George Edward Stone Papers, 1890-1957
14 boxes (6.75 linear feet).
Professor of Botany, Massachusetts Agricultural College.
Correspondence, lecture notes, reports, notes on experiments, drawings depicting original apparatus, scrapbooks of printed botanical illustrations, student papers, genealogies, memorabilia, and photographs; together with papers reflecting administrative and official duties; correspondence, notes, and news clippings on psychic phenomena; and autobiographical notes, including reflections on Massachusetts Agricultural College and on Emily Dickinson.
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Subjects- Botany--Massachusetts
- Dickinson, Emily, 1830-1886
- Horticulture--Massachusetts
- Massachusetts Agricultural College--Faculty
- Massachusetts Agricultural College. Department of Botany
- Plant physiology--Massachusetts
Contributors- Barlow, Waldo
- Stone, George E. (George Edward), 1860-1941
Types of material
Call no.: FS 085
View related collections: Agricultural education, Horticulture & botany, UMass, UMass faculty : : No Comments
Roscoe Wilfrid Thatcher Papers, 1900-1934
4 boxes (2 linear feet).
Roscoe W. Thatcher
The agronomist Roscoe Thatcher served as the last president of Massachusetts Agricultural College and the first when the institution changed its name to Massachusetts State College in 1931. Before coming to Amherst, Thatcher had extensive experience in both agricultural research and administration, having served as director of the agricultural station for the state of Washington, as professor of plant chemistry at the University of Minnesota (1913-1917), and as dean of the School of Agriculture and director of the Minnesota Experiment Station (1917-1921), and as director of the New York Agricultural Experiment Station at Geneva. Selected as President of the Massachusetts Agricultural College in 1927, he helped expand the two year program in practical agriculture to become the Stockbridge School of Agriculture and oversaw curricular reform, orienting vocational training toward citizenship education. The student health service also started during his tenure. Thatcher resigned due to ill health in 1933. Although he returned to research in agricultural chemistry at the College in April 1933, he died in his laboratory on December 6, 1933.
Official and administrative correspondence, memos, and other papers, relating to Thatcher’s service as president of Massachusetts State College together with writing and biographical material.
Subjects- Massachusetts State College. President
Contributors- Thatcher, Roscoe Wilfrid, 1872-1933
Call no.: RG 3/1 T43
View related collections: UMass administration : : No Comments
Ray Ethan Torrey Papers, 1832-1983
13 boxes (5.5 linear feet).
Ray Ethan Torrey. Photo by Frank A. Waugh
A plant morphologist and member of the Botany Department at Massachusetts Agricultural College, Ray Ethan Torrey was among the college’s most charismatic faculty members during the early twentieth century. Born in Leverett, Mass., and educated in the local public schools, Torrey graduated from MAC with the class of 1912, earning his PhD at Harvard six years later. After serving on the faculty of Grove City College and Wesleyan, he returned to his alma mater in 1919, where he remained for more than 36 years. A specialist in plant morphology and author or two widely used textbooks and numerous articles, Torrey’s introductory course in botany was among the most popular in the college. He was best known, however, for taking a broader, philosophical approach to science that encouraged students to explore the connections between philosophy, science, religion, and the humanities. Torrey died of leukemia in Boston on Jan. 16, 1956.
Correspondence, chiefly with former students and colleagues at other institutions; lecture notes and outlines; 27 pen and ink drawings; published writings and drawings; biographical material; class and laboratory notes taken by students; family and educational records (1832-1956); photographs, and other papers.
Subjects- Botany--Study and teaching
- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of Botany
Contributors
Call no.: FS 121
View related collections: Horticulture & botany, UMass faculty : : 1 Comment
UMass Amherst Faculty and Staff Collection, ca.1867-2008
175 boxes (84 linear feet).
Pres. Hugh P. Baker and
Cabinet of Faculty, 1936
From its founding in 1863, UMass Amherst has grown from rural agricultural roots into a major research university, and the handful of instructors who present at the inauguration of the college has grown into a diverse faculty of over 1,100.
The Faculty and Staff Collection contains files accumulated by the University Archives relating to the faculty, staff, and administrators of UMass Amherst and its predecessors, the Massachusetts Agricultural College and Massachusetts State College. This list is not an exhaustive accounting of present or past members of the UMass community: although full-time, part-time, and visiting faculty are included, this listing includes only those for whom the University Office of Communications or University Archives collected information. Typically these files consist of some combination of resumes, notices of honors and awards, press releases and news clippings, articles about or by the subject, obituaries, and other miscellaneous information. In many cases, the subjects are represented by only one or two items.
Subjects- Massachusetts Agricultural College
- Massachusetts Agricultural College--Faculty
- Massachusetts Agricultural College--Staff
- Massachusetts State College
- Massachusetts State College--Faculty
- Massachusetts State College--Staff
- University of Massachusetts Amherst
- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Staff
Types of material- Clippings (Information artifacts)
- Obituaries
Call no.: RG 40/11
View related collections: UMass (1947- ), UMass faculty, UMass staff : : No Comments
UMass Amherst. Trustees, 1864-2007
(84.25 linear feet).
When Massachusetts Governor John A. Andrew incorporated the Board of Trustees for the Massachusetts Agricultural College in 1863, the fourteen members of the board were charged with creating a new agricultural college. Since that time, the Board of Trustees (including student trustees) had governed the University, meeting regularly to act on University-wide matters of policy, mission, finance, and campus maintenance. Governance responsibilities in some areas (e.g., tuition, academic program review and approval) are shared with the statewide Board of Higher Education. The Board of Trustees maintains a Chair and six standing committees: Executive, Administration and Finance, Academic and Student Affairs, Athletics, Audit, and External Affairs. The President and the Five College Chancellors administer board policy.
The bulk of the Board of Trustees records consists of meeting minutes (1906-2007) and Trustee Documents (1963-2007), along with the papers of a small number of individual trustees and the records of the Trustees’ “Commission on the Future of the University of Massachusetts” (1988-1989), which resulted in the consolidation of the state’s five public university campuses under a single President and Board of Trustees. In partnership with the Board of Trustees, SCUA has digitized the complete minutes of the Board from chartering of the university in 1863 through 2004.
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Contributors- Massachusetts Agricultural College. Trustees
- Massachusetts State College. Trustees
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Trustees
Types of material
Call no.: RG 2
View related collections: UMass administration : : No Comments
Ralph Van Meter Papers, 1919-1958
2 boxes (1 linear feet).
Ralph Van Meter
Ralph Van Meter, the first president of the University of Massachusetts after it changed its name from Massachusetts State College in 1947, spent nearly 40 years learning, teaching, and leading on the Amherst campus. A graduate of Ohio State University (B.S., 1917), he came to the Massachusetts Agricultural College as a specialist in Food Conservation in 1917, serving in the Pomology Department first as a professor, and then as the head from 1936 to 1948. The Board of Trustees appointed Van Meter as Acting President in 1947 and President in 1948. He was responsible for a number of innovations, including the creation of the position of Provost (first held by John Paul Mather) and the establishment of new schools of business administration and engineering.
Correspondence, memos, reports, clippings, and other papers, relating to matters at issue during Van Meter’s presidency of University of Massachusetts including the building program, World War II veterans, accreditation, and the university seal; together with published writings, biographical material, military records, and material from Van Meter’s inauguration as university president.
Subjects- University of Massachusetts Amherst. President
Contributors- Van Meter, Ralph Albert, 1893-
Call no.: RG 3/1 V36
View related collections: UMass administration, World War II : : No Comments
Frank A. Waugh Papers, 1896-1983
Professor of landscape architecture and Head, Horticulture Department, University of Massachusetts.
Correspondence (1903-1943); draft and printed versions of articles, lectures, papers, and books; reports; 223 etchings (1934-1943) and 108 photos (1905-1942) by Waugh; plans and blueprints; syllabi and reading list; news clippings of articles by Waugh, sometimes with handwritten notes; and bibliographies, book reviews, and biographical material.
Subjects- University of Massachusetts Amherst--Faculty
- University of Massachusetts Amherst. Department of Horticulture
Contributors- Waugh, Frank A. (Frank Albert), 1869-1943
Types of material
Call no.: FS 088
View related collections: Agriculture, Landscape & gardening, Photographs, UMass, UMass faculty : : No Comments
William Wheeler Papers, 1876-1930
1 box (0.5 linear feet).
William Wheeler, ca.1876
The civil engineer William Wheeler was a member of the first graduating class of Massachusetts Agricultural College in 1871, and was one of its most prominent alumni of the nineteenth century. In 1876, Wheeler joined MAC President William Smith Clark and two other alumni of the college in helping to found the Sapporo Agricultural College in Japan (now Hokkaido University), succeeding Clark as president of SAP from 1877 to 1879. In later life, he was a successful hydraulic engineer and long-time trustee of MAC (1887-1929).
A small, tightly focused collection, the Wheeler Papers consist largely of letters written home by Wheeler while working at the Sapporo Agricultural College, 1876-1880. Typically long and descriptive, the letters include excellent accounts of travel in Japan and Wheeler’s impressions of Japanese culture, but they provide detailed insight as well into the work involved in establishing Sapporo Agricultural College.
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Subjects- Agriculture--Japan
- Clark, William Smith, 1826-1886
- Hokkaido (Japan)--Description and travel--19th century
- Hokkaido Daigaku
- Japan--Description and travel--19th century
- Massachusetts Agricultural College
- Penhallow, D. P. (David Pearce), 1854-1910
- Sapporo (Japan)--Description and travel--19th century
Contributors- Hudson, Woodward
- Wheeler, William, 1851-1932
Types of material
Call no.: RG 2/3 W54
View related collections: Agriculture, Japan, UMass, UMass administration : : No Comments
Marshall P. Wilder Collection, 1848-1929
3 boxes (1.5 linear feet).
Marshall P. Wilder
A merchant and amateur horticulturalist from Dorchester, Mass., Marshall P. Wilder (1798-1886) was a key figure in American pomology during the mid-nineteenth century and a major supporter of agricultural education. A supreme organizer and institution builder, he was a founder and president of the American Pomological Society and United States Agricultural Society, and president of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society and New England Historic Genealogical Society. His 1849 address before the Norfolk Agricultural Society is often credited as an important catalyst for the creation of the Massachusetts Agricultural College, and he served as trustee of the College from its opening in 1867 until his death in 1886.
The Wilder Collection consists primarily of printed works written or collected by Marshall P. Wilder, including materials pertaining to early meetings of the American Pomological Society and the United States Agricultural Society, his 1849 address to the Norfolk Agricultural Society, and his address to the first graduating class at MAC. Among the handful of manuscripts are a draft proposal to hold a national meeting of fruit growers (the inaugural meeting of the American Pomological Society), two letters regarding his donation of a large number of books to the MAC library, and a bound set of 22 beautiful watercolors of pear varieties painted by Louis B. Berckmans.
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Subjects- Agricultural exhibitions
- American Pomological Society
- Horticulture--Massachusetts
- Massachusetts Agricultural College. Trustees
- New-England Historic Genealogical Society
- Pomology--Massachusetts
- United States Agricultural Society
Contributors- Wilder, Marshall P. (Marshall Pinckney), 1798-1886
Types of material
Call no.: RG 2/3 W55
View related collections: Agricultural education, Horticulture & botany, UMass administration : : No Comments