11171309http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6jb87r1revised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-05-07machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-10T10:57:42machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-10T10:57:42humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonHarrington, John PeabodypresumedJohn P. HarringtonpresumedHarrington, John Peabody, 1884-1961presumedHarrington, John P. (John Peabody), 1884-1961presumedHarrington, John P. (Jack)presumedHarrington, John P. 1884-1961presumedHarrington, John P.presumedHarrington, J. P. 1884-1961presumedPeabody Harrington, JohnpresumedハリントンpresumedHarrington, John P. (John Peabody)presumedPeabody Harrington, John 1884-1961presumed1884-04-291961-10-21EnglishAmericansAmerican Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Native American Languages.Collier, John, 1884-1968George G.(George Gustav), Heye 1874-1957.Gumm, H. HaroldJ. Walter Thompson Company.Laird, Carobeth, 1895-1983Mason, John Alden, 1885-1967Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum of AnthropologyPitkin, HarveySouthwest Oregon Research ProjectUniversity of California, Berkeley. Dept. of AnthropologyVon Tilzer, Harry, 1872-1946Harrington, John PeabodyJ. Walter Thompson Company. Biographical Information, 1916-1998 (bulk 1960s-1980s)J. Walter Thompson Company. Biographical Information, 1916-1998 (bulk 1960s-1980s)21 Linear Feet; 19,000 ItemsThe J. Walter Thompson Company (JWT), founded in 1864, is one of the oldest and largest enduring advertising agencies in the United States. The J. Walter Thompson Company Biographical Information collection includes articles, clippings, press releases, internal memoranda and other printed materials that pertain to the lives and careers of over 3,000 managers, executives and staff members of JWT. Extensive files exist for some notable JWT executives, including Don Johnston, Helen and Stanley Resor, Norman Strouse, James Walter Thompson, and James Webb Young.EnglishFrenchGermanDavid M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript LibrarySouthwest Oregon Research Project (SWORP) Collection, 1850-1950Southwest Oregon Research Project (SWORP) Collection 1850-195032.25 linear feet, 49 containersThe Southwest Oregon Research Project (SWORP) Collection consists mainly of photocopies of widely scattered and overlooked original documents pertaining to the history of the Native peoples of greater Oregon. Many of these documents have been languishing in national repositories, particularly in Washington, D.C. SWORP aims to repatriate these materials to the Native American Tribes. Through the agency of Native Americans themselves, the archive and continuing project allows Native American and university scholars to continue to research and rewrite the histories of colonization that have been imposed upon Native peoples.EnglishUniversity of Oregon Libraries. Special Collections and University ArchivesVon Tilzer / Gumm Collection, 1878-1959, (bulk 1900-1949)Von Tilzer / Gumm Collection 1878-1959 (bulk 1900-1949)approximately 11,000 items; 77 containers; 26.0 linear feetThe Von Tilzer / Gumm Collection consists of both personal and professional papers of composer and music publisher Harry Von Tilzer (1872-1946) and his brother, H. Harold Gumm (1881 or 82-1973), who was a lawyer, agent, and producer in the entertainment business. After having served as attorney for the Harry Von Tilzer Music Publishing Co. (HVTMPC) for several decades, Harold Gumm served as executor of Harry Von Tilzer's estate and took over the company when Von Tilzer died in 1946. This collection contains the records of the HVTMPC which are inextricably combined not only with Harry Von Tilzer's papers but also with Gumm's papers and those of his firm Goldie & Gumm. Von Tilzer's personal papers include correspondence, writings, legal and financial documents, and drafts of his autobiography. The HVTMPC materials primarily consist of music (manuscript and printed), lyrics (manuscript and typewritten), scripts, legal and financial records, and a catalog of works published by HVTMPC. Most of Gumm's subject files relate to his activities as an agent for many prominent black performers of the 1930s and 1940s. Materials relating to their brothers (music publisher Will Von Tilzer; songwriter Albert Von Tilzer; and Jules and Jack Von Tilzer, who both worked in the family business) also appear in the collection. In addition, the collection contains programs, photographs, and clippings.EnglishLibrary of Congress. Music DivisionHarvey Pitkin Papers, 1884-1968Pitkin, HarveyHarvey Pitkin Papers 1884-196815.5 Linear feetThe linguist Harvey Pitkin has worked on several of the indigenous languages of Northern California, with a particular interest in Wintu, Patwin, and Yuki. A student of A. L. Kroeber, Pitkin was a member of the Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, and later at Columbia University before his retirement in the late 1980s. The Pitkin Papers contain materials recorded or accumuluted by Harvey Pitkin during the course of his study of American Indian languages, including not only his own fieldnotes and research on Wintu and Yuki, but originals and copies of notes, notebooks, and slipfiles by A. L. Kroeber, A. M. Halpern, John P. Harrington, John Alden Mason, Paul Radin, Hans Uldall, Donald Ultan, T. T. Waterman, and others. These include important information on Atsugewi, Kwakiutl, Luiseno, Pomo, Wappo, Yahi, and Yana, and include some data on the consultants Ralph Moore (Yuki) and Ishi (Yahi). American Philosophical SocietyAmerican Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society, 1882-1958American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society 1882-195880.0 Linear feetFormed in 1927 under the initiative of Franz Boas, Edward Sapir, and other academic linguists, the Committee on Native American Languages of the American Council of Learned Societies was charged with documenting the endangered languages of indigenous Americans. The Collection of the American Council of Learned Socities Committee of Native American Languages is one of the largest and most significant primary resources for study of the indigenous languages of North America. Beginning with the creation of the Committee in 1927, and periodically added to since by the APS, the collection has grown to over 80 linear feet of material representing at least 166 languages and dialects from the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The formats range from field notes and ethnographic texts to slip files, vocabularies, lexica, and grammars, and dozens of linguists and Native consultants are represented. Although most of the material was collected in the 1920s and 1930s, a signficant number of items have been added that extends the range of dates represented both backward and forward. American Philosophical SocietyCarobeth Laird papers, circa 1900-1983Laird, Carobeth, 1895-1983Carobeth Laird papers circa 1900-19839.0 linear feet; (10 document boxes, 1 half-size document box, 3 record storage boxes)This collection contains manuscripts, press clippings, and other material regarding the research of Carobeth Laird, author of as well as a noted anthropologist and linguistics specialist. Material regarding American linguist and ethnologist, John Peabody Harrington, to whom she was married for several years, is also included. The ChemehuevisRivera Library. Special Collections Department.John Collier papers, 1910-1987Collier, John, 1884-1968.John Collier papers 1910-198752.25 linear feetThe papers consist of correspondence, subject files, writings, memoranda and reports, research materials, and miscellanea, documenting the personal life and professional career of John Collier. His service with the American Indian Defense Association (A.I.D.A.), as United States Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and as a teacher and author is detailed. Correspondence files include materials with leading political, literary, and social figures. Drafts of books, articles, essays, reviews, and poetry are supplemented with extensive subject files and research materials. Files relating to the Institute of Ethnic Affairs include substantive correspondence and memoranda. The papers of anthropologist Laura Thompson, Collier's second wife, are also arranged in the papers, and date from 1945-1956.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesJohn Alden Mason Papers, 1904-1967Mason, John Alden, 1885-1967John Alden Mason papers38 linear feetAn archaeological anthropologist and linguist, John Alden Mason spent the majority of his career at the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania. After receiving his undergraduate degree at Penn in 1907, Mason received a doctorate at Berkeley (1911) for his ethnographic work on the Salinan Indians of California, but his diverse interests in later years ran the gamut from Puerto Rican folklore to Piman languages and cultures (including Pima, Papago, Pima Bajo, Northern and Southern Tepehuan, and Tepecano), Mayan, Aztec, and Incan archaeology, and the languages of South American Indians. Mason was curator of the University Museum at Penn from 1926 until his retirement in 1958. The Mason Papers include both in-coming and outgoing correspondence, linguistic material, notes, and photographs relating to Mason's work in the southwestern U.S., northern Mexico, and South America. Centered on the years after Mason's return to Philadelphia in 1926, the collection covers all aspects of Mason's professional life, from reports on field work to answering casual questions referred to him through the University Museum to data and analyses on Piman and other languages. The collection also contains voluminous files relating to the Mason's editorship of the (bulk: 1945-1948). Of special note are a series of class notes (1908-1910) kept by Mason for course work in ethnology, archaeology, and linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania under Edward Sapir and Frank Speck.American Philosophical SocietyEthnological documents of the Department and Museum of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, 1875-1958Ethnological documents of the Department and Museum of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley 1875-1958Microfilm: 139 reels; Number of containers: 93 boxes, 14 oversize folders; Linear feet: 36The Ethnological Documents of the Department and Museum of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley, is composed of 216 separate collections of varying size, spanning the period 1875 to 1958, with the exception of a Quiché Maya manuscript leaf, dating from the 17th Century. The collection is comprised of manuscripts, field notes, and other linguistic, ethnographic and ethnobotanical documents, including card files, newsclippings, genealogical tables, charts, maps, drawings, photographs, as well as some original microfilm. Some of the data was gathered by Berkeley anthropology graduate students for the Culture Element Distribution Survey, under the direction of Alfred L. Kroeber. Many of the manuscripts contain notations in Kroeber's hand. The documents were transferred from the Robert H. Lowie Museum of Anthropology (now the Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum of Anthropology) to The Bancroft Library in 1970.EnglishBancroft LibraryGeorge G. Heye autograph collection, 1886-1928.George G.(George Gustav), Heye 1874-1957.George G. Heye autograph collection1 folders.Collection of autographs of individuals associated with George Gustav Heye, Frederick W. Hodge, and Indians of North America.EnglishEnglishDivision of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.