Master's Theses Collection, 1894-2010
Graduate work in a formal sense emerged at Princeton in the 1870s when President James McCosh added new faculty and graduate fellowships. This collection consists of theses submitted toward the fulfillment of requirements for master's degrees at Princeton University.
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Department of Classics Records, 1894-2017 (mostly 1894-1935)
The Department of Classics at Princeton University offers courses, both in English and in the original languages, that treat the whole range of ancient culture, from its mythology to its philosophy, law, and literature. Consists of the records of the Department of Classics from the late 19th and early 20th century.
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Roy Pedersen Collection of Gaston Longchamp Materials, 1894-2024
Consists of correspondence, ephemera, and other manuscripts relating to the life of artist Gaston Longchamp. Also includes newspaper articles, handwritten notes, and other materials related to Roy Pedersen's research on Gaston Longchamp and other artists.
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Series IV. Miscellaneous Drafts, Extracts and Contents of Vertical Files, 1895-1955
Restrictions may apply.
Consists of the contents of Morey's personal vertical files including drafts, journals, correspondence and other printed matter from Morey's teaching career.
Charles Rufus Morey Papers, 1895-1955 (mostly 1924-1945)
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American art historian Charles Rufus Morey (1877-1955) served as professor in the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University from 1918-1945 and as chairman from 1924-1945. The collection includes Morey's drafts for catalogues, mainly at the Museo Sacro and Museo Cristiano; photographs; professional papers, lecture and course notes; and drafts, extracts and contents of vertical files.
Postcards, Photographs and Negatives, 1901-1950
Restrictions may apply.
Includes a framed portrait, four negatives of other official portraits of Morey, and various postcards and three mounted thumbnail study photographs of Roman architecture taken by Morey.
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Correspondence, 1895-1957
The bulk of the correspondence is from T.S. Eliot, and many letters are interfiled with enclosures that were sent with them. Also included is correspondence between Emily Hale and others, particularly her friends Margaret and Willard Thorp. The Thorps were also associates of Eliot, and they were aware of the close relationship between he and Hale.
Emily Hale Letters from T. S. Eliot, 1895-1965 (mostly 1931-1940)
Consists mostly of letters from British-American poet T.S. Eliot to Emily Hale (1891-1969), a teacher, actress, and close friend of Eliot's. Also included are copies of typescripts by Eliot, photographs, ephemera, and a brief narrative of the relationship between the two penned by Hale.
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Booksellers' League of New York Records, 1895-1967
Founded in 1895, the Booksellers' League of New York was an organization aimed at promoting a professional and collaborative spirit among members of the book trade. The bulk of the collection consists of meeting minutes of the annual meetings and Board of Managers meetings, 1895-1932 (5 vols.) and of materials relating to the League's monthly dinners and other social events, 1901-1958 (invitation cards, programs, menus, handbills, and related membership mailings).
Social Events, 1900-1958
The Social Events group contains materials pertaining to the League's social activities. It includes invitations, menus, programs, handbills, and related correspondence.
Constitutions, 1905-1954
Contains copies of the League's constitutions of 1905, 1942, and 1954 as well as various draft versions. A copy of the 1895 constitution is included in box 1, vol. 4.
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2 letters from Ernest Dowson to Arthur Symons, 1895-1986
HAS ONLINE MATERIAL
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Princeton Alumni Publications, Inc. Editor's Records, 1895-1986
The PAW is successor to the Alumni Princetonian, a weekly publication of the Daily Princetonian. In 1919 the Princeton Printing Company dissolved and printing of the PAW was taken over by the Princeton University Press. The PAW was a weekly magazine during the school year until changing to its current bi-weekly format in 1977. The magazine is now published during the academic year for alumni and professional staff of the University.
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Subseries 1, General, 1895-1998
Series 2: Subject Files, Subseries 1: General (1895-1998) is the most diverse component of the Morse Papers, ranging from highly personal matters to relatively inconsequential ones and touching on innumerable aspects of Morse's life. The material in this subseries is also the broadest of any in terms of time span, for while most of it postdates the Second World War, it includes documents held by Morse's family prior to his birth. The bulk of its folders are identified by the name of the individual or organization to whom or to which their contents relate, but a number are constituted on a broader basis, as in Morse's Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts requests or in the obituaries and tributes which followed his death. Much of the material in this subseries, be it personal correspondence or organizational documents, is routine, though at various junctures an issue of particular moment manifests itself. Considered collectively, this material provides a multidimensional picture of Morse's interests and involvements. For a fuller treatment of the different phases of his life, the subseries which precede and follow this one should be consulted.
Series 2, Subject Files, 1895-1998
Series 2: Subject Files (1895-1998) is composed of material related to the career of Morse outside of the ILO, as well as his personal life and family. Periods of his career covered by the series include his Army service, positions within the Department of Labor, and his work with the United Nations Development Programme. Please see the subseries descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual subseries.
David A. Morse Papers, 1895-2003 (mostly 1942-1990)
The David A. Morse Papers document the life and times of David Abner Morse (1907-1990), American lawyer, soldier, and public official. While he distinguished himself in legal, military, and governmental circles, the most fruitful years of his life were spent at the helm of the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the oldest member of the United Nations' family of specialized agencies. As Director-General of the International Labour Office in Geneva from 1948 to 1970, Morse guided the increasingly complex activities of this tripartite organization, which unites in one body the representatives of workers, governments, and employers. No one has had a longer tenure as its head, and no one has presided over such far-reaching changes in its composition and orientation. Drawing on a variety of experiences in the field of domestic and international labor, including appointments as Assistant, Under, and Acting Secretary of Labor in the Truman administration, Morse gave practical meaning in a postwar context to the ILO's underlying philosophy, namely, that "universal and lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon social justice." The pursuit of this object won for the ILO the Nobel Peace Prize in 1969. The David Morse Papers contain correspondence, reports, memoranda, photographs, and newspaper clippings that document this long, productive career.
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Autobiography: Days and Years, 1895-2999
This is an autobiography giving an account of Velikovsky's life from the earliest years until 1958.
Immanuel Velikovsky Papers, 1920-1996 (mostly 1930-1979)
The collection consists of manuscripts, writings, correspondence (both personal and professional), photographs, works of others, microfilm, printed material, and film reels, spanning more than 50 years, concerning Velikovsky's controversial ideas, the books that he wrote, and the history of opposition and criticism from the academic community that he received following the publication of his first book, Worlds in Collision, in 1950. Colleges and universities threatened to boycott the textbook division of the publisher, Macmillan & Co., which led to the transfer of the publishing rights to Doubleday & Co., even though the book had reached the number one spot on the best-sellers list. The book was eventually banned from a number of academic institutions, and several people lost their jobs because of it.
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George Black Stewart Papers, 1896-1950 (mostly 1896-1917)
Consists of photograph albums, diaries, engagement calendars, and documents of George Black Stewart (Princeton Class of 1906) who was treasurer (1906-1950) of the American University of Beirut.
Engagement Calendars, 1940-1950
Treasurer of the American University of Beirut. Last foreigner to sit on the Municipal Council of Beirut. 10 pieces.
Speeches, 1949-1950
Translated speeches (handwritten and typed), delivered in honour of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Stewart on his retirement as Treasurer, 1949-1950, and other occasions. 6 pieces.
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Sponge Diving in Dodecanese Islands (Greece) Collection, 1896-1954
Consists of documents related to sponge diving activity of the Dodecanese islands, 1896-1954. Letters, contracts, taking out loans, invoices, legal decisions, draft regulation on sponge diving written in Italian; documents of the Italian administration; three sheets of the Nea Rodos newspaper with related articles; a copy of Geōrgios Eleuth. Geōrgas' printed work "Μελέτη περί σπόγγων, σπογγαλιείας και σπογγεμπορίου από των αρχαιοτάτων χρόνων μέχρι σήμερον"; letter (a document) of protest from spongers about the desperation in which they have found themselves because of the greed and indifference of traders who seek to exploit the situation and to speculate, etc. Handwritten and typed, in Greek, Italian, French, and Ottoman Turkish. Signatures, stamps, seals. 167 documents, 419 pages in total.
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Albert Schweitzer Collection, 1896-1976 (mostly 1930-1965)
The collection contains both original and printed material relating to Albert Schweitzer, the French missionary physician who founded the Lambaréné Hospital in French Equatorial Africa in 1913 and who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1953 for his philosophy of "reverence for life."
Concert Programs, 1912-1965
16 programs from concerts honoring Albert Schweitzer or where he was a special guest or participant in a concert relating to Bach or Goethe; with 3 of the 15 being from the Ross List
Subseries 5E: Music Related, 1912-1968
This subseries consists of materials relating to the musical aspect of Schweitzer's life and career.
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Arthur Mendel Papers, 1937-1981 1950-1979 (mostly 1950-1979)
Arthur Mendel was a prominent music scholar in the twentieth century and a professor at Princeton University. The collection contains correspondence with professional colleagues, course notes, musical notes, scrapbooks, and clippings. There is also additional unprocessed material from Mendel's time at Princeton.
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Series 2: Guillermo Valencia Material, 1896-1992
Consists of the correspondence, photographs, works, printed matter, and recordings of Guillermo Valencia.
Sonja Karsen Papers, 1897-1993 (mostly 1950-1973)
Sonja Karsen, born in 1919, was a professor of Spanish at Skidmore College and intensively researched Jaime Torres Bodet and Guillermo Valencia, two Latin American politicians and poets. The Sonja Karsen papers contain much of her research on these two figures.
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Series 3: General Files, 1896-1999
The General Files series contains files of the Ladies Auxiliary documenting a variety of topics. Within the folders are mixed materials, such as clippings, pamphlets, and some correspondence. Particularly notable materials include an 8"x10" photograph of an Eastman Johnson portrait of Isabella McCosh held by the Princeton Art Museum, along with provenance information and a conservation estimate; as well as a 1912 proposal for a new infirmary building that was never built including floor plans and an artist's rendering. Also included are two visitor registers to the McCosh Infirmary.
Series 1: Meeting Minutes, 1902-2002 October 25
The Meeting Minutes series contains the meeting minutes of the Ladies Auxiliary. Included are annual meetings of the entire body, more frequent but less well-attended regular meetings, and executive board meetings. Each set of minutes notes the type of meeting, and contains the date of the meeting, its location, a list of attendees, and issues discussed or voted upon. Until 1915 the minutes are handwritten in bound ledgers by the Ladies Auxiliary Secretary.
Auxiliary to the Isabella McCosh Infirmary Records, 1902-2007
The Auxiliary to the Isabella McCosh Infirmary is a volunteer fundraising organization which supports Princeton University Health Services. Founded in 1902 as the Ladies Auxiliary to the Isabella McCosh Infirmary, the group has been responsible for shaping student health at Princeton University for over a century. The records contain meeting minutes, annual reports, correspondence, and subject files which pertain to the McCosh Infirmary, or to the organization itself.
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Series 1: Correspondence and Scrapbooks, 1896-2009
Consists mainly of correspondence between Dean Mathey and family members. Also includes scrapbooks and newspaper clippings.
Dean Mathey Papers, 1896-2010 (mostly 1906-1972)
Dean Mathey (d. 1972), Class of 1912, was a member of the Board of Trustees and an ardent supporter of the University. The collection documents Mathey's familial relationships, service to Princeton, tennis career and other activities from his undergraduate days to the end of his life.
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Exhibitions Collection, 1896-2013 (mostly 1951-2013)
Consists of material from and about the exhibitions held by the Special Collections in Firestone Library, primarily concerning subjects relating to American and English literature and art.
Princeton University Library Publications from 1938 to 1952, General Manuscripts, 1938-1952
Manuscripts
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Edwin Grant Conklin Papers, 1897-1952
An ardent evolutionist, Edwin Grant Conklin specialized in embryology and cytology and was Chairman of the biology department at Princeton from 1908-1933. His collection consists of personal and professional correspondence, documents, manuscripts and notes of articles, lectures, and speeches, many of which reflect his life-long interest in three organisms, crepidula, cynthia (styla), and amphioxus, as well as Darwinism, and heredity and environment.
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Princeton University Library Collection of Logan Pearsall Smith Materials, 1897-1953
Consists of selected papers, including manuscripts, research materials, and correspondence, of American-born British essayist and critic Logan Pearsall Smith.
Manuscripts, 1897-1953 February 5
Includes Smith's manuscripts, notes, and proofs for his last anthology, The Golden Shakespeare; manuscripts of "Saved from the Salvage," about his recollections of Venice during the winter of 1897 and 1898, which appeared in Horizons (March, 1943); and "Slices of Cake," an account of his meeting Henry James at Edith Wharton's shortly after the outbreak of World War I, published in The New Statesmen and Nation (June, 1943); as well as a few miscellaneous writings.
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Series 5: Subject Files, 1897-2000
Consists of personal and business correspondence as well as memoranda, meeting minutes, photographs, news articles and clippings, documenting Thornhill's involvement in a variety of activities and organizations both inside and outside of the publishing industry.
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Series 5: Notes, 1897-1957
Notes (1897-1957) contains Love's notes on international political affairs relating to the Middle East.
Series 2: Biographical Information, 1924-1993
Biographical information contains a curriculum vitae of Love, a photograph, and an itinerary of Love's trip to Europe in January to March 1966.
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H. Alexander Smith Papers, 1897-1966 (mostly 1920-1966)
H. Alexander Smith served as the executive secretary of Princeton University and was later elected to the United States Senate representing New Jersey. Smith made contributions to United States foreign policy while serving on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The bulk of documentation focuses on his tenure in the Senate and the period immediately after his retirement; reports, correspondence, and printed material from his work at Princeton are also included. The papers contain diaries, correspondence, speeches, notes, photographs, and memorabilia.
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Series 3, Personal Records, 1898-1949
Series 3, Personal Records, 1898-1947 [bulk 1917-1947]contains various documents concerning Keeley's personal life and that of his family. Of specific interest are the drafts of articles that Keeley wrote, including those about life in Damascus (circa 1924-1928), and poems and songs about the life of an American consul, by Charles Allen (circa 1926).
James Hugh Keeley, Jr. Papers, 1898-1975 (mostly 1921-1975)
The James H. Keeley Jr. papers document Keeley's career in the Foreign Service from 1920 through the 1960s. Over the course of his career, Keeley served in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Canada, Greece, Belgium, and Italy.
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Kenneth McKenzie Fable Collection, 1898-1949
Consists of papers of Kenneth McKenzie (1870-1949), a former professor of Romance languages at Princeton, relating to fables.
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McCallum, R.B., 1898-1962
File for Men Ideas, an historical series: IV, The Liberal Party from Lord Grey to Asquith(1959)
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Photographs, 1898-1965
Includes 19 black-and-white photographs: 4 images (16 x 21.9 cm) of an international competition in literature (1965) where Tsitselē participated; 9 postcard photographs (7.7 x 13.5 cm.) of the Delphic Festival (1930) by Nelly's; 1 postcard photograph (0.9 x 14 cm.) of the Arch of Hadrian (Athens) by Neue Photogr. Gesellischaft (1898); and 5 miscellaneous images (11.7 x 0.8 cm.). There are also 15 black-and-white photographs, attached on mat board, of a coctail party dated November 19, 1954, in honor of John Steinbeck; and 5 black-and-white photographs of the Prix Formentor and the International Literary Prize event in Corfu in 1963, depicting Tsitselē, Kimon Friar, Barney Rosset, and others.
Series 3: Photographs; Miscellaneous Tsitselē's Material; Printed Material, 1898-2001
Consists of assorted printed material relating to Tsitselē's works.
Kaiē Tsitselē Papers, 1898-2001
Consists of personal papers of Kaiē Tsitselē, Greek author and translator, who contributed to the dissemination of the Modern Greek literature outside Greece. The collection consists of manuscripts of some of Tsitselē's novels, short stories, radio scripts, and book reviews along with her English translations of Greek works. Correspondence with her friends and colleagues completes the collection.
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Series 1: Correspondence, 1898-1971
This series documents Fosdick's personal and professional life and various areas of interest to Fosdick. While the collection does not contain much material from Fosdick's early career as Commissioner of Accounts in New York, there is an extensive amount of information on his position as chairman of the Commission on Training Camp Activities and his participation in the League of Nations. Fosdick's tenure with the Rockefeller Foundation is also particularly well-documented, and his correspondence with John D. Rockefeller, Jr. is reflective of both the professional and personal aspects of their relationship.
Raymond Blaine Fosdick Papers, 1898-1971 (mostly 1917-1952)
Raymond Blaine Fosdick (1883-1972) served as Under Secretary General for the League of Nations (1919-1920) and as President of the Rockefeller Foundation (1936-1948). The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence related to military life during World War I, the formation and activities of the League of Nations, and the administration of the Rockefeller Foundation in the 1920s through 1940s. The collection also contains various writings and personal memorabilia.
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Subseries 3A: Chapter Files, 1898-1995
The Chapter Files subseries includes drafts, notes and a substantial amount of source material relating to Martindell's unpublished autobiography. The subseries is arranged by chapter number, and chapter titles indicate the subject of each section of the book. Researchers should note that these files contain a small amount of photographs in addition to those found in the Photographs series.
Series 3: Memoirs and undated, 1898-1997
The Memoirs series consists of Martindell's source material, notes, and drafts relating to the unpublished autobiography that she wrote in the late 1990s. These documents were moved by Martindell, during the writing process, to their present arrangement from elsewhere within her own files. Materials range from family information from the late 19th century to records documenting Martindell's political activities in the late 1980s. This series is divided into two subseries: Chapter Files and Subject Files
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Fine Press Printing Ephemera Collection, 1898-2010 (mostly 1924-1948)
Consists of book prospectuses, invitations, greeting cards, and other items printed by private and small presses in the United States, and various countries throughout the world.
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Julian Street Papers, 1899-1966 (mostly 1910-1947)
Consists of correspondence, manuscripts, photographs, and notes, both published and unpublished, of American author, journalist, enologist, and gastronome Julian Street, ranging from his early reporter and drama critic days (1900-1910) up to the page of Table Topics he was working on just before his death (1947).
Series 2: Correspondence, 1906-1961
Consists of correspondence with individuals such as the Marquis de Angerville, Willa Cather, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, and Theodore Roosevelt.
Subseries 1A: Nonfiction, 1924-1959
Consists of manuscripts and notes for works such as "American Adventures" and "Table Topics."
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Edwin Arlington Robinson Letters, 1899-1968
Consists of original letters and transcriptions of additional letters by Edwin Arlington Robinson, American poet and winner of three Pulitzer Prizes.
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Travel in Lebanon, Syria, etc., 1899-1974
Regarding Garrett's travels to several Middle Eastern countries in 1899-1900.
Princeton University Library Collection of Robert Garrett Materials, 1899-1992 (mostly 1920-1945)
The Robert Garrett Papers consists of correspondence and documents primarily concerning the Robert Garrett Collection and other collecting interests of Garrett, Princeton Class of 1897.
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Lantern Slides, 1899-1980
Restrictions may apply.
Broken Lantern Slides, 1899-1980
Restrictions may apply.
Historical Photograph Collection: Slides series, circa 1899-1980
Restrictions may apply.
Consists of several hundred lantern slides containing images of Princeton University, primarily the campus and buildings.
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Clippings and Printed Materials, 1899-2019
Consists of newspaper and magazine clippings, photocopies of articles, printed materials, ephemera, and scrapbooks that McCarthy kept as source material for his work, as well as to track the reception of his activities and those of other Irish poets in the press. While similar materials that McCarthy interfiled with his poetry drafts can be found in the Writings file group, materials described here consist of those that were not already filed or readily associated with a specific writing project. Many of the clippings McCarthy kept pertain to Irish history, government, culture, and literature. There are some magazines in which McCarthy's writings appeared, translations of his works, and writings by others about McCarthy and other topics, including some materials he may have used for teaching purposes. Of note are a small number of photographs depicting McCarthy, including with family and friends, largely from the 1980s through the 2000s.
Thomas McCarthy Papers, 1899-2019 (mostly 1968-2019)
Consists of writings, diaries, correspondence, organizational records, clippings, and other personal papers of Irish poet Thomas McCarthy, including drafts of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction works from the 1970s through the 2010s; extensive diaries and notebooks on personal and literary topics; files related to his work with Cork 2005, the Triskel Arts Centre, and other cultural and arts organizations in Ireland; transcriptions and recordings of interviews and events; and teaching materials.
Clippings and Articles on Irish Culture and Government, 1914-2018
Includes a copy of "Northern Ireland - The Mailed Fist: A Record of Army Police Brutality from Aug. 9-Nov. 9, 1971," published by the Campaign for Social Justice in Northern Ireland in collaboration with the Association for Legal Justice.
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Samuel Reber Collection, 1947-1957
Consists chiefly of several official documents from the years just following World War II, when Samuel Reber was Acting Deputy Director for the Office of European Affairs with the U.S. Department of State and, later, Acting United States High Commissioner for Germany.
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Broadside Playbills, 18th-20th century
This collection contains broadside playbills from the United States, England, and Europe.
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Carl Van Doren Papers, 1900-1950
The collection illustrates the literary career of American author and professor Carl Van Doren, including typescripts and research notes for his Pulitzer Prize winning biography of Benjamin Franklin. The collection also contains various documents, including Van Doren's will, souvenirs, memorabilia, photographs, clippings, and printed material, as well as legal papers and correspondence dealing with his participation in several lawsuits involving copyright infringement.
Subseries 1F: Miscellaneous, 1901-1950
Consists of biographical material, school papers, research materials and notes.
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Series 6: Additional Papers, 1900-1962
Consists of miscellaneous notes, writings, and correspondence by or about Hugh MacNair Kahler.
Hugh MacNair Kahler Papers, 1900-1964 (mostly 1900-1950)
Consists of writings, correspondence, documents, photographs, and other miscellanea of the American editor, novelist, and storywriter Hugh MacNair Kahler.
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Photographs of the Cunliffe-Owens, 1900-1969
Undated photographs of Marguerite and brother Gontran in their youth. Photographs of the Cunliffe-Owen estate. Glass locket with photographs of Pierrot (Mrs. Cunliffe-Owen) and her father. 2 scapular medals (gold one was used by Marguerite's father), undated.
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T. H. Vail Motter Playbills Collection, 1900-1969 (mostly 1913-1959)
The collection consists mainly of playbills of American dramatic productions covering over forty-five years of play-going by T. H. Vail Motter (Princeton Class of 1922) but includes some early 20th-century playbills from the London theater as well as foreign playbills from Greece, Turkey, Belgium, China, Japan, Denmark, Holland, and England.
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Richard Halliburton Papers, 1900-1973 (mostly 1903-1940)
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Richard Halliburton traveled extensively in the first part of twentieth century after graduating from Princeton University in 1921. The collection contains autograph and typescript drafts of seven of Halliburton's books, short stories, essays, school notes, and other travel memorabilia, as well as Halliburton's correspondence with his parents and others, research materials about Rupert Brooke, and a significant group of photographs documenting his travels throughout Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
Subseries 5C: Wesley Halliburton, 1903-1949 March 27
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Consists of the papers of Wesley Halliburton, including "Death Valley Scotty's Fabulous Life Story and Magnificent Castle Enchant Memphian" and a document for "Certificate Award as Master of the Royal Secret of the 32nd Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite."
Series 5: Papers of Others, 1903-1949 March 27
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This series consists of papers of others collected by Richard Halliburton, including papers of Rupert Brooke and Wesley Halliburton, and papers regarding John Wilkes Booth and Richmond Pearson Hobson.
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Paul Frankl Papers, 1900-1974
The Paul Frankl Papers consists of correspondence, writings, notebooks, photographs, and printed matter of the Czech art historian, architect, author, and educator Paul Frankl (1878-1962). A native of Prague, Frankl came to the United States in 1938, and shortly afterwards settled in Princeton, New Jersey, where he was associated with the Institute for Advanced Study.
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William McElwee Miller Papers, 1931-1979
Consists of articles, correspondence, notes, miscellaneous material, and printed matter of William McElwee Miller, a Presbyterian clergyman and a missionary in Iran from 1919 to 1962.
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Dance Subject Files, 1900-1980s
The Dance Subject Files consist of dance-related subject files from early 20th century through 1980s. Among the material are clippings, photos, programs, promotional materials, and dance school brochures.
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Exterior view east side of a Byzantine church, 1900-1999
"Comite de culture institut national des monuments historiques" stamp on verso.
Rue d'Arkhanès-Candie, between 1801-1999
Consists of an albumen print; handwritten captions in pen at the bottom-right corner of the image: "Rue d'Arkhanès-Candie. Phot. R. Béhaeddin.
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Πρωϊνή Βοσκή στην Πορταριά [Prōinē voskē stēn Portaria], 1900-1999
Consists of (1) photograph (silver print, 28.1 x 37.9 cm.); mounted; penciled title and photographer's signature on the matboard in Greek.
Χειμωνιάτικη λιακάδα, Καλύβια-Βόλου [Cheimōniatikē liakada, Kalyvia-Volou], 1900-1999
Consists of (1) photograph depicting a winter scene in Kalyvia, Voloss.
Άγιος Ιωάννης Μπαξέδων Άνω Βίλου [Haghios Iōannēs Baxedōn Anō Volou], 1900-1999
Consists of (1) photograph (silver print, 28.1 x 38.2 cm.); mounted; penciled title and photographer's signature on the matboard.