Gene Abair Alcoholism Collection, ca.1875-1962. ca.100 volumes.
After joining Alcoholics and Anonymous in Springfield to regain control over his life, Gene Abair emerged a new man. And a bibliophile. A janitor with a limited education, Abair began to collect books relating to alcoholism and temperance, eventually devoting himself to making his growing collection available to alcoholics and non-alcoholics alike as a lending library. The collection was acquired by UMass in 1972 with the assistance of Abair’s friend, Mrs. Walter E. Carlson, and about 100 titles (of over 400) were transferred to SCUA.
The Abair Collection includes works on the physiology, psychology, ethics, and social history of alcohol consumption from the mid-19th through the mid-twentieth centuries. Among other items, it includes key works on medical aspects of inebriety, personal narratives and biographies of temperance leaders and alcoholics, and books on the formal temperance movement and prohibition.
Subjects
- Abair, Gene
- Alcoholism.
- Drinking of alcoholic beverages.
- Prohibition.
- Temperance.
Call no.: Rare book collections
Categories: Printed materials, Social change :: :: No Comments
Doris E. Abramson Papers, ca.1930-2007. ca.25 linear feet.
After earning her masters degree from Smith College in 1951, Doris Abramson (class of 1949) returned to UMass in 1953 to become instructor in the English Department, remaining at her alma mater through a long and productive career. An historian of theatre and poet, she was a founding member of the Speech Department, Theatre Department, and the Massachusetts Review. In 1959, a Danforth grant helped Abramson pursue doctoral work at Columbia. Published in 1969, her dissertation, Negro Playwrights in the American Theatre, 1925-1969, was a pioneering work in the field. After her retirement, she and her partner of more than 40 years, Dorothy Johnson, ran the Common Reader Bookshop in New Salem.
An extensive collection covering her entire career, Abramson’s papers are a valuable record of the performing arts at UMass, her research on African American playwrights, her teaching and directing, and many other topics relating to her diverse interests in literature and the arts.
Call no.: FS 127
Categories: African American, LGBT, Massachusetts (West), Performing arts, Poetry, UMass alumni, UMass faculty, Women :: :: No Comments
Bonnie Acker Collection, 1983-2000. 1 box (3 linear feet).
A collection of t-shirts, gift cards, and posters designed by activist and political artist Bonnie Acker. Each item features an illustration by Acker in support of various issues relating to social change ranging from peace with Nicaragua, to nuclear abolition and from lifting the debt of impoverished countries, to the Burlington, Vermont community land trust.
Subjects
- Acker, Bonnie
- Antinuclear movement–United States
- Peace movements
Call no.: MS 582
Categories: Antinuclear, Environment, Peace, Social change, Social justice :: :: No Comments
Activism of the 1980s Photograph Collection, 1985-1987. 0.5 linear feet.
During the academic year 1986-1987, the campus at UMass Amherst was a hotbed of political protest, fueled in part by the US intervention in Central America. The arrival on campus of a CIA recruiting officer in November set off a string of demonstrations that attracted the support of activists Abbie Hoffman and Amy Carter, daughter of former president Jimmy Carter. The occupation of the Whitmore Administration Building was followed by a larger occupation of adjacent Munson Hall, resulting in a number of arrests. Hoffman, Carter, and eleven co-defendants were tried and acquitted on charges of disorderly conduct were tried in April 1987.
The Collection contains 61 mounted photographs of marches, demonstrations, and protests in Amherst and Northampton, Mass., taken by Charles F. Carroll, Byrne Guarnotta, and Libby Hubbard, all students at UMass Amherst. The photographs are a vivid record of campus and community activism, and particularly the mobilization against the CIA and American intervention in Central America, as well as the arrest and trial of Abbie Hoffman and Amy Carter.
Subjects
Contributors
- Carroll, Charles F.
- Guarnotta, Byrne.
- Hubbard, Libby.
- Radical Student Union.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Types of material
Call no.: PH 012
Categories: Antinuclear, Central & South America, Massachusetts (West), Peace, Photographs, Political activism, UMass students :: :: No Comments
Tamas Aczel Papers, ca.1950-1994. 18 boxes (26 linear feet).
Born on Dec. 1, 1921, to a middle class family, Tamas Aczel became affiliated with leftist politics in Hungary prior to the Second World War, joining the Party after. With degrees in literature from Peter Pazmany University (BA 1948) and Eotvos Lorent University (MA 1950), Aczel quickly established a reputation as a literary talent, publishing seven novels and winning the Kossuth Prize (1949) and Stalin Prize for Literature (1952). During this period, he became disenchanted with the Communist government and during the short-lived rebellion in 1956, he served as press secretary for Prime Minister Imre Nagy. When Nagy was deposed, Aczel escaped through Yugoslavia to Austria and then England. In 1966, he was invited to teach modern European literature at UMass, where he became Director of the MFA program (1978-1982). Aczel died in 1994, leaving his wife Olga A. Gyarmaty (an Olympic gold medalist in the long jump, 1948) and son Thomas.
The Aczel collection consists primarily of numerous drafts of several novels, including The Hunt (1990), Illuminations (1981), and Ice Age (1965), along with other writing, translations, some student essays, and autobiographical material. Some material is in Hungarian.
Call no.: FS 031
Categories: Communism & Socialism, Literature & arts, Poetry, UMass faculty :: :: No Comments
Leonard Adams Papers, 1976-2008. 2 boxes (1.0 linear feet).
Leonard Adams (1946-) began his career with the UMass Amherst Libraries in May 1974 when he was hired to work as an Exit Check on the night shift. Before earning his MLS at the University of Rhode Island in 1975, Adams worked in Circulation and Serials, after which he became Serials Cataloger and Bindery Supervisor, and in 1980, Government Documents Librarian. He added Patents and Trademarks to his job duties in 2004. A founding member of the Boston Library Consortium’s Government Documents Interest Group, Leonard Adams served the UMass Amherst Libraries for 33 years before his retirement in May 2008.
Adams’s papers provide insight into the inner-workings of a Government Documents Repository and convey, even in their brevity, the nature of the work of a Government Documents librarian. Included among the papers are professional correspondence, a Government Documents Technical Processing Manual and articles written by Adams, Adams’s annual reports and performance reviews, and other documents relating to Adams’s long tenure at the University Libraries.
Subjects
- Adams, Leonard, 1946- .
- Government documents.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Library.
Call no.: FS 093
Categories: UMass staff :: :: No Comments
William A. Adams Daybook, 1876-1878. 1 vol. (0.1 linear foot).
During the 1870s, William A. Adams maintained a blacksmithing shop close to the intersection of Walnut and Hickory Streets in Springfield, Mass. His trade ran from farriery to repairing iron work, wheels, and wagons, and situated as he was near the southern end of Watershops Pond, one of the industrial centers of the city, his customers ranged from local residents to manufacturing firms, the city, and the Armory.
The Adams account book contains approximately 150 pages containing brief records of blacksmithing work for a range of customers located in the immediate area. Among the more names mentioned are the grocers Perkins and Nye, W. and E.W. Pease Co., J. Kimberley and Co., and Common Councilman William H. Pinney and J. W. Lull, all of whom can be located within a few blocks of Adams’ shop.
Subjects
- Adams, William A.
- Blacksmiths–Massachusetts–Springfield.
- Daybooks.
- Horseshoers–Massachusetts–Springfield.
- Springfield (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century.
Call no.: MS 624 bd
Categories: Massachusetts (West), Trades :: :: No Comments
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
Agriculture in New England Online Collection, 1811-1990.
Mass. Aggie student contemplating
her chicken, ca.1920s
With its roots as a land grant college, UMass has long worked to support agricultural education throughout the Commonwealth through its curriculum, research, and extension services.
The Agriculture in New England Digital Collection includes digitized versions of historical works in agriculture, particularly works that relate to agricultural production in New England, crops and farming practices endemic to the region, and that document the varied roles that UMass has played. Textual materials are made available without restriction, mostly in partnership with Open Content Alliance and the Internet Archive, and all text files are made available in pdf format.
Subjects
- Agriculture–History–New England.
- Horticulture–History–New England.
Categories: Agriculture, Horticulture & botany, Organic farming :: :: No Comments
Benjamin Akin Daybook and Ledger, 1737-1764. 1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).
A tanner, currier, and shoemaker, Benjamin Akin was born into a prominent Bristol County family in Dartmouth, Massachusetts, on May 18, 1715. With a prolific and well-connected family and successful in his own business endeavors, Akin attained some stature in Dartmouth. First appointed town clerk in 1745, he filled that office from 1754-1770 and again from 1776-1780, adding the title “Esq.” to his name by the 1760s. During the Revolutionary years, he served on the town’s public safety committee. He died on April 10, 1802.
The Akin ledger offers insight into the fortunes of an 18th-century artisan during the most productive years of his life, as well as into the structure of a local community in southeastern Massachusetts. The ledger includes accounts of with customers for tanning and currying of calf and sheepskin, day-book entries, and accounts with the Town of Dartmouth for services performed at Town Clerk.
Subjects
- Akin, Benjamin, 1715-1802.
- Akin, Eunice Taber, 1711-1762
- Artisans–Massachusetts
- Tanning–Massachusetts
- Shoemaking–Massachusetts
- Earthquakes–Massachusetts
- Dartmouth (Mass.)–History–18th century
Types of material
Call no.: MS 204bd
Categories: Manufacturing, Massachusetts (East) :: :: No Comments
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