Lang Papers
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> Scope and Contents of the Collection
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Scope and Contents of the Collection
The Malvina Stanton Lang Papers consist of course records, account books, a commonplace book, writings, recollections, memorabilia, biographical information, and a portrait. Most items in the collection date from her time as a student at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (1846-1849) and the years before her marriage in 1856. Three notebooks in the collection contain essays and notes reflecting her study of botany, Joseph Butler's "Analogy of Religion" and John Milton's "Paradise Lost" in 1848-1849. Two account books contain a record of her expenses from 1845-1851, mainly for food, postage, and mending supplies. Her recollections about Mount Holyoke's founder Mary Lyon are in a letter she wrote in 1906 to Louise F. Cowles, a former teacher. Her commonplace book dates from circa 1849-circa 1892 and contains poetry from authors such as John Greenleaf Whittier, Rudyard Kipling, and Oliver Wendell Holmes as well as newspaper clippings on "The Coverdale Bible." Writings consist of two poems by Lang probably from the 1840s. Memorabilia dates from 1849-1905 and consist of her certification to teach English in New Hampshire and her diploma from Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, as well as her induction into the Woman's Board of Missions. Biographical information includes a biographical note and three obituaries, all from 1919. The portrait of Lang is an watercolor miniature painted on ivory by "L. Unger" (Leopold Paul Unger) of Allentown, Pennsylvania in 1852. Material from this collection is available in an online digital format. This collection is organized into eight series:
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