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29 Items
 Author:  Carmichael, Leonard, 1898-1973
 Psychologist, association executive, Instructor, psychology, Princeton University, 1924-1926, assistant professor, 1926-1927; associate professor, Brown University, 1927-1928, professor, 1928-1936; dean, faculty of arts and science, University of Rochester, 1936-1938; president, Tufts University, 1938-1952; Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 1953-1964; chairman, museum committee, National Geographical Society, 1964-1973. 


 Title:  Correspondence between Ashley Montagu and Leonard Carmichael     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  16 August 1960 - 3 December 1960 
 Extent:  5 letters 
 Abstract:  5 letters (2 to Montagu, 3 to Carmichael). Publications; prenatal influences on behavior 
 Source:  Leonard Carmichael Papers (B C212) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Carmichael, Leonard, 1898-1973
 Psychologist, association executive, Instructor, psychology, Princeton University, 1924-1926, assistant professor, 1926-1927; associate professor, Brown University, 1927-1928, professor, 1928-1936; dean, faculty of arts and science, University of Rochester, 1936-1938; president, Tufts University, 1938-1952; Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 1953-1964; chairman, museum committee, National Geographical Society, 1964-1973. 


 Title:  Correspondence between Clyde Kluckhohn and Leonard Carmichael     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  17 October 1955 - 9 April 1956 
 Extent:  3 letters 
 Abstract:  3 letters (1 to Carmichael, 2 to Kluckhohn) + 1 letter to Mrs. Kluckhohn from Carmichael. Publications; personal. 
 Source:  Leonard Carmichael Papers (B C212) 
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 Subjects:  Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
 Author:  Carmichael, Leonard, 1898-1973
 Psychologist, association executive, Instructor, psychology, Princeton University, 1924-1926, assistant professor, 1926-1927; associate professor, Brown University, 1927-1928, professor, 1928-1936; dean, faculty of arts and science, University of Rochester, 1936-1938; president, Tufts University, 1938-1952; Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 1953-1964; chairman, museum committee, National Geographical Society, 1964-1973. 


 Title:  Leonard Carmichael Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1917-1973 
 Extent:  183 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Carmichael was chairman of the Division of Anthropology and Psychology of the National Research Council, from 1941 to 1943. His papers include Division records, from 1941 to 1943 and 1955 to 1962. The earlier documents are interesting for their illustration of the wartime use of anthropology and psychology by the federal government. The records extant in Carmichael's files include various committee and sub-committee reports on routine Division business; they chronicle the marshalling of anthropology and psychology for the war effort. The later records (1955-62) include a history of the Division, membership lists, research proposals, the annual reports of the Division itself, and various sub-committee reports. Also included are reports on symposia supported by the Division, including the "USAF-NRC Symposium On Human Engineering, Personnel, And Training Research" in 1955. Carmichael's papers include records of the U.S. Committee for National Morale, dated 1941 and afterwards, and contain a report on "Cultural Anthropology and Morale," among other documents. He was a member of the applied psychology panel of the Office of Scientific Research and Development, 1942-1945. 
 Source:  Leonard Carmichael Papers (B C212) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  The Ancient Mounds of Pennsylvania. A Report to the American Philosophical Society Summarizing Archeological Data on Pennsylvania Tumuli Contained in Manuscripts Deposited in the Library     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Reports 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1950 
 Extent:  359 leaves 
 Abstract:  Sections by T. Dale Stewart and James B. Griffin. See United States, Work Projects Administration Reports on archaeological excavations in Pennsylvania (913.748 Un3) for site reports mentioned in this volume. 
 Source:  The Ancient Mounds of Pennsylvania (913.748 C223) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Correspondence between Edmund Carpenter and Alfred Hallowell     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1952-1957 
 Extent:  Approximately 18 letters 
 Abstract:  Academics; maps; discussion on writings; "Explorations" journal; funding for "Explorations"; asking for material for "Explorations"; list of names and addresses (academic offices) of those who should receive 2nd "Explorations." Also includes: "Aivilik Eskimo Time-Space Concepts" by Carpenter (first two chapters w/ TOC and preface), 1950 
 Source:  Alfred Irving Hallowell Papers (Ms. Coll. 26) 
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 Subjects:  Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Correspondence between Edmund Carpenter and Anthony F. C. Wallace     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1952-1958 
 Extent:  Approximately 28 letters 
 Abstract:  Explorations journal; publications; reprints; discussion on articles for "Explorations"; comments on articles; fieldwork; Iroquois; Eskimo; personal 
 Source:  Wallace Family Papers, Subcollection I, Anthony F. C. Wallace Papers (Ms. Coll. 64) 
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 Subjects:  Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Correspondence between Edmund Carpenter and Ashley Montagu     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1955-1993 
 Extent:  19 letters and enclosure 
 Abstract:  Social and culture anthropology; fieldwork; ethnography of Carpenter of Eskimos; Carpenter's writings on Art of the Aivilik; employment of Carpenter editing archives of Carl Schuster; publishing; "Explorations" publication; education; peers; Carpenter's retelling of articles; racism; film production; personal 
 Source:  Ashley Montagu Papers (Ms. Coll. 109) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Correspondence between Edmund Carpenter and J. Alden Mason     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  10 February 1949 - 8 December 1951 
 Extent:  9 letters 
 Abstract:  9 letters (1 to Mason, 8 to Carpenter). Pennsylvania archaeology; Pennsylvania Archaeologist; publications 
 Source:  John Alden Mason Papers (B M384) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Correspondence between Edmund Carpenter and William Fenton     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1941-1991 
 Extent:  1 folder 
 Abstract:  Iroquoian figurines; reviews and discussion on various publications and manuscripts; Indian burials and customs (Seneca, Iroquois); archaeology fieldwork; exhibit suggestions; Wampum belts; purchasing, acquiring, auctioning cultural materials; "Christie's Tribal Art", 5 December 1979; "World without End" by Carpenter, asking for comments; peers; repatriations; Seneca, Mohawk, Onondaga language; "Sotheby's Fine American Indian Art" Auction 1983 (photocopies); "False face" masks; personal. See also: Seneca-Iroquois National Museum; Museum of the American Indian; Blankenship, Roy 
 Source:  William N. Fenton Papers (Ms. Coll. 20) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Archaeology, prehistory | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Linguistics and philology | Museums -- Development, operation, and collections | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Financial support for research and publication | Personal matters 
 Author:  Carpenter, Edmund Snow, 1922-
 Archaeologist, ethnologist 


 Title:  Rappahanock Talking Dances     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1942 
 Extent:  1 item 
 Abstract:  Report on graduate student field trip; description and use of traps and hunting devices 
 Source:  Frank Gouldsmith Speck Papers (Ms. Coll. 126) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Folklore, mythology, religion | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
 Author:  Caspari, Ernst Wolfgang, 1909-1988
 Geneticist. Assistant professor of zoology and research associate, University of Rochester, 1944-1946; associate professor, biology, Wesleyan University, 1945-1946, professor, 1949-1960; professor, biology, University of Rochester, 1965-1975, professor emeritus, 1975-1988. 


 Title:  Ernst Wolfgang Caspari Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1938-1980 
 Extent:  9.5 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Caspari's interest in genetics and behavior extended into anthropology, psychology, and sociology. His work has been applied by social scientists to problems in their particular fields. Caspari's papers contain correspondence with the American Psychological and Sociological Associations. Included under the heading of the latter is a copy of his 1963 conference address to the ASA on "Genetic Constitution and Social Factors in Man." There is correspondence (1968-72) with Bernard Campbell on the topic of a published volume dealing with sexual selection in human evolution, to commemorate the centenary of Charles Darwin's Descent of Man, and also with the Wenner-Gren Foundation. Other relevant subject materials include records dealing with Caspari's membership on the Committee on Genetics and Behavior of the National Research Council; a study on "The Biological Basis of Female Hierarchies" of 1975; and various public addresses and papers dealing with heredity and environment in the determination of human behavior, human origins, and the interactions between biological and cultural evolution. 
 Source:  Ernst Wolfgang Caspari Papers (Ms. Coll. 1) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Cherokee Nation
  


 Title:  Cherokee Record Book     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Records 
 Language:  Cherokee 
 Dates:  1902-1903 
 Extent:  100 leaves 
 Abstract:  The record book of a mutual aid group, in the Sequoyan syllabary 
 Source:  Cherokee Record Book (497.3 C41) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork 
 Author:  Clark, William, 1770-1838
 Explorer, soldier. Co-leader of Lewis and Clark expedition to explore the head-waters of the Missouri River and to discover a land route to the Pacific Ocean, 1804-1806; governor of Missouri Territory, 1813-1820; superintendent of Indian affairs, 1822-1838 


 Title:  Lewis and Clark Journals     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1803-1806 
 Extent:  30 volumes (18 bound codices and 12 loose-leaved codices) 
 Abstract:  Journal of Travels to the Source of the Missouri and Across the American Continent to the Pacific Ocean. Includes interlineations by Nicholas Biddle. Journals contain notes on Indian languages, material culture, social organization, customs. See also Journal by John Ordway (917.3 Or2), another member of the expedition. 
 Source:  Lewis and Clark Journals (917.3 L58) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Linguistics and philology 
 Author:  Combe, George, 1788-1858
 Phrenologist, publicist. Combe was a prominent writer, lecturer, and popularizer of the phrenological movement in 19th-century Great Britain and the United States. Phrenology was the intellectual antecedent of later nineteenth- and twentieth-century craniology and anthropometry. Public debates over phrenology's materialist foundations foreshadowed succeeding arguments over the basis and validity of subsequent racial formalisms. 


 Title:  George Combe Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Microfilm 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  Circa 1822-1836 
 Extent:  3 reels 
 Abstract:  Film copy of papers in National Library of Scotland. 
 Source:  George Combe Papers (Film 1351) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
 Author:  Combe, George, 1788-1858
 Phrenologist, publicist. Combe was a prominent writer, lecturer, and popularizer of the phrenological movement in 19th-century Great Britain and the United States. Phrenology was the intellectual antecedent of later nineteenth- and twentieth-century craniology and anthropometry. Public debates over phrenology's materialist foundations foreshadowed succeeding arguments over the basis and validity of subsequent racial formalisms. 


 Title:  Letter to Isaac Hays     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  12 February 1839 
 Extent:  1 letter 
 Abstract:  Phrenology 
 Source:  Isaac Hays Papers (B H334) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
 Author:  Combe, George, 1788-1858
 Phrenologist, publicist. Combe was a prominent writer, lecturer, and popularizer of the phrenological movement in 19th-century Great Britain and the United States. Phrenology was the intellectual antecedent of later nineteenth- and twentieth-century craniology and anthropometry. Public debates over phrenology's materialist foundations foreshadowed succeeding arguments over the basis and validity of subsequent racial formalisms. 


 Title:  Letters concerning phrenology     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  30 October 1823 - 11 May 1840 
 Extent:  7 letters 
 Abstract:  Miscellaneous letters concerning phrenology to the editor of the Edinburgh Literary Gazette, J. C. Holland, John Vaughan, and the reviewer of the Phrenological Transactions in the Edinburgh Literary Gazette. 
 Source:  Miscellaneous Manuscripts (Misc. Mss.) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Personal matters 
 Author:  Combe, George, 1788-1858
 Phrenologist, publicist. Combe was a prominent writer, lecturer, and popularizer of the phrenological movement in 19th-century Great Britain and the United States. Phrenology was the intellectual antecedent of later nineteenth- and twentieth-century craniology and anthropometry. Public debates over phrenology's materialist foundations foreshadowed succeeding arguments over the basis and validity of subsequent racial formalisms. 


 Title:  Letters to Samuel Morton     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  4 April 1838 - 4 November 1840 
 Extent:  20 letters 
 Abstract:  20 letters to Morton. Phrenology; craniology 
 Source:  Samuel George Morton Papers (B M843) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
 Author:  Combe, George, 1788-1858
 Phrenologist, publicist. Combe was a prominent writer, lecturer, and popularizer of the phrenological movement in 19th-century Great Britain and the United States. Phrenology was the intellectual antecedent of later nineteenth- and twentieth-century craniology and anthropometry. Public debates over phrenology's materialist foundations foreshadowed succeeding arguments over the basis and validity of subsequent racial formalisms. 


 Title:  Letters to William Hutton     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  23 April 1836 - 27 April 1836 
 Extent:  2 letters 
 Abstract:  Phrenology 
 Source:  William Hutton Papers (B H978) 
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 Subjects:  Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
 Author:  Cooke, Charles, 1870-1958
 Canadian ethnologist 


 Title:  Iroquois personal names     
 Type:  Text items Sound items 
 Format:  Manuscripts | Recordings 
 Language:  Iroquois 
 Dates:  1951 
 Extent:  684 leaves; 5 reels 
 Abstract:  Alphabetical list of about 6,200 Iroquoian names. The names are spoken by Cooke, alphabetically, in Iroquois 
 Source:  Iroquois personal names (497.3 C772; Rec. 10) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Linguistics and philology 
 Author:  Cornplanter, Jesse J.
  


 Title:  Indian songs in Seneca dialect, in syllables, and other rituals     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Seneca 
 Dates:  1951 
 Extent:  72 leaves 
 Abstract:  These songs were transcribed by Jesse Cornplanter from manuscripts of his father, Edward Cornplanter, and of George Pierce, and also from memory. There are occasional notes in English that give tempo, behavior of dances, sources, etc. Included are 4 letters between Jesse Cornplanter and William N. Fenton. 
 Source:  Indian songs in Seneca dialect, in syllables, and other rituals (497.3 C813) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Linguistics and philology 
 Author:  Coto, Thomas de, d. circa 1656
  


 Title:  Vocabulario de la Lengua Cakchiquel y Guatimalteca     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Cakchiquel | Spanish 
 Dates:  n.d. 
 Extent:  476 leaves 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  Vocabulario de la Lengua Cakchiquel y Guatimalteca (497.43 C82) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
 Author:  Couch, Jonathan, 1789-1870
 British physician, naturalist 


 Title:  Jonathan Couch Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1839-1891 
 Extent:  1 linear foot 
 Abstract:  Couch's papers deal mostly with natural history, but some correspondence and mss. are on the history of language; myth and superstition; and the physical history of man. Included here are manuscripts on "Charms", "Language", "The Cross Buns of Easter", "On the History and Development of Man", and the "Prehistoric in Cornwall." 
 Source:  Jonathan Couch Papers (B C831) 
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 Subjects:  Archaeology, prehistory | Folklore, mythology, religion | Linguistics and philology | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution 
 Author:  Crawford, James M., 1925-1989
 Linguist. County Ranger George Forestry Commission, 1949-1950; Forester in United States Forest Service, 1950-1952; lumber grader Hammond Lumber Company, 1953-1954; surveyor Utah Construction Company, 1955; Research Forester Pacific Southwest Forest and Range Experiment Station, 1961; teaching assistant Berkeley, 1962-1965; assistant professor anthropology Idaho State University, 1966-1968; associate professor anthropology 1968-1981, professor, 1981-1989 


 Title:  James M. Crawford Papers     
 Type:  Collection 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1906-1988 
 Extent:  68.75 linear feet 
 Abstract:  Includes materials from Crawford's career as a linguist who dedicated most of his studies to Native American languages. Series I: Correspondence includes mostly incoming letters to Crawford and deal mainly with his publications. Series II: Subject files contains grant applications, news clippings, Crawford's curriculum vitae, reviews, etc. Series III: Works by Crawford includes handwritten and typed work, both drafts and finished works, as well as notes, outlines and articles. It is arranged into four subseries, A. Cocopa, B. Yuchi, C. Yuman, and D. Other. Series IV: Research Notes includes notes and notebooks on linguistic topics. Series V: Card Files, the largest series in the collection, contains card-sized papers that are mostly dictionary terms for different languages. Series VI: Course Material contains mostly notes from graduate courses in linguistics from the University of California at Berkeley. Series VII: Photographs includes photos used in his book "Cocopa Texts" 
 Source:  James M. Crawford Papers (Ms. Coll. 66) 
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 Subjects:  Social uses and context of anthropology and archaeology | Archaeology, prehistory | Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture | Disciplinary professionalization, professional societies, education, employment | Anthropological and archaeological fieldwork | Folklore, mythology, religion | Linguistics and philology | Museums -- Development, operation, and collections | Physical studies -- Physical anthropology, medical anthropology, anthropometrics, craniology, race, human evolution | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous | Financial support for research and publication | Personal matters 
 Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Havasupai Language Notebook     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Havasupai 
 Dates:  1881 
 Extent:  1 notebook 
 Abstract:   none  
 Source:  Elsie Clews Parsons Papers (Ms. Coll. 29) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology 
 Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Letters to Franz Boas     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  23 June 1894 - 5 December 1894 
 Extent:  2 letters 
 Abstract:  2 letters to Boas. Folklore; publications. 
 Source:  Franz Boas Papers (B B61) 
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 Subjects:  Folklore, mythology, religion | Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Letters to Persifor Frazer, Isaac Minis Hays, and George H. Horn     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Correspondence 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1869-1899 
 Extent:  34 letters 
 Abstract:  34 letters to Persifor Frazer, Isaac Minis Hays, and George H. Horn. American Philosophical Society; publications. 
 Source:  American Philosophical Society Archives (A.P.S. Archives) 
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 Subjects:  Publishing, publications, miscellaneous 
 Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  The Zuni Census of Cushing     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  English 
 Dates:  1982 
 Extent:  44 leaves 
 Abstract:  Photocopy of manuscript analyzing the results of Cushing's 1880 census of the Zuni 
 Source:  American Philosophical Society. Phillips Fund for Native American Research Collection (497.3 Am4 no.194) 
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 Subjects:  Cultural description and analysis, social organization and structure, ceremonial behavior, material culture 
 Author:  Cushing, Frank Hamilton, 1857-1900
 Ethnologist, archaeologist, member of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1879-1900). Cushing is best known for his studies of the Zuni Indians, including works on Zuni folkore and general ethnography. 


 Title:  Zuni [Vocabulary] Notebook     
 Type:  Text items 
 Format:  Manuscripts 
 Language:  Zuni 
 Dates:  1880-1881 
 Extent:  1 notebook 
 Abstract:  Recorded by Cushing 
 Source:  Elsie Clews Parsons Papers (Ms. Coll. 29) 
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 Subjects:  Linguistics and philology