Harvard University - Schlesinger Library
Collection consists of orchestrations for the Radcliffe hymn, correspondence, and the script for the operetta "S. Crew Incorporated.".
Harvard University - Schlesinger Library
Collection includes resumes and articles about Hunt; diaries and address books; college and graduate school papers (including a draft of Hunt's doctoral thesis), notebooks, and transcripts; speeches and conference materials; book reviews, articles, and manuscript drafts; syllabi for Hunt's classes and for classes by others; reports, speeches, and questionnaires related to Hunt's volunteer work with Transition House (battered women's shelter) and her work in Juneau, Alaska, for the Women in Transition Program; correspondence re: Radcliffe women's groups (including the "Radcliffe Lesbians" group) and Radcliffe Union of Students; musical compositions by Hunt; and printed material re: issues of interest to her (politics, gay rights, women's rights, debates about pornography, etc.) The collection also includes correspondence documenting Hunt's personal and emotional life
New York Public Library
Elizabeth Morgan, née Bonney. Her birth date remains uncertain, but she was born in London, and was still a minor on 24 April 1818 when she married Thomas Morgan (1786-1862), of Dixon, Morgan and Co., wine and spirits traders. A stained glass window in St. Olave's Church, Hart Street, bears an armorial decoration commemorating the union. Elizabeth was a close friend of the novelist Jane Porter; she signed her letters to Porter with the nickname "Belinda." The Morgans had at least five children: Thomas (1819-1892), who helped run the family business in London; Francis (1820-1876), who moved to Spain to handle the family business's connections there; Aaron Augustus (1822-1888), a clergyman and Shakespeare scholar; Emily Eustatia, married name Gruggen (1828-1909); and Adelaide Elizabeth, married name Beresford (1837-1902). Elizabeth Morgan died at the age of 65, and was buried in All Souls, Kensal Green on 9 July 1866. Her grandson, Fr. Francis Xavier Morgan (1857-1935) was the legal ...
New York Public Library
Harry Belafonte is a Jamaican-American musician, actor, and activist best known for popularizing calypso music with international audiences, and his involvement in the American Civil Rights movement. His collection contains project files, correspondence, scrapbooks, press materials, scores, lyrics, and scripts that chronicle his career as a singer, songwriter, actor, public speaker, and advocate for political and humanitarian causes. Belafonte's papers reveal the business aspects of his performance projects, source material for his acting and singing career, and organizing efforts associated with the political causes he championed.
University of Utah - J. Willard Marriott Library
The Douglas O. Woodruff papers (1843-1979) consist of the Woodruff family correspondence, genealogical and autobiographical information, documents, photos, newspaper clippings, L.D.S missionary and religious materials, University of Utah student union and alumni association materials, and correspondence from the Association of College Unions, the American Alumni Council, the United States Figure Skating Association, and the American Association of Retired Persons (A.A.R.P.). The largest component of the Woodruff papers, i.e., boxes 36-48, is comprised of correspondence and materials related to the A.A.R.P. Douglas Woodruff was president of the A.A.R.P. from 1974-1976.
University of Washington
Papers of the Emil Skowronek family and former University of Washington faculty member Felix Skowronek
University of Wyoming - American Heritage Center
The Meg Karlin papers include a collection of literature that deals with racial and ethnic stereotyping in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. There is a particular interest in ethnic jokes and anecdotes reflected in the collection. Also included is material related to nationality, war involvement, religion, and holidays. The collection contains books, sheet music, cartoons, drawings, albums of postcards, Victorian clip art, and advertisements. Also included are books of Sunday School hymns and instrumental instruction books from the last quarter of the 19th century. In addition there are sound recordings with ethnic content. Also included are a group of cylinder recordings and early phonographic equipment. Ephemera includes a Fred Karlin project book entitled, "Project Tempo" (1965) on a time-saving device and computer-accurate book of charts showing relationships between tempo, timing, and beats based on the speed of 35mm film
Archives of Michigan
MS 2006-19 documents the life of Albert Merritt Ewert. The material includes biological information about Albert Merritt Ewert, sheet music written by Ewert (1905-1917), documentation about the Grand Ledge Trinity Episcopal Church (1927-1930, 1957), Michigan State Prison (1933-1934), and publications about prisoner probation (1935-1947). The collection also includes journals of Anna Mabel Beard Ewert and Kathleen Ewert Lourim (1943-1961), family photographs (circa 1890-1945), and photographs of Michigan prisons and prison inmates (circa 1930-1940). Lastly, the Ewert collection includes family bibles and other publications (1899-1983). Note: Some material in this collection is not dated
Michigan State University Libraries - Main Library
The collection includes scores of Dett's music, autographed sheet music, newspapers clippings, a program from a concert of Dett's music, and a copy of the "Fisher Edition News," a music industry publication
District of Columbia Public Library
Consists of programs, invitations, musical scores, correspondence, publicity, photographs, and clippings from arts organizations such as the Greg Reynolds Dance Quintet, The Women's Arts Center, Momentum Black Theater, and the Nubian League. Items from arts organizations appear first arranged alphabetically followed and then general information about the visual arts and artists in Washington. Oversized materials are in a separate box