UMarmot(SCUA)

Special Collections & University Archives
Collections

Jakubowska-Schlatner, Basia

Basia Jakubowska-Schlatner Solidarity (Solidarnosc) Collection, 1979-1989. 26 boxes (38.5 linear feet)

As a university student in Warsaw, Poland, in January 1977, Barbara Jakubowska-Schlatner made the decision to join the democratic resistance to the Communist regime. For more than twelve years, she was an active member of the Solidarity (Solidarnosc) movement, organizing opposition to state oppression, producing and distributing underground literature, and working with the pirate broadcasts of Solidarity radio.

Recognizing the importance of the underground press to the Solidarity movement, Jakubowska-Schlatner went to extraordinary lengths to collect and preserve their publications. At various times, the collection was kept in the basement of her mother’s house, spread around among a series of safe locations, and sometimes even secreted in small caches in back lots. The collection of over 1,500 titles is centered on the underground press in Warsaw, but includes titles published in Wroclaw, Gdansk, Krakow, and other cities. These include a startling array of publications, from fliers, handbills, and ephemera to translations of foreign literature, newspapers and periodicals, a science fiction magazine, and instructions on how to run a small press.

Call no.: Rare Book Collections

Jansen, Isabel

Isabel Jansen Papers, ca.1950-1985. 12.5 boxes (19 linear feet).

A Registered Nurse and surgical assistant at Marquette University Medical and Dental Schools, Isabel Jansen was a long-time opponent of fluoridation of drinking water. In 1949, her hometown of Antigo, Wisconsin, became one of the first in the state to put fluorides in its water supply. Jansen emerged as a prominent voice in opposition, arguing that fluorides had a cumulative toxic effect when ingested over a long period, and using public health data, she concluded that fluoridation was strongly correlated with an increase in mortality from heart disease and with a variety of other deleterious health effects. In 1960, she succeeded in ending fluoridation, however after a follow up survey showed a dramatic rise in tooth decay, Antigo residents voted five years later to reintroduce fluoride. Jansen has continued a vigorous resistance, publishing a series of articles on the public health impact and Fluoridation : A Modern Procrustean Practice (1990) and .

The Jansen Papers include a range of correspondence, newsclippings, articles, and notes regarding Isabel Jansen’s long struggle against the fluoridation of drinking water.

Subjects

  • Jansen, Isabel.
  • Fluorides–Environmental aspects.
  • Fluorides–Toxicology.
Call no.: MS 612

Jefferson, Lorian P.

Lorian P. Jefferson Papers, 1913-1929. 1 box (0.25 linear feet).

An historian of economics specializing in American agriculture, Lorian Pamela Jefferson was one of the first women in the field and became an expert on New England agricultural industry. Born in 1871 near Necedah, Wisconsin, Jefferson earned her B.L. from Lawrence University in 1892 and her M.A. from the University of Wisconsin in 1907, continuing on to study towards her PhD though she never finished her research. Jefferson began working at the University in 1912 as an expert in the Division of Rural Social Science and became a professor of Agricultural Economics in 1915. Known as “Miss J”, Jefferson was a dedicated teacher and published extensively on various aspects of agricultural industry and marketing, including the McIntosh apple market and the agricultural labor movement. Illness forced Jefferson’s retirement from the University in 1935 and she died shortly thereafter.

Industry reports, farm and community market assessments, and many of her published articles make up the majority of the collection. There is also a bound volume of correspondence and pamphlets by Jefferson from 1914 titled “Letters Relating to economic Entomology in the United States.” Among the published work is a copy of the magazine Farm and Garden from April, 1924.

Subjects

  • Jefferson, Lorian P.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of Agricultural Economics.
Call no.: FS 072

Jeffrey, Fred P.

Fred P. Jeffrey, 1911-1997. 2 boxes (1 linear foot).

Frederick Painter Jeffrey was born in the coal mining town of Trauger, Pennsylvania in February 1911. Jeffrey received a BA in poultry husbandry at Pennsylvania State College in 1932 and then an MS in poultry genetics at Massachusetts State College in 1934. Jeffrey became a professor of Poultry Science at Rutgers University from 1935-1944; after leaving Rutgers, Jeffrey became a professor in the Poultry Science Department at the University of Massachusetts, a department he later headed. In 1954 he became the Dean of the Stockbridge School of Agriculture, a position he held until his retirement in 1971. Frederick Painter Jeffrey died in September 1997.

The Frederick Painter Jeffrey Papers include materials about his work with Bantam chickens and document his tenure at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. There are also limited materials related to his family and schooling.

Subjects

  • Jeffrey, Fred P.
  • Poultry–Breeding.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of Poultry Science.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Stockbridge School of Agriculture.
Call no.: FS 010

Jones, Ellen

Ellen Jones Diary, 1856-1869. 1 v. (0.1 linear feet).

An eighteen year old girl when she began keeping her diary, Ellen Jones was living in the towns of Keeseville and Jay, both in upstate New York. She attended school in Keeseville, and many of her early entries focus on her schoolwork and on church services. Later entries reveal her growing concern about her ill health. The diary also includes a few entries that mention the Civil War and the boys and men she knew who were serving in the Union Army.

Subjects

Call no.: MS 370bd

Jones, Richard

Richard Jones Papers, ca.1970-1991. 2 boxes (1 linear foot).

Over the course of his esteemed dance career, Richard Jones performed with Eleo Pomare Company, the Miguel Godreau Dance Company, and the Xochipillian Dance Group. Jones was appointed to the staff of the University of Massachusetts on September 1, 1973, and remained with the department until his death in 1991. While at the University, Jones was the founding artistic director of the Amdans Theater, and was the artistic director of the University Dancers from 1979 to 1991.

The Jones Papers are a collection of photographs and reviews of Jones’s choreography during the 1970s and 1980s. A copy of Jones’s original essay, “Costuming for Three Styles of Dance,” (circa 1975) appears in the collection, as do photographs, playbills, posters, Amdans Theatre and University Dancers reviews. The Papers also contain letters to Jones from the Boston Ballet and the American College Dance Festival, as well as reviews of Jones’s choreography for professional companies outside the University.

Subjects

Call no.: FS 006

Joseph D. Norton and Son (Westhampton, Mass.)

Joseph D. Norton and Son Account Book, 1851-1881. 1 v. (0.25 linear feet).

Father and son wood turners, manufacturers of ladders, and general wood workers from the Loudville section of Westhampton, Massachusetts. Includes names of customers and businesses (bulk of the accounts are with local lumber and furniture dealers S.M. Smith Co., E.H. Lyman, Medad Pomeroy, and Charles Loud & Co.), items sold (such as bureaus, tables, and lumber), furniture that they repaired, and supply items which they acquired (such as varnish, stain, glass, tacks). Also contains documentation of employee payment, flour, tow, sugar, and coffee purchases, and employee lost work days.

Subjects

  • Charles Loud & Co.
  • E. H. Lyman (Firm)
  • Furniture industry and trade–Massachusetts–Northampton–History–19th century
  • Furniture industry and trade–Massachusetts–Westhampton–History–19th century
  • Furniture–Repairing–Massachusetts–Loudville–History–19th century
  • Ladders–History
  • Loudville (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Lumber trade–Massachusetts–Northampton–History–19th century
  • Lumber trade–Massachusetts–Westhampton–History–19th century
  • Medad Pomeroy (Firm)
  • Norton, Joseph D.
  • Norton, Leonard
  • S.M. Smith Co.
  • Wages–Furniture workers–Massachusetts–Loudville–History–19th century
  • Wages-in-kind–Massachusetts–Loudville–History–19th century
  • Woodworkers–Massachusetts–Loudville–Economic conditions–19th century

Types of material

Call no.: MS 103bd

Junkins, Donald

Donald Junkins Papers, 1961-1970. 3 boxes (1.5 linear feet).

A poet, expert on the works of Hemingway, Robert Francis, and D.H. Lawrence, and a 1953 graduate of the University, Donald Junkins directed the Master of Fine Arts in English program from 1966. Junkins juggled his career as a poet with his work at the University, focusing his teaching energy on literature, not creative writing, to save his creative resources. Before turning his energies to poetry, Junkins studied theology at Boston University School of Theology. While a student, Junkins met poet Robert Francis, took courses with Robert Lowell and, discovering his love of poetry through these contacts, Junkins life path was forever changed. After leaving Boston University, Junkins taught creative writing at Chico State University before coming to the University.

The Donald Junkins Papers document some of his creative output while at the University through a collection of literary journals containing his poetry, drafts of poems, published and unpublished with notes and galley proofs of his poetry collection And Sandpipers She Said, published by The University of Massachusetts Press in 1970. Two mimeographed publications of student poems represent his teaching work at Chico State University.

Subjects

  • Junkins, Donald.
  • Poetry.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst–Faculty.
  • University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of English.
Call no.: FS 074

Justice for Woody

Justice for Woody Records, 1998-2005. 3 boxes (2.5 linear feet).

The organization Justice for Woody (JFW) was formed in December of 2001 in the weeks immediately following the death of Robert “Woody” Woodward, a political and environmental activist, social worker, teacher, and mountaineer. JFW seeks not only to honor Woody’s legacy, but also to advocate for a fair an independent investigation. The collection consists primarily of newspaper articles from various New England papers as well as Attorney General Sorrell’s Report and an independent analysis of it.

Subjects

  • Brattleboro (Vt.).–Police Dept.
  • Law enforcemnet–Vermont
  • Police brutality–Vermont
  • Police discretion
  • Woodward, Robert, d. 2001
  • Wrongful death–Vermont
Call no.: MS 444
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