G. Edward Gage Papers, 1912-1937. 1 box (0.25 linear feet).
George Edward Gates
photo by Frank A. Waugh, 1927
Recruited to Massachusetts Agricultural College by Lyman Butterfield in 1912, George Edward Gage helped build several scientific departments at the college. Born in Springfield, Mass., on the last day of the year 1884, Gage received his doctorate at Yale in 1909, and served at various points as head of Animal Pathology, Veterinary Science, and Physiology and Bacteriology. He died unexpectedly in March 1948 at the age of 64.
A slender collection, the Gage papers contain seven offprints of Gage’s articles on poultry diseases (1912-1922) and an impressively thorough set of notes taken by MSC student Roy H. Moult in Gage’s Physiology 75 class, 1936-1937.
Subjects
- Gage, G. Edward.
- Moult, Roy H.
- Massachusetts State College. Department of Bacteriology and Physiology.
- Massachusetts State College–Faculty.
- Physiology–Study and teaching.
- Poultry–Diseases.
Call no.: FS 131
Categories: Science & technology, UMass faculty :: :: No Comments
Amory Gale Ledgers, 1840-1872. 2 v. (0.5 linear feet).
A physician and native of Warwick, Mass., Amory Gale worked as an allopath after his graduation from Brown College in 1824, before turning to homeopathy in the mid-1850s. Often struggling with ill health, Gale plied his trade in a long succession of towns, including Canton, Scituate, Mansfield, and Medway, Massachusetts, as well as towns in Rhode Island and New Hampshire. Between 1844 and 1853, he interrupted his medical practice for a turn in the pulpit.
Gale’s surviving ledgers include accounts with patients, their form of payment, lists of medical fees, and a draft of a business agreement with a fellow homeopath in Woonsocket, J.S. Nichols.
Call no.: MS 259bd
Categories: Massachusetts (East), Medical, Rhode Island :: :: No Comments
John Edward Gates Papers, 1982-1991. 2 boxes (3 linear feet).
Lexicographer and former English faculty at Indiana State University, John Edward Gates is the author of numerous scholarly articles on idiomatic phrases and the principles and practice of dictionary making, as well as the co-editor of the Dictionary of Idioms for the Deaf. Reflecting his work as a lexicographer, this collection consists of research notes and proofs of articles and book reviews.
Subjects
- Gates, John Edward.
- Lexicography.
- Linguistics.
Call no.: MS 518
Categories: Literature & language :: :: No Comments
Merrick Gay Account Books, 1844-1849. 1 box (0 linear feet).
Owner of a general store and a woolen factory, postmaster, town clerk, and state senator from Gaysville in Stockbridge, Vermont. Daybooks document accounts and transactions with individuals, businesses, Town of Stockbridge, and Narrows School District, method and form of payment (cash and goods), and Gay’s purchases, including labor costs for hauling his freight.
Subjects
- Barter–Vermont–Gaysville–History–19th century
- Blanchard, Solomon, b. ca. 1816
- Books–Prices–Vermont–History–19th century
- Claremont Manufacturing Company–History
- Freight and freightage–Rates–Vermont–History–19th century
- Gay, Merrick, 1802-1866
- Gaysville (Vt.)–Economic conditions–19th century
- Gaysville (Vt.)–Rural conditions–19th century
- Gaysville Forge Company–History
- Gaysville Manufacturing Company–History
- General stores–Vermont–Gaysville
- Narrows School District–History
- Stockbridge (Vt.)–Economic conditions–19th century
- Waller, Israel
Types of material
Call no.: MS 242
Categories: Mercantile, Vermont :: :: No Comments
George Cooley & Co. Ledger, 1843-1851. 1 v. (0.25 linear feet).
Ledger, begun by George Cooley in 1843 to record the accounts of his soapmaking business in the Cabotville section of Chicopee, continued by Titus Chapin, an ardent abolitionist, and Mordecai Cough who managed the business following Cooley’s death (or departure) in 1848. The 1843 date coincides with the coming of many small businesses to Cabotville in connection with the growth of industries there at the time.
Cooley accepted goods, services and cash as payment. The most frequently accepted goods had relatively obvious value to a soap maker: grease and ashes, tallow, pork, scraps and skins, and candles. Some of the services bartered were repairing wagon, shoeing horse, fixing wippletree, making 30 boxes, and covering umbrella. The business sold gallons, bars, and cakes of soap. Mount Holyoke Seminary bought 28 “fancy soaps”. Also listed were shaving soap and hard or hand soap. In addition, sales sometimes included candles, butter, mop handles, molasses, apples and potatoes, squashes, satinet, cheese, cord wood, paint, and rosin. Some of the listings were annotated with regard to the customer’s character: Ashad Bartlett was seen as “bad and poor and fights with his wife”‘ Norris Starkwether was “an honest man”; and Miss L.B. Hunt “eloped with a man”.
Subjects
- Chicopee (Mass.)–History.
- Soap trade–Massachusetts.
Call no.: MS 111
Categories: Manufacturing, Massachusetts (West), Reform, Social change :: :: No Comments
George H. Gilbert Co. Records, 1842-1931. 26 boxes, 126 vols. (36 linear feet).
In 1841, George H. Gilbert and Charles A. Stevens formed a partnership to manufacture broadcloth and cloaking in Ware, Massachusetts. Ten years later, the partnership dissolved and each partner carried a part of the business into separate establishments. The newly formed George H. Gilbert Company continued making high-grade woolen flannels, for which it developed a national reputation, until 1930.
Records, consisting of correspondence, financial records and cash books, construction contracts, sales lists, production records, and sample books, document the operation of Gilbert and Stevens and later the Gilbert Company for almost a century. The labor accounts (1851-1930), document the phases of the varying ethnic composition of the workforce — Irish, French-Canadian, and eventually Polish — well as the family orientation of the mills.
Subjects
Types of material
Call no.: MS 096
Categories: Immigration & ethnicity, Manufacturing, Massachusetts (Central) :: :: No Comments
German Military Personnel Photograph Collection, ca. 1930-1939. 2 boxes (0.75 linear feet).
Photographs from the 1930s and 1940s featuring both major government officials such as Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler, and lower ranking officials such as regional party leaders. Photographs of German soldiers with their various weapons, some possibly fighting, are also depicted. Includes film stills from the Allied invasion of Normandy and German Communist refugees in the Soviet Union.
Call no.: MS 384
Categories: Germany, Military, Photographs, World War II :: :: No Comments
W. Walker Gibson Papers, 1936-1993. 3 boxes (3.5 linear feet).
Walker Gibson, a professor of English at the University from 1967 to 1987, was a passionate teacher of writing and rhetoric and author of humorous verse. Gibson was born in Jacksonville, Florida in 1919 but was raised in Albany, New York. He earned his B.A. from Yale in 1940 and began graduate work at Harvard, however, his studies were interrupted by World War II, where he served in the U.S. Army Air Corps. After the War, Gibson earned his M.A. from the University of Iowa, where he was a research assistant for the Iowa Writers Workshop. For the next twenty years, Gibson taught English and writing at Amherst College and published prose and his signature humorous verse in the New Yorker, Atlantic, Harpers, and the New York Times Magazine among others. Gibson also published several books, including collections of verse, as well as prose works on writing, teaching composition, and literary criticism. Gibson died at the age of 90 in February, 2009.
The Walker Gibson Papers document the writer and teacher’s career through published and unpublished early writings during his years at Yale, binders including his published writings from the 1950s, correspondence with Theodore Baird, his supervisor at Amherst College, and lecture notes from his University writing and English classes. Completing the collection are three folders of miscellaneous correspondence and a folder of Gibson’s unpublished manuscripts from the late seventies and early eighties.
Subjects
- Gibson, W. Walker.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of English.
Call no.: FS 062
Categories: Literature & language, UMass faculty :: :: No Comments
Girls Club of Greenfield Records, 1895-1995. 21 boxes (27 linear feet).
Founded in 1895, the Girls Club of Greenfield provides high quality early care and educational services to the girls of Franklin County, Massachusetts, and advocates for the rights of children and their families. During the school year, the Club offers diverse programming, ranging from an infant room and preschool to after school activities that promote teamwork, community spirit, social skills, and confidence. Since 1958, they have also operated a summer camp, Lion Knoll, in Leyden.
The records of the Girls Club of Greenfield include by-laws, annual reports, reports and meeting minutes of the Board of Directors, correspondence, and ledgers and account books. Also contains program files for daycare, summer camp, education worker programs, and others, personnel records, membership and committee lists, newsletters, press releases, ledgers, account books, scrapbooks, news clippings, photographs, slides, and artifacts.
Subjects
- Girls Club of Greenfield (Greenfield, Mass.)
- Girls–Massachusetts–Greenfield–Social conditions
- Girls–Massachusetts–Greenfield–Social life and customs
- Girls–Massachusetts–Greenfield–Societies and clubs–History
- Greenfield (Mass.)–Social conditions
- Greenfield (Mass.)–Social life and customs
Types of material
Call no.: MS 379
Categories: Civic organizations, Massachusetts (West), Women :: :: No Comments
Gittings-Lahusen Gay Book Collection, ca.1920-2007
Barbara Gittings and her life partner Kay Tobin Lahusen were pioneers in the gay rights movement. After coming out during her freshman year at Northwestern University, Gittings became keenly aware of the difficulty of finding material to help her understand her gay identity. An inveterate organizer, she helped found the New York chapter of the early Lesbian organization, the Daughters of Bilitis (DOB) in 1957, and she became well known in the 1960s for organizing the first gay rights demonstrations at the White House and Independence Hall. Gittings later worked with organizations from the American Library Association to the American Psychiatric Association to address systematic forms of anti-gay discrimination.
The Gittings-Lahusen Gay Book Collection contains nearly 1,000 books on the gay experience in America collected by Gittings and Lahusen throughout their career. The contents range from a long run of The Ladder, the DOB magazine co-edited by the couple, to works on the psychology and sociology of homosexuality, works on religious and political issues, novels and histories by gay authors, and examples of the pulp fiction of the 1950s and 1960s.
Rare Book Collections
Categories: LGBT, Printed materials, Social justice, Women & feminism :: :: No Comments
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