3 results
Alpheus Thomas Mason Papers, circa 1925-1979
Alpheus T. Mason taught in the Dept. of Politics at Princeton University beginning in 1925 and authored a number of legal works as well as biographies of Supreme Court justices Harlan Fiske Stone and Louis D. Brandeis. This collection consists of papers of Mason, including material relating Stone, Brandeis and Woodrow Wilson.
Top 3 results
view all 40
People and Publicity, circa 1940-1980
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Top 3 results
view all 11
Michael A. Feighan papers, circa 1940-1980
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Feighan was a congressman from Ohio. Consists of papers of Feighan covering his years in Congress (1943-1971).
Top 3 results
view all 4
Hadley Cantril Papers, circa 1940-1969
Hadley Cantril was a psychologist who studied propaganda and public opinion research. The collection includes bound Hadley Cantril Diaries, poll results and reports on Polls During World War II, correspondence, and other reports.
Top 3 results
view all 8
Miscellaneous, circa 1940-1966
A few miscellaneous structures and sites as well as one candid photograph of a group of people gathered outside.
Guy Davenport, 1945-2005
Includes mostly incoming letters, though some are from Brown, of a largely personal nature. Many letters are addressed to Clarence and Jacqueline Brown or to the entire family, particularly those dating from the 1960s. Letters include discussion of each others' literary interests, publications, projects, the work of other academics, and their respective teaching positions, among other topics.
Correspondence, 1945-2005
Most of the correspondence is with Brown's close friend, Guy Davenport. Correspondence with W. S. Merwin is primarily about their collaborative translation work: Osip Mandelstam: Selected Poems (1974) and includes translations of Osip Mandelstam's poetry. Letters with Nadezhda Mandelstam relate to her memoir, Hope Against Hope.
Top 3 results
view all 85
3 results
Letters to Eliseo Diego, 1946-1990 July 9
Includes letters by Gaston Baquero, Eugenio Florit, Ramón Gómez de la Serna, Jorge Guillén, José Lezama Lima, Dulce María Loynaz, Julián and Tangui Orbón, Alphonso Reyes, José María Valverde,
Eliseo Diego Papers, 1940-1990
This collection consists of papers of Diego, Cuban poet, author, and translator. Included are correspondence between Diego, his wife, various friends and other writers.
Top 3 results
view all 6
"Nassau Hall," Print of the Painting by Dudley Morris, Published by The Little Gallery, Princeton, New Jersey, circa 1940-1958
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Various 20th-Century Wood Block Prints, Etchings, etc., circa 1900-1970
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Series 2: Nassau Hall Iconography, Additions, 1807-2012
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Top 3 results
view all 1433
1946 September 3-November 30, 1946 September 3-November 30
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Unification Letter, 1946 September 18
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Top 3 results
view all 13
Series 5: Printed Material, 1933-1970
Consists of printed matter, primarily reviews of Zelda's works.
Top 3 results
view all 28
Top 3 results
view all 4
François Wahl Collection on Severo Sarduy, circa 1939-2013
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
The collection contains edited typescripts and copies of Cuban writer Severo Sarduy's poems, essays, and translations, along with writings about Sarduy, interviews, notes, clippings, photographs, and other printed materials. Correspondence includes a group of postcards sent to Severo Sarduy and his partner François Wahl in the 1960s and 1970s from various European and Latin American writers and philosophers, including Roland Barthes, Alain Badiou, Reinaldo Arenas, Octavio Paz, and Jacques Lacan, and additional correspondence of French editor and structuralist François Wahl.
Subseries 4: Photographs, 1939-2003
Includes personal and professional photographs of François Wahl and Severo Sarduy. Also includes photographs of friends, pets, and Wahl's home.
2 results
Patrick J. Kelleher Papers, circa 1939-1981 (mostly 1960-1978)
Patrick Kelleher was director of the Princeton University Art Museum from 1960 to 1972. His papers consist of articles, notes, photographs, and printed matter from Kelleher about the Holy Crown of Hungary. There is a smaller selection of correspondence with artists and colleagues about the direction of the Art Museum.
Top 3 results
view all 586
Top 3 results
view all 47
Top 3 results
view all 92
Series 6, Memorabilia, 1946-1993
Series 6, Memorabilia (1946-1993) consists of medals, certificates, plaques, keys to cities, pins, ribbons, coins, and eight oversized documents. The material in this series was given to Morse in commemoration of various significant events in his career from governments and organizations throughout the world. The materials honor Morse for his work with ILO, as well as other aspects of his career, and commemorate his visits to other countries and important anniversaries of organizations. The oversize documents include certificates testifying to Morse's appointment as Assistant and Under Secretary of Labor and his designation as the representative of the government of the United States on the Governing Body of the ILO. Also to be found are welcoming addresses presented to him on a visit to India and Pakistan as well as attractively illuminated messages of appreciation on the occasion of his departure from the ILO. Please note that the oversized documents are housed in the oversized cabinets.
Top 3 results
view all 27
Top 3 results
view all 17
Top 3 results
view all 44
Top 3 results
view all 55
Top 3 results
view all 22
3 results
War Correspondent Dog Tags, Pins, and Badges, circa 1936-1967
Consists of a set of dog tags, fifteen pins, and a cloth badge from Gellhorn's career as a war correspondent, primarily from the Spanish Civil War and World War II, including dog tags from her time as a war correspondent for Collier's Magazine during World War II, which are embossed "Martha G. Hemingway / War Correspondent / Colliers Magazine;" her United States War Correspondent's badge; a "¡No pasarán!" pin from the Spanish Civil War; a United States Armed Forces Parachutist Badge with four stars affixed to it; along with other pins and military pips from Great Britain, the Middle East, and Russia.
Martha Gellhorn Letters to George Brown, 1941 October 18-1946 December 28
Consists of thirteen typed letters and one autograph letter from Martha Gellhorn to George Brown, Gellhorn and Hemingway's personal trainer, tennis partner, and close friend. The letters are addressed to George Brown (often referred to as "Flash") at his residence in New York City and are written primarily from Finca Vigía, San Francisco de Paula, Cuba, and Sun Valley, Idaho, with a single 1943 letter on White House stationery addressed from Washington, D.C., and one 1946 letter addressed from South Easton Place in London following Gellhorn and Hemingway's divorce. Gellhorn's letters, which she often signed "Marty," are playful and informal in nature and offer a glimpse into Gellhorn and Hemingway's marriage. Their primary topic is Gellhorn's concern over her and her husband's physical condition and weight, soliciting exercises and weight loss advice from Brown and making jokes about the couple's physical condition and eating and drinking habits. Letters also often refer to errands Brown ran for Gellhorn and Hemingway in New York during the couple's time in the American West and abroad. Gellhorn occasionally mentions her travel plans as a war correspondent for Collier's, and in one letter, suggests Brown attend her 1946 play Love Goes to Press at the Biltmore Theatre in New York. Her letters regarding her domestic life with Hemingway refer to travel plans, tennis, hunting and fishing in Idaho, Hemingway's cats and pigeons at Finca Vigía, and rumors in the press about Hemingway having an affair, which Gellhorn dismisses. She also refers fondly to Hemingway's sons as "Bumby," "Mousie," and "Giggy" and comments on their activities.
Princeton University Library Collection of Martha Gellhorn Materials, 1936-1974
Consists of an open collection of letters and memorabilia of American war correspondent, journalist, and novelist Martha Gellhorn (1908-1998), assembled from various sources. Contents include approximately fifty letters (1968-1974) to her adopted son George "Sandy" Gellhorn and fourteen letters (1941-1946) to George Brown, who was Gellhorn and Ernest Hemingway's personal trainer, tennis partner, and friend, as well as badges from Gellhorn's time as a war correspondent and a portrait drawing of her.
Top 3 results
view all 9
Subseries 1: Personal, circa 1935-2006
Includes early personal photographs of Alonso as an infant and as a child attending Colegio Don Bosco; and his later academic endeavors at the Colegio Nacional de Buenos Aires. Also present are photographs of his families; and portraits and travel of Alonso spanning the length of his career.
Individuals, circa 1929-1957
Individuals featured are Raúl Gustavo Aguirre, Edgar Bailey, Jorge Luis Borges, Nicolás Espiro, and Aníbal Trolio.
Top 3 results
view all 49
Top 3 results
view all 67
Top 3 results
view all 13
Top 3 results
view all 6
Top 3 results
view all 19
Lyman B. Kirkpatrick Papers, circa 1933-2000 (mostly 1942-1982)
SOME ONLINE CONTENT
Lyman B. Kirkpatrick, Jr. served with the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from its inception in 1947 until 1965. The papers document Kirkpatrick's career at the CIA, including his role as inspector general during the Bay of Pigs invasion, as well as his service in the U.S. Army and Office of Strategic Services during World War II, and his time as a professor of political science at Brown University.
Series 4, Writings, 1946-1989
The Writings series consists of correspondence, notes, and other material related to Kirkpatrick's three books, numerous book reviews, and other published and unpublished writing. Most of the material related to Kirkpatrick's books consists of correspondence, book reviews, and administrative material, rather than drafts of the actual works. Text and drafts of shorter articles and Encyclopedia Britannica entries are included, however. The majority of the material in the series was written during Kirkpatrick's time as a political science professor at Brown University, and concerns foreign policy and intelligence subjects.
Top 3 results
view all 1317
Princeton as the Nation's Capital (Continental Congress), circa 1933-1983
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Maps, Paintings, and Pictures, circa 1899-1965
HAS ONLINE CONTENT
Top 3 results
view all 23
Series 2: Writings, circa 1933-1972
This series includes a few memoranda, addresses and speeches, handwritten notes, and a typescript of the complete third and probably last draft of the memoirs that Matthews published privately under the title "Memoirs of a Passing Era" (circa 1972). According to his foreword, Matthews chose for private publication because he did not wish the memoirs to be subject to a commercial publisher's changes, omissions, or additions. In addition, he wanted the book to be a full account of his life as he remembered it, and to contain his "frank opinion of those, both great and small, with whom I was associated in public life. In a few instances my opinions would be less than complimentary and I have no wish to make them public."
Top 3 results
view all 87
Top 3 results
view all 4
Pierre and Dollie Chareau Collection, 1932-1998
Louise Dorothee (Dollie) Dyte Chareau (1880-1967) was the wife of the architect Pierre Chareau (1883-1950), who is best known for the Maison de Verre, which was built from 1927 to 1932 in Paris. This collection consists mainly of correspondence between Harold Rubinstein (1891-1975) and Dollie Chareau, and between Michael Rubenstein (1920-2001) and Pierre Chareau scholars, including Marc Vellay, Margaret Antalopoulos, and Margaret Tallet.
Top 3 results
view all 11
Lawrence Rauch Papers, circa 1932-1951
Lawrence Rauch was a Princeton University graduate student (Ph.D. Mathematics, 1949) and a pioneer in the field of radio telemetry. The bulk of the collection consists of letters written home by Rauch during his time as a graduate student at Princeton from 1941 to 1949, which document Princeton academics and student life as well as Rauch's work in radio telemetry, and include references to his defense work for the United States government.
Photographs, 1946
Group photograph of personnel involved with Operation Crossroads and family photographs believed to have been take in Hawaii prior to Operation Crossroads.
Top 3 results
view all 7
Memorabilia, circa 1932-1949
Clippings, programs, cards, an issue of "California Arts and Architecture" with an article by Frederic Beach Dennis, etc.
Scrapbook pages, circa 1917-1953
Five loose pages containing 24 photographs of Sylvia Beach, Beach family and friends, and 22 cards and memorabilia
Top 3 results
view all 31
Top 3 results
view all 7
Top 3 results
view all 4
Series 2: Writings, circa 1930s-1960s
Consists of the writings of Paul Frankl, including The Gothic, Gothic Architecture, and Weltregierung, as well as others.
Top 3 results
view all 7
Istanbul, circa 1918-1949
Photographs, postcards, and a scrapbook depicting sites, landscapes, and people of Istanbul. The scrapbook contains photographs of street vendors in Istanbul and the musical notation of their chants; it was compiled by Edgar Fisher, Jr., the son of the dean of Robert College. Also includes a 1956 pamphlet about the Kariye Mosque, of which there are several photographs, and a small, signed handpainted card of a view of Istanbul.
Unidentified, circa 1916-1950s
Photographs and postcards depicting unidentified locations. Also includes a small, signed painting presented to George Huntington in September 1916.
Top 3 results
view all 166
3 results
Series 1: Broadsides and Posters from the Princeton University Archives Oversize Collection, circa 1807-1983
Series 1: Materials from the Princeton University Archives Oversize Collection, circa 1807-1983 contains oversize items from the University archives that do not fit well into existing archival collections. These include advertisements for a variety of events and activities, memorial and congratualtory notices, certificates and diplomas awarded to Princeton, as well as certificates and diplomas awarded by Princeton to other insitutions.