Sagendorph Woolen Company Daybook, 1885-1887
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Daybook contains daily transactions between the Sagendorph Woolen Company of East Brookfield, Massachusetts and other businesses, local residents, and the company’s labor force. These detailed entries present a dynamic picture of the company’s manufacturing operations ranging from the purchase of raw materials to the sales of finished products.
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Subjects- Carding (textiles)
- East Brookfield (Mass.)--History
- Textile construction processes and techniques
- Textile industry--Massachusetts--History
- Textile manufacturers--Massachusetts
- Textile materials
- Yarn-making processes and techniques
Contributors- Sagendorph Woolen Company
Types of material
Call no.: MS 430
View related collections: Manufacturing, Massachusetts (Central) : : Comments Off
Tiyo Attallah Salah-El Papers, 1890-2006
15 boxes (7.5 linear feet).
Tiyo Atallah Salah-El playing saxophone in high school
While serving a life sentence in a Pennsylvania prison, Tiyo Attallah Salah-El transformed himself into an activist, scholar, and advocate for the abolition of prisons. An accomplished jazz musician, Salah-El has distinguished himself for educational and scholarly work, his musical career, his close relationship with activists and educators, and for the non-profit organization he founded, The Coalition for the Abolition of Prisons (CAP).
The Papers of Tiyo Attallah Salah-El document his experience in the State Correctional Institution in Dallas, Pennsylvania from 1977 to the present, providing information on his education, teaching, and activism. The bulk of the collection consists of his extensive correspondence with educators, musicians, and activists. Other highlights include a manuscript copy of his autobiography and the founding documents of the The Coalition for the Abolition of Prisons.
Subjects- Criminal justice, Administration of
- Jazz musicians
- Prisoners--United States
- Prisons--United States
- Quakers
Contributors- Ahrens, Lois
- Nagel, Mechthild
- Neill, Montgomery
- Salah-El, Tiyo Attallah
- Zinn, Howard, 1922-
Types of material
Call no.: MS 590
View related collections: African American, Prison issues : : No Comments
Stephen L. Saltonstall Collection, 1962
60 items
Civil rights demonstration, Cairo, Ill., 1962
In the summer 1962, future Harvard student Steve Saltonstall became one of the early wave of white northerners who went into the Jim Crow south to work for civil rights. During that summer, he worked with SNCC to organize public accommodations in Cairo, Ill., and with an AFSC crew to help clear brush from a drainage ditch near Circle City, Missouri, encountering local resistance in both places. Saltonstall later became an attorney and currently practices in Vermont.
The Saltonstall collection consists of approximately sixty photographs taken by John Engel during his tour with an AFSC crew during the summer of 1962. While most of the images depict the crew’s work near Circle City, Missouri, six photos document a civil rights rally in Cairo, Ill. The images are available in digital form only.
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Subjects- American Friends Service Committee
- Cairo (Ill.)
- Circle City (Mo.)
- Civil rights demonstrations--Illinois--Photographs
Contributors- Engel, John P
- Saltonstall, Stephen L
Types of material
Call no.: PH 014 digital
View related collections: Antiracism, Civil rights, Digital, Famous Long Ago : : No Comments
Samizdat Collection, 1955-1983
12 boxes (6 linear feet).
In the mid-1970s, the Center for the Study of New Russian Literature in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at UMass Amherst began collecting the self-published and underground literature of the Soviet Union as a means of documenting social and political dissent in the Communist state.
The Samizdat collection includes writings in several genres — chiefly fiction, poetry, drama, and literary, social, and political criticism — in handwritten, photocopied, and printed form, as well as photos, a passport application for Mikhail Baryshnikov, and memorabilia from an American production of one of the plays in the collection.
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Subjects- Underground literature--Soviet Union
Call no.: MS 404
View related collections: Cold War culture, East & Central Europe, Social change : : No Comments
Sampson Perkins & Co. Account Book, 1866-1873
1 vol. (0.15 linear feet).
Iron foundry in Taunton, Massachusetts that produced stoves for individuals and several large local companies. Includes monthly labor payments to workforce of thirteen, as well as monthly accounts of sales, merchandise on hand, and rent. Also documents the company’s worth, annual profits, and the worth of company partners in 1870.
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Subjects- Boardinghouses--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century
- Iron foundries--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century
- Stove industry and trade--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century
- Taunton (Mass.)--Economic conditions--19th century
- Wages--Iron and steel workers--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century
- Wages--Stove industry and trade--Massachusetts--Taunton--History--19th century
Contributors- Perkins, Sampson, b. 1806
- Sampson Perkins & Co
Types of material
Call no.: MS 232 bd
View related collections: Business & industry, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments
Paul Samuel Sanders Papers, 1937-1972
(9 linear feet).
Methodist Clergyman; literary and religious scholar.
Correspondence, drafts of writings, notes for lectures and sermons, book reviews, course materials, class notes taken as a student, biographical material, and other papers, relating chiefly to Sander’s studies of English and religious literature, his teaching career at several colleges (including the University of Massachusetts) and church-related activities. Includes draft of an unpublished book on the Bible as literature; correspondence and organized material from his participation in Laymen’s Academy for Oecumenical Studies, Amherst Massachusetts (LAOS); and notebook of funeral records (1940-1957).
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Subjects- Layman's Academy for Oecumenical Studies
- Methodist Church--Clergy
- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of English
ContributorsTypes of material
Call no.: FS 084
View related collections: Massachusetts (West), Religion : : No Comments
Richard Santerre Franco-American Collection, 1872-1978
113 items
An historian from Lowell, Mass., Richard Santerre received his doctorate from Boston College in 1974 for his dissertation Le Roman Franco-Americain en Nouvelle Angleterre, 1878-1943. For more than twenty years he published regularly on the history of French and French-Canadian immigrants in New England, particularly Massachusetts, while doing so, assembling a significant collection of books on the subject.
With titles in both French and English, the Santerre Collection deals with the wide range of Franco-American experience in New England, touching on topics from literature and the arts to religion, benevolent societies, language, the process of assimilation, biography, and history. The collection includes several uncommon imprints regarding French American communities in Lowell, Lawrence, New Bedford, and Worcester, Mass., as well as in Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, and it includes publications of associations such as the Ralliement Français en Amérique, the Association Canado-Americain, and the Alliance Française de Lowell.
Subjects- French Canadians
- French--Massachusetts
- French--New England
Contributors
Call no.: Rare Book Collections
View related collections: Immigration & ethnicity, Massachusetts, Printed materials : : No Comments
Orlando Sargent Account Book, 1753-1808
1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
Prosperous, slave-owning farmer from Amesbury, Massachusetts, who also served as town warden, selectman, and representative. Includes details of the purchases of agricultural products (corn, potatoes, lamb, rye, hay, molasses, wood, cheese), and related services with some of the town’s earliest settlers, widow’s expenses, expenses in support of his grandmother, and family dates.
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Subjects- Agricultural prices--Massachusetts--Amesbury--History--18th century
- Amesbury (Mass.)--Economic conditions--18th century
- Amesbury (Mass.)--History--18th century--Biography
- Amesbury (Mass.)--Officials and employees--History--18th century
- Farm produce--Massachusetts--Amesbury--History--18th century
- Farmers--Massachusetts--Amesbury--Economic conditions--18th century
- Sargent family
Contributors- Sargent, Orlando, 1728-1803
Types of material
Call no.: MS 139
View related collections: Farming & rural life, Massachusetts (East) : : No Comments
Roland Sarti Papers, 1964-2002
11 boxes (5.25 linear feet).
Born in Montefegatesi, Italy, in April 1937, Roland Sarti began his academic career as a teaching assistant and instructor at Rutgers University from 1960-1964. In the fall of 1967, he was appointed Assistant Professor of Italian History at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, becoming chair of the University Seminar on Studies in Modern Italy five years later. A scholar of the fascist movement in Italy, Sarti also wrote on topics ranging from rural life in the Apennines to the life of the revolutionary Giuseppe Mazzini. During his tenure at UMass, he served on the Personnel, Curriculum, and Graduate Studies Committees, and played a prominent role in the Faculty Senate and the International Programs Office, particularly with respect to the summer programs in Italy. A past president of the New England Historical Society and the Society for Italian Historical Studies, he was a board member for the European History Quarterly and the H-Italy Network. He retired from active teaching in 2002.
The Sarti Papers document Sarti’s distinguished career as professor, author, and chair of the History Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. They consist of professional correspondence, history department records, records of major crises at the University, Italian studies newsletters, student publications, and historical society records. A significant amount of the materials, particularly among the correspondence and periodicals, are in Italian.
Subjects- Fascism
- Italy--History--20th century
- Italy--Politics and government--20th century
- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of History
Contributors
Call no.: FS 011
View related collections: Political activism, UMass faculty : : No Comments
Birgit H. and Peter Satir Papers, 1970-2000
37 boxes (55.5 linear feet).
Distinguished researchers in the Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Birgit and Peter Satir have made fundamental contributions to the study of exocytosis and the ultrastructure of cellular motility. While working on his doctorate at the Rockefeller Institute, Peter spent 1958 studying at the Carlsberg Biological Institute in Copenhagen, where he met Birgit. After completing their degrees in 1961 and marrying the next year, the couple went on to academic appointments at the University of Chicago and Berkeley. Although they are considered the first couple to be allowed to work in the same department at Berkeley, Birgit was never fully salaried, prompting the Satirs to move to more favorable circumstances at Einstein in 1977. Birgit’s research has centered on the nature of microdomains in cell membranes and how cells secrete chemical products, while Peter has studied the role of the structure and function of cilia and flagellae in cell motility.
The Satir collection contains professional correspondence, journals, and several thousand electron micrographs and motion picture films of ciliates and flagellates taken in the course of their research.
Subjects- Cell biology
- Ciliates
- Flagellata
- Protozoans--Composition
Contributors- Satir, Birgit H.
- Satir, Peter
Types of material- Scanning electron micrographs
Call no.: MS 706
View related collections: Protistology : : No Comments