Papers of Anne Tredick Dickey, 1893-

ArchivalResource

Papers of Anne Tredick Dickey, 1893-

Collection includes diaries of Anne Tredick Dickey, her mother Florence H. Tredick, and her grandmother Addie M. Tredick; personal and professional correspondence; family and travel photographs; notecards containing talks by Florence H. Tredick, mostly on books and reading; her father's umpire notebook; published family histories; blueprints; articles re: Dickey's work, etc.

3 linear ft. (3 cartons, 1 folio folder)

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Radcliffe College

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rf9p18 (corporateBody)

Vocational short courses and institutes were initiated by the Radcliffe Appointment Bureau to train students for careers after graduation. Among these courses were: the Institute on Historical and Archival Management, 1954-1960; Communications for the Volunteer, 1965-1968; Summer Secretarial Course, 1935-1955, and the Radcliffe Publishing Course (formerly Publishing Procedures Course), 1947-, which continues to offer a six-week summer course in publishing. From the description of Rad...

Tredick, Florence Hollenbeck.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6wq4j7d (person)

Dickey, Anne Tredick, 1917-2009.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6w42bks (person)

Interior designer and curator Anne Tredick Dickey was born in Chicago, Illinois, to Alton and Florence Hollenbeck Tredick. Her father was an investment banker and baseball umpire; her mother a teacher and authority on children's literature who helped establish one of the first elementary school library systems in the United States. She attended Radcliffe College, graduating in 1939 with a degree in architectural history. She worked in the Office of War Information and as...

United Nations

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6t76681 (corporateBody)

In 1945, four individuals who had worked on the Manhattan project-John L. Balderston, Jr., Dieter M. Gruen, W.J. McLean, and David B. Wehmeyer-formed a committee and wrote a letter to 154 public figures asking for their opinions about the possibility of the creation of a world government. Over the next year, as the various public figures responded to the letter, the responses were correlated into a report that was released in 1947. From the guide to the Balderston, John L., Jr. Colle...