Shahid Ali Agha Collection, 1972-1797. 2 vols., 270p. (0.25 linear foot).
A poet and translator of Kashmiri descent, Agha Shahid was raised in a household where poetry was recited in Persian, Urdu, Hindi, and English. Born in New Delhi on February 4, 1949, he was educated at the University of Kashmir, Srinagar, and University of Delhi, earning earned a doctorate in English from Pennsylvania State University in 1984 and an MFA from the University of Arizona in 1985. The author of nine volumes of poetry, and widely anthologized, Ali was on faculty in the MFA Program at University of Massachusetts Amherst, when he died of brain cancer in December, 2001.
This small collection contains copies of Ali’s first two books, Bone-Sculpture (1972) and In Memory of Begum Akhtar (1979), a self-produced chapbook, and a rough manuscript of poems. All are inscribed to his colleague and friend Zabelle Stodola.
Subjects
- Agha, Shahid Ali, 1949- .
- Poets–Massachusetts.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of English.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
Call no.: MS 6xx
Categories: Poetry, UMass faculty :: :: No Comments
Brackett and Shuff Ledger, 1844-1846. 1 vol., 270p. (0.25 linear foot).
The firm of Brackett and Shuff manufactured moldings, doors, and sashes in Lowell, Massachusetts, during the 1840s.
This slender ledger includes sparse accounts (fewer than 30p.) of millwork done by Brackett and Shuff, documenting the manufacture of moldings, doors, and sashes. Crudely kept and only partly filled out, it includes some records of setting up machinery, including tempering plane irons and truing shoulder saws.
Subjects
- Brackett and Shuff.
- Brackett, John B.
- Lowell (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century.
- Millwork (Woodwork)–Massachusetts.
- Shuff, Allison S.
Subjects
Call no.: MS 487 bd
Categories: Massachusetts (East), Trades :: :: No Comments
Timothy Cushing Account Book, 1764-1845 (Bulk: 1781-1806). 2 vols. (0.25 linear feet).
A carpenter by trade and a farmer, Timothy Cushing lived in Cohasset, Massachusetts, throughout most of his adult life. Born on Feb 2, 1738, the eighth child of Samuel Cushing, a selectman and Justice of the Peace from the second district in Hingham (now Cohasset), Cushing married Desire Jenkins (b. 1745) on June 4, 1765, and raised a considerable family of eleven children. During the Revolutionary War, he served for a brief period in companies raised in Cohasset, but otherwise remained at home, at work, until his death on December 26, 1806.
Cushing’s accounts offer a fine record of the activities of a workaday carpenter during the first decades of the early American republic, reflecting both his remarkable industry and the flexibility with which he approached earning a living. The work undertaken by Cushing centers on two areas of activity — carpentry and farm work — but within those areas, the range of activities is quite broad. As a carpenter, Cushing set glass in windows, hung shutters, made coffins, hog troughs, and window seats; he worked on horse carts and sleds, barn doors, pulled down houses and framed them, made “a Little chair” and a table, painted sashes, hewed timber, made shingles, and worked on a dam. As a farm worker, he was regularly called upon to butcher calves and bullocks, to garden, mow hay, plow, make cider, and perform many other tasks, including making goose quill pens. The crops he records reflect the near-coastal setting: primarily flax, carrots, turnips, corn, and potatoes, with references throughout to cattle and sheep. During some periods, Cushing records selling fresh fish, including haddock and eels.
Subjects
- Agricultural laborers–Massachusetts–Cohasset–18th century.
- Carpenters–Massachusetts–Cohasset–18th century.
- Cohasset (Mass.)–Economic conditions–18th century.
- Cohasset (Mass.)–Economic conditions–18th century.
- Cushing, Isaac, 1813-1891.
- Cushing, Timothy, 1738-1806.
Types of material
Call no.: MS 485bd
Categories: Farming & rural life, Massachusetts (East), Trades :: :: No Comments
Robert E. Dillon Papers, 1943-1946. 1 box (0.5 linear feet).
Robert E. Dillon, 1943
A working class native of Ware, Mass., Robert E. Dillon was a student at Massachusetts State College when he was drafted into the Army in 1943. After his induction at Fort Devens, Mass., and training for the Quartermaster Corps in Virginia and California, Dillon was assigned to duty as a mechanic and driver with the First Service Command. Stationed at Rest Camps number 5 and 6 in Khanspur, India (now Pakistan), Dillon’s company maintained the trucks and other vehicles used to carry supplies over the Himalayas to Chinese Nationalist forces. After he left the service in February 1946, having earned promotion to T/5, Dillon concluded his studies at UMass Amherst on the GI Bill and earned a doctorate in Marketing from Ohio State. He taught at the University of Cincinnati for many years until his death in 1985.
The Dillon Papers consist of 178 letters written by Dillon to his family during his service in World War II, along with several written to him and an assortment of documents and ephemera. Beginning with basic training, the letters provide an essentially comprehensive account of Dillon’s military experience and interesting insight into a relatively quiet, but sparsely documented theater of war.
Subjects
- Dillon, Robert E.
- India–Description and travel.
- Pakistan–Description and travel.
- World War, 1939-1945.
MS 635
Categories: UMass alumni, World War II :: :: No Comments
Enola Gay Controversy Collection, 1995. 2 boxes (1 linear foot).
On January 30, 1995, the National Air and Space Museum capitulated to popular and political pressure and scuttled an exhibit they had planned to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Early in 1993, curators began to develop plans for an exhibit that would center around the Enola Gay, the B-29 Stratofortress bomber that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, but opposition from veterans’ groups rose almost immediately. By mid-summer, the Air Force Association and American Legion led opposition to the exhibit, fearing that it would not present a balanced view of the events and that it would focus exclusively on the “horrors of war” and an alleged “moral equivalence” between Japan and the United States. Although several attempts were made to rewrite the script of the exhibit, congressional and public pressure eventually led to the cancellation of the exhibit in January 1995 and to the resignation of the Director of the Museum, Martin Harwit, in May.
Collected by historian Waldo Heinrichs, the Enola Gay Controversy Collection contains the various versions of the scripts of the planned exhibition and copies of correspondence, memos, publications, and the three volumes of “Revisionism gone wrong: Analysis of the Enola Gay controversy” issued by the Air Force Association.
Subjects
- Atomic bomb–Moral and ethical aspects.
- Enola Gay (Bomber)–Exhibitions–Political aspects.
- Heinrichs, Waldo.
- National Air and Space Museum–Exhibitions–Political aspects.
Call no.: MS 615
Categories: Japan, World War II :: :: No Comments
Roy Finestone Photograph Collection, 1969-1990. 239 images (digital collection).
A wave of experimentation in communal living in New England reached a peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s, with dozens of communities spread across the landscape of western Massachusetts and Vermont. Nina Finestone joined the Johnson Pastures in Guilford , Vermont, in 1969, however after the main house there went up in flames on April 16, 1970, killing four people, she joined a number of its residents who moved to the nearby Montague Farm in Montague, Massachusetts. Nina married a fellow Montague farmer, Daniel Keller, and the couple moved to Wendell in 1980.
Providing exceptional visual documentation of life at Johnson Pasture, the Montague Farm, and Wendell Farm between 1969 and 1990, the Finestone collection is centered on the lives and family of Daniel and Nina Keller. All images were taken by Roy Finestone, Nina’s father, with a medium format camera using color transparency film.
Subjects
- Finestone, Roy.
- Communal living–Massachusetts.
- Johnson Pasture Community.
- Keller, Daniel.
- Keller, Nina.
- Montague Farm Community.
- Wendell Farm Community.
Call no.: PH 005
Categories: Counterculture, Famous Long Ago, Intentional communities, Massachusetts (West), Photographs, Vermont :: :: No Comments
Anna Gyorgy Papers, 1974-1988. 6 boxes (6.5 linear feet).
As a member of the Montague Farm community, Anna Gyorgy became a leader in the movement against nuclear energy. In 1974, she helped organize the Alternative Energy Alliance in Montague, Mass., and two years later, she was part of the coalition that founded the Clamshell Alliance. An author, ecofeminist, and peace activist, she has lived In Ireland, West Africa, and Germany since 1985 and remains deeply involved in international movements for justice and peace.
Tightly focused on Anna Gyorgy’s activism from the mid-1970s through late 1980s, the collection contains important documentation on the early antinuclear movement in western Massachusetts with some material on the international movement in the 1980s. In addition to a small run of correspondence, the collection includes writings, news clippings, publications, and ephemera relating to antinuclear activism during the 1970s and 1980s and to other related causes, including the Rainbow Coalition and Jesse Jackson’s run for the presidency in 1984. The balance of the Gyorgy Papers are housed at Smith College.
Subjects
- Alternative Energy Coalition.
- Antinuclear movement.
- Clamshell Alliance.
- Gyorgy, Anna.
Types of material
Call no.: MS 631
Categories: Alternative energy, Antinuclear, Environment, Famous Long Ago, Intentional communities, Women & feminism :: :: No Comments
Mill River Flood Stereographs, 1874. 19 items (0.25 linear feet).
Ruins of Stone Bridge, Leeds
The Mill River flood of 1874 was one of the great man-made disasters of late nineteenth century western Massachusetts. Following the collapse of an earthenwork dam on May 16 of that year, 600,000,000 gallons of water coursed through Williamsburgh, Skinnerville, and Leeds, destroying factories and homes, bridges and roads, and leaving 139 deaths in its wake.
The nineteen images in the Mill River Flood collection are a small sampling of a series of 110 stereographs taken by the Knowlton Brothers of Northampton to document the devastation caused by the flood of May 1874. The collection also includes one view taken by F. J. Moore of Westfield, who issued his own series of 21 stereographs, and one by an unidentified photographer.
Subjects
- Floods–Massachusetts–Mill River Valley (Hampshire County)–Photographs.
- Haydenville (Mass.)–Photographs.
- Knowlton Brothers.
- Leeds (Mass.)–Photographs.
- Mill River Valley (Hampshire County, Mass.)–Photographs.
- Moore, F. J.
- Skinnerville (Mass.)–Photographs.
- Williamsburgh (Mass.)–Photographs.
Types of material
- Photographs.
- Stereographs.
Call no.: PH 019
Categories: Environment, Massachusetts (West), Photographs :: :: No Comments
Norwich (Conn.) Ironmonger’s Account book, 1844-1847. 1 vol., 270p. (0.25 linear foot).
Straddling three rivers with easy access to Long Island Sound and the Atlantic, Norwich, Conn., was an important center during the mid-nineteenth century for the shipment of goods manufactured throughout eastern Connecticut.
Despite covering a limited period of time, primarily 1844 and 1845, the account book of an unidentified iron monger from Norwich (Conn.) provides insight into the activities of a highly active purveyor of domestic metal goods. The unidentified business carried a heavy trade in the sale or repair of iron goods, as well as items manufactured from tin, copper, and zinc, including stoves of several sorts (e.g., cooking, bricking, coal), ovens, pipes, kettles and coffee pots, ice cream freezers, lamps and lamp stands, reflectors, and more. The firm did business with individual clients as well as mercantile firms, corporations such as the Mill Furnace Co., organizations such as the Methodist Society, the city of Norwich and County of New London, and with local hotels.
Subjects
- Hardware industry–Connecticut.
- Iron industry and trade–Connecticut.
- Norwich (Conn.)–Economic conditions–19th century.
- Stoves.
Subjects
Call no.: MS 540 bd
Categories: Connecticut, Mercantile :: :: No Comments
George Stocking Account Book, 1815-1850. 1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
The shoemaker George Stocking was born on May 23, 1784, on his family’s farm in Ashfield, Mass., the second son of Abraham and Abigail (Nabby) Stocking. At 25, George married Ann Toby (1790-1835) from nearby Conway, with whom he had nine children, followed by two more children with his second wife, the widow Mary Jackson Shippey, whom he married on Dec. 16, 1840. George succeeded Amos Stocking, his uncle, in the tanning and shoemaking business at Pittsfield, Mass., where he died on Christmas day 1864.
George Stocking’s double column account book documents almost 35 years of the economic activity of a shoemaker in antebellum Ashfield, Massachusetts. Although the entries are typically very brief, recording making, mending, tapping, capping, or heeling shoes and boots, among other things, they provide a dense and fairly continuous record of his work. They also reveal the degree to which Stocking occasionally engaged in other activities to earn a living, including mending harnesses and other leatherwork to performing agricultural labor. The book includes accounts with Charles Knowlton, the local physician was was famous as a freethinker and atheist and author of Fruits of Philosophy, his book on contraception that earned him conviction on charges of obscenity and a sentence of three months at hard labor.
Subjects
- Ashfield (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century.
- Knowlton, Charles, 1800-1850.
- Shoemakers–Massachusetts–Ashfield.
- Stocking, George, 1784-1864.
Types of material
Call no.: MS 486bd
Categories: Manufacturing, Massachusetts (West), Trades :: :: No Comments
.