Harvard University.00aFrancis,cof Assisi, Saint,d1182-1226. 0aMonasticism and religious ordersxHistoryyMiddle Ages, 600-1500. 0aChristian sects, Medieval. 0aFrancexSocial life and customs.0 cGift;aMrs. William R. Belknap;b2115 Douglas Boulevard, Louisville Ky.;d1928 June 12;eno acc. number.5hou1 aGift of Mrs. William R. Belknap, 1928.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 787-78902319cpcaa2200373 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100003700123245006700160300004000227351031800267545004900585520039800634555008701032555017001119524012401289546001601413600003401429600002101463600002001484600003701504655002401541656002401565656002001589700003401609700005601643541012501699561004901824506004201873852003001915000601941-220130204135229.0860512i17831957mau eng d0 aocn1225058151 aMAHV86A232 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aPeabody, Marian Lawrence,d1875-10aMarian Lawrence Peabody letters and family papers,f1783-1957. a2 boxes,a1 volumea(1 linear ft.). aOrganized into the following series: I. bMS Am 1976: Letters; II. bMS Am 1976.1: Additional letters; III. bMS Am 1976.2: Additional letters; IV. bMS Am 1976.3: Additional letters; V. bMS Am 1976.4: Letters, account book of Abbot Lawrence, and other papers; VI. MS Am 1976.5: Additional letters; VII. MS am 1976.6. aPeabody was an American painter and diarist. aAn autograph collection of letters written by English aristocrats, American politicians, authors, artists, educators, diplomats, and other prominent people to various Peabodys and Lawrences, especially Marian Lawrence Peabody and Bishop William Lawrence. Also contains a personal account book, 1841-1855, of merchant and manufacturer, Abbott Lawrence and a guest list for a party in his honor.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou013898 aUnpublished printed finding aid available in the Houghton Accessions Records, under *51M-213, *52M-229, *54M-194, *55M-224, *56M-110, *58M-133-138, and *61M-246-248. aMarian Lawrence Peabody Letters and Family Papers, 1783-1957 (MS Am 1976-1976.6). Houghton Library, Harvard University. aIn English.10aLawrence, Abbott,d1792-1855.30aLawrence family.30aPeabody family.10aPeabody, Marian Lawrence,d1875- 7aAccount books.2aat 7aManufacturers.2aat 7aMerchants.2aat1 aLawrence, Abbott,d1792-1855.1 aLawrence, William,cBishop,d1850-1941,erecipient.0 cGift;aMrs. Harold Peabody;d1955-1962;e51M-213, 52M-229, 54M-194, 55M-224, 56M-110, 58M-133-138, and 61M-246-248.5HOU1 aGift of Mrs. Harold Peabody, 1955-1962.5HOU0 aCollection is open for research.5hou8 bHOUcBhMS Am 1976-1976.602043ntcaa2200373 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002300087041001800110100003800128245008800166300006200254351007900316546003800395545006500433520036300498524015500861555008701016600003801103600002001141600001901161650001501180650002101195650001801216655001601234655002301250700003601273700003501309852002301344541015401367561008001521506006801601010194773-920100816135032.0061219i19621982mau |||||||eng|d0 aocn612886301 aMH-HTcMH-HTedacs aengafreajpn1 aAlexeieff, Alexandre,d1901-1982.10aAlexander Alexeieff and Claire Parker correspondence with Cecile Starr,f1962-1982. a2 boxes,a2 audiocasettes,a4 videotapes,a(1 linear ft.) bOrganized into two series: I. Correspondence, and II. Additional material. aIn English, French, and Japanese. aAlexandre Alexeieff and Claire Parker were French animators. aContains correspondence of Alexandre Alexeieff and his wife and collaborator Claire Parker with their American representative and friend Cecile Starr about promoting Alexeieff's films in America, film and publication rights, payments for Alexeieff's book illustrations, technical aspects of animation, and private matters. Also includes promotional material. aAlexandre Alexeieff and Claire Parker Correspondence with Cecile Starr (MS Thr 499). Harvard Theatre Collection, Houghton Library, Harvard University.0 aElectronic finding aid availableuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou0186410aAlexeieff, Alexandre,d1901-1982.10aParker, Claire.10aStarr, Cecile. 0aAnimators. 0aWomen animators. 0aIllustrators. 0aAudiotapes. 7aVideotapes.2local10aParker, Claire,ecorrespondent.1 aStarr, Cecile,ecorrespondent.8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 499 cPurchase;aCecile Starr;b35 Strong Street, Burlington, VT 05401;d2006;e2006MT-140;h$10000.00 (Bayard Livingston and Kate Gray Kilgour Fund).5the aPurchased with the Bayard Livingston and Kate Gray Kilgour Fund, 2006.5the aThere are no restrictions on physical access to the collection.01486cbc a2200325z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102100001800123245003600141300001300177351001700190545014200207520041000349524008600759650002700845600001800872650002400890630003100914650001400945650002700959651002200986656002501008656001901033541004801052583003701100852002301137000602266-920130910132152.0860808i18261880mau eng d0 aocn6123726501 aMAHV86A454 aMH-HcMH-Hedacs1 aMiles, Henry.10aHenry Miles papers,f1826-1880. a2 boxes. aUnprocessed. aMiles was a Vermont Quaker active in the peace and anti-slavery movements. He was president of the Freedmen's Aid Society of Monkton, Vt. aContains correspondence and manuscripts concerning the Society of Friends, abolitionism, and peace. Includes correspondence, constitutions and petitions pertaining to various freedmen's aid societies, peace societies, and the free labor movement which called for the boycott of products produced by slave labor; articles for various abolitionist newspapers; and Miles's essays on religion and Bible study. aHenry Miles Papers, 1826-1880 (MS Am 1074). Houghton Library, Harvard University. 0aAntislavery movements.10aMiles, Henry. 0aSociety of Friends.00aBiblexStudy and teaching. 0aFreedmen. 0aPeacexSocieties, etc. 0aVermontxHistory. 7aAbolitionists.2lcsh 7aQuakers.2lcsh 3Papers.aTuttle, 1936-1948.cExchange.5hou 3Papers.aSurvey/eec08/05/86kdw8 bHOUcBhMS Am 107402318cpc a2200445z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001700087035001400104040002300118041001400141100003400155245007300189300001300262520020600275524005800481545015800539546005000697555004600747600003200793600002100825650004200846650001100888655002200899655002000921656002100941007001500962007001500977506007400992583005801066843017601124852001301300856013101313856013201444856016901576541006901745583003601814852002201850000603164-120120507091113.0860821i19001928mau eng d0 aocn7934923400 aocn6123789561 aMHAT86A10 aMH-HTcMH-HTeappm aenggerrus1 aWaitt, Joseph E.,ecollector.00aHarry Houdini collection,f1900-1928 (inclusive),g1900-1914 (bulk). a2 boxes. aContains 63 letters by Houdini to Waitt, many written while the former was on tour; 25 letters to Houdini and Waitt from others; and a box of handbills, broadsides, posters, photographs, and clippings. aHarry Houdini Collection. Harvard Theatre Collection. aAmerican magician, Houdini toured extensively in Europe and Russia. Dr. Waitt, of Boston, made some of the apparatus used by Houdini early in his career. aSome of the posters are in Russian or German.0 aPreliminary list available in repository.10aHoudini, Harry,d1874-1926.10aWaitt, Joseph E. 0aMagic tricksxEquipment and supplies. 0aMagic. 7aHandbills.2ftamc 7aPosters.2ftamc 7aMagicians.2lcshcr|cn |||||a|pcr|cn |||||a|a0 aNo restrictions on access copy.fUnrestricted online access2star5MH1 aHarvard University Librarylcommitted to preserve5MH aElectronic reproduction.bCambridge, Mass. :cHarvard College Library Digital Imaging Group,d2010,2012.nCopy digitized: Houghton Library: MS Thr 337m2010,2012 maun s bNETcRDM403November 17, 1907 photograph on leftuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4505762?buttons=yzColor digital image available403November 17, 1907 photograph on rightuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:4505763?buttons=yzColor digital image available403Harry and Bessie Houdini photograph with holiday inscription to Dr. Waitteuhttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.HOUGH:8929442?buttons=yzColor digital image available e59M-1303PapersaDe Bourcier, Mr. & Mrs. Robert, 1960.cPurchase 3PapersaSurvey/eec07/10/86kft8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 3301488nbc a22002177a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070245009300087300001300180520062700193555007400820580004600894561007900940600002601019655002001045700002601065541009601091506006001187852002301247002292829-420020606093309.7910809i19621991xx ||||| |||||||||||eng|d0 aocn61245390110aPapers of John Lithgow: newspaper clippings and programs series,f1962-1991 (inclusive). a2 boxes. aContains programs and newspaper clippings of reviews for productions in which John Lithgow appeared. Also contains photocopies and originals of newspaper and magazine articles written by John Lithgow. Productions associated with this series of material include: Terms of Endearment, Kaufman at Large, Bedroom Farce, Beyond Therapy, Requiem for a Heavyweight, M. Butterfly, Anna Christie, Beaux Stratagem, Boy Meets Girl, The Changing Room, Comedians, My Fat Friend, Of Mice and Men, A Pagan Place, Secret Service, and Spokesong. Series also includes material from Harvard College productions which Lithgow participated in.0 aDetailed data base inventory available at repository (File: LITHGOW). aForms part of the Papers of John Lithgow. aGifts of John Lithgow: 2 October 1985, 22 September 1988, and 20 May 1991.10aLithgow, John,d1945- 7aClippings.2aat1 aLithgow, John,d1945-0 cThis is one portion only (13 items); Gift;aJohn Lithgow;d2000 September;e2003MT-17.5the1 aRestricted. Access requires permission of curator.5the8 bTHEcBhMS Thr 39601204ctm a2200265 a 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003300108245004200141300000900183520027100192524006000463545007300523600003200596600004600628650002800674650003800702655003800740740001600778541006800794561004700862852002900909000602375-420090712081124.0860910q19171924xx ||| | eng d0 aocn612373496 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aDouglas, Norman,d1868-1952.00aLetters to Martin Secker,f1917-1924. a2 v. aConsists of letters from Douglas to Martin Secker concerning the publication of his novel South Wind in 1917 and its publication in a limited edition in 1922. Also included is "A Fragment," by Douglas, first published in 1924 in The First Edition and Book Collector. aMS Eng 973-973.1. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aDouglas was a British author. Martin Secker was a British publisher.10aSecker, Martin,d1882-1978.10aDouglas, Norman,d1868-1952.tSouth wind. 0aAuthors and publishers. 0aEnglish literaturey20th century. 7aManuscripts for publication.2aat22aA fragment. aBell, Harold Wilmerding, 1947.cGift.e47M-178F, 47M-179F.5hou aGift of Harold Wilmerding Bell, 1947.5hou8 bHOUcFhMS Eng 973-973.101164ctm a2200241 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070040002100087100003900108245005400147300000900201520012900210524006200339545014200401500003200543600003900575650003800614700005700652561005100709541012900760852003300889000602430-020040527121957.0860922i18211852xx |||| | eng d0 aocn612374986 aMH-HcMH-Heappm1 aMitford, Mary Russell,d1787-1855.00kLettersbto Sir Thomas Noon Talfourd,f1821-1852. a2 v. aOver 250 letters from Mitford to Talfourd containing discussions of her literary and dramatic productions and other matters. aMS Eng 1339-1339.1. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aMitford was an English author and dramatist. Talfourd was an English judge and author whose influence assisted Mitford's literary career. aBound in dark blue morocco.10aMitford, Mary Russell,d1787-1855. 0aEnglish literaturey19th century.1 aTalfourd, Thomas Noon,cSir,d1795-1854,erecipient. aPurchased with the Amy Lowell fund, 1953.5hou cPurchase;aMaggs Brothers Ltd.;b50, Berkeley Square, London, England;d1953 Jan. 8;e52M-97F;hAmy Lowell Fund, £425.5hou8 bHOUcGENhMS Eng 1339-1339.101315cbc a2200313z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001400087040002500101100003400126245005900160300000900219520024200228524006000470545004100530555005000571561002100621600004200642600003400684600003800718600003500756650002000791650002200811656003000833541007800863583003500941852002500976000603169-220020606090541.3860825i18951938mau eng d0 aocn6123790521 aMHAT86A15 aMH-ThrcMH-Threappm1 aMcCarthy, Lillah,d1875-1960.00aScrapbooks of Lillah McCarthy,f1895-1938 (inclusive). a2 v. aScrapbooks contain clippings and printed ephemera concerning McCarthy's career in the theatre, 20 costume drawings by Charles Ricketts and 4 by Norman Wilkinson for parts McCarthy performed, and fragments of 2 play transcripts she wrote. aLillah McCarthy Scrapbooks. Harvard Theatre Collection. aEnglish actress and theatre manager.0 aManuscript catalogue available in repository. aPurchased, 1963.20aGranville-Barker, Harley,d1877-1946.10aMcCarthy, Lillah,d1875-1960.10aRicketts, Charles S.,d1866-1931.10aWilkinson, Norman,d1882-1934. 0aCostume design. 0aTheaterzEngland. 7aActresseszEngland.2lcsh e63M-63PaperaB. Rota, London, 1963 (Sheldon and Lowell funds).cPurchase 3PaperaSurvey/eec03/13/85kft8 bTHEcGENhfMS Thr 8601678cbc a2200301z 4500001001200000005001700012008004100029035001700070035001500087040002100102110003600123245004300159300000900202520023600211524011700447545032300564555008500887561005500972610003601027610003601063650005501099655002601154506004201180561002401222541006201246583003801308852003001346000602012-720020606090541.3860609i16381783mau eng d0 aocn6123689391 aMAHV86A299 aMH-HcMH-Heappm2 aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.)00kAccount books,f1638-1783 (inclusive). a2 v. aConsists of two account books, 1638-1716 and 1680-1783, containing records of offerings received, minister's disbursements, expenses of sacraments and special services, contributions to the poor, and accounts of individual members. aFirst Church, Cambridge, and Shepard Congregational Society Account Books. Houghton Library, Harvard University. aA church was formed in Cambridge in 1633, but in 1636 the minister and most of the members removed to Hartford, Conn. A new church was gathered that year. In 1829 the congregation split over the unitarian controversy. The Unitarians retained the name First Parish and the Congregationalists kept the name First Church.0 aUnpublished finding aids available in repository. Accessions no.: *61M-94 (6-7). aDeposited by the Shepard Historical Society, 1961.20aFirst Church (Cambridge, Mass.)20aFirst Parish (Cambridge, Mass.) 0aCongregational churcheszMassachusettszCambridge. 7aAccount books.2ftamc0 aCollection is open for research.5hou0 aDeposit, 1961.5hou0 3Papers.aShepard Historical Society, 1961.cDeposit.5hou 3Papers.aSurvey/pbec06/06/86kdw8 bHOUcFhMS Am 1672-1672.1