Compare Constellations
Information: The first column shows data points from Sinnott, E. W. in red. The third column shows data points from Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Sinnott, E. W.
Shared
Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958
Sinnott, E. W.
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, E. W.
Dates
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958
Dates
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958
Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-
Dates
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund, Ware, 1888-1968
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund, Ware, 1888-1968
Dates
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Sinnott, Edmund W.
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund W.
Dates
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Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund Ware
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund Ware
Dates
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Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-1958.
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-1958.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-1958.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-1958.
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, E.W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1968
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, E.W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1968
Dates
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, E.W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1968
Citation
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, E.W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1968
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Edmund W. Sinnott
Name Components
Name :
Edmund W. Sinnott
Dates
- Name Entry
- Edmund W. Sinnott
Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888- (Edmund Ware),
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888- (Edmund Ware),
Dates
- Name Entry
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
シノット, エドマンド・W
Name Components
Name :
シノット, エドマンド・W
Dates
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund Ware 1888-1958
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund Ware 1888-1958
Dates
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- Sinnott, Edmund Ware 1888-1958
Citation
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- Sinnott, Edmund Ware 1888-1958
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, E.W.
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, E.W.
Dates
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Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnot, E.
Name Components
Name :
Sinnot, E.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Sinnot, E.
Citation
- Name Entry
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-
Name Components
Name :
Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-
Dates
- Name Entry
- Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-
Citation
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- Sinnott, Edmund W. 1888-
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Botanist and historian; taught botany at University of Connecticut, Barnard, and Yale.
Edmund Ware Sinnott received an A.B. degree from Harvard in 1908, an A.M. in 1910, and a Ph.D. in 1913. He was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1908 to 1915. Sinnott was a professor of botany at the Connecticut Agricultural College from 1915 to 1928; at Barnard College from 1928 to 1939; at Columbia University from 1939 to 1940; and at Yale University from 1940 to 1956. At Yale he also served as chairman of the biology department, 1940-1950; director of the Sheffield Scientific School, 1945-1956; and dean of the Graduate School, 1950-1956. Sinnott died on January 6, 1968.
Edmund Ware Sinnott received an A.B. degree from Harvard University in 1908, an A.M. in 1910, and a Ph.D. in 1913. He was on the faculty of Harvard University from 1908 to 1915. Sinnott was a professor of botany at the Connecticut Agricultural College from 1915 to 1928; at Barnard College from 1928 to 1939; at Columbia University from 1939 to 1940; and at Yale University from 1940 to 1956. At Yale he also served as chairman of the biology department, 1940-1950; director of the Sheffield Scientific School, 1945-1956; and dean of the Graduate School, 1950-1956. Sinnott died on January 6, 1968.
Albert Francis Blakeslee, a geneticist and botanist, served as the director of Smith College Genetics Experiment Station from 1943-1954.
Albert Blakeslee's boyhood was spent in East Greenwich, Connecticut, where he early exhibited a strong liking for natural history. This leaning was not encouraged by his pragmatic father, who wanted the boy's education to plan for a financially independent career; but his mother was more sympathetic. After the two years of teaching at Montpelier Academy in Vermont, his natural inclinations were not to be denied, and he entered graduate study at Harvard with a determination to become a botanist. His Harvard professors, Farlow and Thaxter, greatly helped Blakeslee's development as a botanist. He engaged in a classification of the Mucors and discovered the positive and (sexual) zygospores and observed their sexual fusion to start the diploid phase of the Mucor life cycle. His summer in Venezuela as a plant collector for the Harvard Cryptogamic Herbarium (1903) and his two summers of teaching nature study in the Cold Spring Harbor courses broadened his knowledge of plants and generated in him a deep love of teaching. Thus, when he went to Germany for a postdoctoral fellowship in 1904, he was already becoming well known as a botanist.
At the University of Halle he worked under the distinguished mycologist Klebs for two years, with some stay during the period at the Universities of Berlin, Leipzig, and Oxford. This fellowship was supported by the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Blakeslee became fluent in the German language, as became apparent in later years when such a distinguished authority as Erwin Baur, plant geneticist, sent to Blakeslee in preference to any other English-speaking biologist a copy of his proposed publication on the dysgenic effects upon German life and culture of the post-war occupation of Germany's Rhineland by the French. Baur requested Blakeslee to be so good as to translate the communication into good English, edit it, and submit it for him to some American journal, such as Eugenical Notes, edited by Davenport. The original manuscript by Baur, the translation and very extensive editing -- really a toning down -- by Blakeslee, and the subsequent letter of withdrawal of the communication by Baur are all in the Blakeslee Papers, an invaluable addition to our knowledge of the course of German eugenics in the period between the two World Wars (see B. Glass, "A Hidden Chapter of German eugenics between the two World Wars," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 125: 357-367, 1981). While in Germany Blakeslee spent much time in art museums and attendance at concerts, and formed cultural tastes that were a lifelong joy to him.
Upon returning from Germany, Blakeslee accepted an appointment as professor of botany at the Connecticut Agricultural College, later to become the University of Connecticut. He taught many courses, in summer as well as during the regular year, and collaborated with C.D. Jervis in two popular handbooks for the identification of trees in New England and in winter. He made crosses of tree species, and successfully produced the first interspecific hybrid pine. His broad concern with social applications of botany and with teaching are to be seen in his paper presented in an American Association for the Advancement of Science symposium in 1909 on the subject, "The Botanic Garden as a Field Museum of Agriculture." He also conducted research on the genetics of poultry, and found certain genetic traits with visible effects that were linked with high egg yield; also he uncovered a negative correlation between yellow color and the time of a year when the last egg is laid. He discovered that Rudbeckia hirta, the black-eyed Susan, is a frequently mutating species. Beginning what was to become his most famous genetical work, that with the jimson weed, Datura stramonium, he worked out the simple Mendelian inheritance of white versus purple flower color and of spiny versus smooth seed capsules. In 1914-1915, he gave, at Storrs, the first college course in genetics in the United States. Also, while on leave and at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory as a research investigator, he resumed his early work on the Mucors; and in Datura found, in 1913, his first trisomic type, the "Globe" seedpod type, which has 2N + 1 chromosomes.
In 1915 Blakeslee was invited by C. B. Davenport, Director of the Carnegie Institution of Washington Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, to fill the place just vacated by George Harrison Shull, who was transferring to Princeton University. Blakeslee accepted, although he much regretted the loss of his opportunities to teach. He remained at Cold Spring Harbor until he retired in 1941, at the age of 67. He became greatly renowned for his work on Datura stramonium, in which he eventually found a trisomic type for every one of the twelve chromosome pairs in the species, each type recognizable by a distinctive phenotype of the seed capsule. With his assistants, he raised as many as 70,000 Datura plants in each summer. In 1920, he was joined by John Belling, a gifted cytologist, as his collaborator. They developed the skilled art of making acetocarmine stains of smeared plant chromosomes, a technique that became universally adopted as an enormous time-saver and also one productive of better microscopic differentiation of the chromosomes in the set. The typical chromosome numbers for many species of flowering plants were determined by the team.
In 1924, Dorothy Bergner replaced John Belling as Blakeslee's principal coworker. With Bergner, Blakeslee discovered a thirteenth trisomic in Datura. As there are only 12 chromosome pairs, a different explanation was sought, and found. There are also secondary trisomics, in which one arm of a primary chromosome has been doubled while its other arm is missing. Such a chromosome, added to the 12 types in which an entire chromosome is extra, greatly increases the diversity of chromosomal types. In search of the origin of these secondaries, numerous translocation types were found, types in which parts of two primary chromosomes had undergone a reciprocal interchange. In the pairing of homologous chromosomes that takes place during meiosis, these aberrations give rise to rings of four associated chromosomes, two normal plus two translocation chromosomes in the ring. Non-disjunction is a frequent consequence, and additional types of trisomics result. The discovery in natural populations of so much chromosomal diversity was a stepping-stone to the new evolutionary synthesis of the 1930s. Polyploid and triploid Daturas were also found, as populations from various parts of the world were analyzed. In 1937 it was discovered that colchicine will paralyze mitotic cell division and give rise to cells in which the chromosome number has been doubled. Using this technique, Blakeslee and Bergner produced polyploids, periclinal chimeras; and a new research assistant, Sophie Satina, collaborated in working out cell lineages during plant development.
Other collaborations, going back many years, were with E.W. Sinnott on quantitative inheritance, with I.T. Buchholz on pollen tube growth, with C.S. Gager on the use of radium to produce mutations. By means of exposures to radium or X-rays, 541 different gene loci were identified by mutation, 81 of which were mapped to a specific chromosome. It was also found that there was an increase of mutations during the storage of seeds. With I. van Overbeek, Blakeslee applied the techniques of tissue culture to the study of Datura genetic types.
In 1931, Blakeslee became deeply interested in the human inheritance of taste sensitivity to a chemical substance, PTC (phenylthiocarbamide). It is intensely bitter to most persons, but tasteless to others. Blakeslee checked this capacity in identical twins and found they were always similar in their capacity to taste PTC, or inability to taste it. He gave many popular lectures and demonstrations of this novel aspect of human heredity.
Blakeslee became involved in the administration of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory as early as 1923, and moved to greater and greater responsibility as Davenport aged. Upon Davenport's retirement in 1936, Blakeslee was the natural choice to succeed him. By this time he was one of America's foremost geneticists. He had helped to reorganize the American Journal of Botany in 1935, had been elected to the National Academy of Sciences and to the American Philosophical Society, and had been honored by many foreign scientific and learned organizations.
Upon retiring at Cold Spring Harbor, Blakeslee spent two years as a research associate at Columbia University, but found in 1942 an ideal situation for his "retirement" years in an appointment as a visiting professor at Smith College. Here he started up a four-college conference (Smith College, Amherst College, Mount Holyoke College, and Massachusetts State College -- later the University of Massachusetts) on Genetics, and a second on Human Relations. He initiated an active program of genetics at Smith College. With Miss Satina, he continued research on Datura by utilizing the technique of raising plant embryos in cell culture, in order to determine at what stage of development particular abnormal types led to deviations from normality, and just what they were. He became president of the Smith College Faculty Club, and worked to improve the conditions of retired faculty members. He spent much effort on human relations of the town-gown sort. As in previous periods of his life, he attended many foreign scientific congresses, for example, all of the Botanical Congresses (until 1950), and the Indian Scientific Congress in 1947. He was a visiting lecturer at Harvard University in 1948-1949. Upon his death, he left his estate to the National Academy of Sciences as trustee to provide continued assistance in maintaining and further developing a balanced genetics research program at Smith College. His personality was marked by great versatility, good humor, and a live social conscience. He was generous in giving credit to others in joint activities, yet in general somewhat reticent. These traits are reflected in some of his correspondence.
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University of Connecticut, President's Office Records [Charles L. Beach 1908-1928], undated, 1906-1929.
Title:
University of Connecticut, President's Office Records [Charles L. Beach 1908-1928] undated, 1906-1929.
Charles Lewis Beach attended the University of Wisconsin. He served on the faculty of the Storrs Agricultural College and Connecticut Agricultural College as an instructor in Dairy Husbandry (1894-1904). After serving in a similar position at the University of Vermont, Beach returned to the College as its fourth president in 1908. Beach Hall was dedicated in his honor in 1929 a year after his retirement from the college. Charles Lewis Beach died 15 September 1933.
ArchivalResource: 9.0 Linear feet
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- Resource Relation
- University of Connecticut, President's Office Records [Charles L. Beach 1908-1928], undated, 1906-1929.
Rose, H. Wickliffe (Harold Wickliffe), 1896-1970. Harold Wickliffe Rose papers, 1924-1972 (inclusive).
Title:
Harold Wickliffe Rose papers, 1924-1972 (inclusive).
The papers consist entirely of materials relating to Rose's book, The Colonial Houses of Worship in America (1963). Included are the manuscript, related correspondence, reviews, and a large amount of research material: notes, letters, and printed and pictorial matter about churches in eighteen states. Among his correspondents are Frederick W. Beinecke, A. Pierce Middleton, Richmond P. Miller and Edmund W. Sinnott.
ArchivalResource: 6.75 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702168915 View
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- Resource Relation
- Rose, H. Wickliffe (Harold Wickliffe), 1896-1970. Harold Wickliffe Rose papers, 1924-1972 (inclusive).
General Faculty and Faculty Council of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Records, 1799-2011
Title:
General Faculty and Faculty Council of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Records, 1799-2011
The university's earliest , adopted by its Board of Trustees in 1795, defined the duties and rights of the faculty. Formal faculty meetings have been held since at least 1799; the amended adopted by the trustees in December 1799 included guidelines for the conduct of such meetings. Throughout the antebellum period, the faculty was responsible for enforcing social as well as academic regulations and for handling cases of student misconduct. After 1875 the faculty assumed an increasing role in establishing policies governing educational activities and the awarding of degrees by the university. The , originally titled , was adopted by the General Faculty in 1947 and has been amended numerous times. In 1950 the General Faculty authorized the creation of the Faculty Council to act as its legislative body. The council, composed of elected members from the various faculty divisions and ex-officio members from the university administration, held its first meeting on 5 January 1951. Officers of the faculty include the chair and the secretary. The university's chancellor presides over meetings of the Faculty Council. Much of the Faculty Council's work is carried on by its standing and special committees. Laws and Regulations Laws of the University Faculty Code of University Government Faculty Legislation Records include minutes of meetings of the General Faculty, 1799-2011, and of the Faculty Council, 1951-2011; files of the secretary of the faculty and of the chair of the faculty; minutes of the meetings of various faculty divisions; and files of standing and special committees. Beginning in the mid-1990s, there are scattered meeting transcripts among the minutes. There are also recordings of many General Faculty and Faculty Council meetings, 1984-2010, on 283 audiocassettes, 31 data compact discs, and three digital video discs.
ArchivalResource: About 43,000 items (71.0 linear feet)
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- General Faculty and Faculty Council of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Records, 1799-2011
Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-1968. Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1923-1981.
Title:
Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1923-1981.
Correspondence, background notes, collected printed matter, and other papers, relating to early meetinghouses and churches of New England and Sinnott's book Meetinghouse & Church in Early New England (1963); together with ca. 1200 photographs, chiefly by Jerauld A. Manter.
ArchivalResource: 5 ft. (ca. 2940 items)
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- Resource Relation
- Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-1968. Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1923-1981.
Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958. The dilemma of the intellectual : [commencement address delivered at Mount Holyoke College June 3, 1956] / Edmund W. Sinnott.
Title:
The dilemma of the intellectual : [commencement address delivered at Mount Holyoke College June 3, 1956] / Edmund W. Sinnott. [1956]
Typescript (carbon copy) with holograph additions.
ArchivalResource: 10 leaves ; 28 cm.
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- Resource Relation
- Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958. The dilemma of the intellectual : [commencement address delivered at Mount Holyoke College June 3, 1956] / Edmund W. Sinnott.
William B. Provine collection of evolutionary biology reprints, 20th century.
Title:
William B. Provine collection of evolutionary biology reprints, 20th century.
Journal reprints on evolutionary biology.
ArchivalResource:
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- William B. Provine collection of evolutionary biology reprints, 20th century.
Owens, Claire Myers. Claire Myers Owens collection, 1868-1983.
Title:
Claire Myers Owens collection, 1868-1983.
Correspondence; manuscripts; drafts; notes; published writings; video and audio recordings of lectures and interviews; transcriptions of interviews and radio scripts; diaries; legal and financial records; photographs; biographical information and family histories; book reviews; articles and newsclippings about Owens; and artifacts. Correspondence consists of letters to and from family and friends, colleagues in the human potential movement, distinguished scholars in the fields of religion and psychology, publishers, and editors. Owens's memorabilia, consisting of personal and professional diaries (1910-1982), photographs of Owens with family and friends at various stages of her life, clothing and accessories, address books, and school mementos lend another view to the life of Owens. Correspondents include: Louise Ames, James Branch Cabell, Stanley R. Dean, Havelock Ellis, Raul Da Silva, Charles Gelatt, Jean Houston, Aldous Huxley, C.G. Jung, Sinclair Lewis, Abraham Maslow, H.L. Mencken, F.S.C. Northrop, Raymond Prince, Kenneth Ring, Bertrand Russell, Edmund Sinnott, Doree Smedley, Charles Tart, Carl Van Doren, John White, Dwain Wilder, the C.G. Jung Foundation, the Association for Transpersonal Psychology, Texas Woman's University, and the Zen Center. Also includes the papers of Owens's parents, Coren Lee and Susan Myers, consisting of correspondence, legal records, and miscellaneous; and the personal papers of Harry Thurston Owens, Claire's third husband.
ArchivalResource: 28 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/20879942 View
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- Resource Relation
- Owens, Claire Myers. Claire Myers Owens collection, 1868-1983.
Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958. [Selections]
Title:
[Selections] 1909-1958.
ArchivalResource: 2 v. (87 items)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/12378619 View
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- Resource Relation
- Sinnott, Edmund W. (Edmund Ware), 1888-1958. [Selections]
Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1904-1968
Title:
Edmund Ware Sinnott papers 1904-1968
The papers consist of correspondence, lectures, speeches, writings, notes, clippings, and printed material, primarily relating to Edmund Sinnott's professional career as a botanist.
ArchivalResource: 16.75 linear feet (34 boxes)
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0452 View
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- Resource Relation
- Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1904-1968
Yale University. Dept. of Botany. Department of Botany, Yale University, Records 1907-1950 (inclusive).
Title:
Department of Botany, Yale University, Records 1907-1950 (inclusive).
The records consist of office files, correspondence, photographs, and memoranda documenting the activities and operations of the Yale Department of Botany, which no longer exists as a separate academic unit.
ArchivalResource: 21.25 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702170482 View
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- Resource Relation
- Yale University. Dept. of Botany. Department of Botany, Yale University, Records 1907-1950 (inclusive).
American Association for the Advancement of Science. Letters, 1948-1971, to Lewis Mumford.
Title:
Letters, 1948-1971, to Lewis Mumford.
Correspondence to Lewis Mumford from various members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. This correspondence contains a letter from W. Seavey Joyce, President, Boston College, relating to the annual meeting of the A.A.A.S. held at Boston College in 1969.
ArchivalResource: 9 items (12 l.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155878457 View
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- Resource Relation
- American Association for the Advancement of Science. Letters, 1948-1971, to Lewis Mumford.
Jones, Edward P., d. 1953. Congregational meeting houses in Connecticut : 190 white Connecticut meeting houses and 54 brick or stone edifices : erected by Congregational Churches organized between one hundred and three hundred and eighteen years ago / Edward P. Jones, 1948.
Title:
Congregational meeting houses in Connecticut : 190 white Connecticut meeting houses and 54 brick or stone edifices : erected by Congregational Churches organized between one hundred and three hundred and eighteen years ago / Edward P. Jones, 1948.
In the introduction to the volume Jones notes: "the intent of this treatise is to trace Congregationalism from little parishes in England between 1620 and 1630 to the modern church of today..." Special emphasis is on the New England Meeting House. A brief description of 244 churches, often with an illustration of the church exterior, is included in this typewritten manuscript. A list on the back of the volume includes the name of each church, the date it was the organized, and the name of its minister.
ArchivalResource: 1 v. (151 p.) : ill. ; 24 cm.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122573913 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Jones, Edward P., d. 1953. Congregational meeting houses in Connecticut : 190 white Connecticut meeting houses and 54 brick or stone edifices : erected by Congregational Churches organized between one hundred and three hundred and eighteen years ago / Edward P. Jones, 1948.
Ernst Mayr papers, 1946, 1974-1979, Bulk, 1974-1979, 1946-1979
Title:
Ernst Mayr papers, 1946, 1974-1979 Bulk, 1974-1979 1946-1979
This collection includes documents (correspondence, drafts of talks, personal data sheets) relating to the Conference on Evolutionary Synthesis, which met in Boston in May and October 1974, and was sponsored by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. There is background material on the organization of the conference, as well as correspondence, especially with William B. Provine, on the editing and publication of the proceedings (Mayr and Provine, eds., "The Evolutionary Synthesis..." 1980).
ArchivalResource: 0.5 Linear feet, Ca. 700 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.M451-ead.xml View
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- Resource Relation
- Ernst Mayr papers, 1946, 1974-1979, Bulk, 1974-1979, 1946-1979
Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954. Papers, 1904-1954.
Title:
Papers, 1904-1954.
Mostly concerned with Blakeslee's studies on beans, blood groups, colchicine, Datura, embryo cultures, and horticulture. Many letters relate to the support and direction of the Smith College Genetics Experiment Station, which he headed. Other letters are about the Carnegie Institution of Washington, "Biological Abstracts," American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Philosophical Society, Institut de France, University of Connecticut. Also contains travel letters from Germany and miscellaneous lectures.
ArchivalResource: ca. 15,000 items (12.5 linear ft.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/154298036 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954. Papers, 1904-1954.
Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-. Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1904-1968 (inclusive).
Title:
Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1904-1968 (inclusive).
The papers consist of correspondence, lectures, speeches, writings, notes, clippings, and printed material, primarily relating to Edmund Sinnott's professional career as a botanist.
ArchivalResource: 14 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702166888 View
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- Resource Relation
- Sinnott, Edmund Ware, 1888-. Edmund Ware Sinnott papers, 1904-1968 (inclusive).
Albert Francis Blakeslee papers, 1904-1954, 1904-1954
Title:
Albert Francis Blakeslee papers, 1904-1954 1904-1954
Mostly concerned with Blakeslee's studies on beans, blood groups, colchicine, Datura, embryo cultures, and horticulture. Many letters relate to the support and direction of the Smith College Genetics Experiment Station, which he headed. Other letters are about the Carnegie Institution of Washington, "Biological Abstracts," American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Philosophical Society, Institut de France, University of Connecticut. Also contains travel letters from Germany and miscellaneous lectures.
ArchivalResource: 12.5 Linear feet, Ca. 15,000 items
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.B.B585-ead.xml View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Albert Francis Blakeslee papers, 1904-1954, 1904-1954
American Philosophical Society Library. Miscellaneous Manuscripts Collection. 1668-1983.
Title:
Miscellaneous Manuscripts Collection
Though the Miscellaneous Manuscripts collection is composed of items that do not fall readily into any other existing collection, the two dominant intellectual areas represented in the collection are Early American History and History of Science.
ArchivalResource: 25.0 Linear feet
http://www.amphilsoc.org/mole/view?docId=ead/Mss.Ms.Coll.200-ead.xml View
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- Resource Relation
- Miscellaneous Manuscripts Collection, 1668-1983, Bulk, 1750-1850, 1668-1983
Letters to Albert Hanford Moore, 1896-1916 (inclusive), 1906-1912 (bulk).
Title:
Letters to Albert Hanford Moore, 1896-1916 (inclusive), 1906-1912 (bulk).
ArchivalResource:
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/gra00040/catalog View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Letters to Albert Hanford Moore, 1896-1916 (inclusive), 1906-1912 (bulk).
Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005. Papers, 1946, 1974-1979.
Title:
Papers, 1946, 1974-1979.
This collection includes documents (correspondence, drafts of talks, personal data sheets) relating to the Conference on Evolutionary Synthesis, which met in Boston in May and October 1974, and was sponsored by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. There is background material on the organization of the conference, as well as correspondence, especially with William B. Provine, on the editing and publication of the proceedings (Mayr and Provine, eds., "The Evolutionary Synthesis ..." 1980).
ArchivalResource: ca. 700 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/173465832 View
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- Resource Relation
- Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005. Papers, 1946, 1974-1979.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Beach, Charles L.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w64f5jc0
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Philosophical Society.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Banks, Joseph, Sir, 1743-1820
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Barnard College
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Blakeslee, Albert Francis, 1874-1954.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Buchholz, J. T., (John Theodore), 1888-1951
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Bush, Vannevar, 1890-1974
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Carnegie Institution of Washington.
Cleland, Ralph E., (Ralph Erskine), 1892-1971
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vm4wkp
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cleland, Ralph E., (Ralph Erskine), 1892-1971
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Columbia University
Citation
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- Cooper, Thomas, 1759-1839
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Coues, Elliott, 1842-1899
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Cuvier, Georges, Baron, 1769-1832
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Darlington, William, 1782-1863
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Davenport, Charles Benedict, 1866-1944
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Davis, Bradley M., (Bradley Moore), b. 1871
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Edison, Thomas A., (Thomas Alva), 1847-1931
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Einstein, Albert, 1879-1955
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Everett, Edward, 1794-1865
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Fitch, John
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Flynn, John E., (John Edward), 1897-1965
Genth, F. A., (Frederick Augustus), 1820-1893
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66t0k3b
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Genth, F. A., (Frederick Augustus), 1820-1893
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Gray, Asa, 1810-1888
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Greeley, Horace, 1811-1872
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Harding, Warren G.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hyde, James Hazen, 1876-1959
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Institut de France.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Jones, Edward P., d. 1953.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Manter, Jerauld A., 1889-1990.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mount Holyoke College
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Newcomb, Simon
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Newton, Isaac, Sir, 1642-1727
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Owens, Claire Myers.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Poinsett, Joel Roberts, 1779-1851
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Provine, William B.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rittenhouse, David, 1732-1796
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Robbins, William Jacob, 1890-1978
Rose, H. Wickliffe (Harold Wickliffe), 1896-1970.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tb3kv3
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rose, H. Wickliffe (Harold Wickliffe), 1896-1970.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Rush, Benjamin, 1746-1813
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe, 1793-1864
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Seybert, Adam, 1773-1825
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Shull, George Harrison, 1874-1954
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Smith College. Genetics Experiment Station.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sparks, Jared, 1789-1866
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stevens, Henry
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sully, Thomas, 1783-1872
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Thomson, Charles, 1729-1824
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of Connecticut.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. General Faculty.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xd7fdr
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. General Faculty.
Waksman, Selman A., (Selman Abraham), 1888-1973
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69c702z
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Waksman, Selman A., (Selman Abraham), 1888-1973
Citation
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- Waterton, Charles, 1782-1865
Citation
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- Wayne, Anthony
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Wilson, Edwin Bidwell, 1879-1964
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Yale University
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Yale University. Dept. of Botany.
Beans
Citation
- Subject
- Beans
Blood groups
Citation
- Subject
- Blood groups
Botany
Citation
- Subject
- Botany
Church architecture
Citation
- Subject
- Church architecture
Church architecture
Citation
- Subject
- Church architecture
Church buildings
Citation
- Subject
- Church buildings
Church buildings
Citation
- Subject
- Church buildings
Colchicine
Citation
- Subject
- Colchicine
Datura
Citation
- Subject
- Datura
Embryology
Citation
- Subject
- Embryology
Geneticists
Citation
- Subject
- Geneticists
Genetics
Citation
- Subject
- Genetics
Horticulture
Citation
- Subject
- Horticulture
Intellectuals
Citation
- Subject
- Intellectuals
Science
Citation
- Subject
- Science
Botanists
Citation
- Occupation
- Botanists
Historians
Citation
- Occupation
- Historians
Photographers
Citation
- Occupation
- Photographers
Citation
- Place
- New England
New England
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Germany
Germany
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 138