UMarmot(SCUA)

Special Collections & University Archives
Collections

Calidonna, Frank

Association for Gravestone Studies Collection
Frank Calidonna Photograph Collection, 1991. 1 box (0.25 linear feet).
Charles A. Jones monument, 1858
Charles A. Jones monument, 1858

A teacher at the New York State School for the Deaf since the 1970s, Frank Calidonna is a professional photographer based in Rome, N.Y. A long-time member of the Association for Gravestone Studies, Calidonna has a long standing interest in Victorian cemeteries and, among other projects, made a photographic study of the Victorian Mount Cemetery in Rochester, N.Y., in 1991.

The Calidonna Collection contains 55 black and white prints (5×7″) taken of monuments and gravestones in Mount Hope Cemetery, ca.May 1991, documenting the stylistic variation, ranging from high Victorian to relatively recent. The collection also includes two brochures for Mount Hope.

Subjects

  • Association for Gravestone Studies.
  • Calidonna, Frank.
  • Mount Hope Cemetery (Rochester, N.Y.).
  • Sepulchral monuments–New York.

Types of material

  • Photographs.
Call no.: PH 021

Calkins, David

David and Marshall Calkins Account Books, 1848-1855. 3 v. (0.25 linear feet).

These three accounting volumes of Monson, Massachusetts physicians David and Marshall Calkins encompass the period May 1848–December 1855. Medically, these volumes reflect a growing understanding of the human body and the analysis and treatment of its ailments. Additionally, these account books reflect a period of growing prosperity for Monson through the birth of stream powered milling industries.

Subjects

Types of material

Call no.: MS 178

Callaghan, M.B.

M.B. Callaghan Daybook, 1844-1860. 1 vol. (0.25 linear feet).

Daybook of M. B. Callaghan, general store owner in Charlton, New York, documenting Callaghan’s purchases from various wholesale merchants, including Van Heusen and Charles (Albany), Asher Cook, H.C. Foster, Craig and Company (Schenectady), Schenectady and Mohawk Sheeting Company and various unnamed peddlars. Daybook includes lists of purchases (1844-1857), some arranged by wholesaler, and an inventory of goods on hand between 1859 and 1860.

Subjects

  • Callaghan, M. B.
  • Charlton (N.Y.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Cook, Asher
  • Craig & Co.
  • Foster, H. C.
  • General stores–New York–Charlton
  • General stores–New York–Charlton–Inventories
  • Inventories, Retail–New York (State)–New York
  • Purchasing–New York–Charlton
  • Schenectady & Mohawk Sheeting Co.
  • Van Heusen and Charles

Types of material

Call no.: MS 284bd

Cambodian Crisis Committee

Cambodian Crisis Committee Records, 1982-1990. 17 boxes (26 linear feet).

In 1979 the Vietnamese invaded Cambodia removing the Khmer Rouge from power and ending the four year reign of a regime responsible for the deaths of more than a million people. In the upheaval surrounding the invasion hundreds of thousands of Cambodians fled to nearby Thailand. From camps along the border of Thailand and Cambodia 150,000 Cambodian refugees eventually resettled in the U.S.

The Cambodian Crisis Committee in Amherst, Massachusetts worked to educate Americans about the situation of the refugees, as well as help Cambodian families reunite. Elaine Kenseth Abel, a member of the Family Reunification Advocacy Project, received numerous letters from Cambodian refugees in the U.S. seeking assistance in getting their family members out of Thailand. The collection consists of case files, correspondence, and photographs documenting Cambodian refugees and their American advocates reunite families. The collection also includes newsletters and correspondence from other advocacy groups like the Cambodian Crisis Committee throughout the U.S.

Subjects

Call no.: MS 361

Cambodian-Americans in Amherst

Cambodian Americans in Amherst Exhibition Collection, 1986. 1 box (1.5 linear feet).

Organized by UMass anthropology professor Joel Halpern, the images in this collection were put on display during the Cambodian New Year celebration in 1986. As part of the celebration, members of the large community of Cambodian refugees who have resettled in Amherst were recognized.

Subjects

Call no.: MS 114

Campano, Anthony

Anthony Campano Papers, 1956-2007. 2 boxes (1 linear foot).
The Campano family, 1967
The Campano family, 1967

Anthony “Tony” Campano and Shizuko Shirai met by chance in January 1955 as Tony was passing through Yokohama en route to his new post in Akiya. Recently transferred to Japan, Tony enlisted in the U.S. Army a little over a year earlier, serving first in Korea. As their relationship blossomed, Tony and Shizuko set up housekeeping until his enlistment ended and he returned home to Boston. Determined to get back to Japan quickly and marry Shizuko, the two continued their courtship by mail, sending letters through Conrad Totman and Albert Braggs, both stationed in Japan. By the summer of 1956, Tony re-enlisted in the Army, this time stationed in the Medical Battalion of the 24th Division located in Seoul, Korea. There he remained until August 1957 when he was finally able to secure official authorization to marry Shizuko. Cutting their honeymoon short to deal with her medical emergency, Tony returned to his post in Korea. The couple reunited in November of that year after Tony secured a new assignment in Yokohama.

The letters of Tony Campano to Shizuko Shirai during the year or more they were separated document their unlikely romance. Soon after Tony returned home when his first enlistment ended, friends and family tried to discourage him from pursuing a relationship with Shizuko. Despite their age difference–Shizuko was eleven years older– and the language barrier, the two ultimately married. In addition to the couple’s long-distance courtship letters, the collection also contains about 100 letters exchanged between Campano and Conrad Totman, dating from their early days in the U.S. Army to the present; taken together they document a friendship of more than fifty years.

Subjects

  • Campano, Anthony.
  • Campano, Shizuko Shirai.
  • Correspondence.
  • Japan–Social life and customs–1945-
  • Totman, Conrad.
  • United States. Army–Non-commissioned officers–Correspondence.
Call no.: MS 617

Campbell, Sadie

Sadie Campbell Papers, 1812-2002. 19 boxes (10.25 linear feet).
Sadie Campbell and sons Harold and Robert Leslie

A housewife, mother and active community member, Sadie Campbell was born in 1881 and lived at 1 Depot Street in Cheshire, Massachusetts for most of her life until she died in 1971. Sadie was closely tied to the Cheshire community where she had a large circle of friends and acquaintances, and was active in a a number of organizations, such as: the Cheshire Ladies Reading Club, the Merry Wives of Cheshire Shakespeare Club, and the Cheshire Cash Tearoom. The collection documents three generations of a western Massachusetts family. The variety and nature of the materials in this collection offer a good view into the local and social history of western Massachusetts through the lives of Sadie Campbell and her family.

Subjects

  • Campbell, Sadie
  • Cheshire (Mass.)–History
  • Cheshire Cash Tearoom
  • Family–Massachusetts–History–19th century
  • Family–Massachusetts–History–20th century
  • Housekeeping–Massachusetts–Cheshire
  • Housewives–Massachusetts–Cheshire
  • Massachusetts–Cheshire–History–19th century
  • Massachusetts–Cheshire–History–20th century
  • Massachusetts–Social life and customs–19th century
  • Merry Wives of Cheshire Shakespeare Club
  • Small business–Massachusetts
  • Tyrell, Augustus
  • Williams Manufacturing Company
  • Women–Societies and clubs–History–19th century

Types of material

  • Account books.
  • Invitations
  • Legal documents
  • Letters (Correspondence).
  • Pamphlets
  • Photographs
  • Recipes
Call no.: MS 439

Cance, Alexander E. (Alexander Edmond), 1874-

Alexander E. Cance Papers, 1911-1951. 6 boxes (2.75 linear feet).

Professor and Head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the Massachusetts Agricultural College who also worked briefly for Presidents Woodrow Wilson and Herbert Hoover, as well as the United States Department of Agriculture.

Includes biographical materials, correspondence concerning Cance’s role in the agricultural cooperative movement, addresses, articles (both in typescript and published), lectures, book reviews, typescript of a Carnegie study of factors in agricultural economics, a summary of a U.S. Senate report of which he was co-author, “Agricultural Cooperation and Rural Credit in Europe,” and research material. No documentation of his role as a delegate to the Hoover Conference on Economic Crisis, 1920, or his position as Supervisor of Market Research with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1922.

Subjects

Call no.: FS 045

Carroll, Lucius W.

Lucius W. Carroll Ledger, 1841-1862. 1 v. (0.25 linear feet).

Businessman in several partnerships in south-central Worcestor county who owned a general store in Webster, Massachusetts. Includes lists of partners (such as John P. Stockwell of Stockwell and Carroll), yearly salaries and profits, accounts of what he sold and how he was paid, lists of individual customers and manufacturing companies, and labor accounts of workers. Also contains an alphabetical index to the ledger and several pages of notes receivable and notes payable.

Subjects

  • Barter–Massachusetts–History–19th century
  • Carroll & Crosby
  • Carroll, Lucius W.
  • Dudley (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Dudley Woolen Manufacturing Company (Dudley, Mass.)
  • General stores–Massachusetts
  • Merchants–Massachusetts–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Oxbridge (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Shopping–Massachusetts–History–19th century
  • Slater, George
  • Stockwell & Carroll
  • Union Mills (Webster, Mass.)
  • Webster (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Webster Woolen Mills (Webster, Mass.)

Types of material

Call no.: MS 245bd

Center for Community Access Television (Amherst, Mass.)

Center for Community Access Television Records, 1973-1989. 1 box (0.5 linear feet).

Group comprised of students from the University of Massachusetts and community members who sought to develop and promote cultural, literary, charitable, educational and public affairs television programming. Records include by-laws, articles of organization, organizational histories, annual reports, meeting minutes, correspondence, program schedules, subject files, brochures, handbills, news clippings, and materials relating to a proposed merger with University of Massachusetts Cable Vision. In 1989, CCATV was renamed Amherst Community Television (ACT).

Subjects

  • Amherst (Mass.)–Intellectual life–20th century
  • Cable television–Massachusetts–Amherst–History
  • Center for Community Access Television (Amherst, Mass.)
  • Handbills
  • Public-access television–Massachusetts–Amherst–History
  • Television programs–Massachusetts–Amherst–History
Call no.: MS 293
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