Ursula Martius Franklin fonds, 1934-2014

ArchivalResource

Ursula Martius Franklin fonds, 1934-2014

1934-2014

Fonds consists of records documenting the personal, professional, and public life of Dr. Ursula Franklin, physicist, engineer, materials scientists, pacifist and feminist. Records document Dr. Franklin’s early life and career, later employment by the University of Toronto, awards and honorary degrees, teaching, research process and output, publishing activities, travel, service on national scientific boards, work with the CBC, peace work with the Quakers and Voice of Women, as well as other advocacy and activism. A series of chronological files documents Dr. Franklin’s speeches, talks and attendance at a variety of academic and community events. Fonds also includes a significant amount of correspondence with colleagues, family, friends, fellow activists and ordinary citizens, as well as electronic copies of more than 575 pages of surveillance of Dr. Franklin by the RCMP. One series also documents a wide range of matters at the University of Toronto relating to Massey College, Museum Studies, the SLOWPOKE Reactor, and other matters. Yet another series documents Dr. Franklin’s involvement with the Ursula Franklin Academy. Records include day planners, notebooks, correspondence, publications, news clippings, reports, drafts, research data and notes, background material, photographs, sound and moving image recordings and some copies of government documents and records. See series and subseries descriptions for more detail.

14.3 m of textual records 1.10 m of graphic records 3 boxes of oversized textual records 6 boxes of artifacts 117 audiocassettes 39 VHS tapes 1 Betacam tape 10 CDs 13 DVDs Electronic records: 5 PDF files, 19.8 MB

eng, Latn

Related Entities

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Franklin, Ursula M., 1921-2016

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6jj49n2 (person)

Ursula Franklin was born September 16, 1921 in Munich, Germany. She studied chemistry and physics at Berlin University until she was expelled by the Nazis; her mother was Jewish. Her parents were interned in concentration camps while Franklin herself was sent to a forced labor camp and repaired bombed buildings during the Holocaust; the family survived and was reunited in Berlin after the war. Franklin received her Ph.D. in experimental physics at the Technical University of Berlin in 1948. Fra...