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MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1839-1891
Abstract:  

In many ways, Jonathan Couch was a prototype of the Victorian provincial naturalist, a trained physician whose eclectic, but intensely local interests ran from the life sciences to geology, Cornish folk beliefs, and local history. His major works included a three-volume translation of Pliny's Natural History (London, 1847-1849) published by the Wernerian Club of London, The History of Polperro (Truro, 1871), and the exhaustive four-volume A History of the Fishes of the British Islands (London, 1862-1868). The remnants of a wide-ranging mind, the Couch Papers contain a sampling of correspondence, rough drafts of articles, and notes on a variety of topics of interest to the Cornish naturalist and antiquarian, Jonathan Couch. The bulk of the correspondence relates to Couch's translation of Pliny's Natural History, published by the Wernerian Club of London between 1847 and 1849. The notes are highly diverse, but include some systematic descriptions of fishes, probably used in his A History of the Fishes of the British Islands and notes Cornish folk beliefs. Of particular interest are his "Notes connected with instinct and reason" and three manuscripts relating to evolutionism: "Enquiry into the circumstances...," "On the history and development of man," and "The Natural History of the Creation of the World, with its changes to the subsidence of the flood and Noah."
Call #:  
Mss.B.C831
Extent:
1 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1952-1957
Abstract:  

The Santa Fe Fiesta and the Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial are two of the major cultural events held annually in New Mexico, both involving substantial participation by the Indian population of the state and region. The older of these, the Fiesta, originated in 1712 when the Spanish governor, the Marqués of Pañuela, set aside a day in September to commemorate the reconquest of the province by Don Diego de Vargas. Since 1919, the festival has been held annually and has increasingly become a celebration of traditional New Mexican culture and the varied ethnicities of its population. The Inter-Tribal Indian Ceremonial of Gallup, New Mexico, was organized by local businessmen and Indian traders in 1922 for "the encouragement of Indian arts and crafts and the education of whites to the beauties of Indian life" and for the "perpetuation of the dances, traditions and customs of Indian life." The H. O. Hanson Photograph Collection contains 34 large format (8x10") black and white prints, including sixteen images of the Inter-Tribal Ceremonial at Gallup, 1953 and 1954, four images of the Jemez Pueblo, and nine images of the Santa Fe Fiesta, 1952 and 1953. Hanson has not been further identified, but he may have worked for the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Call #:  
Mss.B.H198
Extent:
0.1 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1905-1910
Abstract:  

Norman Leonard Jacobs was an engineer and surveyor with the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway in Canada. The collection consists of his correspondence with Bessie Frank (later Anathan), an acquaintance from Pittsburgh. Jacobs wrote of daily life in Canadian cities, interactions with First Nations tribes, and daily hardships encountered in the field (extreme cold, snowblindness, and lack of food), but also spoke of his work with pride and enthusiasm. In addition to the letters, Jacobs wrote twenty-eight pages of a "Diary of a Tenderfoot." Also included in the collection are two photobooks and various loose photographs, which display various aspects of camp life, details of work sites and landscape, as well as First Nations families, camps, and modes of transportation.
Call #:  
Mss.SMs.Coll.13
Extent:
1 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1859-1882
Abstract:  

A traveler, archaeologist, and photographer, Désiré Charnay (1828-1915) was one of the most important early expeditionary photographers. During his tours of Yucatan, Oaxaca, and Chiapas in 1858-1860 and 1880-1886, Charnay became one of the first to use photography in documenting the great Meso-American archaeological sites and to make ethnographic photographs of indigenous Mexicans. His major publications Cités et Ruines Américaines (Paris, 1862) and Les Anciennes Villes du Nouveau Monde (Paris, 1885) are important transitional works to the later scientific archaeology of Alfred Maudslay. The collection of photographs taken by Desire Charnay are representative of the range of images he took of Meso-American archaeological sites during three tours of Mexico in 1858-1860 and 1880-1886. Although some of the images have suffered an unfortunate degree of fading, they convey the power and fascination that these sites held for Charnay and his contemporaries, and include some of the best early examples of the use of photography in the documentation of Mexican archaeology. The collection includes 123 images of the sites at Tula, Teotihuacan, Iztaccihuatl, Chichen Itza, Comalcalco, and Palenque, of archaeological specimens held at the Museum of Mexico, and of landscape and villages in Yucatan, Chiapas, and Oaxaca, as well as a series of Lacandon, Mayan, Mixtec, and Yucatec "racial types."
Call #:  
Mss.913.72.Ab23
Extent:
2 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1690-1915
Abstract:  

The collection contains information on Fox family speculation in western lands, two manuscript maps from the 1790's and 1830's depicting the family's holdings in northwestern Pennsylvania, and a photograph album from the 1890's documenting Chestnutwold, the Fox estate adjacent to Andalusia. Chief correspondents are Samuel and George Fox.
Call #:  
Mss.B.F832f
Extent:
2 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1846-1903
Abstract:  

After receiving his PhB at Yale's Sheffield Scientific School in 1858, Alfred P. Rockwell continued his studies at the Museum of Practical Geology in London and the Bergakademie Freiberg, focused largely on mining engineering and coal geology. After service in the Civil War, he held positions at Yale and MIT before leaving academia in 1873 to pursue other opportunities. He later served as president of the Eastern Rail Road and Treasurer of the Great Falls Manufacturing Company, a textile firm in New Hampshire. The small collection of the papers of Alfred P. Rockwell document his interest in coal geology during the period of his postgraduate study at the Museum of Practical Geology and the Bergakademie, 1858-1859. Although the correspondence is slight, the collection includes a suite of notes on collieries, coal mining technology, and the economics of coal. Of particular note in the collection are the eight notebooks on mining engineering (some containing sketches), including two volumes of notes on John Percy's lectures at the Museum of Practical Geology, 1858, three volumes kept during his stay at the Bergakademie Freiberg, including one on a course on metallurgy taught by Bernhard von Cotta, 1858-1859, and one of an industrial tour through Germany and Belgium (June 1859). The other volumes include two on collieries in northern England, and one including of production records for the Great Falls Manufacturing Company, 1879-1886.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R59p
Extent:
0.5 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:
1845-1921
Abstract:  

A military officer and civilian superintendent of the École Polytechnique in Paris, Albert de Rochas became one of the best known psychic researchers in late nineteenth century France. His interests centered on uncovering the laws behind psychic forces, somnambulism, magnetism and mesmerism, hypnotism, perception, and reincarnation. A prolific writer, he studied a number of Spiritualist and Spiritist mediums, including Maria Mayo (Lina), Eusapia Paladino, and D. D. Home. Despite the relatively small size of the collection, the papers of Albert de Rochas open an important window onto the development of psychic science in fin de siecle France and onto the cultural impact of Spiritualism. The collection includes a scattered, but valuable selection of correspondence with fellow psychic researchers, editors, mediums, and other individuals interested in psychic research, and a valuable set of 69 spirit and psychic photographs, that Rochas collected as evidence of psychic forces, and as documentation of séances, mediums, and "sensitives." Rochas' work on the exteriorization of sensibility and studies of Lina, Charles Bailey, and Paladino are relatively well documented, and his interests in the laws of psychic phenomena, reincarnation, and the exmigration of the living soul run throughout.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.106
Extent:
1.75 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1910-1996
Abstract:  

The Mary Rosamond Haas papers are extensive, including correspondence, research notes, field notes, texts, lexical slip files, audio recordings, photographs, reprints and more, covering more than 100 languages of North America and Southeast Asia. Of particular value are notes and audio recordings from fieldwork from the 1930s on Ditidaht, Tunica, Natchez and Muscogee, work toward pedagogical materials for Thai, and groundbreaking comparative studies of several language families of North America.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.94
Extent:
95 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Abenaki language | Achumawi language | Alabama language | Algonquian languages | Anthropological linguistics -- America. | Anthropology | Apalachee language | Arapaho language | Atakapa language | Atayal language | Athapascan languages | Atikamekw language | Aymara language | Baptists -- Oklahoma | Beothuk language | Berkeley (Calif.) | Biloxi language | Blackfoot language | Brighton Reservation (Fla.) | Burmese language | Cahuilla language | California | Catawba language | Central Yupik language | Chehalis language | Cherokee Indians | Cherokee language | Chevak Cup'ik language | Cheyenne language | Chickasaw Indians | Chickasaw language | Chief Peter | Chimariko language | Chipewyan language | Chitimacha language | Choctaw Indians | Choctaw language | Cocopa language | Comanche language | Comecrudo language | Correspondence. | Cree language | Creek Indians | Creek Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Creek language | Crow language | Dakota language | Dane-zaa language | Deg Xitan language | Del Norte County (Calif.) | Delaware language | Dictionaries. | Ditidaht Indians | Ditidaht language | Ethnographic texts | Ethnography | Ethnomusicology | Eyak language | Fiddle tunes | Gelatin silver prints | Gore (Okla.) | Gwich'in language | Haas, Mary R. (Mary Rosamond), 1910-1996 | Halkomelem language | Harjo, Alice | Harrington, John Peabody | Hidatsa language | Highland Chontal language | Hill, James | Hitchiti language | Hollywood Indian Reservation (Fla.) | Hoopa (Calif.) | Huave language | Hunting songs | Hupa Indians -- Folklore | Hupa Indians -- Medicine | Hupa Indians -- Music | Hupa Indians -- Religion | Hupa Indians -- Social life and customs | Hupa language | Hymns | Illinois language | Incas. | Indians of North America -- British Columbia | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma | Indians of North America -- Oklahoma -- Languages | Kalapuya language | Karankawa language | Karok language | Karuk language | Kickapoo language | Kiliwa language | Kiowa Apache language | Klamath language | Koasati Indians | Koasati language | Konawa (Okla.) | Kumeyaay language | Kuna language | Kutenai language | Kwakiutl Indians | Lakota language | Language and languages | Latin language | Lectures. | Linguistic texts | Linguistics. | Love songs | Luiseno language | Lullabies | Lushootseed | Maidu language | Makah language | Maps. | Maya Indians | Menominee language | Miami language (Ind. and Okla.) | Michif language | Micmac language | Mikasuki language | Miwok language | Mobilian trade language | Molala language | Munsee language | Muskogean languages | Muskogee Indians -- Folklore | Muskogee language | Natchez Indians | Natchez Indians -- Folklore | Natchez Indians -- Music | Natchez Indians -- Rites and ceremonies | Natchez language | Navajo language | Nitinat language | Nootka Indians | Nootka language | Northern Paiute language | Northwest Coast Indians | Nuu-chah-nulth | Nuu-chah-nulth language | Ofo language | Ojibwa language | Oklahoma | Oneida language | Orleans (Calif.) | Osage language | Paiute language | Patwin language | Pawnee language | Penobscot language | Photographs | Photographs. | Photomechanical prints | Plains Indians | Pomo language | Potawatomi language | Pueblo Indians | Quapaw language | Quechua language | Quileute language | Research notes. | Rumsen language | S'gaw Karen language | Salinan language | Salishan languages | Sarsi language | Seminole Indians | Seminole Indians -- History | Seminole Indians -- Music | Seminole Indians -- Oklahoma -- Religion | Seminole Indians -- Politics and government | Seminole Indians -- Social life and customs | Seminole language | Shasta language | Shawnee language | Siouan languages | Siouan languages -- Mutual intelligibility | Slavic languages | Sound recordings | Spanish language | Sulphur, Alex | Sulphur, Fannie | Takelma language | Tanana language | Taos language | Thai language | Timucua language | Tlingit language | Tol language | Tonkawa language | Tunica Indians | Tunica language | Tutelo language | United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities. | Upper Tanana language -- Glossaries, vocabularies, etc. | Uto-Aztecan languages | Vietnamese language | Wappo language | Watergate Affair, 1972-1974 | Western Apache language | Winnebago language | Wintu language | Wintun languages | Wiyot language | Wiyot-Yorok | Yana language | Yokuts language | Youchigant, Sesostrie | Yuchi language | Yuki language | Yurok Indians -- Folklore | Yurok Indians -- Music | Yurok language | Zuni language



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1840, 1862
Abstract:  

Born in Boston and educated there and in France, Samuel Breck (1771-1862) was a major figure in the mercantile, philanthropic, and political life of Philadelphia during the first hald of the nineteenth century. With an interest in historical and literary affairs, Breck was an active member of the Library Company of Philadelphia, the Phialdelphia Athenaeum, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and the American Philosophical Society (elected 1838). The Breck Collection is comprised of two manuscripts written by Samuel Breck. The first, "Historical Sketch of the Continental Bills of Credit, from 1775 to 1781, with Specimens Thereof" (1840), includes an essay and 153 specimens of Continental Currency. The second essay, "Recollections of My Acquaintance and Association with Deceased Members of the American Philosophical Society" (1862) includes the 92 year-old Breck's reminiscences of his personal relationships with the nationally and internationally prominent membership of the APS.
Call #:  
Mss.332.5.B74h
Extent:
0.25 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1563-1973
Abstract:  

The Scientists Collection is comprised of individual letters and small groups of correspondence from American, British, French, and German scientists during the past three centuries. Although the content is highly varied, there is significant strength in astronomy, natural history, conchology, and geology. Among the scientists better represented in the collection are the astronomers William Radcliffe Birt, J.F.W. Herschel, and Franz Xaver von Zach; the conchologists A.D. Brown, Fred L. Button, Otto Mörch, Alfred Newton, Christian M. Poulsen, Temple Prime, Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy, and A. G. Wetherby; the physical scientists George Biddell Airy, Arnold Sommerfeld, Ferdinand R. Hassler, and Max Planck; the archaeologist Jean François Nadaillac; the philosopher William Whewell; and the naturalists Walter Henry Bates, Robert Chambers, Edme Dupuget, Robert Kaye Greville, Joseph Henry, John Stevens Henslow, John Lubbock, and Herbert Spencer.
Call #:  
Mss.509.L56
Extent:
5.75 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1887-1963
Abstract:  

The bacteriologist and virologist Thomas Milton Rivers spent over thirty years at the Rockefeller Institute as a researcher in the Department of Bacteriology and from 1937-1955, as Director. Working on measles and pneumonia, Rivers discovered the parainfluenzae bacillus and cultivated vaccine virus for human use, and during the 1950s, he played an important role in coordinating research on poliomyelitis as head of the National Institute for Infantile Paralysis. During the Second World War, Rivers led the Naval Medical Research Unit in the South Pacific, rising to the rank of Rear Admiral. The Rivers Papers contains correspondence, laboratory notes, speeches, and photographs documenting Rivers' activities at the Rockefeller Institute, the development of polio vaccine, and Rivers' Navy experience in the Pacific during World War II.
Call #:  
Mss.B.R52
Extent:
10 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1932-1980
Abstract:  

Ernst Wolfgang Caspari was an important contributor to behavior and developmental genetics, working primarily on the mealmoth Ephestia. Trained in Alfred Kuhn's laboratory at the University of Göttingen (1933-1935), Caspari was forced from his position by the Nazis in 1933, escaping to the United States five years later. As a professor of biology at Lafayette College, Wesleyan University, and the University of Rochester, Caspari continued his research on Ephestia, mouse genetics, and behavior genetics until his retirement in 1975. The Caspari Papers includes correspondence, papers, grant reports, and lectures relating to Caspari's genetic research dating primarily from the period after his departure from Germany. In addition to substantial material on behavior genetics and human evolution, the collection includes correspondence relating to Caspari's editorial work for Advances in Genetics, and his involvement with the American Institute of Biological Sciences, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Fifth Banff Conference on Theoretical Psychology, Genetics Society of America, International Conference on the Unity of Science, Social Science Research Council, Committee on Genetics and Behavior, and the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.1
Extent:
9.5 Linear feet
Subjects:  

Advances in Genetics | Ahuja, M. R., Mulkh Raj, 1933- | American Institute of Biological Sciences | American Institute of Biological Sciences | American Society of Naturalists -- Honorary membership | American Society of Naturalists -- Nominating committee | Anders, Fritz Wilhelm, b. 1919 | Atomic Energy Commission | Bacterial genetics | Banff Conference on Theoretical Psychology | Behavior genetics. | Behavioral genetics, IQ | Bibliographical matters | Biochemistry and organic chemistry | Biographical and personal data | Biographical and personal data -- Mayr, Ernst | Braun, J. Werner (Joachim Werner), 1914-1972 | Calhoun, John B. | Cancer, chemotherapy | Caspari, Ernst W., 1909-1988 | Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (Stanford, CA) | Champlin, Arthur Kingsley | Chatard, Patricia M. | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory -- Board of Directors | Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. | Committee activities | Conferences and symposia | Cotter, William Bryan, Jr. | Cytogenetics | Dalton, Howard Clark | Demerec, M. (Milislav), 1895-1966 | Developmental genetics | Displaced German scholars | Dobzhansky, Theodosius Grigorievich, 1900-1975 | Drosophila genetics | Editorial matters | Editorial matters -- Genetics | Educational matters | Educational matters -- Training grants | Egelhaaf, Albrecht, 1922- | Ehrman, Lee | Eicher, Eva M. (Eva Mae) | Embryology, developmental genetics | Embryology, developmental genetics -- Lectures, public speaking | Ephestia | Erlenmeyer-Kimling, L. | Eugenics | Evolution | Fellowships, assistantships | Fellowships, assistantships -- University of Rochester | Firshein, W. (William), 1930- | Genetics | Genetics -- Ephestia | Genetics -- Somatic hybrids | Genetics Society of America | Genetics Society of America -- Committee activities | Genetics Society of America -- President | Genetics of plants | Gottlieb, Frederick Jay, 1935- | Graduate study | Graduate study -- University of Rochester | Grant applications | Green, Melvin M. | History of biology, especially genetics | Honors | Human evolution | Human evolution, physical anthropology | Human genetics | Immunogenetics | International Conference on the Unity of the Sciences | International Congress of Genetics | International Congress of Genetics -- Fourteenth Congress | International Congress of Genetics -- Organizing Committee | Invitations | Kuhn, Alfred | Kühn, Alfred, 1885-1968 | Lectures | Lectures, public speaking | Lectures, public speaking -- Visiting lectures | Lepidoptera -- Research grants | Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005 | McClintock, Barbara, 1902-1992 | Milano, Ann | Milano, Madelyn | Molecular genetics | Mouse -- Genetics | Mouse genetics | Muth, Friedrich Wilhelm | National Research Council -- Committee activities | National Science Foundation | Nawa, Saburo | New York University | Photographs | Photographs | Pohley, Heinz-Joachim | Political issues | Political refugees -- Germany | Population genetics | Poultry genetics | Protozoan genetics | Publication | Publication -- Genetics | Rabbit genetics | Radiation genetics | Rat genetics | Recommendations | Referee's report | Requests for aid in finding positions | Research support | Research support -- Proposals | Research support -- Reports | Research support -- U. S. Army Chemical Corps | Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory | Russian politics and science | Schwarz, Ernst, 1989- | Scientific organizations, meetings, programs | Scientific organizations, meetings, programs -- American Institute of Biological Sciences | Smith, Woollcott | Smithsonian Institution | Social Science Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Genetics and Behavior | Social Science Research Council -- Committee activities | Solicitations for support or contribution | Sonneborn, T. M. (Tracy Morton), 1905-1981 | Stanford University | Stern, Curt, 1902-1981 | Teaching | Teaching -- Wesleyan University | Teicher, Luz S. | Timofeeff-Ressovsky, Nikolai W. | Travel -- Invitations, arrangements | U.S. Atomic Energy Commission | University of Giessen | University of Kentucky | University of Koln | University of Pittsburgh | University of Rochester | University of Rochester--Faculty | Unpublished manuscripts, notes, etc. | Vankin, George Lawrence, 1931- | Watson, Geoffrey, 1942- | Wesleyan University | Wesleyan University--Faculty | World War II -- Impact on science | Ziegler, Irmgard



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
Circa 1940-1978
Abstract:  

The collection of Charles Coleman Sellers (1903-1980) contains copious and detailed documentation of the art of Charles Willson Peale and his family. It consists of working files for Sellers's numerous publications, including his Portraits and Miniatures by Charles Willson Peale (1952); Charles Willson Peale with Patron and Populace (1969); C. W. Peale's Portraits of Washington (1951); Benjamin Franklin in Portraiture (1962); Mr. Peale's Museum (1980). Most files include photographs of the art work, notes on the piece, and correspondence with authorities or owners. Other series include one relating to the paintings of various other Peales, including Anna C., James, Mary Jane, Raphaelle, Rembrandt, Rubens, and Sarah Miriam, and a miscellaneous artist file, which includes the same type of material and information on many eighteenth- and nineteenth-century artists, including Thomas Eakins, George Healy, Robert Edge Pine, William Rush, Thomas Sully, Benjamin West, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, etc. There is a separate Sellers collection at Dickinson College, primarily personal in nature.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.3
Extent:
19.5 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1758-1995
Abstract:  

Trained as an anthropologist under Frank Speck at the University of Pennsylvania, the ethnohistorian George Snyderman (1908- ) spent his career studying Seneca Indian religion, history, and culture. Snyderman edited the previously unpublished diaries of Halliday Jackson and John Phillips, Quaker missionaries to the Senecas in the late 18th and early 19th century. The Snyderman Papers includes a small volume of correspondence, along with manuscripts of works by Snyderman and colleagues, and copies of primary source materials pertaining to Seneca history. Of particular interest is his correspondence with anthropologists William N. Fenton, Merle Deardorff, and Frank Speck and with his Seneca consultant Clara Redeye and her daughter, Helen Harris, and photographs of the Allegany Senecas taken by Fenton and Speck.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.51
Extent:
3 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1945-2000
Abstract:  

An anthropologist and student of Native American cultures, Elisabeth Tooker devoted a long career, much of it as a professor at Temple University, to study of the culture and ethnohistory of the Haudenosaunee of New York State. The Tooker Papers is arranged in six series, and contain her correspondence, subject files, research notes, and both published and unpublished papers.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.84
Extent:
42 Linear feet



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1916-1973
Abstract:  

The American Eugenics Society Records is a small, selective collection offering information on various periods of the Society's development, including correspondence, membership records, and formal and informal material on its history. Of particular interest are the records of the Society's numerous committees, including the Executive Education, Population Genetics Research, Legislative, and local and state committees, and documentation of AES educational initiatives at state fairs and eugenic health exhibits and contests, especially the Fitter Family Contests. A scrapbook containing 97 images of Fitter Family and eugenic health exhibits, 1924-1926, provides valuable visual information of AES activities. One series in the collection relates to the numerous Princeton Conferences and to a genealogical survey of the populations of Shutesbury and Leverett, Massachusetts, and there is also material on the Population Council. The collection largely revolves around Frederick Osborn, the moving force in the Society for most of its later history, and it includes approximately 100 papers written or delivered by Osborn concerning eugenics, genetics, or population related topics. This note is currently under review for revision.
Call #:  
Mss.575.06.Am3
Extent:
12 Linear feet
Subjects:  

American Eugenics Society | Behavioral genetics, IQ | Biographical and personal data | Biology, genetics, eugenics | Business | Business -- Newsletters | Carnegie Corporation | Committee activities | Committee activities -- Massachusetts | Committee activities -- Pennsylvania | Committee activities -- Utah | Conferences and symposia | Congratulations, greetings, thanks | Educational matters -- Research programs | Embryology, developmental genetics | Eugenics | Eugenics -- Societies, etc. | Eugenics -- United States | Fellowships, assistantships | Fellowships, assistantships -- University of Michigan | Fitter Family Contests | Genetics -- Societies, etc. | Graduate study | Harvard University | History of biology, especially genetics | Human evolution, physical anthropology | Human genetics | Human genetics -- Pedigrees | Human genetics -- Race | International Congress of Eugenics -- Second Congress | Lectures, public speaking -- Sermons | Maps | National Research Council | Osborn, Frederick, 1889-1981 | Photographs | Political issues | Political issues -- Birth control | Population Council | Population genetics | Population, demography | Princeton Conferences | Publication | Race, race relations, racism | Research support | Research support -- Bajema, Carl Jay | Reviews | Scientific organizations, meetings, programs | Scientific organizations, meetings, programs -- Population Council | Scientific organizations, meetings, programs -- Society for the Study of Social Biology | Solicitations for support or contribution | Unpublished manuscripts, notes, etc. | Whitney, Leon Fradley, 1894-19 | World War II -- Impact on science



MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION

Dates:
1898-1956
Abstract:  

A pioneer biochemist, Carl Neuberg (1877-1956) spent over thirty years of his productive career as a professor at the University of Berlin (1903-1937) and as Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institutes of Biochemistry and Experimental Therapy. His varied research interests resulted in important contributions to the understanding of fermentation processes, solubility and transport phenomena in cells, the chemistry of carbohydrates, sugars, enzymes, and amino acids, and photochemistry. Neuberg was forced out of his position after the Nazi rise to power, and taking refuge in the United States. For the last several years of his life, he worked at New York University. The Neuberg collection consists of correspondence, lab notebooks, documents, photographs, and reprints, nearly all dating from after Neuberg's departure from Germany in 1940. The correspondence documents Neuberg's late-career work and the contacts he developed with American chemical manufacturers and industries involved in fermentation, as well as the burgeoning post-war relationship between scientific research and the federal dollar. Files for the American Cancer Society, U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, and the U.S. Public Health Service in particular contain useful information for study of the politics and mechanics of government grants.
Call #:  
Mss.Ms.Coll.4
Extent:
13.5 Linear feet



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