UMarmot(SCUA)

Special Collections & University Archives
Collections

Tass Sovfoto Photograph Collection

Tass Sovfoto Photograph Collection, 1919-1963 (bulk: 1943-1963). 111 items (0.25 linear feet).
Lenin at the 3rd International, 1919
Lenin at the 3rd International, 1919

For many years, Sovfoto, a stock photograph agency based in New York City, was the sole source in the United States for the best work in contemporary Soviet photojournalism. Founded in 1932, the company carried photographers for Tass and, later, other news agencies from throughout the Soviet republics, Eastern Europe, and China.

The Tass Sovfoto Collection depicts Soviet life, primarily in the 1950s and early 1960s. Typically rendered in heroic Soviet style, the photographs are relatively varied in subject, documenting political events (e.g., Communist Party meetings, the meeting of Kennedy and Khrushchev); generals, politicians, and celebrities (Lenin, Khrushchev, Shostakovich); and athletic and cultural events. A few images appear to be parts of photo essays aimed at a popular audience, including images of Jewish life in Russia and the life of a Soviet worker, while others are stock images of Soviet troops during the Second World War.

Subjects

  • Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963.
  • Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, 1894-1971.
  • Lenin, Vladimir Il’ich, 1870-1924.
  • Shostakovich, Dmitrii Dmitrievich, 1906-1975.
  • Soviet Union–Photographs.
  • World War, 1939-1945.
Call no.: PH 010

Tax Equity Alliance of Massachusetts, Initiative 1990

Tax Equity Alliance of Massachusetts Intiative Collection, 1988-1989. 1 folder (0.1 linear feet).

Founded in 1987, the Tax Equity Alliance of Massachusetts Initiative (TEAM) was a coalition of government groups, civic and business leaders, human services advocates, unions, and others sharing the conviction that fair taxation and quality services must go hand-in-hand. The collection is limited to their publication, “Talking Tax,” and brochures both for their volunteers and for the public.

Subjects

  • Taxation–Massachusetts.
Call no.: MS 321

Textile Workers Union of America. New Bedford Joint Board

TWUA New Bedford Joint Board Records, 1942-1981. 19 boxes (9 linear feet).

Four local unions located in New Bedford, Massachusetts, that joined in 1939 and became the first affiliates of the New Bedford Joint Board of the Textile Workers Union of America. Includes by-laws, minutes of board of directors and local meetings, correspondence, subject files, photographs, and scrapbooks relating to the administration of the New Bedford Joint Board, documenting its role in addressing grievances filed against individual companies, in facilitating arbitration, and hearing wage stabilization Board cases.

Call no.: MS 134

Thatcher, Roscoe Wilfrid, 1872-1933

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

  • Thatcher, Roscoe Wilfrid, 1872-1933.
  • Massachusetts State College. President.
Call no.: RG 3/1 T43

Thayer Family Industries

Thayer Family Industries Ledger, 1847-1855. 1 v. (0 linear feet).

The Thayer family operated a small manufacturing complex on the Deerfield River in Charlemont, Massachusetts. Businesses included a sawmill, a foundry, a shop for the manufacture of axes and edged tools, and a tannery. Ledger documents their businesses and reflects the exchange economy of rural Massachusetts.

Subjects

  • Axe industry–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Barter–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Charlemont (Mass.)–Economic conditions–19th century
  • Charlemont (Mass.)–Rural conditions–19th century
  • Foundries–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Kingsley, Edmond
  • Manufacturing industries–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Sawmills–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Tanneries–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century
  • Thayer family
  • Thayer, Alonzo, b. 1817
  • Thayer, Ruel, b. 1785
  • Thayer, Ruel, b. 1824
  • Tinsmiths–Massachusetts–Charlemont–History–19th century

Types of material

Call no.: MS 238bd

Thomas, Norman, 1884-1968

Norman Thomas Autobiography, 1946-1958. 1 box (0.5 linear feet).

An ardent Socialist and pacifist, Norman Thomas ran six times as a democratic socialist candidate for president of the United States. Born in 1884 in Marion, Ohio, the son of a Presbyterian minister, Thomas became a leading voice of the non-Communist left, taking up the causes of civil rights, peace, and social justice.

Thomas’s memoir traces the major events of his life from his boyhood and education at Bucknell and Princeton, to his experiences during both world wars, and from his acceptance of Socialism to his reflections on religion.

Subjects

Call no.: MS 186

Thomas, R. Brooke

R. Brooke Thomas Papers, ca.1948-1990. 118 boxes (177 linear feet).

During his tenure as Professor of Anthropology at UMass Amherst, R. Brooke Thomas conducted research on biocultural adaptations of Andean peoples to hypoxia, cold, undernutrition, and disease. Born in Lancaster, PA in June 1939, Thomas earned both his BA (1963) and PhD (1972) in Anthropology from Penn State University, focusing on the adaptation of human populations to multiple environmental constraints, particularly those populations residing in high altitude areas. He and his students are noted for their early work in the fields of environmental anthropology and political ecology, analyzing the interplay between political economic and biological factors.

The Thomas Papers are comprised of biological, ethnographic, and anthropometric survey data relating to Indian cultures in the Central Andes, particularly in Peru, along with Thomas’s dissertation and research data, notes for research and teaching, correspondence, and an extensive run of publications.

Subjects

Call no.: FS 105

Thompson, William

William Thompson Account Book, 1861-1862. 1 folder (0.1 linear feet).

William Thompson’s 1861-1862 account of his business with George Dodge and Co., a general store in an unidentified town. Thompson bought everything from suspenders to fish, and indigo to K oil from Dodge.

Subjects

Types of material

Call no.: MS 097

Thomson, J. (John), 1837-1921

John Thomson Photograph Collection, 1863. 1.5 linear feet
Caledonia Sugar Mill

The Scotsman John Thomson is considered one of the fathers of social documentary photography and a pioneer in the photography of southeast Asia. Between 1861 and 1872, he traveled extensively in Asia, documenting the scenery and people of modern day Malaysia, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia, and China.

The collection includes eight albumen prints from wet-plate collodion negatives taken early in Thomson’s photographic career. The images of Penang, Malaysia, are all signed by John Thomson, with five dated November 1863. Subjects include Malay people, a native infantry regiment, sugar mill, temple, and Thomson’s widely reproduced image of tree ferns.

Subject terms

  • George Town (Pinang)–Photographs
  • Kedah–Photographs
  • Malaysia–Photographs

Contributors

  • Thomson, J. (John), 1837-1921

Types of material

  • Albumen prints.
  • Photographs.
Call no.: PH 002

Thresholds to Life

Thresholds to Life Records, 1983-1986. 1 box (0.25 linear feet).

Thresholds to Life is a training program for decision making, problem solving, and life planning taught by volunteers to prison inmates and offenders on probation in 30 locations in the United States. The records in this collection are those of the Thresholds program in Greenfield, Massachusetts, a United Way agency.

Subjects

  • Prisoners–Massachusetts.
  • Thresholds to Life.
Call no.: MS 156
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