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Antoine Emile Blanche letter, Paris, 1882, Aug. 21

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letter (ALS) to a colleague about a patient, the husband of a Madame Serac. Includes transcription.
1 result in this collection

Antoine Dubois papers, 1821-1826, and undated.

3 items
Abstract Or Scope
3 ANS. One note informs a M. Cochin of his intent to visit a Mme. Benoit and to accept M. Benoit's offer of transportation. M. Benoit is identified as Cochin's father-in-law.
1 result in this collection

Antoine Dubois papers, 1821-1826, and undated. 3 items

Anthony Askew letters, 1745-1749

5 items
Abstract Or Scope
5 letters (ALS). Askew writes to Richard Mead and to his father, Dr. Adam Askew, about his travels, including visits to the library at Wolfenbuttel, and the Herculaneum. He discusses his classical studies, commenting on the work of various classicists including Richard Dawes, Richard Bentley, John Mill, and Johann Jacob Reiske.
1 result in this collection

Anthony Askew letters, 1745-1749 5 items

Anthony and Newlin family papers, 1861-1974 and undated

0.4 Linear Feet
Abstract Or Scope
Anthony family of Burlington (Guilford Co.), N.C. Collection primarily comprises 32 albumen photographs and one tintype (circa 1861-1954 and undated), most of which are accompanied by identifying information and feature formal portraits. Nineteen of the photographs represent Newlin or Anthony family members. Among the other thirteen, five are images of the Letterboat, Perry, and Holt families; four are unidentified images of World War I soldiers, possibly associates of Joseph Jonathan Newlin; and one is a print of evangelist "Cyclone Mac." The tintype is of an unidentified Confederate soldier, possibly James Rieh, whose letter of 12 May 1861 is in the collection. Other materials include John Anthony's bank account book (1906-1907); his personal account book (1892-1922), with entries for housekeeping and farm expenses and income; and a commonplace book for M. G. Newell (1938?). In addition, there are a few letters (1910-1958), clippings (1950-1974), and printed materials (1922-1961).
1 result in this collection

Anthony and Newlin family papers, 1861-1974 and undated 0.4 Linear Feet

Annie Jennings papers, 1815-1929

1 Linear Feet Approx. 521 Items
Abstract Or Scope
Resident of Brownsville, Maryland and wife of Samuel Jennings, Jr. Papers of Maryland resident Annie (Fouch?) Jennings include business documents of Samuel Jennings, David Fouch, and Samuel Jennings Jr., farmers and millers of wheat in Washington County, Maryland; land deeds and surveys; debts; tax listings; correspondence concerning family matters and social life in Maryland, Iowa, Illinois, and South Dakota; papers related to the English estate of William Jenners; Sunday School lessons of the 1870s; and genealogies of the Fouch and Jennings (or Jenners) families. Volumes include an account book, 1852-1853, of David Fouch (?) for milling flour, and a route book, 1882-1883, of Fred O'Brian.
Top 3 results in this collection — view all 6

Annie Jennings papers, 1815-1929 1 Linear Feet Approx. 521 Items

Anne Noggle photographs of Soviet airwomen, 1990-1992

2.0 Linear Feet (2 boxes)
Abstract Or Scope
Anne Noggle (1922-2005), aviator, photographer, author, and educator, traveled to Moscow from 1990-1992 to conduct more than seventy interviews and to photograph former Soviet airwomen who served during World War II as pilots, gunners, bombardiers, navigators, and flight crews. The 36 black-and-white portraits in this collection show the women seated and standing, most in a studio setting; they are in civilian clothing and many are wearing their wartime medals and military insignia. The gelatin silver photographs were printed by Noggle and measure 20x24 (8), 16x20 (6), and 11x14 (22) inches. Almost all appear in her book A Dance with Death: Soviet Airwomen in World War II, published in 1994, also held by the library. Acquired as part of the Archive of Documentary Arts at Duke University.
Top 3 results in this collection — view all 4

Anne Noggle photographs of Soviet airwomen, 1990-1992 2.0 Linear Feet (2 boxes)

Anna Lora Weiss Account Books, 1896-1910

0.2 Linear Feet 2 Items
Abstract Or Scope
Anna Lora Weiss, born circa 1858, lived in Boston's Dorchester section and owned several rental properties throughout the city. She was also a member of several voluntary and charitable associations, including the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and the Commitee on Music for the School Committee of Boston. Her family, including her mother Mary Clapp Weiss, brothers Richard and Carl, and sister Mary, were of German descent. Collection contains two account books, dated 1896-1904 and 1905-1910 respectively, kept by Anna Lora Weiss of Boston, Mass. The account books meticulously document Weiss's income, including significant income she received from her rental properties and other investments, as well as her expenditures on travel, household goods, gifts, and charitable contributions. In addition, the account books indicate that Weiss loaned money at interest to her brother Carl for his often unsuccessful business endeavors. In addition to her finances, the account books also document Weiss's daily activities and social and political interests. Together, the account books reveal that Weiss was an active, independent, and astute businesswoman. Acquired as part of the Sallie Bingham Center for Women's History and Culture.
Top 3 results in this collection — view all 4

Anna Lora Weiss Account Books, 1896-1910 0.2 Linear Feet 2 Items

Anna Letitia Barbauld and William Allen poems, 1823 August 23-30

0.1 Linear Feet (1 item)
Abstract Or Scope
Anna Letitia Barbauld was an English woman of letters who had great professional success at a time when women writers were still something of an anomaly. She is remembered for her poetry, children's literature, essays, criticism, and editorial works. She was rediscovered when feminist literary critics examined her place in British literary history. Barbauld was also an abolitionist, something she had in common with fellow educator and Stoke Newington resident William Allen. This item is a single small sheet of paper with an autograph manuscript poem by Barbauld on the front dated August 23, 1823, and another one on the back by William Allen dated August 30, 1823. Both poems were aimed at a juvenile audience. It is likely that their common interests and close proximity led them to develop a friendship. Although this was written towards the end of Barbauld's life, it is evidence that they still had at least an epistolary relationship in 1823.
1 result in this collection

Anna Letitia Barbauld and William Allen poems, 1823 August 23-30 0.1 Linear Feet (1 item)

1 result in this collection

Andrew Duncan, Jr. letter, [Edinburgh], to "My dear Sir.", undated, [probably between 1793 and 1832]

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Invites addressee to join the Horticulture Society [of Edinburgh].
1 result in this collection

Andrew Clark papers, [London], 1892 and undated

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
2 notes (ANS), including a note to a Mr. Darwin.
1 result in this collection

Andre Matthey letter, Geneva, to M. Pacquin, Valence, France, 1814, Dec. 2

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Matthey writes to Pacquin, the prison physician at Valence, of a Caesarian section operation and on obstetrics in general.
1 result in this collection

Andre Chantemesse note, Paris, 1886, Apr. 8

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
Note (ANS) asking a colleague to meet him at the Hospital St. Antoine to be shown a method of treatment.
1 result in this collection

Andre Chantemesse note, Paris, 1886, Apr. 8 2 items

Amos Throop letter, Providence, Rhode Island, to Zachariah Allen, Exeter, New Hampshire, 1807, Nov. 4

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS to his nephew, then a student at Phillips Exeter Academy. Throop praises the academic reputation of the school, relates news of a cotton mill fire and reports on the health of various family members.
1 result in this collection

Amos Eaton papers, 1827-1831

3 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS from William Tully informs Eaton that Stephen Van Rensselaer is at home. Eaton responds with an ALS to Van Rensselaer informing him of what his sons will need to bring if they are to accompany his expedition. In a later ALS Ebenezer Emmons solicits Eaton's editorial advice for the second edition of his "Manual of mineralogy and geology."
1 result in this collection

Amos Eaton papers, 1827-1831 3 items

American Expeditionary Forces Vladivostok photograph album, 1918-1920

0.25 Linear Feet 1 item
Abstract Or Scope
Collection includes a 7"x10" photograph album, containing 81 black-and-white photographs and photo postcards, documenting the presence of various military forces in Vladivostok, probably taken or collected between 1918 and 1920 by an unidentified soldier in the American Expeditionary Force sent to intervene in the Russian Civil War. Images include street scenes and landscapes, with some portraits and interior scenes; many contain printed or hand-written captions in English. Topics include various modes of military transport, especially ships and trains; military base scenes, particularly those of the Expeditionary Forces; military parades, including Russian and Bolshevik troops; various nationalities represented in the city and among the military forces (e.g., Japanese, Chinese, Czech, French, German, and British), as well as post-battle images of the dead and later funeral processions.
3 results in this collection

American Expeditionary Forces Vladivostok photograph album, 1918-1920 0.25 Linear Feet 1 item

American Catalin Corporation salesman's sample book, 1928-1930

0.25 Linear Feet 1 item
Abstract Or Scope
The American Catalin Corporation was founded in New York, N.Y., in 1927; it developed the light-colored, transparent, filler-free Bakelite resin in a wide range of colors. Bakelite is the first synthetic plastic, developed by Dr. Leo Baekeland between 1907 and 1909. American Catalin Corporation used its form of the resin for costume jewelry, fashion accessories, radios, and other products. By 1942, the company suspended its manufacture of jewelry and cast items to concentrate on wartime production. After the war, petroleum-based plastics gained favor. Collection comprises a salesman's sample book in a black leather album used to provide a visual guide for the company's products. The album contains primarily 34 black-and-white 8x10 photographs (8 photographs are laid in, all but two are linen backed, those not laid-in are stamped on the back with "Johnston & Tunick Commercial Photographers"), as well as 17 typeset pages containing inter-office memos, sales tips, information regarding the company's competition, and customer testimonials. Several of the memos are written to the attention of D. J. Kelly, who was the salesman for whom the sample book was prepared. There is also a two-page key to the main group of 19 photographs, identifying the Bakelite products in each photograph, as well as the item's final producer. Seven of the laid-in photographs show the corporation's factory, including three of factory workers on the job. The American Catalin Corporation was founded in New York, N.Y., in 1927; it developed the light-colored, transparent, filler-free Bakelite resin in a wide range of colors. Bakelite is the first synthetic plastic, developed by Dr. Leo Baekeland between 1907 and 1909. American Catalin Corporation used its form of the resin for costume jewelry, fashion accessories, radios, and other products. By 1942, the company suspended its manufacture of jewelry and cast items to concentrate on wartime production. After the war, petroleum-based plastics gained favor.
1 result in this collection

American Catalin Corporation salesman's sample book, 1928-1930 0.25 Linear Feet 1 item

Amedee Dechambre papers, undated, between 1853-1886

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
2 ANS. In one note, Dechambre refers to Ch. Bouchard and P. Brouardel.
1 result in this collection
1 result in this collection

Amariah Brigham letter, Utica, New York, to Rev. T.H. Gallaudet, Hartford, Conn., 1843, Jun. 6

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letter (ALS). As Director of the New York State Lunatic Asylum, Brigham writes with news about the affairs of and events at the Asylum.
1 result in this collection

Alva Curtis document, Columbus, Ohio, 1837, Mar. 5

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Holograph, signed. Certifies that Alfred Church studied at the School for six months. Gives details of Church's work during this period.
1 result in this collection

Alva Curtis document, Columbus, Ohio, 1837, Mar. 5 1 items

A. L. Millin letter, [Paris], to "mon cher Labouisse.", 1806, Jan. 9

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Refers to the contents of a periodical, presumably the Magasin encyclopedique, which he edited between 1795-1816.
1 result in this collection

Alfred Langdon Elwyn letter, Philadelphia, 1859, May 18

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Sends Mrs. Allen of Providence, an autograph collector, an autograph of financier Robert Morris. Writes of Morris' disastrous land speculations.
1 result in this collection

Alfred Langdon Elwyn letter, Philadelphia, 1859, May 18 1 items

Alexander von Humboldt papers, 1816-1966 [bulk between 1816-1855] and undated.

26 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS, in French. Humboldt writes to P.H. Azais and Jules Berger de Xivrey on politics, philosophy, his expeditions, ethnology, natural history and the influence and inspiration of French thought. In 1966 Fritz Lange, of the Alexander-von-Humboldt-Kommission, writes to the Duke Medical Center Library regarding the Kommission's project to locate world-wide all correspondence to and from Humboldt.
1 result in this collection

Alexander von Humboldt papers, 1816-1966 [bulk between 1816-1855] and undated. 26 items

Alexander Russell Webb Journals, 1892

0.2 Linear Feet 3 Items
Abstract Or Scope

The collection contains Webb's "Journal No. 1, From Manila to Calcutta" (142 pp.), Aug. 29-Oct. 19, 1892, and his "Journal No. 2, From Calcutta to Bombay and Agra" (144 pp.), Oct. 20-Dec. 15, 1892. This is the first journal that Webb ever wrote (Vol. 1, p. 1). His journal continued beyond Vol. 2; the last sentence was continued elsewhere, and no pages appear to be missing from this volume. A later volume or volumes contained the account of the rest of his journey which is incomplete here.

2 results in this collection

Alexander Russell Webb Journals, 1892

Alexander Russell Webb Journals, 1892 0.2 Linear Feet 3 Items

Alexander H. Stevens papers, [New York City], 1839 and undated

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Stevens writes a letter of recommendation for a Doctor Morgan and comments upon a case of Pott's Disease.
1 result in this collection

Alexander Fisher letter, to William Jerdan, 1821, Jan. 6

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Fisher writes of his journal, presumably of the expedition of the H.M.S. Dorothea and Trent in 1818, and of the publication of Parry's account of the same. He writes of a future expedition, aboard the H.M.S. Hecla.
1 result in this collection

Alexander Fisher letter, to William Jerdan, 1821, Jan. 6 1 items

Alexander Campbell note, 1808, Apr. 14

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Holograph, signed. Promisory note for forty-five dollars to be paid to Joseph Basset.
1 result in this collection

Alexander Campbell note, 1808, Apr. 14 1 items

Alexander Braun note, Berlin, to Herr Gilman, [no year], Feb. 20

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Note (ANS) inviting Gilman to an evening with the "Gesellschaft naturforscher Freunde."
1 result in this collection

A. Leblanc letter, Paris, 1830, Oct. 4

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS regarding a social engagement.
1 result in this collection

Aldo Castellani letters, Lisbon, Portugal, to Dr. David T. Smith, 1950, 1956

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letters (ALS, TLS) relating to sample bacterial cultures sent by Castellani to Smith.
1 result in this collection

Albrecht von Haller papers, 1763-1770 and undated.

3 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Malcolm Flemyng writes, in English, to Haller on medical matters. He sends a second letter, in Latin, in which he refers to Haller's Physiology and to John Locke. Haller writes, in French, to Ignazio Somis, reporting on fever in the family, malaria in Germany and other matters.
1 result in this collection

Albrecht von Haller papers, 1763-1770 and undated. 3 items

Albert Bushnell Hart papers, 1912-1928

3 items
Abstract Or Scope
TLS. Hart answers John Thomas Lee's inquiries regarding Alexander Hamilton's Itinerarium. Also included is a letter from J.R.H. Moore to Lee, in which Moore describes his copy of the book, which he wishes to sell.
1 result in this collection

Albert Bushnell Hart papers, 1912-1928 3 items

Alban Smith Payne letter, Markham, Virginia, to Miss Southwick, 1888, Dec. 11

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Gives various details about his life, citing correspondents of note and relating his part in the "Willie Patterson affair", in which Payne knocked down Patterson, apparently a prizefighter, for attacking Usher Parsons.
1 result in this collection

A. J. Lawyer papers, 1838-1842

3 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS to his father, congressman Thomas Lawyer (1785-1868), of Lawyersville, Schoharie Co., New York. Letters generally refer to his medical studies.
1 result in this collection

A. J. Lawyer papers, 1838-1842 3 items

A. Howard Okie papers, 1842-1868 and undated.

10 items
Abstract Or Scope
Papers include letters from Dixon Hall Lewis and, in German, from Constantine Hering; prescriptions; and notes relating to social engagements.
1 result in this collection

A. Howard Okie papers, 1842-1868 and undated. 10 items

Agostino Bassi letter, Lodi, Italy, to "Nostra Altezza", 1851, Sep. 29

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letter (LS) presenting his most recent work.
1 result in this collection

A. Dubois note, Dover, to Mr. Diamond, London, 1843, July 8

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ANS. Announces his safe arrival and requests that a prescription which he had forgotten be sent.
1 result in this collection

[Ad?] Richard papers, undated.

2 items
Abstract Or Scope
2 autographed notes from unidentified French physician.
1 result in this collection

[Ad?] Richard papers, undated. 2 items

Adolf Kussmaul manuscript, Strassburg, 1880, Nov. 14

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Autograph manuscript, signed. Describes results of a detailed examination of a patient's stomach and kidneys and prescribes a course of treatment.
1 result in this collection

Adolf Kussmaul manuscript, Strassburg, 1880, Nov. 14 1 items

Adolf Bardeleben letter, Greifswald, Germany, 1853, Jun. 11

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letter (ALS) concerning a post-mortem examination in a case of cancer of the brain.
1 result in this collection

Adolf Baginsky enrollment book, Berlin, 1865-1866

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
This signed document is a record of lectures attended at the Konigliche Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat, Berlin.
1 result in this collection

Admittance cards, 1811-1880

0.2 Linear Feet (98 cards; 1 box)
Abstract Or Scope
.Admittance, matriculation, and "Order of Lecture" cards are from a number of medical students from 1811-1880 in the University of Pennsylvania, Jefferson Medical College, Long Island College Hospital (Brooklyn, N.Y.), Harvard University Medical School, Philadelphia School of Anatomy, New Hampshire Medical Institution, Berkshire Medical Institution, and St. Bartholomew's Hospital (London, England). They contain the autographs of the most eminent professors of the day: i.e., Samuel Gross, Franklin Bache, Benjamin Rush, Austin Flint, Samuel Jackson, S. Weir Mitchell, J. K. Mitchell, Charles D. and James A Meigs, John Barclay Biddle, et al. The St. Bartholomew's Hospital card is signed by Ludford Harvey, John P. Vicent, and John Abernethy, the latter (1764-1831) being an eminent English surgeon and founder of the Medical School of St Bartholomew's. The "Order of Lecture" cards from Jefferson Medical College and the University of Pennsylvania list curricula, faculty and their residences, schedules of lectures and texts.Admittance cards, 1850-1853, are for courses at the Jefferson Medical School in Philadelphia. They include two matriculation cards for William D. Watson of Chatham County, N. C., dated Nov., 1850, and Oct., 1852, and an examination card Oct., 1852-1853, which is signed by Dr. S. Weir Mitchell as professor of Anatomy, Surgery and Physiology. Dr. Watson returned to Chatham County after his graduation. His house was destroyed during the Civil War. The portion of his medical library saved and stored in a neighboring attic eventually was placed in the historical Collection of the library of the University of Pennsylvania Medical School.
1 result in this collection

Admittance cards, 1811-1880 0.2 Linear Feet (98 cards; 1 box)

Adamos manuscript, undated

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
Four pages of a materia medica, of which one section bears the title "The Efforts and Vertuos: with the severall use of Venice Triache."
1 result in this collection

Adamos manuscript, undated 1 items

Abraham Zacarías López Penha letters, 1894-1925 and undated

0.2 Linear Feet
Abstract Or Scope
Novelist and poet, editor of the modernist journal REVISTA AZUL. Born to a Jewish family in 1865 in Willemstad, Curacao, emigrated to Colombia in 1887, died in 1927 in Barranquilla, Colombia. Collection features letters to López Penha from a wide variety of Latin American and European literary and intellectual figures, many of them Jewish. Correspondents include Venezuelan journalist Nicanor Bolet Peraza; Peruvian novelists Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera and Clorinda Matto de Turner; Cuban authors Aurelia Castillo de Gonzáles and Enrique Hernandez Miyares; English novelist H. Rider Haggard; Mexican poet Amado Nervo; European Jewish activists Max Simon Nordau, Angel Pulido, and Israel Zangwill; Spanish authors Gaspar Núñez de Arce, Emilia Pardo Bazán, and Miguel de Unamuno; and many others. The majority of the letters are written in Spanish, a few are in English.
1 result in this collection

Abraham Zacarías López Penha letters, 1894-1925 and undated 0.2 Linear Feet

Abraham Rand Thompson letter, Charlestown, Massachusetts, to Loammi Baldwin, Esq., Norfolk, Virginia, 1833, June 7

1 items
Abstract Or Scope
ALS. Thompson refers to President Andrew Jackson's visit to the Bunker Hill monument in Boston and describes Commodore Jesse D. Elliott, the commander of the Charleston Navy Yard.
1 result in this collection

Abigail Adams letters, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Mrs. Esther Black, Quincy, Massachusetts., 1797-1798

15 items
Abstract Or Scope
6 letters (ALS) to Mrs. Black concerning Mr. and Mrs. Hall, who died in the yellow fever epidemic of 1797, and their orphaned infant daughter. Mr. Hall was treated by Dr. Benjamin Rush and Dr. John Redman Coxe. The infant was later inoculated for small pox by Dr. Rush. Includes transcriptions.
1 result in this collection

Aaron Burr letter, Philadelphia, to Mrs. Burr, 1793, Dec. 24

4 items
Abstract Or Scope
Letter (ALS) to Mrs. Burr informing her that Benjamin Rush, uninformed that she is already taking hemlock for her illness, advises the same. Includes transcription.
1 result in this collection

Aaron Burr letter, Philadelphia, to Mrs. Burr, 1793, Dec. 24 4 items