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MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1817-1865
Abstract:  

John Neagle was among the better known portrait painters in Philadelphia during the first half of the nineteenth century and was the husband of Thomas Sully's niece, Mary C. Sully. The Neagle Papers is a small assemblage of personal correspondence, documents, and notes assembled by Neagle during his career. The letters are primarily of a personal nature, but along with the five bound volumes, offer insight into Neagle's study of painting and the techniques he employed. Included among the bound volumes are recipes for varnish, megellup, and drying oils and notes on watercolor painting.
Call #:  
Mss.B.N125.p
Extent:
0.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1746-1929
Abstract:  

This collection includes letters, diaries, notebooks, and early photographs, relating primarily to the Wister family of Germantown and Philadelphia. Much of the correspondence concerns domestic news and consists of letters from or to Sarah Wister. These include interesting observations on Germantown and Philadelphia society from other families as well, such as the Bayntons and Bullocks. There are numerous letters from various Wisters, including Casper, Charles Jones, Elizabeth (including a journal of a trip to Bristol, 1783), Hannah, John, Owen Jones, and others. There is also poetry by Sarah.
Call #:  
Mss.974.811.Ea7
Extent:
3.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1901-1965
Abstract:  

In addition to correspondence relating to poultry genetics and egg production, there are significant notes concerning breeding records, heredity, and race genetics. There are 42 class notebooks kept by Goodale, and 62 volumes of Mount Hope Poultry Farm family, hatching, mating records for the period 1918 to 1956. The collection includes photographs, glass-lantern lecture slides, and artifacts of poultry feathers.
Call #:  
Mss.B.G61
Extent:
27 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1912-1959
Abstract:  

THIS COLLECTION IS CURRENTLY BEING PROCESSED. THE INVENTORY OF CONTENTS IS IN PROCESS, AS IS THE ORGANIZATION OF THE COLLECTION. There are notes, transcriptions, essays, etc., on the language and customs of several Indian tribes. There are numerous vocabularies, dictionaries, and grammatical notes on the Ho-Chunk, Patwin, and Huave tribes, and some items on the Fox, Tukudh, Pomo, Wappo, and Wintu; 79 notebooks, in English and Ho-Chunk, on myths, legends, stories, customs, dances, religious observances, costume, etc., of the Ho-Chunk, with some on the Ottawa and Ojibwa; notes on Ho-Chunk history; 2 boxes of Ho-Chunk phonetic texts; and significant material on Mexican Indians (Zapotec). Some of the items are typed copies of Radin's published studies.
Call #:  
Mss.497.3.R114
Extent:
12.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1812-1897
Abstract:  

This collection contains mostly entomological material, with much information on the description and identification of particular insects, entomological collections, and the study of entomology in Europe and the United States. In addition, there are materials on medicine and hospitals during the American Civil War, on the Corps of Topographical Engineers, the United States Army, on natural history in the United States, and on the LeConte's family. Some letters are written to President Rutherford B. Hayes and concern the Commissionership of Agriculture, for which LeConte was considered, but not appointed. Letters of John Eatton LeConte and Joseph LeConte are included.
Call #:  
Mss.B.L493
Extent:
7.7 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1861-1939
Abstract:  

The plant physiologist and historian Rodney H. True (1866-1940) divided his career relatively evenly between the Bureau of Plant Industry in United States Department of Agriculture and the Department of Botany and Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania. A specialist in the physiological function of mineral nutrients in plants, True was active in his later career in the Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture, the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society, and the Agricultural History Society. The True Papers consist of 6 linear feet of material relating primarily to the period of his career spent at the University of Pennsylvania. The collection contains roughly equal proportions of personal and professional correspondence, with a few diaries and research notebooks documenting his involvement with professional organizations and his interests in the history of his discipline.
Call #:  
Mss.B.T763
Extent:
6 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1906-1988
Abstract:  

James M. Crawford was a linguist who mainly studied Native American languages, including Cocopa, Yuchi, and Mobilian trade language. He came to the field of linguistics halfway through his lifetime after pursuing a career in forestry in the West and Southwest. After receiving his PhD in 1966 from the University of California at Berkeley, he returned to his birthplace, Georgia, where he taught in the Department of Linguistics at the University of Georgia at Athens. The collection is organized into seven series: I. Correspondence, 1964-1986; II. Subject Files, 1949-1987; III. Works by Crawford, 1962-1986; IV. Research NOtes & Notebooks, 1906-1988; V. Card Files, 1960s-1980s; VI. Course Material, 1961-1986; VII. Photographs, 1963-1978.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.66
Extent:
69 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1896-1974
Abstract:  

William Jacob Robbins (1890-1978, APS 1941) was a botanist and physiologist. From 1937 to 1957 he was director of the New York Botanical Garden. His research focused on culture methods of plants in relation to biochemistry and nutrition, especially on the synthetic abilities of fungi. His studies paralleled the scientific agenda of the Rockefeller Foundation, an agency with which he was closely associated for years as adviser and trustee. He was perhaps the most influential botanist in the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) during the early postwar era, and a principal participant in the plans for the global reconstruction of science. Robbins served as president of the American Philosophical Society from 1956 to 1959.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R538
Extent:
4 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Agricultural ecology. | Agriculture -- Japan. | American Philosophical Society | Animal Medical Center (U.S.) | Appleman, Charles Orval, 1878-1964 | Beadle, George Wells, 1903-1989 | Berkner, Lloyd V. (Lloyd Viel), 1905-1967 | Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954 | Botany. | Bronk, Detlev W. (Detlev Wulf), 1897-1975 | Cattell, James McKeen, 1860-1944 | Cleland, Ralph E. (Ralph Erskine), 1892-1971 | Coolidge, William David | Diaries. | Drinker, Henry S. (Henry Sturgis), 1850-1937 | Du Pont, Henry Francis, 1880-1969 | Enders, John F., 1897-1985 | Fackenthal, Frank Diehl, 1883-1968 | Greenleaf, Lewis S., Jr. | Gregg, Alan, 1890-1957 | Harrison, Ross G. (Ross Granville), 1870-1959 | India -- Description and travel. | Ingraham, Mark Hoyt | Japan -- Description and travel. | Jewett, Frank B. (Frank Baldwin) | Lecture notes. | Lectures. | Lehigh University. | Livingston, Burton E. (Burton Edward), 1875-1948 | Lloyd, John T. | Merrill, Elmer Drew, 1876-1956 | National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) | National Research Council (U.S.). Committee for Research in Problems of Sex | New York Botanical Garden. | Northrop, John Howard, 1891-1987 | Notebooks. | Photoprints. | Plant physiology. | Plants. | Richards, Alfred N.(Alfred New | Robbins, William Jacob, 1890-1978 | Rockefeller Foundation | Schramm, Jacob R. (Jacob Richard) | Smith College. Genetics Experiment Station | Tropical plants. | True, Rodney H.(Rodney Howard) (1866-1940) | University of Missouri. | Waterman, Alan Tower, 1892-1967 | Wilson, Edwin Bidwell, 1879-1964 | World War, 1914-1918. | Zwemer, Raymund L. (Raymund Lull)



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1930-1971
Abstract:  

This collection includes correspondence, lectures, notebooks, reports, photographs, and maps. There is much in Russell's papers concerning the Department of Geography at L.S.U., as well as faculty and research concerns and other needs of the university.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R91,.d,.m,.n
Extent:
6 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Caddo Indians | Diagrams. | Diaries. | Gelatin silver prints | Geography. | Geology. | Howe, Henry V. (Henry Van Wagenen) | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Caddo Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Cameron Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Iberia Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- LaSalle Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Lafourche Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Saint Mary Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Tensas Parish -- Antiquities | Indians of North America -- Louisiana -- Vermilion Parish -- Antiquities | Jones, Wellington Downing | Kniffen, Fred Bowerman | Lawson, Andrew C. (Andrew Cowper), 1861-1952 | Lectures. | Louderback, George D. (George Davis), 1874-1957 | Louisiana -- Description and travel. | Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College. -- | Maps. | Mencken, H. L. (Henry Louis), 1880-1956 | Morgan, James P. (James Plummer) | Morocco -- Description and travel. | Naval research -- United States. | Notebooks. | Penck, Albrecht, 1858-1945 | Physical geography -- Rhône River Valley (Switzerland and France) | Prehistoric peoples -- Louisiana | Price, W. Armstrong (William Armstrong) | Public lands -- Louisiana. | Rhône River Delta (France) | Roy, Chalmer John | Russell, Richard Joel, 1895-1971 | Sauer, Carl Ortwin, 1889-1975 | Sketches. | Sternberg, Hilgard O'Reilly | Taensa Indians | Thornthwaite, C. W. (Charles Warren), 1899-1963 | Turkey -- Description and travel. | United States. -- Office of Naval Research.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1886-1947
Abstract:  

This is a diverse collection, including correspondence, drafts of letters, notes and notebooks (on biometric methods; tables and formulae; science, nature and method; coefficient and correlation; vitalism; Japanese language); commonplace book (1924); autobiography; and over one hundred folders of unpublished writings. The correspondence and other material covers a variety of topics, including biology, eugenics, evolution and natural selection, human heredity, paramecia, protozoa genetics, U.S. immigration policy. There is much on the Seventh International Congress of Zoology (1907); letters to his father and wives, and from students and colleagues on his seventy-fifth birthday, 1943 (1 v.); diplomas and certificates of membership; and photographs.
Call #:  
Mss.B.J44
Extent:
30 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Alexander, Jerome, 1876-1959 | Animal behavior. | Autobiographies. | Aydelotte, Frank, 1880-1956 | Biology. | Biometry. | Blumer, Herbert, 1900-1987 | Brennemann, Joseph, 1872-1944 | Burbank, Luther, 1849-1926 | Calkins, Gary N. (Gary Nathan) | Cattell, James McKeen, 1860-1944 | Certificates. | Chen, Tze-tuan | Commonplace books. | Conklin, Edwin Grant, 1863-1952 | Correlation (Statistics) | Cowdry, E. V. (Edmund Vincent), 1888-1975 | Davenport, Charles Benedict, 1866-1944 | Diplomas. | Emigration and immigration law -- United States. | Eugenics. | Evolution. | Fisher, Irving, 1867-1947 | Geiser, Samuel Wood, 1890-1983 | Genetics. | Harrison, Ross G. (Ross Granville), 1870-1959 | Heredity. | Japanese language | Jennings, H. S. (Herbert Spencer), 1868-1947 | Kellogg, Vernon L. (Vernon Lyman), 1867-1937 | Korzybski, Alfred, 1879-1950 | Lectures. | Lillie, Frank Rattray, 1870-1947 | Mast, Samuel Ottmar, 1871-1947 | Metcalf, Maynard M. (Maynard Mayo), 1868-1940 | Metz, Carl W., 1889-1975 | Muller, H. J. (Hermann Joseph), 1890-1967 | Natural selection. | Notebooks. | Osterud, Hjalmar Laurits | Paramecium -- Physiology. | Pearl, Raymond, 1879-1940 | Philosophy of science | Photoprints. | Pomeroy, Fred Elmer | Protozoa -- Physiology. | Raffel, Daniel | Shull, George Harrison, 1874-1954 | Sonneborn, T. M. (Tracy Morton), 1905-1981 | Vavilov, N. I. (Nikolai Ivanov | Vitalism. | Watson, John B. (John Broadus), 1878-1958 | Whitney, Leon Fradley (1894-1973) | Wilson, Edwin Bidwell, 1879-1964 | Yerkes, Robert Mearns, 1876-1956 | Zoologists -- United States.



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1775-1853
Abstract:  

Robert Maskell Patterson (1787-1854, APS 1809) was a professor of chemistry and natural philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania (1812-1828) and professor of natural philosophy at the University of Virginia (1828-1835). He was director of the U.S. Mint from 1835 to 1851. His father, Robert Patterson, was a revolutionary soldier, professor of mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania (1779-1814), and director of the U.S. Mint (1805-1824).
Call #:  
Mss.B.P274
Extent:
0.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1808-1840
Abstract:  

The correspondence is principally to Zaccheus Collins (1810-1840), with bills, receipts, and notes on Rafinesque vs. Parker; letters from Collins, L.A. Tarascon, Lewis C. Beck, John Torrey, and Charles W. Short (1817-1835); and miscellaneous correspondence and documents relating to Rafinesque vs. Parker, with an account of the Felician Society of Feliciana County, Illinois (1820). The writings are chiefly on botanical topics, and include notes and essays on Indians, Blacks, grapes and wine-making, banking, and speculation. Rafinesque's growing interest in Indian antiquities, linguistics, and history is apparent in letters after 1820. There is an account of Rafinesque's scientific travels in North America and southern Europe (1800-1832), and a bibliography. The botanical notes include descriptions of specimens collected by Lewis and Clark, Patrick Gass, and Henry Muhlenberg.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R124
Extent:
1.75 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1917-1969
Abstract:  

A physician and naturalist, Oswald Hope Robertson worked at the Rockefeller Institute, the Peking Union Medical College, and at the medical school of University of Chicago (1927-1951). With a broad range of research interests, Robertson contributed important work on the transmission of pneumonia, the disinfection of air with glycol vapors, and later in his career, on the physiology and ecology of salmonid fishes. He is best remembered, however, as the creator of the first blood bank, established for use by British and American forces during the First World War. The Robertson Papers contain correspondence, notes, articles, and notebooks on many of Robertson's major research interests, including his work on blood. His early work on salmonid ecology is represented in a journal and eleven notebooks stemming from fieldwork in the lakes of the Wind River Range in northwestern Wyoming, 1942-1951. There is also interesting material on the Research Corporation (New York City) concerning patents on glycol vapors and air sterilizers, as well as notes and manuscripts of papers on morphine experiments, canine pneumococcus, bacteremia, and the effects of hydrocortisone.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R546
Extent:
7 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1934-1985
Abstract:  

Trained as an anthropologist at Berkeley under A.L. Kroeber and Robert Lowie, Carl Voegelin spent the majority of his career as a structural linguist specializing in Algonquian languages, including Delaware, Potawatomi, Fox, Menominee, and Shawnee, and on the Seneca, Ojibwa (Chippewa), and Blackfoot (Siksika). His most significant contributions came through his studies of Delaware, Shawnee, and Hopi, but he is also credited with reviving the International Journal of American Linguistics after the death of its founder, Franz Boas, and with nurturing the program in anthropology at Indiana University, where he was on faculty from 1941 until his retirement in 1976. The Voegelin collection contains field notes, lexical files, notebooks, papers, correspondence, and other materials relating to Voegelin's work on Native American languages. The bulk of the collection concerns Delaware and Shawnee, but there is significant material for Blackfoot, Menominee, Ojibwa and Potawatomi, Seneca, and Penobscot. Notes on Turkish, kept during the Second World War, are also present. Among other important series in the collection are Voegelin's correspondence and notes concerning two of his major projects: the translation and interpretation of the Walam Olam and his study of Shawnee law. Correspondents include Leonard Bloomfield, Eli Lilly, and Morris Swadesh. A portion of the collection is indexed in Kendall (1982).
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.68
Extent:
34.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1919-1971
Abstract:  

Eugene Opie spent most of his career as a pathologist at the Rockefeller Institute engaged in research on the influenza, tuberculosis, blood diseases, poliomyelitis, and viruses. His work at Washington University, St. Louis, is documented, as are his efforts to alleviate tuberculosis in Jamaica, among Philadelphia schoolchildren, and in New York City. The Opie collection contains correspondence, notebooks, lab notes from his days at Rockefeller, articles, reprints, and photographs. Opie's long interest in China is reflected in material on the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China, the United China Relief, and Chinese medicine in general. There is also significant documentation on the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation, the Henry Phipps Institute of the University of Pennsylvania, the Milbank Memorial Fund, and other institutions. There are also reports of approximately 300 clinical autopsies performed at the Base Hospital, Camp Pike, Ark., of soldiers who died in the flu epidemic of 1918. Also there are notes of Opie's course in pathology at the University of Pennsylvania.
Call #:  
Mss.B.Op3
Extent:
37 Linear feet
Subjects:  

American Bureau for Medical Aid to China | Articles | Aub, Joseph C. (Joseph Charles), 1890-1973 | Autopsy. | Bachman, George W. | Barker, Lewellys F. (Lewellys Franklin), 1867-1943 | Bessey, Otto Arthur, 1904-1984 | Brinton, Ward, 1873-1935 | China -- Medicine | Cohn, Alfred E. (Alfred Einstein), 1879-1957 | Cornell University--Faculty | Cornell, Walter Stewart, 1877-1969 | Ekhart, Walter | Epidemiology | Eugenics | Ferrell, John A. (John Atkinso | Flahiff, Edward | Flexner, Simon, 1863-1946 | Henry Phipps Institute | Howard, Hector Holdbrook, 1873 | Influenza -- Epidemiology | Influenza -- Research | Isaacs, Joyce | Jamaica -- Medicine | Johns Hopkins University. Medical School--Faculty | Kohlberg, Alfred | Laboratory notes | Medicine -- China | Medicine -- United States | Menkin, Valy | Milbank Memorial Fund | National Tuberculosis Association | Notebooks | Opie, Eugene L. (Eugene Lindsay), 1873-1971 | Pathology | Photoprints | Poliomyelitis | Putnam, Persis | Robinson, George Canby, 1878- | Rockefeller Foundation. -- International Health Division. | Rockefeller Institute | Russell, Frederick Fuller, 187 | Sawyer, Wilbur A. (Wilbur Augustus), 1879-1951 | Stevens, Helen K. | Tuberculosis -- Jamaica | Tuberculosis -- New York (N.Y.) | Tuberculosis -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia | United China Relief | University of Pennsylvania. | University of Pennsylvania. Medical School--Faculty | Warren, Andrew J. | Washburn, Benjamin Earle, 1885 | Washington University. Medical School--Faculty | Wells, Clifford W. | World War, 1914-1918 -- Medical care



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1783-1817
Abstract:  

A physician, natural historian, and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, Benjamin Smith Barton (1766-1815) was one of the central figures in Philadelphia's early national scientific establishment. Having received his medical training in European universities, Barton was appointed Professor at the University of Pennsylvania in 1789, lecturing on botany, materia medica, natural history. A prolific author, he established his reputation as one of the nation's preeminent botanists through his botanical text book The Elements of Botany (1803), but his contribtions to zoology, ethnology, and medicine were equally noteworthy. Barton's monograph on the "fascinating faculty" of the rattlesnake and his efforts in historical linguistics (New Views of the Origin of the Tribes and Nations of America, 1798) were widely read, and his Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal (1804-1809) was one of the nation's first medical journals and an important outlet for natural historical research. The Barton Papers offer a comprehensive view of the professional work of Benjamin Smith Barton from the time of his return to the United States in 1789 until his death. The collection is divided into five series: Correspondence, Subject Files, Bound Volumes, Graphic Materials, and Printing Plates. The collection includes a particularly valuable series of botanical, medical, and natural historical drawings collected by Barton for research, reference, and publication. Among the many artists represented are William Bartram, Frederick Pursh, Pierre Turpin, and Benjamin Henry Latrobe.
Call #:  
Mss.B.B284d
Extent:
10 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Art | Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815 | Bartram's Garden (Philadelphia, Pa.) | Bartram, John, 1699-1777 | Blanchard, Jean-Pierre, 1753-1809 | Botanists | Botany -- Study and teaching -- 19th century | Botany -- Virginia | Buffalo (N.Y.) -- Description and travel | Business and Skilled Trades | Chemistry -- 18th century | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee language | Choctaw Indians | Diaries. | Drawings. | Dysentery. | Education | Electricity -- 18th century | Engravings. | Ethnobotany | Family Correspondence | General Correspondence | Geology -- 18th century | Gout | Harden, Jane LeConte | Hopkins, John Henry, 1792-1868 -- pictorial works | Hudson River (N.Y.) -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Indians of North America | Indians of North America -- Agriculture | Indians of North America -- Languages | Kaigana Indians | Kaskaskia Indians | Language Material | Language and Linguistics | Literature, Arts, and Culture | Mammals -- Classification | Mandan Indians | Mastodons | Materia medica | Medicine | Medicine -- Practice -- 18th century | Medicine -- Study and teaching -- 18th century | Meteorology -- United States -- 18th century | Meteors | Mineralogy | Native America | Natural history | Natural history -- 18th century | Natural history -- 19th century | New Jersey -- Description and travel -- 18th century | New York (State) -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Niagara Falls (N.Y. and Ont.) -- Description and travel | Notebooks | Osage language | Pennsylvania -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Physicians -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia | Physics | Political Correspondence | Printing and Publishing | Printing plates | Rittenhouse, David, 1732-1796 | Science and technology | Seminole Indians | Seneca | Sketchbooks | Sketches. | Tlaxcala (Mexico) | Travel | Travel Narratives and Journals | Turpin, P. J. F. (Pierre Jean François), 1775-1840 | Tuscarora Indians | University of Pennsylvania -- Faculty | Venereal disease | Virginia -- Description and travel -- 18th century | Watercolors | Yellow fever | Yellow fever -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia -- 1793 | Zoology -- 18th century



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1911-1974
Abstract:  

L.C. Dunn was one of the most significant figures in the emerging field of developmental genetics in the 20th century. His T-locus work with the mouse established a number of important genetic principles, including ideas of gene interaction, the distribution of alleles in wild populations, and the factors that influence fertility. He wrote an important textbook of genetics, Principles of Genetics (1925), in collaboration with Sinnott (and later Dobzhansky); other significant books authored or co-authored by him include Heredity, Race and Society (1946), and A Short History of Genetics (1965). He worked in poultry genetics for eight years at the Agricultural Experiment Station in Storrs, CT, from 1920-1928. The remainder of his career was spent at Columbia University, where he worked with rats, mice, and fruit flies, and proved himself to be an inspiring teacher as well. His interest in international scientific collaboration led him to establish ties to Soviet scientists, and to help relocate refugee scientists during World War II. He remained active in his profession to the end of his life. This collection includes correspondence, reports, notebooks, lectures, and photographs. It is a rich collection, documenting the development of American genetics as well as Dunn's interests in humanitarian efforts and international affairs. There is significant material relating to American-U.S.S.R. contacts, particularly in the files on the American-Soviet Friendship Council and the American-Soviet Science Society. There is much, as well, on the impact of the Lysenko controversy in the U. S. Dunn's interest in European scientists can also be seen in the sizable amount of material on the Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars. Material relating to the Kilgore and Magnusson bills for the support of science (predecessors to the NSF) are also in the collection. Of note are data on the following: National Research Council Committee on Experimental Animals and Plants; research on the population study of the Jewish community in Rome; and Columbia University. There is much in the correspondence concerning Drosophila, poultry genetics, and other such topics; Walter Landauer is Dunn's major correspondent.
Call #:  
Mss.B.D917
Extent:
15.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

American-Soviet Science Society | Biology, genetics, eugenics | Bjerknes, Kristian Bonnevie, 1901-1981 | Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954 | Boas, Franz, 1858-1942 | Bonnevie, Kristine, 1872-1948 | Bridges, Calvin B. (Calvin Blackman), 1889-1938 | Carrel, Alexis, 1873-1944 | Caspari, Ernst W. | Castle, William E., (William Ernest), 1867-1962 | Cohn, Alfred E., (Alfred Einstein), 1879-1957 | Columbia University. | Corner, George Washington, 1889-1981 | Dahlberg, Gunnar, 1893-1956 | Danforth, Charles H. (Charles Haskell) | David, Paul R. | Demerec, M., (Milislav), 1895-1966 | Developmental genetics | Dobzhansky, Theodosius Grigorievich, 1900-1975 | Drosophila -- Genetics | Dunn, L. C. (Leslie Clarence), 1893-1974 | Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced German Scholars | Ephrussi, Boris, 1901-1979 | Eugenics | Evolution (Biology) | Fisher, Ronald Aylmer, Sir, 1890-1962 | Geneticists | Genetics | Genetics -- Soviet Union | Geyer-Duszynska, Irene, 1924- | Goldschmidt, Richard, 1878-1958 | Gumbel, Emil J. | Heredity | Huxley, Julian, 1887-1975 | Iltis, Hugo | Italy -- Population studies | Ivanyi, Pavol | Jennings, H. S., (Herbert Spencer), 1868-1947 | Jews -- Population studies | Jews -- Rome | Jollas, Victor | Landauer, Walter, 1896-1978 | Landsteiner, Karl, 1868-1943 | Lectures | Lewontin, Richard C., 1929- | Mice -- Genetics | Mohr, Otto Louis, 1886- | Mohr, Tove | Morgan, Thomas Hunt, 1866-1945 | Muller, H. J. (Hermann Joseph), 1890-1967 | National Council of American-Soviet Friendship (U.S.) | National Research Council. Committee on Experimental Animals and Plants | Notebooks | Photoprints | Political refugees -- United States | Popuation biology | Poultry -- Genetics | Primatology | Race, race relations, racism | Science and politics | Stern, Curt, 1902-1981 | Wilson, Edwin Bidwell, 1879-1964



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1810-1953
Abstract:  

The most stellar member of a stellar family, Elisha Kent Kane was among the most popular American explorers of the mid-nineteenth century, a hero in the tragic mode. Born in Philadelphia in 1820, the son of John Kintzing Kane and Jane Duval Leiper, Kane studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania before earning a commission as a naval surgeon. While in the Navy, Kane embarked on the succession of voyages to exotic locales that became the basis for his extraordinary fame. In 1843, he attended Caleb Cushing's first diplomatic mission to China as ship's physician, and subsequently traveled to the Philippines and Western Africa. Distinguishing himself in the Mexican War, Kane's greatest fame came from two expeditions to the arctic, aiming to locate the lost explorer, Sir John Franklin and to explore for evidence of the open polar sea. Kane died in 1857 while attempting to organize a third arctic voyage. Part of the Kane Family Collection, the Papers of Elisha Kent Kane contain a mix of personal and family correspondence with correspondence relating to all of Kane's explorations. Intelligent, articulate and very much a romantic, Kane's letters are expressive and passionate. The collection provides fine documentation of youth, his relationship with the Spiritualist Margaret Fox, and of course his travels to China and off the coast of Africa in 1846. Kane's two expeditions to the arctic are particularly well documented, with correspondence, notes, logbooks, diaries, and sketches, as well as Kane's post-expedition notes, writings, and lectures recounting his experiences.
Call #:  
Mss.B.K132
Extent:
6.75 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Abolition, emancipation, freedom | Africa | Africa -- Description and travel | Americans Abroad | Arctic Indians | Arctic regions -- Discovery and exploration | Arctic regions-Pictorial works | Asia Minor -- Description and travel | Bills. | Blockley Hospital (Philadelphia, Pa.) | China -- Foreign relations -- United States | Colonization, repatriation | Cracroft, Sophia, 1816-1892 | Egypt -- Description and travel | Engravings. | Exploration | Exploration. | Explorers -- United States | Family Correspondence | Fox, Margaret, 1833-1893 | Franklin, John, Sir, 1786-1847 | General Correspondence | Geometry -- Study and teaching | Grinnell Expedition, 1st, 1850-1851 | Grinnell Expedition, 2d, 1853-1855 | Grinnell, Henry, 1799-1874 | Henry, Joseph, 1797-1878 | Hospitals -- Pennsylvania | Indians of North America -- Nunavut | International Travel | Inuit -- Canada | Inuit -- Greenland | Inuit -- Nunavut -- Baffin Island | Journals (notebooks) | Kane, Elisha Kent, 1820-1857 | Kane, Jane Duval Leiper | Kennedy, John Pendleton, 1795- | Lectures | Letterbooks | Liberia -- Description and travel | Logbooks | Maps. | Marriage and Family Life | Medicine -- Practice -- Pennsylvania | Medicine -- Study and teaching -- Pennsylvania | Meteorology -- Arctic Regions | Mexico -- Description and travel | Mineralogy -- Study and teaching | North Carolina -- Description and travel | Northwest Passage | Notebooks | Obstetrics | Philadelphia (Pa.) -- Hospitals | Philadelphia. General Hospital | Plantations | Receipts | Silhouettes | Sketches. | Slave trade -- Africa | Slaves, slavery, slave trade | Social Life and Custom | Travel Narratives and Journals | United States -- Foreign relations -- China | United States. Navy | Watercolors



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1724-1965
Abstract:  

This is a collection of letters, letterbooks, account books, scrapbooks, etc., concerning the families of Robert Hare and Thomas Willing. The letters and other documents include early family material, as well as documents written by numerous family relations, and some obviously only collected by them. The Willing family letters (1744-1901) are diverse, concerning family matters, business, society, comments on the Civil War, etc. There are numerous letters from Thomas Willing, many concerning his banking career, as President of the Bank of North America and later at the first Bank of the U.S. The Hare family letters (1724-1965) are more extensive and diverse, including much on travel in the U.S. and elsewhere. There is a letter from Robert Hare Jr. concerning steam engines, and letters from Horace Binney Hare concerning his education at Harvard, 1860, his trip to San Francisco and the west, 1862, and numerous letters written while a soldier in the Civil War. There are many letters from Horace Binney (1780-1875, DAB) to his daughter Esther, who was married to John Innes Clark Hare (1816-1905, DAB), concerning family travel and court cases. There are also letters from outside the family, such as those from Dorothea L. Dix. The bound volumes include, among others: Robert Hare letterbooks (1824-1825, 1841-1857), estate records, and laboratory expense accounts (1818-1860); G. H. Hare's journal or log of cruises aboard the U.S. United States (1841) and U.S. Flint (1845); Horace Binney Hare's 1862 journal of his trip to San Francisco. There are account books and accounts (1754-1795) kept by Thomas Willing; accounts of the controversy over the estate of John Innes Clark; and records of the First Colored Wesley Methodist Church of Philadelphia (receipt book, 1820-1848; minute book, 1827-1844). There are also Philadelphia court records, and minutes of the Common Council of the city, 1832.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.104
Extent:
52 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Account books. | African American | African American churches -- United States | Americans Abroad | Banks and banking -- United States -- History -- 19th century. | Beale, Catherine C. | Beale, Charles Willing, 1845-1932 | Beale, Constance R., 1850-1937 | Beale, Edward Fitzgerald, 1822-1893 | Binney, Horace, 1780-1875 | Business Records and Accounts | Business and Skilled Trades | Cassatt, Mary, 1844-1926 | Clark, John Innes | Dix, Dorothea Lynde, 1802-1887 | Early National Politics | Education | Educational Material | Family Correspondence | First Colored Wesley Methodist Church of Philadelphia. | Flint (Ship) | General Correspondence | Hare, Charles Willing, 1871-1942 | Hare, Ellen Mary Cassatt | Hare, Emily P. Beale, 1848-1935 | Hare, Esther Binney, 1873-1967 | Hare, Esther Coxe Binney | Hare, George Harrison | Hare, Horace Binney | Hare, Horace Binney, 1843-1879 | Hare, Horace Binney, 1876-1956 | Hare, John Innes Clark, 1816-1905 | Hare, Margaret Willing, 1753-1816 | Hare, Robert, 1752-1811 | Hare, Robert, 1781-1858 | Hare, Robert, 1869-1875 | Hare, Thomas Truxtun, 1878-1956 | Hare-Willing family. | Harvard University | Institutional Records | International Travel | Journals (notebooks). | Law | Legal Records | Letterbooks. | Mac Veagh, Margaret | Meigs, Ellen Mary Cassatt Hare | Minutes. | Miscellaneous | Natural history | Notebooks | Perry-Smith, Oliver, 1884-1969 | Philadelphia (Pa.) -- Social life and customs. | Philadelphia (Pa.). -- Councils. -- Common Council. | Philadelphia History | Receipt books. | Religion | Religion, religious organizations | Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919 | San Francisco (Calif.) -- Description and travel. | Science -- United States -- 19th century. | Science and technology | Scrapbooks. | Smith, Stuart Farrar, 1874-1951 | Social conditions, social advocacy, social reform | Steam-engines. | Titantic (Steamship) | Travel | Travel Narratives and Journals | United States (Ship) | United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865. | West (U.S.) -- Description and travel. | Willing, Thomas, 1731-1821 | Women's History | World War I | World War II



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1745-1955
Abstract:  

A collection of letters, legal papers and financial records of three generations of the prominent Philadelphia family. Spanning 1745-1955, detailed are the legal cases and political advocacy work of John Kintzing Kane (1795-1858), Robert Patterson Kane (1827-1906), and Francis Fisher Kane (1866-1955). Also includes correspondence, architectural drawings, and photograph albums of the Cope family. Robert Patterson Kane's daughter Eliza Middleton Kane (1863-1952) married the Philadelphia architect Walter Cope (1860-1902) in 1893. The APS papers of Elisha Kent Kane are in call no. B K132.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.115
Extent:
56 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Antebellum Politics | Architects. | Architectural drawings. | Arctic regions -- Discovery and exploration -- American. | Bache, A. D. (Alexander Dallas), 1806-1867 | Bancroft, George, 1800-1891 | Bartram, John, 1699-1777 | Bills (financial). | Biographies. | Briefs. | Business Records and Accounts | Business and Skilled Trades | Chesapeake and Delaware Canal Company. | Commonplace Book | Cope, Eliza Middleton Kane, 1863-1952 | Cope, Walter, 1860-1902 | Deeds. | Diaries. | Diplomas. | Early National Politics | Family Correspondence | General Correspondence | Germantown (Philadelphia, Pa.) -- Social life and customs. | Girard Bank. | Haiti | Indian Rights Association. | Indians of North America -- Legal status, laws, etc. | Institutional Records | Insurance policies. | Italy -- Commerce. | Kane, Robert Patterson, 1827-1 | Law | Law firms -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. | Lawyers -- Pennsylvania. | Lawyers. | Legal Records | Letterbooks. | Manuscripts (for publication). | Marriage and Family Life | Mormons -- Utah -- History. | Nauvoo (Ill.) -- Expulsion of the Mormons. | Notebooks | Notes. | Peale's Museum (Philadelphia, Pa.) | Pennsylvania -- Politics and government | Pennsylvania -- Politics and government -- 1775-1865. | Pennsylvania History | Philadelphia (Pa.) -- Social conditions. | Philadelphia (Pa.) -- Social life and customs. | Philadelphia History | Photograph albums | Political Correspondence | Poor -- Services for -- Pennsylvania -- Philadelphia. | Prison reformers -- United States. | Prisons -- Pennsylvania. | Receipts. | Religion | Reports. | Saint George Society -- Trials, litigation, etc. | Social Life and Custom | Social reformers -- United States. | Trade | Trials (Espionage) -- United States. | Trials. | U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey | United States -- Commerce. | Ute Indians | Ute Indians -- Removal | Various authors



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