New Search  |  Browse by Location  |  Browse by Subject  |  Browse all entries  |  Map
Results:  3 Items 
Locations
Amsterdam (1)
Arlington (1)
Baltimore (1)
Bath (1)
Baton Rouge (2)
Beacon (1)
Beppu (1)
Berlin (2)
Bermuda (1)
Biloxi (1)
Blue Lick (1)
Boston (1)
Brookhaven (1)
Brunswick (1)
Bryn Mawr (1)
Buffalo (1)
Cambridge (1)
Cambridge, Massachusetts (1)
Carlisle (1)
Carville (1)
Charlottesville (1)
Cherbourg (1)
Chicago (1)
Cologne (1)
Copenhagen (1)
Dallas (1)
Deming (1)
Denver (1)
Dresden (1)
Durham (1)
Edinburgh (1)
El Paso (1)
Fort Myers (1)
Frankford (1)
Frankfurt (1)
Fredericksburg (1)
Fukuoka (1)
Fukuyama (1)
Gainesville (1)
Geneva (1)
Glasgow (1)
Gothenburg (1)
Grand Canyon (1)
Great Falls (1)
Greenville (1)
Grindelwald (1)
Hakone (1)
Hart (1)
Harwell (1)
HindAs (1)
Hiroshima (1)
Hohenschwangau (1)
Honolulu (1)
Houston (1)
Innsbruck (1)
Interlaken (1)
Ithaca (1)
Kobe (1)
Kumamoto (1)
Kyoto (1)
Kyushu (1)
Lake Chūzenji (1)
Lake Moxie (1)
Leiden (1)
Lexington (2)
Limerick (1)
Liverpool (1)
London (1)
Los Alamos (1)
Los Angeles (1)
Louisville (1)
Lucerne (1)
Macon (1)
Madison (1)
Mainz (1)
Malvern (1)
Manchester (1)
Marlborough (1)
Menton (1)
Miami (1)
Millersburg (1)
Minneapolis (1)
Mobile (1)
Monterey (1)
Montreal (1)
Mount Aso (1)
Mount Unzen (1)
Munich (1)
Nagasaki (1)
Naples (1)
Natchez[X]
Neuschwansteinstraße (1)
New Brunswick (1)
New Castle (1)
New Haven (1)
New Orleans (3)
New York (1)
Newark (1)
Nice (1)
Nikko (1)
Oak Ridge (1)
Oklahoma City (1)
Olympic Valley (1)
Orlando (1)
Osaka (1)
Oxford (1)
Oxford, Mississippi (1)
Paris (1)
Pasadena (1)
Philadelphia (3)
Phoenix (1)
Pittsburgh (2)
Port Vincent (1)
Prague (1)
Princeton (1)
Reno (1)
Richmond (1)
Rochester (1)
Rockport (1)
Rome (1)
Roswell (1)
Sadler (1)
Saint Catharine's (1)
Saint Francisville (1)
Saint Louis (2)
Salzburg (1)
San Francisco (1)
Sanibel (1)
Santa Barbara (1)
Schenectady (1)
Seattle (1)
Shannon (1)
Shikoku (1)
Shimabara (1)
Shippensburg (1)
South Newfane (1)
Southampton (1)
Stockholm (1)
Stoke-on-Trent (1)
Tahoe (1)
Tallahassee (1)
Tampa (1)
The Hague (1)
Tokyo (1)
Uppsala (1)
Venice (1)
Vicksburg (1)
Victoria (1)
Vienna (1)
Virginia City (1)
Visalia (1)
Washington D.C. (2)
Weldon (1)
Wells (1)
Wheeling (1)
Worcester, United Kingdom (1)
Yosemite Valley (1)
Zurich (1)
1.Title:  Alexander Dallas Bache Diary (1862)
 Dates:  1862 - 1862 
 Extent:  1 volume  
 Locations:  Baton Rouge | Mobile | Natchez | New Orleans | Philadelphia | Vicksburg 
 Abstract:  The Alexander Dallas Bache diary offers an unusual view of Civil War battlefields from the perspective of the superintendent of the United States Coast Survey. Bache served as Captain's Clerk aboard USS Harford flagship, one of 17 Union ships that traveled up the Mississippi River to take New Orleans. With entries spanning the spring and summer of 1862 (4/14-7/13), this volume recounts naval bombardments in the early years of the war, provides textured accounts of the Confederate South, and will no doubt interest researchers who study the Civil War, U.S. military history, and the Confederate States of America. 
    
Bache's diary provides curt but consistent accounts of the Union's military operations, particularly along the Mississippi River. Those include the Battle of Charlotte (4/25), the Battle of Baton Rouge (5/28), and the Battle of Vicksburg (6/28). Notably, Bache travels to shore on at least one occasion, furnishing first-hand accounts of the Confederate South. For example, he attends a religious service, writing, "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13). Later, he describes as Natchez as a "very pretty place" (5/18). Interested researchers might consider pairing this volume with the Thomas Hewson Bache Diary, also from 1862, which provides a surgeon's perspective on the Battle of Baton Rouge.
 
    
The Alexander Dallas Bache diary offers an unusual view of Civil War battlefields from the perspective of the superintendent of the United States Coast Survey. Bache served as Captain's Clerk aboard USS Harford flagship, one of 17 Union ships that traveled up the Mississippi River to take New Orleans. With entries spanning the spring and summer of 1862 (4/14-7/13), this volume recounts naval bombardments in the early years of the war, provides textured accounts of the Confederate South, and will no doubt interest researchers who study the Civil War, U.S. military history, and the Confederate States of America.
 
Bache's diary provides curt but consistent accounts of the Union's military operations, particularly along the Mississippi River. Those include the Battle of Charlotte (4/25), the Battle of Baton Rouge (5/28), and the Battle of Vicksburg (6/28). Notably, Bache travels to shore on at least one occasion, furnishing first-hand accounts of the Confederate South. For example, he attends a religious service, writing, "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13). Later, he describes as Natchez as a "very pretty place" (5/18). Interested researchers might consider pairing this volume with the Thomas Hewson Bache Diary, also from 1862, which provides a surgeon's perspective on the Battle of Baton Rouge.
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • "the bombing in the night was beautiful" (4/19)

  • Receives news that "the American flag flies over Jackson" (4/28)

  • "Some of the officers went to church where they prayed for the President of the Confed. States" (5/13)
 
 Subjects:  American Civil War, 1861-1865 | Confederate States of America. | Diaries. | Medicine. | Religion. | Science. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | United States Coast Survey. | United States--Politics and government--1783-1865. | Weather. 
 Collection:  A. D. Bache Collection  (Mss.B.B123)  
  Go to the collection
 
2.Title:  George Hunter Journals (1796-1809)
 Dates:  1796 - 1809 
 Extent:  4 volumes  
 Locations:  Baltimore | Berlin | Blue Lick | Carlisle | Frankford | Lexington | Louisville | Millersburg | Natchez | New Orleans | Philadelphia | Pittsburgh | Port Vincent | Richmond | Sadler | Saint Catharine's | Saint Louis | Shippensburg | Washington D.C. | Wheeling 
 Abstract:  George Hunter maintained four journals during expeditions into Kentucky, Illinois, Mississippi, and Louisiana between 1796-1809. Hunter records his daily affairs, observations of territories, visits to trading centers, and commentary on international rivalries and relations with various indigenous peoples, including the Delaware, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Osage. With rich, narrative accounts of western travel in the early national period—including exploration of Louisiana shortly after the Louisiana Purchase—the Hunter diaries ought to interest scholars researching the American west, Native America, and U.S. empire. 
    
Interested researchers would do well to consult the detailed description of Hunter's four volumes available in the Early American History Note. For the purposes of diary researchers, the first volume (1796) warrants attention for its descriptions of indigenous peoples and early settlements. For example, Hunter offers an extended account of St. Louis (9/4/1796). He also describes an Indian woman whose nose was cut off by her husband for infidelity, a passage excerpted in Selected Quotations (9/9/1796). The 1802 journal documents Hunter's trip across Pennsylvania (Berlin, Carlisle, and Shippensburg), visit to a cave in Kentucky, and discussion of salt production at Blue Lick. Finally, the last two journals (1804, 1809) include various travels in the South, including a description of expedition to the Hot Springs of Arkansas (1804-1805) as well as longitudes and latitudes that researchers might use to trace Hunter's journey. Notably, Hunter discovers Mammoth bones, which he compares to those of Charles Wilson Peale, writing, "I cannot for bear mentioning a great natural curiosity I have just seen here [sic] about 2 ½ Tons of Bones of one or two Mammoths twice as large as Peals" (5/27/1804).
 
    
George Hunter maintained four journals during expeditions into Kentucky, Illinois, Mississippi, and Louisiana between 1796-1809. Hunter records his daily affairs, observations of territories, visits to trading centers, and commentary on international rivalries and relations with various indigenous peoples, including the Delaware, Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Osage. With rich, narrative accounts of western travel in the early national period—including exploration of Louisiana shortly after the Louisiana Purchase—the Hunter diaries ought to interest scholars researching the American west, Native America, and U.S. empire.
 
Interested researchers would do well to consult the detailed description of Hunter's four volumes available in the Early American History Note. For the purposes of diary researchers, the first volume (1796) warrants attention for its descriptions of indigenous peoples and early settlements. For example, Hunter offers an extended account of St. Louis (9/4/1796). He also describes an Indian woman whose nose was cut off by her husband for infidelity, a passage excerpted in Selected Quotations (9/9/1796). The 1802 journal documents Hunter's trip across Pennsylvania (Berlin, Carlisle, and Shippensburg), visit to a cave in Kentucky, and discussion of salt production at Blue Lick. Finally, the last two journals (1804, 1809) include various travels in the South, including a description of expedition to the Hot Springs of Arkansas (1804-1805) as well as longitudes and latitudes that researchers might use to trace Hunter's journey. Notably, Hunter discovers Mammoth bones, which he compares to those of Charles Wilson Peale, writing, "I cannot for bear mentioning a great natural curiosity I have just seen here [sic] about 2 ½ Tons of Bones of one or two Mammoths twice as large as Peals" (5/27/1804).
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • "After dinner crossed the Mississippi, in a Canoe, swimming our horses after it, & came to the Town of St. Louis, on the Spanish side, here we also paid our respects to the Commandant & were politely received…This Town is built on the banks of the Mississippi upon high ground with a gradual descent to the water. Is very healthy to appearance. The children seem ruddy & water is good, & everything puts on a better appearance than on our side" (9/4/1796)

  • "There is a considerable resort of Indians, they are constantly thro & about this hour at all times, like as many pet Lambs, at present there is a Man, his Squa & child sitting by the kitchen fire. The squa has a piece of her nose cut off by this very husband now sitting peaceably by her sit, in a fit of Jealousy, she wears a piece of [Ten?] bent over the part to make out the nose. It seems with them that for the first offence this way with another man, the Squa is punished with a sound drubbing, for the next, he cuts off the end of her nose, & for the third he either kills her or turns her away" (9/9/1796)

  • "I cannot for bear mentioning a great natural curiosity I have just seen here [sic] about 2 ½ Tons of Bones of one or two Mammoths twice as large as Peals" (5/27/1804)
 
 Subjects:  American Western Life | Cherokee Indians. | Chickasaw Indians. | Choctaw Indians. | Delaware Indians. | Diaries. | Expedition | Geology. | Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826. | Meteorology. | Native America | Natural history. | Osage Indians. | Science. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1783-1865. | Weather. 
 Collection:  George Hunter Journals  (Mss.B.H912)  
  Go to the collection
 
3.Title:  John Clark Slater Diary Abstracts (1900-1975)
 Dates:  1900 - 1875 
 Extent:  1 volume  
 Locations:  Amsterdam | Arlington | Bath | Baton Rouge | Beacon | Beppu | Berlin | Bermuda | Biloxi | Boston | Brookhaven | Brunswick | Bryn Mawr | Buffalo | Buffalo | Cambridge | Cambridge, Massachusetts | Carville | Charlottesville | Cherbourg | Chicago | Cologne | Copenhagen | Dallas | Deming | Denver | Dresden | Durham | Edinburgh | El Paso | Fort Myers | Frankfurt | Fredericksburg | Fukuoka | Fukuyama | Gainesville | Geneva | Glasgow | Gothenburg | Grand Canyon | Great Falls | Greenville | Grindelwald | Hakone | Hart | Harwell | HindAs | Hiroshima | Hohenschwangau | Honolulu | Houston | Innsbruck | Interlaken | Ithaca | Kobe | Kumamoto | Kyoto | Kyushu | Lake Chūzenji | Lake Moxie | Leiden | Lexington | Limerick | Liverpool | London | Los Alamos | Los Angeles | Lucerne | Macon | Madison | Mainz | Malvern | Manchester | Marlborough | Menton | Miami | Minneapolis | Monterey | Montreal | Mount Aso | Mount Unzen | Munich | Nagasaki | Naples | Natchez | Neuschwansteinstraße | New Brunswick | New Castle | New Haven | New Orleans | New York | Newark | Nice | Nikko | Oak Ridge | Oklahoma City | Olympic Valley | Orlando | Osaka | Oxford | Oxford, Mississippi | Paris | Pasadena | Philadelphia | Phoenix | Pittsburgh | Prague | Princeton | Reno | Rochester | Rockport | Rome | Roswell | Saint Francisville | Saint Louis | Salzburg | San Francisco | Sanibel | Santa Barbara | Schenectady | Seattle | Shannon | Shikoku | Shimabara | South Newfane | Southampton | Stockholm | Stoke-on-Trent | Tahoe | Tallahassee | Tampa | The Hague | Tokyo | Uppsala | Venice | Victoria | Vienna | Virginia City | Visalia | Washington D.C. | Weldon | Wells | Worcester, United Kingdom | Yosemite Valley | Zurich 
 Abstract:  The John Slater Papers include abstracts from his diaries, available as loose, mostly typed pages, which traverse his consequential career in physics (1900-1975). These abstracts trace Slater's doctoral study at Harvard (1923) and postgraduate work at Cambridge University, appointment at MIT (1930), work at the Laboratory for Nuclear Science during World War II, and late-career at the University of Florida (after his retirement from MIT in 1966). His diaries contain notes about a trip to Japan (including Hiroshima and Nagasaki) in the fall 1953, meetings with defense contractors (such as Lockheed Martin) throughout the 1950s and 1960s, a sighting of Sputnik (7/20/1958), notes about an "NSF proposal for computing center" (4/30/1965), associations with and publications of APS members (7/7/1951, 7/7/1972), and Slater's own personal affairs, as excerpted in Selected Quotations. As such, these abstracts may interest scholars researching John Clark Slater's career in the field of physics, biochemistry, atomic history, and the history of science more broadly, as well as those considering World War II and military contractors in the Cold War period, the space race, the history of computing, and the institutional history of the American Philosophical Society.; To supplement these diary abstracts, researchers might choose to expand their exploration of the Slater Papers, which also contain 133 research notebooks (1944-1976), a lengthy series of folders, containing lectures, scientific notes, drafts of manuscripts and papers, correspondence from his collaboration with the Los Alamos Labs (1966-1970), and correspondence relating to the National Academy of Science. 
    
 
    
The John Slater Papers include abstracts from his diaries, available as loose, mostly typed pages, which traverse his consequential career in physics (1900-1975). These abstracts trace Slater's doctoral study at Harvard (1923) and postgraduate work at Cambridge University, appointment at MIT (1930), work at the Laboratory for Nuclear Science during World War II, and late-career at the University of Florida (after his retirement from MIT in 1966). His diaries contain notes about a trip to Japan (including Hiroshima and Nagasaki) in the fall 1953, meetings with defense contractors (such as Lockheed Martin) throughout the 1950s and 1960s, a sighting of Sputnik (7/20/1958), notes about an "NSF proposal for computing center" (4/30/1965), associations with and publications of APS members (7/7/1951, 7/7/1972), and Slater's own personal affairs, as excerpted in Selected Quotations. As such, these abstracts may interest scholars researching John Clark Slater's career in the field of physics, biochemistry, atomic history, and the history of science more broadly, as well as those considering World War II and military contractors in the Cold War period, the space race, the history of computing, and the institutional history of the American Philosophical Society.; To supplement these diary abstracts, researchers might choose to expand their exploration of the Slater Papers, which also contain 133 research notebooks (1944-1976), a lengthy series of folders, containing lectures, scientific notes, drafts of manuscripts and papers, correspondence from his collaboration with the Los Alamos Labs (1966-1970), and correspondence relating to the National Academy of Science.
 
View Full Description in New Window
 
 
  Selected Quotations
  • "In Washington, talking over plans with RCLM. She agrees to marry me. We'll be married sometime in spring of 1954" (11/21-22/1953)

  • "To My Darling Rose, Who is Even More Fascinating at 70 Than When I first Met Her at 35. From Her Devoted Husband, John Clark Slater" (10/23/1972)
 
 Subjects:  American Philosophical Society. | Asia. | Atomic history and culture | Biochemistry. | Cold War. | Computers--History. | Defense contracts. | Diaries. | Europe. | Higher education & society | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | Physics. | Quantum theory. | Science. | Space flight. | Travel. | United States--Civilization--1918-1945. | United States--Civilization--1945- | University of Florida 
 Collection:  John Clarke Slater Papers  (Mss.B.SL2p)  
  Go to the collection