Special Collections & University Archives
Faber, Tom A.
Tom A. Faber Ledger, 1848-1853.
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Owner of a livery stable in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Includes lists of stabler activities, customers (individuals and businesses), and employed ostlers. Also contains method of payment (cash and services), and one labor account for Fred Berry, a nineteen year old Afro-American who was one of three ostlers living in Faber’s household at the time.
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Subjects- African Americans--Massachusetts--Great Barrington--History--19th century
- Berry, Fred
- Burghardt, Thomas, b. 1790
- Cab and omnibus service--Massachusetts--Great Barrington--History--19th century
- Coaching (Transportation)--Massachusetts--Great Barrington --History--19th century
- Crane, Albert S
- Girling and Doolittle
- Granger and Hill
- Great Barrington (Mass. : Town)--Economic conditions
- Households--Massachusetts--Great Barrington--History--19th century
- Ives, George
- Pynchon, George
- Rose Cottage Seminary (Great Barrington, Mass.)
- Stables--Massachusetts--Great Barrington--History--19th century
ContributorsTypes of material
Call no.: MS 244 bd
View related collections: Business & industry : : No Comments
Charles Taylor Collection, 1731-1904.
(5 linear feet).
Collection of historical documents compiled by Charles Taylor, author of the 1882 town history of Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Includes Court of Common Pleas cases, deeds, estate papers, indentures, land surveys, sheriff’s writs, town history reference documents, Samuel Rossiter’s financial papers, and genealogical research papers for over 40 families.
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Subjects- Debt--Massachusetts--Great Barrington
- Farm tenancy--Massachusetts--Great Barrington
- Great Barrington (Mass.)--Economic conditions--18th century
- Great Barrington (Mass.)--Genealogy
- Great Barrington (Mass.)--History
- Great Barrington (Mass.)--Politics and government
- Great Barrington (Mass.)--Social conditions
- Land use--Massachusetts--Great Barrington
Contributors- Ives, Thomas
- Kellogg, Ezra
- Pynchon, George
- Pynchon, Walter
- Root, Hewitt
- Rossiter, Samuel
- Taylor, Charles J. (Charles James), 1824-1904
Types of material- Deeds
- Genealogies
- Land surveys
- Writs
Call no.: MS 104
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Politics & governance : : No Comments
Thomas Barton Papers, 1947-1977 (Bulk: 1960-1974).
4 boxes (2 linear feet).
YPSL logo
In the early 1960s, Tom Barton (b. 1935) emerged as a leader in the Left-wing of the Young People’s Socialist League, the national youth affiliate of the Socialist Party. Deeply committed to the civil rights and antiwar struggles and to revolutionary organizing, Barton operated in Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York and was a delegate and National Secretary at the 1964 convention in which tensions within YPSL led to its dissolution.
A small, but rich collection, the Barton Papers provide a glimpse into the career of a long-time Socialist and activist. From Barton’s entry into the Young People’s Socialist League in the latest 1950s through his work with the Wildcat group in the early 1970s, the collection contains outstanding content on the civil rights and antiwar movements and the strategies for radical organizing. The collection is particularly rich on two periods of Barton’s career — his time in the YPSL and Student Peace Union (1960-1964) and in the Wildcat group (1968-1971) — and particularly for the events surrounding the dissolution of YPSL in 1964, following a heated debate over whether to support Lyndon Johnson for president. The collection includes correspondence with other young radicals such as Martin Oppenheimer, Lyndon Henry, Juan McIver, and Joe Weiner.
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Subjects- Antiwar movements
- Civil rights movements
- Communists
- Revolutionaries
- Socialist Party of the United States of America
- Socialists--United States
- Student Peace Union
- Students for a Democratic Society (U.S.)
- Vietnam War, 1961-1975--Protest movements
- Wildcat
- Young People's Socialist League
Contributors- Barton, Thomas
- Gilbert, Carl
- Henry, Lyndon
- MacFadyen, Gavin
- McIver, Juan
- Oppenheimer, Martin
- Shatkin, Joan
- Shatkin, Norm
- Verret, Joe
- Weiner, Joe
Call no.: MS 539
View related collections: Civil rights, Cold War culture, Communism & Socialism, Labor, Peace, Political activism, Social justice, Vietnam War : : No Comments
Thomas Bucklin Daybook, 1841-1843.
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Daybook of physician Thomas Bucklin who, for twenty-three years, practiced medicine in and around Hopkinton, Massachusetts. Accounts are listed chronologically and by surname; patients included women and local Irish laborers. Entries are brief and in medical shorthand. The book contains prescriptions, some for specific patients and some borrowed from other doctors; a list of deaths in Hopkinton for 1841-43, with the age of the deceased and cause of death; and personal notations in the margins of the book, noting holidays, weather conditions and trips.
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Subjects- Bowker family
- Bullard family
- Claflin family
- Hopkinton (Mass.)--Social conditions
- McFarland family
- Medicine--Practice--Massachusetts--Hopkinton
- Mortality--Massachusetts--Hopkinton
- Phipps family
- Physicians--Massachusetts--Hopkinton
- Rockwood family
- Vaccination of children--Massachusetts--Hopkinton
Contributors- Bucklin, Thomas, 1771-1843
Types of material
Call no.: MS 260 bd
View related collections: Massachusetts (East), Medical : : No Comments
Thomas W. Copeland Papers, 1923-1979.
22 boxes (10 linear feet).
A long time member of the English Department at UMass Amherst, Thomas Wellsted Copeland was a scholar of Edmund Burke. By the spring of 1949, Copeland was known as the preeminent Burke scholar and was named the Managing Editor of the ten-volume publication Correspondence of Edmund Burke. After his retirement, a chair was established in his name in the department.
The Copeland Papers are a rich collection of personal and professional correspondence, journals and writings from Copeland’s Yale years, manuscripts, typescripts, notes and draft revisions of his works on Edmund Burke, and a journal chronicling Copeland’s four-year exercise in the daily practice of writing.
Subjects- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of English
Contributors
Call no.: FS 050
View related collections: Literature & language, UMass, UMass faculty : : No Comments
W.E.B. Du Bois Papers, 1803-1984.
328 boxes (168.75 linear feet).
W.E.B. Du Bois
Scholar, writer, editor of The Crisis and other journals, co-founder of the Niagara Movement, the NAACP, and the Pan African Congresses, international spokesperson for peace and for the rights of oppressed minorities, W.E.B. Du Bois was a son of Massachusetts who articulated the strivings of African Americans and developed a trenchant analysis of the problem of the color line in the twentieth century.
The Du Bois Papers contain almost 165 linear feet of the personal and professional papers of a remarkable social activist and intellectual. Touching on all aspects of his long life from his childhood during Reconstruction through the end of his life in 1963, the collection reflects the extraordinary breadth of his social and academic commitments from research in sociology to poetry and plays, from organizing for social change to organizing for Black consciousness.
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Subjects- African Americans--Civil rights
- African Americans--History--1877-1964
- Crisis (New York, N.Y.)
- Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963--Views on democracy
- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
- Pan-Africanism
- United States--Race relations
Contributors- Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963
Types of material
Call no.: MS 312
View related collections: African American, Antiracism, Civil rights, Communism & Socialism, Digital, Du Bois, W.E.B., Peace, Political activism, Social change, Social justice : : No Comments
Thomas Nye Cashbook, 1830-1842.
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Agent or part-owner of a firm, who may have been a ship’s chandler, from Fairhaven and New Bedford, Massachusetts. Includes personal expenses and business accounts (large bills for firms and small bills for labor, repairs, food, blacksmithing, and other items and services). Cash book is made up of six smaller cash books bound together; also contains lists of deaths in the family and notations of the lading of several ships.
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Subjects- Fairhaven (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Merchants--Massachusetts--New Bedford--Economic conditions--19th century
- New Bedford (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Nye family
Contributors- Nye, Thomas, 1768-1842
- T. and A.R. Nye (Firm)
Types of material
Call no.: MS 227 bd
View related collections: Business & industry, Maritime, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments
Association for Gravestone Studies
Thomas W. and Margaret Tenney Photograph Collection, 1966-1978 (Bulk: 1966-1972).
12 boxes (6 linear feet).
Submit Gaylord, 1766, Hadley, Mass.
A long-time resident of Berkeley, Calif., Thomas W. Tenney and his wife Margaret took up photography in a serious way in the early 1960s. Photographing the Bay Area scene and publishing in the New York Times and elsewhere, the Tenneys became full time photographers by about 1964. For over a decade, they took summer trips to New England to photograph colonial and early national gravestones, culminating in a public exhibition of their work in 1972 at the Bolles Gallery in San Francisco.
The Tenney collection consists of several hundred scrupulously-documented images of gravestones in Massachusetts, Connecticut, and other New England states taken between 1966 and 1978. Selecting stones for “artistic rather than historical reasons,” the Tenney’s focused primarily on details of the carving and inscriptions.
Subjects- Sepulchral monuments--Connecticut
- Sepulchral monuments--Massachusetts
- Sepulchral monuments--Rhode Island
- Sepulchral monuments--Vermont
Contributors- Tenney, Margaret K.
- Tenney, Thomas W.
Types of material
Call no.: PH 045
View related collections: Connecticut, Gravestones, Massachusetts, Photographs, Rhode Island : : No Comments
Norman Thomas Autobiography, 1946-1958.
1 box (0.5 linear feet).
An ardent Socialist and pacifist, Norman Thomas ran six times as a democratic socialist candidate for president of the United States. Born in 1884 in Marion, Ohio, the son of a Presbyterian minister, Thomas became a leading voice of the non-Communist left, taking up the causes of civil rights, peace, and social justice.
Thomas’s memoir traces the major events of his life from his boyhood and education at Bucknell and Princeton, to his experiences during both world wars, and from his acceptance of Socialism to his reflections on religion.
Subjects- Pacifists--United States
- Socialists--United States
- World War, 1939-1945
Contributors- Thomas, Norman, 1884-1968
Types of material
Call no.: MS 186
View related collections: Communism & Socialism, Peace, Social change, Social justice, World War II : : No Comments
Antislavery Collection, 1725-1911.
(7.5 linear feet).
The Antislavery Collection contains several hundred printed pamphlets and books pertaining to slavery and antislavery in New England, 1725-1911. The holdings include speeches, sermons, proceedings and other publications of organizations such as the American Anti-Slavery Society and the American Colonization Society, and a small number of pro-slavery tracts.
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Subjects- Abolitionists--Massachusetts
- Antislavery movements--United States
- Slavery--United States
Contributors- American Anti-Slavery Society
- American Colonization Society
Call no.: Rare Book Collections
View related collections: African American, Antiracism, Digital, Printed materials, Social change : : No Comments