New Search  |  Browse by Location  |  Browse by Subject  |  Browse all entries  |  Map
Results:  3 Items 
Locations
Antarctica (1)
Arrow Rock (1)
Bay of Isles (1)
Browning (1)
Buenos Aires (1)
Cahokia (1)
Cape Disappointment State Park (1)
Caracas (1)
Cascade (1)
Chinook (1)
1.Title:  Grace E. Barstow Murphy Diaries (1952-1970)
 Dates:  1952 - 1970 
 Extent:  6 volumes  
 Locations:  Antarctica | Bay of Isles | Buenos Aires | Caracas | Punta Arenas | Strait of Magellan 
 Abstract:  Grace Murphy's diaries offer a limited but detailed account of her travels to Argentina, Antarctica, and Venezuela with her husband, Robert Cushman Murphy in six volumes chronicling the years 1952 and 1967-70. These notebooks ought to interest researchers examining mid-century conservation, disability studies (particular the deaf), excursions to Antarctica, Venezuela under military dictatorship, and the career of Robert Cushman Murphy (whose papers are also available at the American Philosophical Society). 
    
The Grace E.B. Murphy Papers include two distinct sets of diaries. The first, a two-volume account of her trip to Venezuela (2/19-3/14/1952), provides detailed accounts of animals (especially birds), vegetation (including mangrove forests and mango groves), and accounts of the people, social life, and appearance of towns and cities, including Caracas. Those interested in conservation efforts might gravitate towards entries describing a visit to a jaguar hunting camp (e.g. 3/3/1952) and descriptions of the burgeoning oil industry (2/16/1952 and 3/7/1952). Entries pertaining to oil extraction are particularly noteworthy because they include on-the-ground accounts of oil wells and comparisons of U.S. foreign policy with regards to Venezuela and Iran. Researchers may find more detailed accounts in Murphy's typed notes contained in seven folders of "Vacation in Venezuela."
 
Murphy's excursion to Antarctica sprawls across four notebooks, though "No. I," which spans 1/26-2/15/1967, provides the most detailed and sequential account of her trip to Antarctica. Entries provide accounts of other travelers, social obligations, modes of transportation, scenery, wildlife (especially penguins), glaciers and icebergs, and destinations including Buenos Aires (1/26), Punta Arenas (1/28), and Antarctica (beginning 2/5). Perhaps most remarkable are Murphy's lyrical accounts of Antarctica (e.g. 2/2, 2/5, 2/6), candid reflections on her relationship with her husband, Robert (2/4, 2/8), and even her disability (1/29). (Those interested in disability studies might also reference the folders "Your Deafness is Not You," enclosed in the same box.)
 
"No. II" picks up on 2/11/1967 but continues through 3/31/1970 with some entries related to South Africa
 
while it includes several self-contained entries, most of this notebook is comprised of supplemental notes and questions. "No. III" includes still further miscellaneous notes as well as entries from the end of the Antarctic excursion, dates 2/16-21. Finally, a fourth volume, entitled "For Grace" contains accounts from 2/10, 2/15, 2/16, 2/18, and 2/19
 
however, the penmanship differs from the early notebooks and it is not immediately clear who authored these accounts. (It could very well be her husband, Robert).
 
    
Grace Murphy's diaries offer a limited but detailed account of her travels to Argentina, Antarctica, and Venezuela with her husband, Robert Cushman Murphy in six volumes chronicling the years 1952 and 1967-70. These notebooks ought to interest researchers examining mid-century conservation, disability studies (particular the deaf), excursions to Antarctica, Venezuela under military dictatorship, and the career of Robert Cushman Murphy (whose papers are also available at the American Philosophical Society).
 
The Grace E.B. Murphy Papers include two distinct sets of diaries. The first, a two-volume account of her trip to Venezuela (2/19-3/14/1952), provides detailed accounts of animals (especially birds), vegetation (including mangrove forests and mango groves), and accounts of the people, social life, and appearance of towns and cities, including Caracas. Those interested in conservation efforts might gravitate towards entries describing a visit to a jaguar hunting camp (e.g. 3/3/1952) and descriptions of the burgeoning oil industry (2/16/1952 and 3/7/1952). Entries pertaining to oil extraction are particularly noteworthy because they include on-the-ground accounts of oil wells and comparisons of U.S. foreign policy with regards to Venezuela and Iran. Researchers may find more detailed accounts in Murphy's typed notes contained in seven folders of "Vacation in Venezuela."
 
Murphy's excursion to Antarctica sprawls across four notebooks, though "No. I," which spans 1/26-2/15/1967, provides the most detailed and sequential account of her trip to Antarctica. Entries provide accounts of other travelers, social obligations, modes of transportation, scenery, wildlife (especially penguins), glaciers and icebergs, and destinations including Buenos Aires (1/26), Punta Arenas (1/28), and Antarctica (beginning 2/5). Perhaps most remarkable are Murphy's lyrical accounts of Antarctica (e.g. 2/2, 2/5, 2/6), candid reflections on her relationship with her husband, Robert (2/4, 2/8), and even her disability (1/29). (Those interested in disability studies might also reference the folders "Your Deafness is Not You," enclosed in the same box.)
 
"No. II" picks up on 2/11/1967 but continues through 3/31/1970 with some entries related to South Africa
 
while it includes several self-contained entries, most of this notebook is comprised of supplemental notes and questions. "No. III" includes still further miscellaneous notes as well as entries from the end of the Antarctic excursion, dates 2/16-21. Finally, a fourth volume, entitled "For Grace" contains accounts from 2/10, 2/15, 2/16, 2/18, and 2/19
 
however, the penmanship differs from the early notebooks and it is not immediately clear who authored these accounts. (It could very well be her husband, Robert).
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • On the international oil industry: "Oil is certainly a worldwide & important matter…every gallon of gas we buy for our car lies a tremendous intricacy of people, plans, research, expense, & knowledge—knowledge most of all, perhaps. Even the good food brought from U.S.A. to every table where all these people eat, must make an industry by itself" (3/7/1952)

  • Disability and the Straights of Magellan: "Am I really here? Am I really going there? Who says that people need to get old? Who says that deafness need cut [into] to life? Age is or is not in the heart, as one chooses. A disability & I've heard deafness called the cruelest because it isolates, need to curtail [response] to one's living? (1/29/1967)

  • Glacier in Antarctica: "It is a blue one cannot describe—a lively blue, a soft blue, baby view, the kind of blue of a gown for the loveliest Madonna ever painted. How did the word "blue" ever be prostituted to an idea of sadness? Perhaps in the way that a lovely girl would be prostituted yet somehow keep a purity innate in her soul. How mixed up life is, yet how amazingly interesting life becomes by being mixed-up. The very fact that this blue over which I have suddenly lost my mind & gone berserk is made up of the hardest and coldest ice on this earth is certainly part of the mix-up. Perhaps the combination of the ice & the blue points out that mix-ups are mix-ups so why try to solve them? Life can be so extremely delightful no matter what, let's [toss] all the problems & live it in fullness. Let's take the immaculate blue of the ice-berg into our beings, neglecting, forgetting the ice hill is a fire: let our Heaven be blue in spite of that ice" (2/5/1967)
 
 Subjects:  Africa. | Antarctica--Discovery and exploration. | Antarctica. | Conservation of natural resources. | Diaries. | Disability. | Ecology. | Environmental protection. | Murphy, Robert Cushman, 1887-1973 | Oil industries. | Ornithology. | Travel. | Venezuela - Description and travel. | Venezuela--Politics and government. | Women--History. 
 Collection:  Grace E. Barstow Murphy papers, 1835-1973  (Mss.B.M957.g)  
  Go to the collection
 
2.Title:  William Dunbar and Zebulon Pike Journals (1804-1806)
 Dates:  1804 - 1806 
 Extent:  3 volumes  
 Locations:  Concord | Hot Springs | Natchez | Saint Catherine's Landing | Saint Louis | Washita 
 Abstract:  The Expedition Journals feature three travel journals bound in a single volume. The first two document William Dunbar's expedition up the Red and Ouachita Rivers to the Hot Springs of Arkansas in 1804-1805. Although few contemporary locations are named, they include numerous coordinates that researchers may use to track the journey. "Journal... to the Mouth of the Red River" furnishes particularly lush descriptions of the settlers (e.g. 10/21/1804) and indigenous peoples (11/24/1804) in the region. The second journal records technical data from the expedition, including a thermometrical log. Both journals dovetail nicely with that of traveling companion, George Hunter, also available at the APS (Mss.B.H912).; The final journal recounts an expedition to explore the geography of the Mississippi River led by Lt. Zebulon Montgomery Pike between 1805-1806. The Pike journal provides a daily account of the activities of the expedition during an early exploration into present day Minnesota. Notably, that journal includes significant attention to exchanges between settlers and local indigenous tribes (e.g. 9/3/1805, 9/10/1805, 9/24-25/1805). That volume has been printed with variations and omissions in An Account of Expeditions to the Sources of the Mississippi and through the Western Parts of Louisiana... (Philadelphia, 1810), and it was edited in Donald Jackson, ed., The Journals of Zebulon Pike: with Letters and Related Documents (Norman, Okla., 1966). Bound together, the Dunbar and Pike volumes ought to interest a range of scholars researching U.S. exploration and Native America in the early national period. 
    
 
    
The Expedition Journals feature three travel journals bound in a single volume. The first two document William Dunbar's expedition up the Red and Ouachita Rivers to the Hot Springs of Arkansas in 1804-1805. Although few contemporary locations are named, they include numerous coordinates that researchers may use to track the journey. "Journal... to the Mouth of the Red River" furnishes particularly lush descriptions of the settlers (e.g. 10/21/1804) and indigenous peoples (11/24/1804) in the region. The second journal records technical data from the expedition, including a thermometrical log. Both journals dovetail nicely with that of traveling companion, George Hunter, also available at the APS (Mss.B.H912).; The final journal recounts an expedition to explore the geography of the Mississippi River led by Lt. Zebulon Montgomery Pike between 1805-1806. The Pike journal provides a daily account of the activities of the expedition during an early exploration into present day Minnesota. Notably, that journal includes significant attention to exchanges between settlers and local indigenous tribes (e.g. 9/3/1805, 9/10/1805, 9/24-25/1805). That volume has been printed with variations and omissions in An Account of Expeditions to the Sources of the Mississippi and through the Western Parts of Louisiana... (Philadelphia, 1810), and it was edited in Donald Jackson, ed., The Journals of Zebulon Pike: with Letters and Related Documents (Norman, Okla., 1966). Bound together, the Dunbar and Pike volumes ought to interest a range of scholars researching U.S. exploration and Native America in the early national period.
 
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • Dunbar: "On the left is a small settlement commenced by a man and his wife: a covered frame of rough poles without walls serves for a house, and Couple of acres of Indian corn had been cultivated, which sufficed to stock their little magazine with bread for the year, the forest supplies Venison, Bear, turkey &c, the river fowl and fish, the skins of the wild animals and an abundance of the finest honey being carried to market enables the new settler to supply himself largely with all other necessary articles, in a year or two he arrives at a state of independence, he purchases horses, cows & other domestic animals, perhaps a slave also who shares with the labours and productions of his fields & of the adjoining forests. How happy the contrast, when we compare the fortune of the new settler in the U.S. with the misery of the half staving, oppressed and degraded peasant of Europe!!" (10/21/1804)

  • Dunbar: "By the expression planes or prairies in this place is not to be understood a dead flat resembling certain savannahs, whose soil is stiff and impenetrable, often under water & bearing only a coarse grass resembling weeds, very far different are the western Prairies, which expression signifies only a country without timber: Those Prairies are neither flat nor hilly, but undulating into gently swelling lawns and expanding into spacious vallies in the center of which is always found a little timber growing upon the banks of brooks and rivulets of the finest water, the whole of the prairies is represented to be composed of the richest and most fertile soil, the most luxuriant & succulent herbage cover the surface of the Earth interspersed with millions of flowers and flowering shrubs the most ornamental and adorning kinds: Those who have viewed only a skirt of those prairies, speak of them with a degree of enthusiasm as if it was only there that Nature was to be found in a state truly perfect, they declare that the fertility and beauty of the rising grounds, the extreme richness of the Vallies, the coolness and excellent quality of the waters found in every Valley, the Salubrity of the atmosphere and above all the grandeur and majesty of the enchanting landscape which this country presents, inspires the soul with sensations not to be felt in any other region of the Globe. This Paradise is now very thinly inhabited by a few tribes of Savages and by immense herds of wild Cattle (Bison) which people those countries…the whole of it being cultivable, it will admit the fullest population, and will at a future day vie with the best cultivated and most populous countries on the Globe (1/10/1805)

  • Pike: "It is astonishing to me, what a dread the Indians have of the Americans in this quarter. I have frequently seen them go round Islands to avoid meeting my Boat. It appears evident to me that the Traders have taken great pains to impress on the Minds of the Savages, an idea of our being a very Vindictive, Ferocious, and Warlike people. This impression was given no doubt with an evil intention, but when they find that our conduct towards them is guided by magnanimity and justice, instead of operating in an injurious manner, it will have the effect of making them reverence, at same time, they fear us" (9/3/1805)
 
 Subjects:  Caddo Indians. | Chickasaw Indians. | Chippewa Tribe | Dakota Indians. | Diaries. | Expedition | Exploration & encounters | Hot Springs (Ark.) | Indian traders. | Louisiana Purchase. | Meteorology. | Minnesota. | Mississippi River--Description and travel. | Native America | Ojibwa Indians. | Osage Indians. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | Weather. 
 Collection:  Expedition Journals  (Mss.917.7.D91)  
  Go to the collection
 
3.Title:  Meriwether Lewis and William Clark Journals (1804-1806)
 Dates:  1804 - 1806 
 Extent:  30 volumes  
 Locations:  Arrow Rock | Browning | Cahokia | Cape Disappointment State Park | Cascade | Chinook | Cut Bank | Dillon | Fort Calhoun | Fort Osage | Lemhi Pass | Lewis and Clark National Historical Park | Lolo | Nez Perce National Historical Park | Pompey's Pillar | Portage | Rocheport | Rulo | Saint Albans | Saint Louis | Sioux City | Spalding | Spirit Mound Township | Stanton | Weippe Prairie | Williston 
 Abstract:  The Lewis and Clark Journals are among the most treasured and well-known collections at the American Philosophical Society. These 30 manuscript journals provide a detail record of the travels of Lewis and Clark to the source of the Missouri River and across the continent to the Pacific Ocean, including interlineations by Nicholas Biddle, who later published the narrative "History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814). Interested researchers may refer to the Finding Aid for a detailed account of the collection. Scholars researching the Lewis and Clark Expedition and western exploration in the early national period may choose to complement these volumes by paging the Meriwether Lewis Journal (Mss.917.3.L58), which provides an early account of the river trip from Pittsburgh to the winter camp of the expedition (1803), and the William Clark Diary (Mss.917.3.L58c), which details Clark's diplomatic expedition into the Missouri Territory after the expedition (1808). 
    
 
    
The Lewis and Clark Journals are among the most treasured and well-known collections at the American Philosophical Society. These 30 manuscript journals provide a detail record of the travels of Lewis and Clark to the source of the Missouri River and across the continent to the Pacific Ocean, including interlineations by Nicholas Biddle, who later published the narrative "History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814). Interested researchers may refer to the Finding Aid for a detailed account of the collection. Scholars researching the Lewis and Clark Expedition and western exploration in the early national period may choose to complement these volumes by paging the Meriwether Lewis Journal (Mss.917.3.L58), which provides an early account of the river trip from Pittsburgh to the winter camp of the expedition (1803), and the William Clark Diary (Mss.917.3.L58c), which details Clark's diplomatic expedition into the Missouri Territory after the expedition (1808).
 
View Full Description in New Window
 
  
 Subjects:  Chinook Indians. | Diaries. | Diplomacy. | Expedition | Exploration & encounters | Indians of North America--Missouri. | Indians of North America--Montana. | Indians of North America--North Dakota | Indians of North America--Oregon | Louisiana Purchase. | Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-1806) | Mandan Indians | Missouri Indians. | Native America | Natural history. | Northwest Coast of North America. | Oto Indians. | Salish Indians. | Shoshoni Indians. | Sihasapa Indians. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. 
 Collection:  Lewis and Clark Journals  (Mss.917.3.L58)  
  Go to the collection