Special Collections & University Archives
Bailey, Ebenezer
Samuel H. Rundlett Daybooks, 1873-1879.
3 vols. (0.2 linear feet).
Teamster from Newburyport, Massachusetts. Three daybooks document his work for local businesses (hauling bales of raw cotton and finished cloth, delivering coal, produce, fertilizer, and goods), prices paid for freight handling, and forms of payment (cash, credit at a store, and produce from a local farmer). Of note is Rundlett’s delivery of goods to the Newburyport branch of the Sovereigns of Industry, a workingmen’s cooperative association.
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Subjects- Newburyport (Mass.)--History
- Sovereigns of Industry
- Teamsters--Massachusetts--Newburyport
Types of material
Call no.: MS 214 bd
View related collections: Business & industry, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments
Association for Gravestone Studies Collection
Elizabeth W. Whitaker Collection, 1802-1989.
1 box (0.5 linear feet).
Gravestone, No. Guilford, Conn.
A physical education teacher from Rome, New York, Elizabeth W. Whitaker became an avid recorder of gravestone inscriptions in the 1940s. She died in 1992 at the age of 93.
The core of the Whitaker collection consists of 25 receipts and accounts relating to the early marble industry in western Massachusetts. The key figures in this series are Rufus Willson and his father-in-law, John Burghardt, who quarried stone near West Stockbridge, Mass., conveying it to Hudson, N.Y. The collection also includes a selection of photographs and postcards of gravestones, mostly in New England and New York; two folders of typed transcriptions and newspaper clippings of epitaphs from the same region, ranging in date from the early colonial period to the mid-19th century; and a price list of Barre granite from Wetmore and Morse Granite Co., 1934.
Subjects- Marble industry and trade--Massachusetts
- Sepulchral monuments--Massachusetts
Contributors- Association for Gravestone Studies
- Burghardt, John
- Whitaker, Elizabeth W
- Willson, Rufus
Types of material- Photographs
- Receipts (Financial records)
Call no.: MS 682
View related collections: Business & industry, Gravestones, Massachusetts (West), Photographs : : No Comments
Picket line, New Bedford, 195
“Teamsters crossed the Hathaway picket line”
Western Massachusetts was an early and important center of both industrialization and the development of organized labor, and in recent years, it has experienced many of traumatic effects of de-industrialization and economic transformation. The Department of Special Collections and University Archives seeks to document the history of organized labor, the experience of work, and business and industry in New England.
At the heart of the SCUA holdings is a suite of collections documenting the organized labor movement in New England. The official records of the Massachusetts AFL-CIO, a large and important collection, is joined by records for trades ranging from clothing and textile workers to carpenters, electrical workers, and granite cutters.
Of particular note is the John W. Bennett Labor History Collection, a large assemblage of labor-related realia and ephemera, including hundreds of badges, pins, watch fobs, lighters, and other artifacts distributed to union members at annual conventions and other union events. The collection is a unique resource for study of the iconography of organized labor and includes items from representative unions and locals ranging from the Knights of Labor in the 1870s to the present. While centered on New England, the Bennett Collection extends nationally.
View our brochure on documenting labor, work, and industry (pdf).
Significant collections
- Organized Labor
- From the records of the Massachusetts State AFL-CIO to the papers of union locals and labor leaders.
- See all Business and industry
- Manufacturing
- The industrial heritage of New England is represented in collections ranging from the records of the Clement Co. and the Northampton Cutlery Company (both manufacturers of cutlery), the American Writing Paper Company, the Rodney Hunt Co. (a manufacturer of textile machinery and waterwheels), and Smith and Wesson. The most recent collection is the papers of Sidney Topol, CEO of Scientific-Atlanta, a corporation at the forefront of the growth of cable television in the United States.
- Merchants and mercantile exchange
- Account books and other business records for a number of New England merchants dating back to the eighteenth century, ranging from small scale traders to keepers of rural general stores to shipping merchants trading in the Atlantic economy.
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American Friends Service Committee Records, 1975-2005.
24 boxes (36 linear feet).
Established in 1968 in response to the war in Vietnam, the AFSC office in western Massachusetts did not limit its focus to draft and military counseling, instead the organization broadened its focus over time to include educational and outreach programs for a variety of peace and socal justice issues. Today the chapter focuses on economic justice, campaigns against U.S. military intervention, and actions to combat racism and classism. With an emphasis on serving the community of western Massachusetts, the program is equally committed to calling attention to issues of both national and local importance. Recent campaigns range from ending the war in Iraq and supporting peace in Columbia to preventing the construction of a new jail in Chicopee.
The collection consists chiefly of subject files that together provide a picture of the various issues in which the western Massachusetts AFSC was involved. Topics range from the organization’s earliest focus, the Vietnam War, to the first Gulf War, landlord/tenant relations, immigration, and landmines. The collection also includes materials relating to public figures, some of whom traveled to the region to speak.
Subjects- Activists--Massachusetts
- Massachusetts--Economic conditions
- Peace movements--Massachusetts
- Social justice--Massachusetts
Contributors- American Friends Service Committee. Western Massachusetts
Call no.: MS 459
View related collections: Antiracism, Civil rights, Massachusetts (West), Peace, Prison issues, Social justice : : No Comments
Associated Industries of Massachusetts Collection, 1944-1986.
2 boxes (1 linear feet).
Associated Industries of Massachusetts (A.I.M.), established in 1915, is the largest non-profit, nonpartisan association of employees in the state. Their primary mission is to improve the economic condition of the Commonwealth and to advocate for fair and equitable public policy.
The collection consists entirely of publications, chief among these are the group’s newsletter dating from the 1940s-1950s.
Subjects- Massachusetts--Economic conditions--20th century
- Massachusetts--Politics and government--20th century
Call no.: MS 155
View related collections: Business & industry : : No Comments
Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts Hampshire-Franklin County Chapter Records, 1947-1973.
2 boxes (1 linear feet).
Minutes and correspondence of the Executive Committee, correspondence and general files of chairmen Philip Eddy, David E. Matz, and Donn Kesselheim, as well as correspondence, briefs, and clippings related to legal cases and inquiries undertaken by the chapter.
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Subjects- Civil rights--Massachusetts
Contributors- Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts. Hampshire-Franklin County Chapter
- Eddy, Philip
- Kesselheim, Donn
- Matz, David E
Call no.: MS 303
View related collections: Civic organizations, Massachusetts (West), Social justice : : No Comments
Communist Party of Massachusetts Collection, 1942-1954.
1 box (0.25 linear feet).
Documenting Communist Party activities in Massachusetts during the 1940s-1950s, this small collection consists of pamphlets, broadsides, and election materials, which cover issues such as housing, freedom of speech, McCarthyism, and the war in Korea.
Subjects- Communism--United States--History
- Communists--Massachusetts
Contributors- Communist Party of Massachusetts
Call no.: MS 538
View related collections: Communism & Socialism, Massachusetts, Political activism : : No Comments
Franco-American Oral History Collection, 1980-1984.
1 box (0.25 linear feet).
With a population of nearly a million French Americans, Massachusetts bears witness to the largest continental migration experienced in the Northeast. Under a grant from the Massachusetts Foundation for Humanities and Public Policy, 44 interviews of Franco Americans in the region were conducted from August 8, 1982 to January 18, 1983.
These interviews document the lives of those individuals, covering a period beginning in the late nineteenth century through 1984.
Subjects- French Americans--Massachusetts
Types of material
Call no.: MS 123
View related collections: Immigration & ethnicity, Massachusetts, Oral history : : No Comments
Massachusetts Locales Collection, 1905-1989.
3 boxes (1.5 linear feet).
Materials, such as clippings, maps, and photographs, relating to Amherst, but also including items from other western Massachusetts towns. Topics covered include are Amherst writers such as Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost, town history, trees and birds of Amherst, and Connecticut River Valley history.
Subjects- Amherst (Mass.)--History
- Massachusetts--History
Types of material
Call no.: MS 300
View related collections: Massachusetts (West) : : No Comments
Massachusetts AFL-CIO Directly Affiliated Local Unions Records, 1930-1980.
1 box (0.25 linear feet).
This small collection provides background on labor unions in Massachusetts that, lacking a national scope, join the AFL-CIO as Directly Affiliated Local Unions (DALUs). Taken together, these records provide some basic information on the names and descriptions of companies that have agreements with DALUs, the numbers of union members involved, the occupations represented, and jurisdiction.
Subjects- Labor unions--Massachusetts
Contributors
Call no.: MS 044
View related collections: Labor, Massachusetts : : No Comments