55357514http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w64q7vqqrevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-18machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-16T00:51:37machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-16T00:51:37humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-28machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonFarnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933presumedFarnam, Henry Walcott, 1853-1933presumedFarnam, Henry W., 1853-1933presumedFarnam, Henry W.presumedFarnam, Henry Wolcott, 1853-1933.presumedFarnam, Henry Walcottpresumed1853-11-061933-09-05FamiliesEuropeEconomistsAmerican Association for Labor Legislation.Barrows family.Bingham family.Bingham family.Bingham family.Board of Research Associates in American Economic history.Commons, John R. (John Rogers), 1862-1945.Connecticut Training School for Nurses.Ely, Richard Theodore, 1854-1943.Farnam familyFarnam family.Farnham family.Hilles, Charles Dewey, 1867-1949.Hocking, William Ernest, 1873-1966Immigration Restriction League (U.S.).Lounsbury, Thomas Raynesford, 1838-1915.Sargent family.Seymour, George Dudley, 1859-1945.Sumner, William Graham, 1840-1910.Taylor, Henry C. (Henry Charles), 1873-1969.Villard, Henry, 1835-1900Volkmann, Richard von, 1830-1889.Walcott, Frederic Collin, 1869-1948.Weir, John Ferguson, 1841-1926.Yale College (1718-1887). Class of 1874.Yale University. President's Office.Farman, Henry Walcott, 1853-1933.Farnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933Hilles, Charles Dewey, 1867-1949. Charles Dewey Hilles papers, 1823-1955 (inclusive).Hilles, Charles Dewey, 1867-1949.Charles Dewey Hilles papers, 1823-1955 (inclusive).63.50 linear ft.Correspondence, memoranda, speeches, press releases, clippings, printed matter, photographs, and memorabilia documenting Hilles' activities as secretary to President Taft (1911-1913), as chairman and committeeman to the Republican National Committee (1912-1937) and as assistant Secretary of the Treasury (1909-1911). Yale University LibraryHenry Villard papers, 1604-1948 (inclusive), 1863-1900 (bulk).Villard, Henry, 1835-1900. Henry Villard papers, 1604-1948 (inclusive), 1863-1900 (bulk).15 boxes (6.25 linear ft.)Personal and professional papers, as well as family papers of Henry Villard, the German-born American journalist, financier and railway promoter.EnglishGermanEnglishGermanHoughton LibraryConnecticut Training School for Nurses. Connecticut Training School for Nurses records and memorabilia, 1786-1954 (inclusive).Connecticut Training School for Nurses.Connecticut Training School for Nurses records and memorabilia, 1786-1954 (inclusive).36.75 linear feet.The records consist of policy and financial records, reports, correspondence, student records and notebooks, photographs, and alumnae records documenting the operations of the Connecticut Training School for Nurses. Topics include curriculum, administration, organization, social work, legal issues, funding, personnel, and social events. Included are two historical sketches of the school by Francis Bacon, a key personality in its founding, and Henry W. Farnum, its president. Yale University LibraryVolkmann, Richard von, 1830-1889. Letters received, 1867-1889.Volkmann, Richard von, 1830-1889.Callomon, Fritz T. (Fritz Thomas), 1876-1964.Letters received, 1867-1889.6 folders (29 items).Letters received by Richard von Volkmann and one sent by him, 1867-1889. Correspondents are notable physicians, surgeons, and professors from Germany, England, France, Russia, and the United States. Correspondents include: Adolf Bardeleben, Ernst von Bergmann, Wilhelm Busch, Henry T. Butlin, Henry W. Farnam, Werner Hagedorn, A. Hegar, Hjalmar Heiberg, C. Hueter, Theodor Kocher, Léon Labbé, Bernhard von Langenbeck, H. Maas, Wjatscheslaw Manasseïn, Albert Mosetig-Moorhof, Felix von Niemeyer, J. N. Nussbaum, Auguste Reverdin, J.-L. Reverdin, Carl Reyher, Gustav Simon, Carl Thiersch, Sir Patrick Heron Watson, Spencer Wells, and C. A. Wunderlich. Detailed biographical information about correspondent, English translations of letters, and commentary by Fritz T. Callomon included. GermanFrenchEnglishCollege of Physicians of PhiladelphiaCommons, John R. (John Rogers), 1862-1945. John R. Commons papers, 1832-2005 (bulk 1894-1938).Lombard, Norman, b. 1884.Commons, John R. (John Rogers), 1862-1945.Andrews, John B. (John Bertram), 1880-1943.Cross, Ira B. (Ira Brown), b. 1880.Easley, Ralph M. (Ralph Montgomery), b. 1858.Ely, Richard T. (Richard Theodore), 1854-1943.Farnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933.Hoagland, Henry E. (Henry Elmer), 1886-1975.Hoxie, Robert Franklin, 1868-1916.James, C. L.Keynes, John Maynard, 1883-1946.La Follette, Robert M. (Robert Marion), 1855-1925.Macy, Valentine Everit, 1871-1930.Morehouse, Edward Ward, 1896-1974.Perlman, Selig, 1888-1959.Phillips, Thomas, b. 1833.Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell, 1877-1934.Rogers, Edward H. (Edward Henry), b. 1824.Saposs, David J. (David Joseph), 1886-1968.Sumner, Helen L. (Helen Laura), 1876-1933.Wallace, Henry A. (Henry Agard), 1888-1965.Witte, Edwin E. (Edwin Emil), 1887-1960.John R. Commons papers, 1832-2005 (bulk 1894-1938).6.2 c.f. (17 archives boxes),24 reels of microfilm (35 mm), and351 photographs (1 archives box); plusadditions of 1.8 c.f., and29 photographs.Papers, dating mainly from 1894-1938, of John R. Commons, an economist, labor historian, expert on government regulation, and long-time University of Wisconsin-Madison faculty member. The files best document Commons' research interests including labor history, labor economics, an unemployment compensation plan for the Chicago clothing market, banking and monetary reform, and the regulation of interstate commerce. Also covered are government and private organizations connected with those research interests such as the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, American Bureau of Industrial Research, Carnegie Institution, National Bureau of Economic Research, National Monetary Association, Stable Money Association, United States Commission on Industrial Relations, Wisconsin Industrial Commission, and Women's Educational and Industrial Union. Included are correspondence, research files, clippings and scrapbooks, speeches, articles, and book drafts. Prominent correspondents include John B. Andrews, Ira B. Cross, Ralph M. Easley, Richard T. Ely, Henry W. Farnam, Robert F. Hoxie, Henry Hoagland, C.L. James, John M. Keynes, Robert M. La Follette, Sr., Norman Lombard, V. Everit Macy, Edward W. Morehouse, Selig Perlman, Thomas Phillips, Ulrich B. Phillips, Edward H. Rogers, David J. Saposs, Henry A. Wallace, Edwin Witte, and Helen Sumner Woodbury. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper ProjectAmerican Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 1, part a. Correspondence (A-H), 1905-1910. [microform]American Association for Labor Legislation.Series 1, Subseries 1, part a. Correspondence (A-H), 1905-1910. [microform]Series 1, Subseries 1 parts a and b: 2.5 linear ft. (on 3 microfilm reels)Include correspondence relating to the formation and early administration of the American Association for Labor Legislation (AALL); to relations of the AALL with the International Association for Labor Legislation; to fund raising; to the Association's desire to investigate occupational diseases and poisons; to the establishment of state chapters; to a study of phosphorus poisoning ("phossy jaw"); to a workmen's compensation campaign in New York; to the Illinois 10-hour law; to pension systems; to changes in legislation in regard to occupational hazards, insurance, employment office regulations, and child labor; and to a contributory workmen's compensation insurance plan. Major correspondents include John B. Andrews, Louis D. Brandeis, John R. Commons, Miles M. Dawson, Edward T. Devine, Richard T. Ely, Henry W. Farnam, Henry B. Favill, Josephine C. Goldmark, Samuel Gompers, and Alice Hamilton. Other individual and organizational correspondents of national significance or who wrote with some frequency include the following with names beginning with the letters A-H: Jane Addams; Felix Adler; Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees of America; American Economic Association; J. Mahlon Barnes (national secretary, Socialist Party); Stephen Bauer (general secretary, International Association for Labor Legislation); James D. Beck (commissioner, Wisconsin Bureau of Labor and Industrial Statistics); Sophonisba P. Breckinridge; Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen; Robert W. Bruère (general agent, New York Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor); Committee of One Hundred on National Health, of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; John L. Coulter (University of Minnesota); Edgar T. Davies (chief, Illinois State Factory Inspectors). Additional correspondents include Davis Rich Dewey; Mary E. Dreier (president, New York Women's Trade Union League); Crystal Eastman (secretary, New York State Commission on Employers Liability and Causes); Irving Fisher (president, Committee of One Hundred of the Association for the Advancement of Science; John A. Fitch; Lucia O. Ford; Lee K. Frankel; S.M. Franklin (secretary, National Women's Trade Union League); Ernst Freund; John P. Frey (International Moulders); Andrew Furuseth (Sailors' Union of the Pacific; Charles F. Gettemy (director, Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics); John M. Glenn (secretary and director, Russell Sage Foundation); Nathan Glicksman; John Golden (president, United Textile Workers of America); Fred S. Hall (secretary, Pennsylvania Child Labor Association); M.B. Hammond (associate professor, Ohio State University); C.A. Harper, M.D. (secretary, Wisconsin Board of Health); G.W.W. Hanger (U.S. Bureau of Labor); Charles Harrington, M.D. (secretary, Massachusetts State Board of Health); L.W. Hatch (chief statistician, New York State Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics); C.R. Henderson; Morris Hillquit; and Hull House. Cornell University LibraryFarnam family papers, 1721-1941Farnam family.Farnam family papers, 1721-2002 (inclusive), 1850-1937 (bulk).161.5 linear ft.Correspondence, diaries, letterbooks, financial papers, writings, scrapbooks, and memorabilia of the Farnam family of New Haven, Connecticut, 1721-1929. The papers of Henry Farnam (1803-1883), and two of his sons, Henry Walcott Farnam (1853-1933) and William Whitman Farnam (1844-1929) form this collection. The papers of Henry Farnam include personal and professional correspondence concerning his family, life in New Haven, and the building of several canals and railroads in Connecticut and the Midwest. Materials documenting the New Haven and Northampton Company, Chicago and Rock Island Railroad, Mississippi and Missouri Valley Railroad, Northern Indiana Railroad, and Peoria and Bureau Valley Railroad is arranged here. The papers of Henry Walcott Farnam include personal and professional correspondence, financial papers, writings, subject files and scrapbooks relating to his family, life in New Haven, student and teaching experiences at Yale, membership in local, state, and national academic and reform organizations, and philanthropic activities on behalf of educational and charitable institutions. The papers of William Whitman Farnam include correspondence and topical files relating to family matters, Yale University, and New Haven Park Commission activities.Yale University LibraryThe Inquiry papers, 1915-1921 (inclusive).The Inquiry papers, 1915-1921 (inclusive).l8 linear ft. (35 boxes, 4 folios)Correspondence, organizational records, reports containing historical and statistical material, maps, and other papers of The Inquiry, a group of experts assembled at the request of President Wilson to collect and collate data in preparation for a peace conference following World War I. Yale University LibraryAmerican Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 2, part c. Correspondence (N-W), 1910-1915. [microform]American Association for Labor Legislation.Series 1, Subseries 2, part c. Correspondence (N-W), 1910-1915. [microform]Series 1, Subseries 2, parts a, b, and c: 8 linear ft. (on 9 microfilm reels)Include correspondence relating to a bill banning the use of white phosphorous in the match industry; to meetings and programs of the Association; to occupational diseases; to accident reporting; to workmen's compensation; to workplace inspection; to child labor; to women's hours of work; to minimum wage investigation; to lead poisoning; to questions of mediation and compulsory arbitration; to a study of anthrax as an occupational disease; to health insurance; to revision of the compressed air provisions of the New York State Labor Law; to the Kern bill; to the National Conference on Unemployment; and to the operation of the Municipal Lodging House, on the Board of which Andrews served. Major and frequent correspondents include Thomas J. Parkinson, I.M. Rubinow, and Henry R. Seager. Other individual and organizational correspondents of national significance or who wrote with some frequency include the following with names beginning with letters N-W: The National Association of Manufacturers of the United States; the National Child Labor Committee; the National Civic Federation; the National Consumers League; the National Metal Trades Association; Charles P. Neill (United States commissioner of labor); Agnes Nestor (treasurer, Women's Trade Union League); Richard M. Neustadt; NEW REPUBLIC; New York State Dept. of Health; New York State Factory Investigating Committee; North American Civic League for Immigrants; Henry Noyes; the Ohio Federation of Labor; Irene Osgood Andrews; Carl E. Parry (instructor, University of Michigan); and Paul Skeels Pierce (assistant professor, State University of Iowa). Other correspondents include Jessica B. Peixotta (assistant professor, University of California, Berkeley); A.J. Pillsbury (chairman, California State Industrial Accident Board); John W. Plaisted (secretary, Industrial Relations Committee, Boston Chamber of Commerce); C.W. Price (International Harvester Company); Prudential Insurance Company of America; C.R. Richards (Columbia University, secretary, National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education); Raymond Robins; Russell Sage Foundation; Mary R. Sanford (member, Executive Committee of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society); Sophy Sanger (British Association for Labor Legislation); Margaret A. Schaffner; Louis B. Schram; F. Charles Schwedtman (Consulting Electrical and Mechanical Engineers); Laura Scott; Elizabeth Shapleigh; and P. Tecumseh Sherman (attorney, Taft & Sherman). Additional correspondents include John R. Shillady (New York State Dept. of Labor); Erich Cramer Stern (attorney); William L. Stoddard (associate of Lincoln Filene); Warren S. Stone (grand chief, Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers); Josiah Strong (president, American Institute of Social Services); Helen L. Sumner Woodbury; SURVEY (Constance D. Leupp, Edward T. Devine, Graham Taylor, Arthur P. Kellogg); Wiley Swift (secretary, National Child Labor Committee); Graham R. Taylor; Harry D. Thomas (secretary-treasurer, Ohio Federation of Labor); Millie R. Trumbull (Consumers League of Oregon); U.S. Bureau of Labor, Commission on Industrial Relations; Mary Van Kleeck (industrial secretary, Alliance Employment Bureau, New York); Louis Varlez (LUTTE CONTRE CHOMAGE); V.C. Vaughan; Charles H. Verrill; Lillian D. Wald; John H. Walker; Paul H. Watrous (secretary, Industrial Insurance Committee of the Wisconsin State Legislature); Adna F. Weber; F.F. Wesbrook (dean, University of Minnesota College of Medicine and Surgery); Wisconsin State Industrial Commission; Stephen Wise; Women's Educational and Industrial Union; Clinton Rogers Woodruff (attorney, secretary, National Municipal League); and Edwin R. Wright (Illinois State Federation of Labor). Cornell University LibraryFrederic Collin Walcott papers, 1850-1948Walcott, Frederic Collin, 1869-1949.Frederic Collin Walcott papers 1850-194811.5 linear feet (19 boxes, 1 folio)The early papers relate to Walcott's business concerns and his game preserve. The bulk of the collection covers the period from 1915-1919 when Walcott was with the Rockefeller Foundation War Relief Commission and the U.S. Food Administration. Beginning with 1929 there is some correspondence from his career as Republican Senator from Connecticut. The remainder of the collection relates to Walcott's work in Polish relief (1939-1940) and his interest in conservation. Other persons represented include William Henry Welch (1850-1934); Herbert Hoover, with whom Walcott worked regarding Belgian relief, the Food Administration, and later as Senator; William Howard Taft; and many leaders of the American business community.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesAmerican Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 2, part b. Correspondence (H-M), 1910-1915. [microform]American Association for Labor Legislation.Series 1, Subseries 2, part b. Correspondence (H-M), 1910-1915. [microform]Series 1, Subseries 2, parts a, b, and c: 8 linear ft. (on 9 microfilm reels)Include correspondence relating to a bill banning the use of white phosphorous in the match industry; to meetings and programs of the Association; to occupational diseases; to accident reporting; to workmen's compensation; to worksite inspection; to child labor; to women's hours of work; to the minimum wage investigation; to lead poisoning; to questions of mediation and compulsory arbitration; to the study of anthrax as an occupational disease; to health insurance; to the revision of the compressed air provisions of the New York State Labor Law; to the Kern Bill; to the National Conference on Unemployment; and to the operation of the Municipal Lodging House, on the Board of which Andrews served. Major and frequent correspondents include L.W. Hatch, Frederick L. Hoffman, Seth Low, Royal Meeker, Thomas J. Parkinson, I.M. Rubinow, and Henry R. Seager. Other individual and organizational correspondents of national significance or who wrote with some frequency include the following with names beginning with letters H-M: Fred S. Hall (secretary, Pennsylvania Child Labor Association); M.B. Hammond (associate professor, Ohio State University); William Hard (writer, EVERYBODY'S); G.W.W. Hanger (U.S. Bureau of Labor); Samuel R. Haythorn; C.R. Henderson; Hamilton Higday; Morris Hillquit; Frederick L. Hoffman (statistician, Prudential Insurance Co.); Reinhard Hohaus; Robert Hunter; Illinois State Federation of Labor; Frances Ingram (Neighborhood House, Louisville, Ky.); International Seamen's Union of America; International Typographical Union; Ethel M. Johnson (Massachusetts Dept. of Labor and Industry); Frederick N. Judson; Marie Kasten (State of Connecticut Industrial Commission); Florence Kelley; Arthur Kellogg; Paul U. Kellogg; Susan M. Kingsbury (director, Women's Educational and Industrial Union; William Kirk; Robert M. La Follette; John Lapp (editor, MODERN MEDICINE); Julia C. Lathrop (Hull House); William Launer (secretary, Glass Bottle Blowers' Association); Max Lazard; F. Lee (U.S. Senate legislative counsel); Don D. Lescohier (secretary, Minnesota Branch AALL); Samuel McCune Lindsay (secretary, National Child Labor Committee); Walter Lippmann; Max O. Lorenz (Bureau of Labor and Industrial Statistics, Wisconsin); Louisiana Board of Health; Owen R. Lovejoy (general secretary, National Child Labor Committee); and Seth Low. Other correspondents include S.W. McCall; Roswell C. McCrea (associate director, The School of Philanthropy); Mary E. McDowell (University of Chicago Settlement); W.E. McEwen (labor commissioner, Bureau of Labor and Industries, Minnesota); Alexander J. McKelway (secretary for the southern states, National Child Labor Committee); Reuben McKitrick; V.E. Macy (treasurer of New York Branch); W.A. Mahon (Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees of America); Theodore Marburg; John Martin; Frederick C. Martindale (secretary of state, Dept. of State); Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics; Royal Meeker (U.S. Dept. of Labor); H.V. Mercer (attorney, member, Minnesota Employees' Compensation Commission); Darwin J. Meserole (managing attorney, The Cooperative Law Company); Henry C. Metcalf (Tufts College); John Mitchell (vice-president, A.F. of L.); Wesley C. Mitchell; Anne Morgan; Frank Morrison (A.F. of L.); Edward A. "Ned" Moseley (secretary, Interstate Commerce Commission); Henry Moskowitz (secretary, Society for Ethical Culture); and Hugo Munsterberg (professor). Cornell University LibraryTaylor, Henry C. (Henry Charles), 1873-1969. Henry C. Taylor papers, 1896-1968.Taylor, Henry C. (Henry Charles), 1873-1969.Taylor, Anne Dewees.Henry C. Taylor papers, 1896-1968.23.0 c.f. (49 archives boxes, 5 card boxes, and 1 flat box) and21 tape recordings; plusadditions of 1.4 c.f.,515 photographs,121 negatives, and5 transparencies.Papers of a noted agricultural economist who was a professor at the University of Wisconsin, 1908-1919; chief of the United States Bureau of Agricultural Economics, 1922-1925; director of a comprehensive survey of rural Vermont, 1928-1931; U.S. delegate to the International Institute of Agriculture, 1933-1935; director of the Farm Foundation, 1935-1945; and author of numerous books and articles on agricultural economics. The collection includes extensive professional correspondence, subject files, and drafts and supplementary research material related to his writing. Personal and biographical files include notes about courses taken under Professor Richard T. Ely; papers relating to the construction and sale of Taylor's home in Virginia which was designed by George Keck; and some files relating to the professional career of his wife, Anne Dewees Taylor. The processed portion is summarized above and is described in the register. Additional accessions are described below. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper ProjectConnecticut Training School for Nurses records and memorabilia, 1786-1954Connecticut Training School for Nurses records and memorabilia 1786-195435.25 linear feetThe records consist of policy and financial records, reports, correspondence, student records and notebooks, photographs, and alumnae records documenting the operations of the Connecticut Training School for Nurses. Topics include curriculum, administration, organization, social work, legal issues, funding, personnel, and social events. Included are two historical sketches of the school by Francis Bacon, a key personality in its founding, and Henry W. Farnum, its president.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesImmigration Restriction League (U.S.) records, 1893-1921.Immigration Restriction League (U.S.) records12.4 linear feet (24 boxes and 17 volumes)Records of the Immigration Restriction League (U.S.), especially those of Prescott F. (Farnsworth) Hall, one of the founders and executive secretary from 1896-1921.Houghton LibraryEly, Richard Theodore, 1854-1943. Papers, 1812-1963 (bulk 1882-1939).Ely, Richard Theodore, 1854-1943.Richard T. Ely papers, 1812-1963 (bulk 1882-1939)81.8 c.f. (198 archives boxes, 3 cartons, 2 card file boxes, and 1 oversize folder) and191 reels of microfilm (35 mm); plusadditions of 0.6 c.f. and42 photographs.Papers, dating mainly 1882-1939, of Richard Ely, an economist, educator, reformer, and faculty member at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Wisconsin, and Northwestern University. Also included are genealogical information and records of several academic, patriotic, and reform organizations which Ely helped found, including the American Association for Agricultural Legislation, American Bureau of Industrial Research, Christian Social Union, Ely Economic Foundation, Institute for Economic Research, Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities, League to Enforce Peace-Wisconsin Branch, and Wisconsin Loyalty Legion. During his long career Ely made numerous contributions to American life and also had significant contacts in Europe and in Japan. As a social scientist and an educator he was greatly influenced by the German higher education system. In this country he pioneered the seminar method of graduate education, was a founder of the American Economic Association, a frequent lecturer at Chautauqua, and a symbol of academic freedom. He established the areas of labor economics, labor history, agricultural economics, conservation, real estate, and land economics as fields of academic interest. Ely corresponded with hundreds of individuals including many prominent in the social sciences and education, in the field of business, and in Wisconsin political, educational, and business circles. A prolific author and editor, Ely had frequent contacts with publishers and editors, especially those at the Macmillan Company. Ely is also widely recognized as a key figure in the development of the reform ideology which characterized the Progressive Era. He had many contacts with prominent political, reform, religious, labor, and socialist leaders. Ely received and wrote thousands of letters during his career; selected correspondents are noted in the subject headings below and a correspondent index was compiled for inclusion in the microfilm edition. Additions received in 1991 consist primarily of family correspondence and miscellaneous professional papers.EnglishWisconsin Historical Society ArchivesSargent family. Sargent family papers, 1871-1974 (inclusive), 1871-1927 (bulk).Sargent family.Sargent family papers, 1871-1974 (inclusive), 1871-1927 (bulk).2 .75 linear feet (6 boxes)Formerly titled the Henry Bradford Sargent Papers. Correspondence, office files, financial papers, printed matter and memorabilia documenting Sargent's close association with Yale University, as member of the Yale Corporation (1902-1920) and as secretary of the class of 1871 of the Sheffield Scientifc School. Having been an oarsman for Yale, he retained an interest in rowing and papers on the building of the Yale boat house and the four-oared crew which went to Philadelphia in 1876 are included in the collection. Yale officials with whom he corresponded include George A. Adee, Walter Camp, Russell Chittenden, George Parmly Day, Henry W. Farnam, Arthur T. Hadley and Anson Phelps Stokes. Also included are business papers of Sargent & Company, a hardware manufacturing concern which he headed, and records and correspondence from various social and political organizations. An addition to the colletion (box 6) includes materials relating to other Sargent family members. Yale University LibraryBoard of Research Associates in American Economic history. Board of Research Associates in American Economic History papers, 1902-1933 (inclusive).Board of Research Associates in American Economic history.Board of Research Associates in American Economic History papers, 1902-1933 (inclusive).11 linear ft. (22 boxes, 1 folio)Correspondence, reports, studies, minutes of meetings, circular letters, financial reports, outlines of proposed surveys, annual reports, departmental reports, and monographs relative to the established purpose of the Board, which was sponsored by the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Department of Economics and Sociology. Yale University LibraryFisher, George Park, 1827-1909. Correspondence with Henry Charles Lea, 1894-1899.Fisher, George Park, 1827-1909.Farnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933.Schwab, John C.Correspondence with Henry Charles Lea, 1894-1899.14 items (14 leaves).Comprises items from editors George P. Fisher, Henry W. Farnam, and John C. Schwab, and 1 item from Lea to Fisher. University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt LibraryPinkus, Norbert, 1879-. [Workmens' insurance in Germany. Pinkus and Farnam. 1904-1905. : Pamphlet vol.].Pinkus, Norbert, 1879-Farnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933.[Workmens' insurance in Germany. Pinkus and Farnam. 1904-1905. : Pamphlet vol.]. 1904-1905.7 pieces in 1 v.HCL Technical Services, Harvard College LibraryWeir, John Ferguson, 1841-1926. John Ferguson Weir papers, 1838-1957 (inclusive), 1861-1928 (bulk).Weir, John Ferguson, 1841-1926.John Ferguson Weir papers, 1838-1957 (inclusive), 1861-1928 (bulk).12 linear ft.Correspondence, addresses and writings, papers relating to the Yale School of the Fine Arts, and other papers of John F. Weir, artist, painter and first director of the Yale School of the Fine Arts, serving from 1869-1913. Correspondents include many persons prominent in the art world between 1870 and 1920. There is also much material on the origins and development of art education in this country and at Yale. Yale University LibraryFarnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933. Looking backwards: memories of many friends, 1853-1890, [microform].Farnam, Henry W. (Henry Walcott), 1853-1933.Looking backwards: memories of many friends, 1853-1890, [microform].A privately published autobiography of Henry Farnam covering the years 1853-1890. Included among the subjets discussed are his European travels, education, family life, and his career as an economist. Yale University LibraryBarrows family papers, 1861-1931.Barrows family. Barrows family papers, 1861-1931.53 boxes (26 linear ft.)Letters and manuscripts of the Barrows family of New York.EnglishHoughton LibraryAmerican Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 1, part b. Correspondence (I-W), 1905-1910. [microform]American Association for Labor Legislation.American Association for Labor Legislation Records on Microfilm, 1905-194556 linear feet (on 71 microfilm reels)Includes correspondence relating to the formation and early administration of the American Association for Labor Legislation; to relations of the Association with the International Association for Labor Legislation (IALL); to fund raising; to the Association's desire to investigate occupational diseases and poisons; to the establishment of state chapters; to the study of phosphorus poisoning ("phossy jaw"); to a workmen's compensation campaign in New York; to the Illinois 10-hour law; to pension systems; to changes in legislation in regard to occupational hazards; to insurance; to employment office regulations; to child labor; and to a contributory workmen's compensation insurance plan. Major correspondents include Arthur Kellogg, the National Child Labor Committee, Irene Osgood, Margaret D. Robins, and Adna F. Weber. Other individual and organizational correspondents of national significance or who wrote with some frequency include the following with names beginning with letters I-W: Illinois State Federation of Labor; International Association for Labor Legislation; International Typographical Union; J.W. Jenks (professor, Cornell University); Frederick N. Judson; Florence Kelley; Paul U. Kellogg (director, "Pittsburgh Survey", CHARITIES AND THE COMMONS); Robert Marion La Follette; Samuel McCune Lindsay (secretary, National Child Labor Committee); Max O. Lorenz, (Bureau of Labor and Industrial Statistics, State of Wisconsin); Owen R. Lovejoy (general secretary, National Child Labor Committee); Roswell C. McCrea (associate director, The School of Philanthropy); W.E. McEwen (labor commissioner, Bureau of Labor, Industries and Commerce, Minnesota); Reuben McKitrick; Theodore Marburg; Helen Marot (secretary, N.Y. Women's Trade Union League); Massachusetts Commission on Old Age Benefits; Massachusetts State Board of Health; H.V. Mercer (lawyer, Minneapolis, Minn.); Darwin J. Meserole (managing attorney, The Cooperative Law Company); Henry C. Metcalf (Tufts College, Dept. of Political Science); John Mitchell (vice-president, A.F. of L.); Edward A. Moseley (secretary, Interstate Commerce Commission); National Consumers' League; National Metal Trades Association (Robert Wuest, commissioner); Charles P. Neill (U.S. commissioner of labor); J. Pease Norton; and the Ohio Federation of Labor. Other correspondents include Paul S. Pierce (assistant professor, State University of Iowa); Jessica B. Peixotta (assistant professor, University of California); John W. Plaisted (secretary, Industrial Relations Committee, Boston Chamber of Commerce); C.R. Richards (Columbia University, secretary, National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education); I.M. Rubinow; Russell Sage Foundation; Mary R. Sanford (member, Executive Committee of the Intercollegiate Socialist Society); Sophy Sanger (honorary secretary, British Association for Labor Legislation); Margaret R. Schaffner; Louis B. Schram; F. Charles Schwedtman (Consulting Electrical & Mechanical Engineers); Henry R. Seager; Warren S. Stone (grand chief, Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers); SURVEY; Wiley Swift (secretary, National Child Labor Committee); Frank W. Taussig (professor, Harvard University); Graham Taylor (associate editor, CHARITIES AND THE COMMONS; Graham Romeym Taylor (staff member, CHARITIES AND THE COMMONS); Harry D. Thomas (secretary-treasurer, Ohio Federation of Labor, A.F. of L.); William H. Tolman (director, American Institute of Social Service); U.S. Bureau of Labor; U.S. Dept. of Commerce and Labor; Mary Van Kleeck (industrial secretary, Alliance Employment Bureau, N.Y.); V.C. Vaughan; Lillian D. Wald; and F.F. Wesbrook (dean, University of Minnesota, College of Medicine and Surgery); and others.EnglishKheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and ArchivesBoard of Research Associates in American Economic History papers, 1902-1933Board of Research Associates in American Economic History papers 1902-193311 linear feet (22 boxes, 1 folio)Correspondence, reports, studies, minutes of meetings, circular letters, financial reports, outlines of proposed surveys, annual reports, departmental reports, and monographs relative to the established purpose of the Board, which was sponsored by the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Department of Economics and Sociology. Included are interviews (ca. 1906-1907) with Southern farmers, professionals, government officials, and merchants on the economics of agriculture in the South. Also a number of interviews with blacks connected with the Tuskegee Institute, an insurance agent, a banker and laborers. Topics covered in the collection include labor legislation in Indiana, 1908; laws regarding seamen; immigration; labor problems in individual states; public poor relief in Wisconsin; trade unions; school systems; child labor laws; and mining laws.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesWalcott, Frederic Collin, 1869-1948. Frederic Collin Walcott papers, 1850-1948 (inclusive).Walcott, Frederic Collin, 1869-1948.Frederic Collin Walcott papers, 1850-1948 (inclusive).11.5 linear ft. (19 boxes, 1 folio)The early papers relate to Walcott's business concerns and his game preserve. The bulk of the collection covers the period from 1915-1919 when Walcott was with the Rockefeller Foundation War Relief Commission and the U.S. Food Administration. Beginning with 1929 there is some correspondence from his career as Republican Senator from Connecticut. The remainder of the collection relates to Walcott's work in Polish relief (1939-1940) and his interest in conservation. Other persons represented include William Henry Welch (1850-1934); Herbert Hoover, with whom Walcott worked regarding Belgian relief, the Food Administration, and later as Senator; William Howard Taft, and many leaders of the American business community. Yale University LibraryCharles Dewey Hilles papers, 1823-1955Hilles, Charles Dewey, 1867-1949.Charles Dewey Hilles papers 1823-195563.5 linear feetCorrespondence, memoranda, speeches, press releases, clippings, printed matter, photographs, and memorabilia documenting Hilles' activities as secretary to President Taft (1911-1913), as chairman and committeeman to the Republican National Committee (1912-1937) and as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (1909-1911). His correspondence as Taft's secretary is of special importance as being originally part of the President's office files. His work as administrator of the Ohio Industrial School (1892-1902) and the New York Juvenile Asylum (1902-1909) is also documented in the correspondence. Family correspondence is particularly rich for the fall of 1911 when Hilles was touring the country with President Taft, and for 1912 just before his appointment as chairman of the Republican National Committee. Correspondents of note include Charles Francis Adams, William Jennings Bryan, Nicholas Murray Butler, Andrew Carnegie, Josephus Daniels, Charles G. Dawes, Theodore Dreiser, Henry W. Farnam, Irving Fisher, Arthur T. Hadley, Warren G. Harding, Charles Evans Hughes, Frank B. Kellogg, Henry Cabot Lodge, Gifford Pinchot, Theodore Roosevelt, Elihu Root, Henry L. Stimson, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Booker T. Washington and George Westinghouse.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesLounsbury, Thomas Raynesford, 1838-1915. Thomas Raynesford Lounsbury papers, 1829-1915 (inclusive), 1856-1915 (bulk).Lounsbury, Thomas Raynesford, 1838-1915.Thomas Raynesford Lounsbury papers, 1829-1915 (inclusive), 1856-1915 (bulk).20 linear ft. (51 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, writings, research, notes, scrapbooks, and other materials documenting Lounsbury's personal life and professional career as an author and educator of English literature at Yale University. Correspondence with Yale colleagues, students, authors, and officials details his academic and literary interests, and activity in the areas of international language and simplified spelling. Personal materials include letters relating to Lounsbury's Civil War experiences and diaries containing brief entries from 1856-1915. Yale University LibraryThomas Raynesford Lounsbury papers, 1829-1915Lounsbury, Thomas Raynesford, 1838-1915.Thomas Raynesford Lounsbury papers 1829-191520 linear feet (51 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, writings, research, notes, scrapbooks, and other materials documenting Lounsbury's personal life and professional career as an author and educator of English literature at Yale University. Correspondence with Yale colleagues, students, authors, and officials details his academic and literary interests, and activity in the areas of international language and simplified spelling. Personal materials include letters relating to Lounsbury's Civil War experiences and diaries containing brief entries from 1856-1915.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesGeorge Dudley Seymour papers, 1684-1944Seymour, George Dudley, 1859-1945.George Dudley Seymour papers 1684-194457 linear feet (128 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, writings, photographs, research files, printed material, and miscellanea of George Dudley Seymour, a lawyer, antiquarian, historian, author and city planner in New Haven, Connecticut. Seymour's personal papers and collected manuscripts document the history of the Seymour family, the patriot Nathan Hale, the city planning movement in New Haven, Connecticut, and local history, 1684-1944. General correspondence files contain the bulk of personal correspondence, with many figures from the fields of art, education, politics, and sculpture represented, including William Howard Taft, a close friend of Seymour's. Family genealogy files include extensive correspondence, papers, and photographs Seymour accumulated in the course of his research on (1939). Seymour also collected information and manuscripts relating to Nathan Hale, the Connecticut hero. The Seymour FamilyEnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesThe Inquiry Papers, 1915-1921The Inquiry Papers 1915-192118 linear feet (35 boxes, 4 folios)Correspondence, organizational records, reports containing historical and statistical material, maps, and other papers of The Inquiry, a group of experts assembled at the request of President Wilson to collect and collate data in preparation for a peace conference following World War I. Members of The Inquiry included Edward House, Sidney Mezes, Isaiah Bowman, Charles Seymour, David H. Miller, Walter Lippmann, James T. Shotwell, and Clive Day.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesFarnam family. Farnam family papers, 1721-2002 (inclusive), 1850-1937 (bulk).Farnam family.Farnam family papers, 1721-2002 (inclusive), 1850-1937 (bulk).161.5 linear ft.Correspondence, diaries, letterbooks, financial papers, writings, scrapbooks, and memorabilia of the Farnam family of New Haven, Connecticut, 1721-1929. The papers of Henry Farnam (1803-1883), and two of his sons, Henry Walcott Farnam (1853-1933) and William Whitman Farnam (1844-1929) form this collection. The papers of Henry Farnam include personal and professional correspondence concerning his family, life in New Haven, and the building of several canals and railroads in Connecticut and the Midwest. Materials documenting the New Haven and Northampton Company, Chicago and Rock Island Railroad, Mississippi and Missouri Valley Railroad, Northern Indiana Railroad, and Peoria and Bureau Valley Railroad is arranged here. The papers of Henry Walcott Farnam include personal and professional correspondence, financial papers, writings, subject files and scrapbooks relating to his family, life in New Haven, student and teaching experiences at Yale, membership in local, state, and national academic and reform organizations, and philanthropic activities on behalf of educational and charitable institutions. The papers of William Whitman Farnam include correspondence and topical files relating to family matters, Yale University, and New Haven Park Commission activities.Yale University LibraryArthur Twining Hadley, president of Yale University, records, 1899-1921Arthur Twining Hadley, president of Yale University, records 1899-192151.75 linear feetThe records contain the official correspondence of Arthur Twining Hadley during his tenure as president of Yale University. The papers document the rapid change and expansion which occurred at Yale during Hadley's presidency. The incoming correspondence contains letters with members of the Yale faculty and administration; requests for personal appearances and speeches and articles; inquiries from educational administrators; and correspondence with alumni relating to fund-raising and class reunions. The outgoing correspondence, in letterbook form, consists of carbon copies of Hadley's official outgoing correspondence from 1899 to 1921. Also included are subject files relating to ROTC and other military training programs; acceptances and regrets to invitations to Hadley's inauguration; newspaper clippings relating to Hadley's activities; copies of three addresses by Hadley; a notebook kept by one of Hadley's students in Economics 20 (1894-1895); Hadley's office appointment books (1900-1920); and two photograph albums.EnglishYale University. Department of Manuscripts and ArchivesBingham family papers, 1811-1974Bingham family.Bingham family papers75.94 Linear Feet (140 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, journals, manuscripts, notebooks, sermons, writings, two books with manuscript notes, legal and financial records, photographs, printed material and miscellanea documenting the personal lives and professional careers of four generations of the Bingham family. The papers include material documenting Hiram Bingham (1789-1869) and his missionary work in Hawaii; Hiram Bingham (1831-1908) and his missionary work in the Gilbert Islands, his literary efforts, and family matters; and Hiram Bingham (1875-1956) and his academic career, his South American explorations, including the discovery of the ruins of Machu Picchu in 1911, and his political career as lieutenant governor, governor, and United States senator from Connecticut. Papers relating to several other family members are also included in the papers.EnglishHawaiianSpanish; CastilianFrenchEnglishYale University LibraryCorrespondence, 1860-1979.Hocking, William Ernest, 1873-1966. William Ernest Hocking papers144 linear feet (110 boxes)Correspondence of Harvard philosopher William Ernest Hocking, his wife, Agnes Hocking, the Hocking family, and others.EnglishHoughton LibraryBingham family. Bingham family papers, 1811-1974 (inclusive).Bingham family.Bingham family papers75.94 Linear Feet (140 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, diaries, journals, manuscripts, notebooks, sermons, writings, two books with manuscript notes, legal and financial records, photographs, printed material and miscellanea documenting the personal lives and professional careers of four generations of the Bingham family. The papers include material documenting Hiram Bingham (1789-1869) and his missionary work in Hawaii; Hiram Bingham (1831-1908) and his missionary work in the Gilbert Islands, his literary efforts, and family matters; and Hiram Bingham (1875-1956) and his academic career, his South American explorations, including the discovery of the ruins of Machu Picchu in 1911, and his political career as lieutenant governor, governor, and United States senator from Connecticut. Papers relating to several other family members are also included in the papers.EnglishHawaiianSpanish; CastilianFrenchEnglishYale University LibrarySumner, William Graham, 1840-1910. William Graham Sumner papers, 1863-1946 (inclusive).Sumner, William Graham, 1840-1910.William Graham Sumner papers, 1863-1946 (inclusive).60.25 linear ft. (123 boxes, 3 folios, 1 file cabinet)The papers consist of correspondence, writings, notes and research materials, clippings, memorabilia, photographs and financial records of William Graham Sumner, a sociologist, professor at Yale University, and advocate of free trade and the gold standard. The correspondence (over 13,000 items) documents many of Sumner's interests including the Yale College curriculum and economic and political issues. It also includes substantive accounts from friends in the South about Reconstruction, the Freedmen's Bureau, and the Tilden-Hayes election. Family correspondence spans the years 1863-1908. There are over 100 letters written by Sumner during the last years of his life to Albert Galloway Keller. Writings in the papers include manuscripts of published and unpublished works, among which are two unpublished books on paper currency. Essays, both complete and fragments, sermons from his service as an Episcopal minister, drafts of lectures, addresses, and several items of fiction are also included. Sumner's exhaustive notes cover a variety of topics on American and European history. The largest set is made up of 250,000 note cards, catalogued and used in the preparation of Science of Society. Among his major correspondents are E. S. Dana, Timothy Dwight, Morton Easton, Irving Fisher, Edwin Godkin, Charles Hines, Alfred Bishop Mason, Simon Newcomb, Joseph Sumner and David Ames Wells. These papers previously formed part of the Sumner-Keller collection. Yale University LibraryAmerican Association for Labor Legislation. Series 1, Subseries 2, part a. Correspondence (A-G) 1910-1915. [microform].American Association for Labor Legislation.Series 1, Subseries 2, part a. Correspondence (A-G) 1910-1915. [microform].Series 1, Subseries 2, parts a : , and c: 8 linear ft. (on 9 microfilm reels)Include correspondence relating to a bill banning the use of white phosphorous in the match industry; to meetings and programs of the Association; to occupational diseases; to accident reporting; to workmen's compensation; to workplace inspection; to child labor; to women's hours of work; to minimum wage investigation; to lead poisoning; to questions of mediation and compulsory arbitration; to a study of anthrax as an occupational disease; to health insurance; to revision of the compressed air provisions of the New York State Labor Law; to the Kern bill; to the National Conference on Unemployment; and to the operation of the Municipal Lodging House, on the Board of which Andrews served. Major and frequent correspondents include Stephen Bauer, James D. Beck, Joseph P. Chamberlain, Katharine Coman, John R. Commons, Clarence Darrow, Edgar T. Davies, Miles M. Dawson, John J. Esch, Henry W. Farnam, Irving Fisher, John A. Fitch, Ernst Freund, and Samuel Gompers. Other individual and organizational correspondents of national significance or who wrote with some frequency include the following with names beginning with letters A-G: Jane Addams; Felix Adler; Magnus W. Alexander (vice-president, National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education); Frederic Almy (secretary, Charity Organization Society, Buffalo, N.Y.); Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees of America; American Medical Association; Leo Arnstein; James P. Boyle; Edwin V. Brake (Colorado Bureau of Labor Statistics); Louis D. Brandeis; Lillian Brandt (secretary, International Congress on Tuberculosis); Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen; Robert W. Bruère (New York Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor); and the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers of America. Other correspondents include Gerald W. Brown (assistant deputy minister of labour, Canada); Bureau of Animal Industry Employees; Bureau of Liability Insurance Statistics; James T. Burke (chief inspector, Office of Inspector of Factories, Toronto); Frank T. Carlton (Michigan Child Labor Committee); D.L. Cease (Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen); Howell Cheney (Child Labor Committee); Everett Colby; Solon DeLeon; Edward T. Devine; Davis Rich Dewey (Massachusetts Institute of Technology); Carroll W. Doten (head of Research Department, School for Social Workers, Simmons College and Harvard University); Frank S. Drown; Mary E. Dreier (president, New York Women's Trade Union League); Mrs. W.F. Dummer; Crystal Eastman (Mrs. Crystal Eastman Benedict); Lucile Eaves (University of Nebraska); Howard P. Eells (treasurer, National Metal Trades Association); Everette E. Ellinwood; Richard T. Ely; Lillian Erskine; and Elizabeth Glendower Evans (secretary, Lyman and Industrial Schools). Additional correspondents include Richard H. Fletcher, (commissioner of labor, Michigan Bureau of Labor Statistics); Lee K. Frankel; Andrew Furuseth (Sailors' Union of the Pacific); Edward Fuster (secretary, Comité Permanent du Congrès International des Accidents du Travail et des Assurances Sociales); Charles F. Gettemy (director, Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics); John M. Glenn (secretary and director, Russell Sage Foundation); John Golden (president, United Textile Workers of America); Josephine Goldmark (editorial secretary, National Consumers' League); Luke Grant; John H. Gray; and R.S. Gray. Cornell University LibrarySeymour, George Dudley, 1859-1945. George Dudley Seymour papers, 1684-1944 (inclusive).Seymour, George Dudley, 1859-1945.George Dudley Seymour papers, 1684-1944 (inclusive).57 linear ft. (128 boxes)The papers consist of correspondence, writings, photographs, research files, printed material, and miscellanea of George Dudley Seymour, a lawyer, antiquarian, historian, author and city planner in New Haven, Connecticut. Seymour's personal papers and collected manuscripts document the history of the Seymour family, the patriot Nathan Hale, the city planning movement in New Haven, Connecticut, and local history, 1684-1944. General correspondence files contain the bulk of personal correspondence, with many figures from the fields of art, education, politics, and sculpture represented, including William Howard Taft, a close friend of Seymour's. Family genealogy files include extensive correspondence, papers, and photographs Seymour accumulated in the course of his research on The Seymour Family (1939). Seymour also collected information and manuscripts relating to Nathan Hale, the Connecticut hero. As a pioneer in New Haven's early city planning movement, Seymour amassed correspondence with such notable figures as Cass Gilbert and Frederick Law Olmstead, minutes of commission meetings, and clipping files which detail much of the city planning activity engaged in during the early 1900s. Topical files and scrapbooks document a wide range of literary and professional activities, including Seymour's writings on New Haven and Connecticut history, and his legal practice in patent law. Yale University Library