Collection number: MS 60
Collection number: MS 60
Terms of Access and Use:
The papers are open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia Smith Collection.
Copyright to the Garrison Family Papers is owned by the Sophia Smith Collection. Permission to cite the papers for quotations or for publication beyond "fair use" must be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection. Copyright to materials authored by persons other than the Garrison Family is owned by those individuals or their heirs or assigns. It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of all copyrights.
The Garrison Family Papers include five generations of the Garrison family, four generations of the Wright family and five generations of the Stephenson family. There are detailed biographical sketches in standard reference works as well as biographies of members of the Garrison and Wright families. These include Dictionary of American Biography (DAB), Notable American Women (NAW). William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; The story of his life told by his children, All On Fire, William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery by Henry Mayer, Growing Up Abolitionist, The Story of the Garrison Children by Harriet Alonso, and James and Lucretia Mott: Life and Letters by Anna Davis Hallowell. Please consult also the Family Trees in the Sophia Smith Collection (note: the Garrison Family Tree is also online: http://www.smith.edu/libraries/libs/ssc/atg/garrison.html#tree).
The Garrison Family
Generation 1: Abijah Garrison and Frances ("Fanny") Lloyd Garrison
The Garrison Family Papers begin with Abijah Garrison (1773 - ?) and Frances ("Fanny") Lloyd Garrison (1776-1823). Abijah was born in an isolated farming community in New Brunswick, Canada. By the 1790s he had become a seaman based in St. John. He married Frances Lloyd in 1798 and they settled on the Jemseg River in New Brunswick. They moved to St. John in 1801. They had two daughters (Mary Ann and Caroline Eliza) and a son (James Holley). Mary Ann died in infancy and in 1805 the family moved to Newburyport, Massachusetts. In December of that year a fourth child, William Lloyd, was born, followed by Elizabeth Knowlton in 1808. A man of intemperate habits, Abijah abandoned his wife and family shortly after Elizabeth's birth. He was never heard from again.
Generation 2: William Lloyd Garrison and Helen Benson Garrison
Frances Lloyd Garrison, abandoned with small children to care for, placed her son William Lloyd (1805-1879) (see DAB) in the care of Deacon Ezekiel Bartlett. He received little schooling, and was apprenticed in 1818 to Ephraim Allen of the Newburyport Herald. In 1826 he became editor of the Free Press. When the press failed he became a journeyman printer and in 1828 he joined with Nathaniel White in editing the temperance newspaper National Philanthropist. Influenced by Benjamin Lundy, a Quaker, he became interested in the abolition movement, a cause he championed for the next thirty years. He founded the abolitionist newspaper, The Liberator, in 1831 which he published until 1865. In 1834 he married Helen Benson, daughter of a retired merchant and member of an abolitionist family. They had seven children: George Thompson (1836-1904) , William Lloyd (1838-1909), Wendell Phillips (1840-1907), Charles Follen (1842-1849), Helen Frances ("Fanny") (1844-1928) , Elizabeth Pease (1846-1848), and Francis Jackson (1848-1916). Although there are papers generated by all of the surviving children, those of William Lloyd are most complete.
Generation 3: Children of William Lloyd Garrison and Helen Benson Garrison
There are seven descendents in Generation 3 of the Garrison family. All of the children of William Lloyd and Helen Benson Garrison, with the exception of George, followed in their father's reform footsteps. Wendell, via his editorship at The Nation, was involved in abolition, freedman's relief, and racial and sexual equality. Fanny, following the death of her husband, Henry Villard, became involved in the suffrage movement and pacifism. Francis in addition to his position as editor at Houghton Mifflin, championed racial and sexual equality. A detailed description of all of the children in Generation 3 can be found in Harriet Alonso's Growing Up Abolitionist, the Story of the Garrison Children. The primary persons in this generation represented in the Papers are William Lloyd Garrison and Ellen Wright Garrison.
William Lloyd Garrison left school at the age of eighteen to begin a business career. In 1855 he became associated with abolitionist James Buffum and lived with the Buffum family for seven years where he became involved in various reform movements. He held clerical and banking positions and in 1864 he went into the wool business. In addition, he established one of the earliest electric light stations in Brockton, Massachusetts, and also dealt in bonds, retiring from business in 1902. He was, however, a reformer at heart and up until his death in 1909 was involved in abolition, women's rights and suffrage, immigration reform, Armenian and Russian relief, Irish home rule, anti-imperialism, pacifism, temperance, and free trade. He was also an avid single taxer and president of the Massachusetts Single Tax league. In 1864 he married Ellen Wright, daughter of Martha Coffin and David Wright (See Wright Family).
Ellen Wright was born in 1842 and grew up in a Quaker abolitionist community. She was educated at abolitionist Theodore Weld's Eagleswood School in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, Sharon Female Seminary in Darby, Pennsylvania, and Mrs. Sedgwick's Young Ladies School in Lenox, Massachusetts. Influenced by her mother's activism, a life long friendship with Susan B. Anthony, and the reform movements of her husband, Ellen was an active life member in the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
Generation 4: Children of William Lloyd Garrison and Ellen Wright Garrison
There are eighteen descendents in Generation 4 of the Garrison family. William Lloyd and Ellen had five children: Agnes (1866-1950), Charles (1868-1951), Frank Wright (1871-1961), William Lloyd (1874-1964), and Eleanor (1880-1974). Although there is material on all of the children as well as other family members, William, Eleanor and Agnes are the most well represented in these papers.
William graduated from Harvard in 1897 and attended Harvard Law School. He became an investment banker and in 1908 became a partner in the firm of Perry, Coffin & Burr. When that partnership was dissolved, he became president of a new firm of Coffin & Burr. According to family members, in hard times he was known to have reimbursed clients from his own pocket if they lost money from his investments. He retired in 1933. A reformer at heart his causes included anti-vaccination, anti-imperialism, free trade, pacifism and racial and sexual equality. In 1901 he married Edith Alice Stephenson (see also Stephenson Family).
Edith was born in 1878, the third of seven children of Benjamin Turner and Luda Grant Stephenson. She was trained as a concert pianist. In addition to raising their six children, she was active in the suffrage movement and was president of the Newton Equal Suffrage League.
Eleanor graduated from Smith College in 1904 and received a Master of Arts degree from Radcliffe in 1906. When she graduated, the suffrage movement was at its peak and she worked avidly for the vote until 1919. In 1912 she became an organizer for Carrie Chapman Catt who headed the New York State campaign for women's suffrage headquartered in New York City. When the campaign ended she became interested in photography which she worked at for 10 years. In the 1940s she moved to California to care for her sister Agnes, remaining there with her brother Frank after Agnes' death.
Generation 5: The children of William Lloyd Garrison and Edith Stephenson Garrison
There are twenty-nine descendents in Generation 5 of the Garrison family. The papers primarily concern the children of William Lloyd and Edith Stephenson: William Lloyd (1902-1988 ) Claire ("Tita") (1903-1985), David Lloyd (1906- 2001), John Bright (1909-1988) Faith (1910- 1981) and Edith Lloyd ("Yoy") (1913-1993). The largest portion of the papers concern David.
David Lloyd Garrison graduated from Harvard in 1928 with a degree in fine arts. He taught for several years and then joined J.H. Emerson Co., manufacturers of breathing equipment. He was an avid birder, and just prior to World War II he was curator of birds at New England Museum of Natural History and the editor of the Bulletin of New England Bird Life. He published a number of papers on birds. He relinquished his conscientious objector status and served as a non-combatant medical technician during World War II. He married Alice ("Pat) O'Reilly (his superior officer) in 1945. After the war he resumed his work for the J. H. Emerson Company. He was also an amateur artist and was active in peace activism, land conservation and civic and church affairs.
The papers do not go beyond Generation 5 of the Garrison family, but there are 60 Garrison descendents in Generation 6.
The Wright family
There are four generations of the Wright family represent in the Garrison family papers. Material in these papers primarily represent Martha Coffin Wright, Lucretia Coffin Mott, Marianna Pelham Mott, and Eliza Wright Osborne.
Martha Coffin Wright (see NAW) was the eighth child of Thomas Coffin and Anna Folger Coffin. She was born in 1806 and in 1824, after three years of boarding school, she married army captain Peter Pelham. They had a daughter Marianna. Pelham died in 1826. In 1829 Martha married lawyer David Wright with whom she had six children: Eliza (1830), Matthew Tallman (1832), Ellen (1840), William Pelham (1842), Frank (1844), and Charles (1848). In 1848 she joined with her sister Lucretia Coffin Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Jane Hunt, and Mary Ann McClintock in planning the first woman's right convention at Seneca Falls, New York. She continued to be active throughout her life in the cause for women's rights and suffrage. She was elected to the presidency of the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1874.
Lucretia Coffin Mott (see NAW) was the second child of Thomas Coffin and Anna Folger Coffin. Born in 1793 on Nantucket, Massachusetts, in a Quaker household, she was educated in a Friends boarding school near Poughkeepsie, New York, where she later taught. In 1811 she married James Mott, a fellow teacher, who shared her causes and feminist leanings. She was an avid abolitionist and pacifist, and along with her sister Martha Coffin Wright, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Jane Hunt, and Mary Ann McClintock, planned the first woman's right convention at Seneca Falls, New York. She was president of the American Equal Rights Association from 1866 until the organization split into the National American Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association in 1869. The Motts had five children: Anna, Maria, Thomas, Elizabeth, and Martha. Thomas Mott married Marianna Pelham, the eldest daughter of Martha Coffin Wright.
Marianna Pelham was the daughter of Martha Coffin Wright by her first husband, Peter Pelham. In 1845 she married her cousin, Thomas Mott, son of Lucretia Coffin Mott and James Mott. They had three children: Isabel (1846), Emily (1848) and Maria (1853).
Eliza was the eldest of six children of Martha Coffin and David Wright. In 1851 she married David Munson Osborne. They had four children, Florence (1856), Emily (1853), Thomas Mott (1859) and Helen (1884).
Stephenson Family
There are five generations of the Stephenson family represented in the Garrison Family Papers. The first generation includes Bryant Parrot (1784-1841) and Abigail Gilbert Balkam (1784-1857) Stephenson. There is further documentation of the subsequent generations up to the nieces and nephews of Edith Stephenson Garrison. Edith's papers are included with the Garrison Family, and the Stephensons are primarily represented by Benjamin Turner and Lucinda (Luda) Grant Stephenson, the parents of Edith Alice Stephenson.
The Garrison Family Papers consist of 117.75 linear feet of material and contain thousands of primary sources that document three families' involvement in most of the major reform movements of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The collection spans the years 1694 to 2005, but the bulk of the material dates from 1830 to 1950. Types of material include correspondence, diaries, writings, speeches, legal documents, photographs, journal and newspaper articles, memorabilia, and a wide variety of printed sources.
Included are the papers of two families who married into the Garrisons: the Wrights (Ellen Wright married William Lloyd Garrison (1838-1909)) and the Stephensons (Edith Stephenson married William Lloyd Garrison (1874 -1964)). The Wright family includes the Coffins (Ellen's mother was Martha Coffin Wright) and the Mott family (Ellen's aunt, Martha's elder sister, was Lucretia Coffin Mott) and their descendents. These papers trace the activities of the Garrison, Wright and Stephenson families and their friends and associates in England, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and New York, among other places.
Although there is unique correspondence, biographical material, printed material, and memorabilia related to William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879), the largest part of the collection relates to his son William Lloyd Garrison (1838-1909) and WLG's (1838-1909) wife, Ellen Wright Garrison, and their descendents. The influence of patriarch William Lloyd Garrison (1805) can be seen as each generation took its place in the reform movements of its time. These include abolition, anti-imperialism, anti-vaccination, conservation, free trade and tariff reform, immigration reform, pacifism, race, single tax, and temperance. The papers are an especially important source for the suffrage and women's rights movements because they include the correspondence of Martha Coffin Wright and Lucretia Coffin Mott with other leaders of the movement; as well as correspondence, printed material and ephemera of Eleanor Garrison, who was an organizer for the Empire State suffrage campaign under Carrie Chapman Catt. Major correspondents on abolition, women's rights, and other reforms include Susan B. Anthony, Alice Stone Blackwell, Henry B. Blackwell, Carrie Chapman Catt, Lucy Conant, Matilda Joslyn Gage, Henry George, Lucretia Coffin Mott, Emmeline and Sylvia Pankhurst, Theodore Parker, Wendell Phillips, Parker Pillsbury, Louis Prang, Caroline Severance, Anna Howard Shaw, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, Booker T. Washington, Theodore Dwight Weld, Frances E. Willard, and Marie Zakrzewska.
Because the Garrisons were a close-knit family, in addition to a wide view of reform, the papers offer a look at two centuries of intimate family life, inter-generational dynamics, and social history. There is extensive correspondence between parents and children, siblings, husbands and wives, cousins, aunts and uncles. They also had a wide circle of friends and associates and an extensive social network, especially in and around Boston.
For the purposes of this project, Garrison family members have been defined as original Garrisons and their direct descendants and anyone who married into the family. In order to differentiate between the various William Lloyd Garrisons, they have been identified by initials and birth dates: i.e. WLG (1805); WLG(1838); WLG (1874), and WLG(1902). It is not always clear which WLG some of the material relates to. The same holds true for the three generations which contain a Benjamin Turner Stephenson in the Stephenson family. Married women are located under their married names.
Since the Garrisons and Wrights were involved in so many reform movements, their letters are full of references to noted people and related activities. Although incomplete, there are two ways this information can be accessed. One is via the card catalog in the Sophia Smith Collection, a second via letter indexes. Approximately one-half of the Garrison Family Papers were indexed by subject for inclusion in the card catalog. Although the box numbers are now outdated, the information contained on the cards is a valuable tool. Over the years, family members, especially Frank Wright Garrison, indexed large portions of the Garrison and Wright family correspondence. These indexes are filed separately at the end of the collection. They are arranged by author and then somewhat randomly by date and consist of detailed notations on the contents of each letter. Although they are somewhat difficult to use, these indexes represent an extraordinary body of information.
The papers are arranged as follows:
The papers are open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia Smith Collection.
Copyright to the Garrison Family Papers is owned by the Sophia Smith Collection. Permission to cite the papers for quotations or for publication beyond "fair use" must be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection. Copyright to materials authored by persons other than the Garrison Family is owned by those individuals or their heirs or assigns. It is the responsibility of the researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of all copyrights.
Please use the following format when citing materials from this collection:
Garrison Family Papers, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College, Northampton, Mass.
Selections from the Garrison Family Papers can be viewed in the Web exhibit Across the Generations: Exploring U.S. History through Family Papers.
The following materials from the Garrison Family Papers are available on microfilm: Series I. Biographical Materials; Series II. Diaries; Series III. Correspondence; Series IV. Writings and Speeches; Series V. Financial matters; Series VI. Subject files; Series VIII. Memorabilia; and Series XI. Scrapbooks. The microfilm is available in the Sophia Smith Collection and in the circulating collection of Neilson Library. The latter is available on interlibrary loan. A reel index is also available. (Contact the SSC for more information).
Also on microfilm:
The Garrison Family Papers were donated to the Sophia Smith Collection by Eleanor Garrison (Smith 1904) beginning in 1948, and continued by Frank Wright Garrison. The major growth of the collection can be traced in the Friends of the Smith College Library Reports, 1948-1965. Since then additional donations were made by various friends and family members: Mrs. Hendon Chubb, James Gould, Lucretia Wells, Otelia Cromwell, Lucia Norton Valentine, Edna Stantial, Agnes Garrison, and William Lloyd and Edith Stephenson Garrison. The most recent donation was made in 2001 and 2002 by Edith Garrison Griffin.
Periodic additions to collection are expected.
Reprocessed in 2003 by Susan L. Boone, Sarah Keen, Kara McClurken, Jessica Petocz, and Meredith Van Dyke. Processing funded by the Bodman Foundation.
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(1830-2005)
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5.25 linear ft
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| Note: [See also SERIES IV. WRITINGS AND SPEECHES - WLG 1838 and WLG 1874 commemorative verse and writings] This material is divided into four subseries: Papers, Genealogy, Garrison Family and Friends and associates. The first subseries consists of correspondence, articles, and inventories regarding Garrison Papers located in other repositories. They are arranged alphabetically by repository. The Genealogy subseries contains Garrison Family genealogical research and correspondence. Genealogical material related to the Wright Family and Stephenson Family is contained in SERIES X and XI respectively. It includes James Gould's research material gathered while compiling the family trees, Frank Wright Garrison's notes, and the notes and correspondence compiled by Wendell Phillips Garrison in 1884 while attempting to trace the family's early history in New Brunswick, Canada. The third subseries, containing information on fifty-two Garrisons, is arranged alphabetically by person and consists of clippings, pamphlets, datebooks, legal records (wills, birth and marriage certificates), tributes, memorials, biographies, commemorative poems, letters of recommendation, and related correspondence. The largest groups of material relate to WLG (1805) and WLG (1838). Of particular interest are various biographies of WLG (1805), including a hand written memoir written by his son, WLG (1838); documents related to the Francis Todd libel suit brought against Garrison and Benjamin Lundy in 1830; and documents related to an incident in 1835 when WLG (1805) barely escaped lynching by a mob in Boston. There is a handwritten autobiographical reminiscence of WLG (1838) dictated to his daughter Agnes in 1909 and correspondence related to his railroad accident in 1871. The fourth subseries, Friends and associates, consists of the same type of materials as subseries three with the addition of published writings and memorabilia. This subseries contains information on many noted people. Although most of the material included here concerns friends of the Garrisons, there is also information about others that that the family collected. They include Susan B. Anthony; Alice Stone Blackwell; Josephine Butler; Frederick Douglass; Henry George; Thomas Wentworth Higginson; the May, McKim, and Pankhurst families; Harriet Martineau; Theodore Parker; Wendell Phillips; Parker Pillsbury; Joseph Lindon Smith (including drawings and sketches); Harriet Tubman; Booker T. Washington; Theodore Dwight Weld; and Marie Zakrzewska. The McKim family includes an autobiographical dairy (1831-36) by James Miller McKim, a cookbook (1831) belonging to Sarah Speakman McKim, and documents related to her separation from the Society of Friends for marrying outside the Society (1840). Also of interest is an 1872 sea diary of Charles Daniel. |
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(1854-1995)
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9 linear ft.
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This series contains narrative and line-a-day diaries and date books for eleven Garrisons: Agnes (1879-1945), David Lloyd (1950-95), Edith Stephenson (1907-63), Eleanor (1913-15), Ellen Wright (1854-1915), Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall (1886-1961), Robert Hale (1913-14, 1959), Wendell Phillips (1860-68), WLG (1838) (1856-1909), and WLG (1874) (1896-97). It is arranged alphabetically. Diaries of Agnes and Ellen Wright Garrison have been microfilmed for History of Women (Research Publications, 1983). Agnes' diaries are of interest because they cover a long period. The earlier ones are more complete than the later and some contain entries in shorthand. She began these in 1879 at the age 13. They are relatively detailed and reveal the social and cultural world of late nineteenth century girlhood. There are travel diaries from the late 1880s. David was also an avid diarist. Although the series we have consist of notes and an index rather than narratives, in his later years he rewrote them in narrative form. These will be given to the Sophia Smith Collection in the future. Ellen Wright Garrison's diaries are most complete for her girlhood and are a valuable record of the education and maturation of a young woman, daughter of abolitionists and women's rights advocates just prior to and during the Civil War. The diaries of Frank and Mildred Yarnall Garrison are combined because both contributed to the writing. In addition there is an early typed copy of a diary of Mildred's from 1886. There is a long run of WLG (1838)'s diaries. Although they are brief-entry diaries they are a good source for information about his activities and contacts. The diary for 1901 contains a necrology of abolitionists. Volumes dating from 1897 to 1909 are boxed separately because of their size. |
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(1744-1996)
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42.5 linear ft.
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This series is divided into three subseries: Family letters, Letters to the Garrisons, and Third party correspondence. Letters by and to the Wrights and Stephensons are located in SERIES X and XI respectively. Some letters in this series, especially those from Generation 1 have been photocopied for preservation purposes. Correspondence related to specific subjects (i.e. free trade, suffrage, single tax, Wianno etc.) is located in SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES, although these subjects are included in the family's personal correspondence as well. Financial and business correspondence is located in SERIES V. FINANCIAL MATERIALS, but the relationship is also fluid because WLG (1874) handled business affairs for many family members and friends. Family letters The first subseries is arranged by generation and then alphabetically by author. If there are only a few letters they have been filed together and arranged by date, otherwise they have been arranged alphabetically by recipient. In some cases where there are many letters from and to couples, the husband's and wive's letters are combined. There are some letters grouped by subject, i.e., suffrage letters and letters home from travelers. It should be noted that some letters are authored and/or addressed to more than one person and sometimes letters are written on the backs of others. There are five generations represented: from the parents of WLG (1805) (Generation 1) to that of WLG (1902) (Generation 5). The one exception from Generation 6, letters from James and Anne Gould, is included because Gould has done extensive genealogical work on the Garrison Family and is the compiler of Garrison family trees. Generation 1 This section contains thirty-nine original letters authored by Abijah Garrison, Frances ("Fanny") Lloyd Garrison, and Abijah's brother, William. These consist of one letter from Abijah to his parents, Joseph and Mary Garrison (1805), two to his wife Frances (1804, 1806), one to his brother Joseph (1806), one to his cousin Johanna Palmer (1814), and one to "Jones" (1798). Fanny's letters consist of thirteen to her son William (1814-22), one to her daughter Maria (1821) and one to her son James (1818). There is one to Ephraim Allen (1823), to whom her son was apprenticed, and one to "friends" (1807). In addition there are twelve letters to her friend Martha Farnham with whom she left her daughter, Maria Elizabeth. Included with these is a "log" of an ocean voyage from Salem to Baltimore probably intended for Martha. Finally there are two letters from William Garrison, one to his brother Abijah (1806) another to his nephew Andrew (1832). Generation 2 There are six Garrisons represented in Generation 2. Of particular interest are Helen Benson Garrison's letters to her brother George (1848), her daughter-in-law Ellen Wright Garrison (1865-73) and her children: Wendell (1856-74), William (1855-72), and Fanny (1866). There are letters in this section from WLG (1805) to his mother (1843), his wife, Helen (1846, 1870-71), daughter-in-law Ellen (1864-78), and his children: Fanny (1871-78), George (1876-78), Wendell and his wife Lucy McKim (1858-78), and William (1855-78). In addition there are letters to his brother in law, George Benson (1843) and other friends and abolitionists including James Buffum (1855), Samuel May (1851), James Miller McKim (1853), Lucretia and Thomas Mott (1840, 1868), and Edmund Quincy (1840-77). Of particular interest is a copy of a letter from WLG (1805) to Harriet Farnham Horton written from jail in 1830. In addition there are seven letters (1843-80) from W. A. Garrison to WLG (1805) and Wendell Phillips Garrison. W.A. Garrison is most likely the son of Abijah's brother Joseph. Generation 3 There are ten Garrisons represented in Generation 3: Annie McKim Dennis Garrison, Francis Jackson and Theresa Holmes Garrison, George Thompson Garrison, Wendell Phillips and Lucy McKim Garrison, WLG (1838) and Ellen Wright Garrison, Fanny Garrison Villard and Henry Villard. As with other generations this correspondence emphasizes the closeness among the Garrison siblings and with their extended family and friends. This generation's correspondence includes courtship letters between WLG (1838) and Ellen Wright, and Lucy McKim and Wendell Garrison; and travel and suffrage correspondence. There is also correspondence between Ellen Wright and Lucy McKim (1852-77), girlhood friends before they both became "Garrisons." These letters discuss their experiences at Eagleswood School, life during the Civil War years, especially from the perspective of the abolitionist circle of connections; and their courtships and marriages. Ellen's letters to Susan B. Anthony (1858-82), letters to her family about her suffrage activities (1898-1904), and from her travels (1901-06) are also noteworthy. The letters to Susan reflect a close personal bond. There is a particularly long run of letters to her sister-in law, Agnes (1876-1930). The letters to her parents (1853-97) and her siblings (1853-1911) describe her girlhood (especially her letters from school), her married life, and her women's right activities. Her letters to WLG (1838) (1863-1930) include courtship letters (1863-64). George Thomson Garrison's letters to his family (1853-89), especially to his mother and brothers William and Wendell, detail his Civil War experiences and his struggle to find personal and professional independence apart from his family. Lucy McKim Garrison wrote several letters to Mary Byrne, an Irish servant and friend (1855-62); letters to Wendell Philips Garrison dating from before their marriage (1863-74); and letters to the McKim family (1859-69) and her Garrison in-laws (1852-1904). This latter group includes her letters to Ellen Wright (1852-76). Wendell's letters include one letter to Mary Byrne (1893), letters to Lucy dating from before their marriage (1863-75), as well as to his siblings (1855-1906) and his parents (1857-59). Correspondence of WLG (1838) includes the following family letters: to his siblings (1859-95), parents (1853-78), Ellen (1863-1908), his children and daughters-in-law (1870-1909); and letters sent from the Northwest (1880), Europe (1889, 1901), and California (1903). In addition there are letters to the Buffums (1862-89) and Martha Coffin and David Wright (1864-77). These letters deal with personal, family, and household affairs; and political activities including anti-slavery, suffrage, and women's rights. Although most financial material is in SERIES V., there is some discussion about his business affairs in these letters. Fanny Garrison Villard's letters to her family (1862-1925), especially to her brother William and his wife Ellen, deal primarily with domestic matters. Letters from her husband, Henry Villard to his brother in law (1867-98) are more revealing because they relate domestic and financial and business matters. Generation 4 There are twenty-five Garrisons represented in Generation 4: Marion Knight Garrison Chubb, Agnes Garrison, Charles and Margaret Carret Garrison, Eleanor Garrison, Fanny Garrison, Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall Garrison, Lloyd McKim Garrison, Philip McKim Garrison, Rhodes and Marianne Baehrecke Garrison, Wendell Holmes Garrison, WLG (1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison, Charles Dyer and Katherine Garrison Norton, Garrison Villard, Helen Villard, Harold and Mariquita Serrano Villard, and Oswald Garrison and Julia Sandford Villard. Letters of Agnes Garrison, Eleanor Garrison, Frank Wright Garrison, WLG (1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison, and Katherine Garrison Norton are especially significant for their content and/or quantity. Agnes was an avid traveler and correspondent. She wrote letters home from Europe and Greece (1889-1902, 1903, 1910-11), and California (1903). There are also significant runs of letters to her siblings and their families (1876-1949), especially to her sister-in law, Ellen Wright Garrison (1881-1930). Eleanor's letters are particularly significant. In addition to a large amount of general family correspondence (to her siblings and their spouses, her parents, nephew and nieces), there are letters home from Smith College (1900-04). Her letters to family, especially to her mother provide valuable insight into the New York State suffrage campaign and her work with Carrie Chapman Catt (1911-19). It is in this generation that the Garrisons, especially Eleanor, began correspondence with the Sophia Smith Collection's founder Margaret Storrs Grierson (1947-74). These candid letters contain characteristic Garrison humor and valuable anecdotal information about the family, it's history, and the donation of the papers. Grierson's letters to the Garrisons can be found in Subseries 2, Letters to the Garrisons. There is a significant group of letters from Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall Garrison, especially to WLG(1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison (1897-1960). He also wrote to Margaret Storrs Grierson and her friend, Marine Leland (1950-61). Both Frank's wife, Mildred Yarnall Garrison and Charles' wife, Margaret Carret Garrison corresponded faithfully with their Garrison in-laws. The largest amount of correspondence in this generation is that of WLG(1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison. Of particular interest are William's letters to Edith (1899-1948). They wrote each other frequently during the summer while Edith stayed at their vacation retreat at Wianno on Cape Cod. There are also many letters to his siblings (1883-1948), his parents (1886-1931), his children (1910-43), and the Villlards. WLG (1874) kept carbons of outgoing correspondence between 1922 and 1933. They include indexes and are arranged by date. Some of these are business letters, others personal and may be duplicated elsewhere in the Papers. There is also a folder of letters to the editor and public officials (1916-30). This generation also contains a substantial collection of Katherine McKim Garrison Norton's (daughter of Wendell and Lucy McKim) correspondence. The largest number of letters are written to her uncle Francis Jackson Garrison (1885-1916), Agnes Garrison (1881-1940), and WLG (1874) (1896-1945). Of particular interest is a four-volume set of her published letters, Katherine Garrison Norton Letters, 1881-1945, edited by her daughter Lucia Norton Valentine. These may be duplicated elsewhere, but the volumes, in addition to the letters, are particularly significant because the introductory material gives excellent insight into the family history with identifications of some family and friends. There is also a group of letters dictated between 6 July and 8 August 1910 while she was hospitalized. They are to various people and some of may also be duplicated elsewhere. The final group is the Villard family. Of the six Villards, Oswald Garrison Villard was the most prolific especially to WLG (1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison (1897-1949). Generation 5 There are thirty-one Garrisons included in Generation 5: Lydia Garrison Auchincloss, Clarinda (Chloe) Garrison Binger, Edith ("Yoy") Garrison Bliss, Robert and Claire ("Tita") Garrison Emerson, David Lloyd Garrison and Alice ("Patty") Garrison, John Bright Garrison and Barbara Foss Garrison, Robert Hale and Catherine Cooper Garrison, George Anthony and Nancy McGilpin Garrison, WLG (1902) and Jane Wilson Garrison, Lloyd Kirkham Garrison, Rhoda Garrison, Rhodes Garrison, Dorothea Villard Hammond, Reed and Faith Garrison Harwood, Estella Garrison Krantz, Charles McKim and Martha Hutcheson Norton, Garrison Norton, Aristides and Margaret Garrison Phoutrides, Katherine Knight Garrison Robinson, Alan and Lucia Norton Valentine, and Henry H. Villard. The largest amount of material is from the children of WLG (1874): WLG (1902), Claire, David Lloyd, John Bright, Faith, and Edith. For the most part the correspondence in this generation reports on personal and family activities. When away from home (at school, while traveling, after they married and moved away) the Garrison children wrote frequently to their parents and siblings. There are long runs of correspondence to WLG (1874) and Edith from their children, especially from Claire Garrison Emerson (1911-69) and David Lloyd (1910-58). Of particular interest are David's letters home from Europe during World War II, and Claire's letters from Vassar (1921-25). Letters to the Garrisons This subseries is arranged in four sections. The first consists primarily of personal letters written to the Garrisons and arranged by author. These consist of large amounts of letters from one person and letters from notables. Where appropriate they are then arranged by recipient and in some cases matching letters from a Garrison have been attached. Major correspondents on abolition and other reforms include Henry Brown Blackwell (1875-1909), Josephine Butler (1875-90), Ednah Dow Cheney (1890, 1897), Moncure Conway (1880-1901), Frederick Douglass (1894), Abby Kelly Foster (1883), George Fowlds (1907-23), Henry George (1888-97), John Haynes Holmes (1915-23), Oliver Johnson (1858-88), Mary Livermore (1886-1902), Theodore Parker (1860, n.d.), Wendell Phillips (1856-77), Parker Pillsbury (1860-97), Louis Prang (1894-1916), Hattie Purvis (1856-1902), Booker T. Washington (1896-1909), Theodore Dwight Weld (1860-1880), Frances E. Willard (1887-95) and Marie Zakrzewska (1887-98). In addition there are letters from writer George Washington Cable (1899-1900); Thomas Edison (1883-94); Edward Everett Hale (1880-97); Nancy Hale (1925); Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1856-1906); comic actor Joseph Jefferson (1882-84); naturalist and artist Roger Tory Peterson (1935-37); artist Joseph Linden Smith (1863-1950), containing sketches; and sculptor Anne Whitney (1883-1904). There are groups of letters from several families: Clarks, Mays, Buffums, Daniels, and McKims. The Clarks were English cousins of the Garrisons. There are letters from twenty-one Clark cousins. These date from 1879 to 1966 and provide a long overview of two world wars and the British suffrage movement. The Daniels were a Cape Cod family and the letters date from 1876 to 1952. Kate Daniel was a family employee and close friend of the Garrisons. She nursed WLG (1838) after his railroad accident in 1871and her husband Charles did the maintenance on the Wianno homes for the family. (See also SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES- Wianno). His sea diary, as well as other information on the family, is located in SERIES I. BIOGRAPHCAL MATERIALS. There are six Buffums represented in this correspondence (1855-86). WLG (1838) did an apprenticeship with abolitionist James Buffum beginning in 1855. There are letters from six members of the May family. Samuel, the patriarch was a pacifist and abolitionist friend of the Garrisons. Finally there are four members of the McKim family represented including James Miller McKim and Sarah McKim, parents of Wendell Phillips Garrison's wives Lucy and Anne. Suffrage and women's rights activities are discussed by a number of correspondents. These include Susan B. Anthony (1881-1905), Alice Stone Blackwell (1896-1948), Carrie Chapman Catt (1906-47), Lydia Maria Child (1859, 1879), Helen Bright Clark (1879-1918), Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1896, 1898), Isabella Beecher Hooker (1870-89), Julia Ward Howe (n.d.), Elizabeth Pease Nicol (1876-93), Mary Gray Peck (1917-50), Emmeline and Sylvia Pankurst, (1912, 1914), Maud Wood Park (1907-51), Caroline Severance (1883-1911), Anna Howard Shaw (1897-1913), Rebecca Spring (1903-04), Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1899-1900), and Lucy Stone (1882-88). Susan B. Anthony's letters are particularly significant. She wrote primarily to Ellen Wright Garrison (1881-1905). These personal letters also report her suffrage activities and comment on the movement in general. There are also Anthony letters in the third party correspondence in this series, as well as letters to the Wrights in SERIES X. Information about the relationship between Smith College and the Garrison family, especially Eleanor Garrison, can be found in the letters from Margaret Storrs Grierson (1947-97), Marine Leland (1955-59), and Elizabeth Duvall (1973-75). Also of interest is a long run of letters from artist Lucy Scarborough Conant to her friend Agnes Garrison, (1883-1906) and from Nora Sayre (1962-74) to her friend Eleanor Garrison. The second section in this subseries consists of additional letters from less well-known people to the Garrisons. The first subsection is arranged by recipient and then alphabetically by sender. The unidentified letters in this section are arranged alphabetically by first name. Of interest in this section are a group of letters to Ellen Wright Garrison from her Eagleswood School friends (1857-60). The second subsection contains condolence letters written to family members on the deaths of Ellen Wright Garrison (1931), Francis Jackson Garrison (1916), Frank Wright Garrison (1961), Helen Benson Garrison (1876), William Lloyd Garrison (1805) (1879), William Lloyd Garrison (1838) (1909), William Lloyd Garrison (1874) (1964), Katherine Garrison Norton (1948), Benjamin T. Stephenson, (1914), Luda Grant Stephenson (1930), and Martha Coffin (1875). This section also contains letters written to WLG (1874) and Edith Stephenson Garrison on their engagement and wedding and to WLG (1838) and Ellen Wright Garrison on their wedding as well as letters of congratulations on the birth of Edith and WLG (1874)'s children. These letters are from family and friends and contain letters from notable people that were friends of the Garrisons. Finally there is a subsection of postcards to the Garrisons arranged in no particular order. Third party correspondence The third subseries consists of letters arranged by author. When both sides of the correspondence exist they have been combined. The origin of these letters is not always clear; some are copies made by Martha Coffin Wright and Frank Wright Garrison. Highlights of the correspondence in this subseries include: John Quincy Adams to Edmund Quincy (1838) regarding an invitation from the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society; a series of letters between Edmund Quincy and Dublin abolitionist Richard Webb (1843-59); letters between Isabella Beecher Hooker and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1870-71) and from Hooker to Susan B. Anthony (1872); Lucy Stone to James Buffum (1856) in which she writes "a wife should no more take her husband's name that he should hers"; a bound collection of letters of Tidd-Lord-Henchman-Carret family (1811-56); Scottish evangelist Ralph Wardlaw to British abolitionist George Thompson (1838); Victoria Claflin Woodhull to Mrs. Bladen (1871); and WLG(1805)'s friend Oliver Johnson to Fredrick Douglass (1845). There is also correspondence of the McKim family, particularly between James Miller McKim and his wife Sarah A. Speakman McKim (1837-84). There are letters of the McKims to Mary Byrne, an Irish servant who became a close family friend. (See also Lucy McKim Garrison's and Annie McKim Dennis Garrison's correspondence in subseries 1, Generation 3). There is a miscellaneous category that includes letters to Mary Randall (1908, n.d.) and a number of unidentified third party letters. |
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(1829-1999)
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7.75 linear ft.
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This series contains writings by twenty-seven Garrisons. It is arranged alphabetically by person and includes speeches, writings, poetry, notes, and in some cases related correspondence. (See also SERIES VI . SUBJECT FILES and SERIES XI. SCRAPBOOKS.) The Garrisons were prolific poets and there are large amounts of original poetry in this series. WLG (1838) and WLG (1874) produced the bulk of these writings. The section on WLG (1838) contains a diary of miscellaneous poetry (1878), high school compositions (1854-55), and writings and speeches arranged alphabetically by subject. The alphabetical list includes tributes and commemorative verse. There are birthday verses he wrote for his own birthdays and prose and verses he wrote for family and friends. There are also verses about Osterville (1876-98) and Quincy School (1891-97), verses arranged alphabetically by title (1880-1906), untitled verse arranged by date (1863-1908) and notes (n.d.). For WLG (1874) there are school essays, and speeches and writings by topic (abolition, peace, race issues, taxation, suffrage etc.) Within this alphabetical list is a group of speeches entitled Technology Talks (1924 and 1933) and talks to the Tuesday Club (1931-40). There are two folders of miscellaneous speeches and writings which concern other topics, including introductory remarks for Booker T. Washington and Charles Eastman. Within this alphabetical list is poetry which includes complete texts and notes and some background material he used to compose the verse. When possible the poetry is arranged by subject (i.e. Anniversary, birthday and commemorative verse, Cape Cod, Coffin and Burr, Harvard (class reunions and other activities), poetry written anonymously under the initials GLW). Otherwise the poems are organized by date; those with no dates are alphabetical by title. The largest group of poems are the commemorative poems written in memoriam and in celebration of others. These include family members, especially the Villards, his wife and children, as well as friends and neighbors. These are arranged in a separate alphabetical section by person, with two folders of poems for miscellaneous people. The final group of poetry includes unidentified, undated and incomplete items. David Lloyd Garrison's autobiographical work Early and Late (1994), Lucy McKim Garrison's transcriptions original slave songs (which are located in the Flat File), and a compilation of Garrison family writings, Garrisoniana (1869-1902) are also noteworthy. |
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(1812-1993)
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4.75 linear ft.
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This series contains financial material related to twelve members of the Garrison Family. It is arranged alphabetically by person and contains tax information, probate and estate records, inventories, items related to real estate, ledgers, business diaries, expense logs and related correspondence. Financial/business correspondence related to property owned at Cape Cod is located in SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES - Wianno. The largest amounts of material relate to both the WLG (1838)'s and WLG (1874)'s business and personal affairs. WLG (1838)'s business material includes brokerage (1873) and mortgage (1889-1901) books and an investment ledger (1889-92), as well as a sales journal (1877-78). There is material related to trust accounts he handled for Mary E. Robinson, Theodore Dwight Weld, Eliza Church, and Theodore Grinké Weld (1875-1903). The personal material includes correspondence (1903-10), estate matters (1892-1936), real estate (1903-10), personal securities (1903), expenses (1890-1904), and ledgers (1872-1900). WLG (1874)'s business material consists of diaries (1898-1904), Perry Coffin & Burr material, including correspondence (1900-57), trust accounts for Mary Randall (1902-07) and Theodore Grimké Weld (1905-23), and correspondence and legal papers for his partnership. There is considerable overlap with SERIES III. CORRESPONDENCE because WLG (1874) handled business affairs for family members and friends. His personal material includes estate items (1928), house construction and repair correspondence (1901-17), and personal ledgers (1907-38). |
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(1810-1966)
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9.75 linear ft.
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This series, arranged alphabetically, contains printed material, memorabilia, and related correspondence on forty-one subjects which were of interest to the Garrisons, or about organizations in which they were involved. These topics range far and wide: reform movements (free trade, single tax, suffrage), minor controversies (the dangers of football and the reform of hockey rules), health issues (anti-vaccination, osteopathy, homeopathy), schools and camps (Auburn Female Seminary, Eagleswood School, Country Day School for Boys, Roxbury Latin School, Harvard University, Sidney Lanier Camp), and Garrison homes and retreats (Wianno). Some of the subjects relate to only one Garrison, others relate to several and span the generations. The largest and/or richest subjects are abolition (1833-1962), anti-vaccination (1895-1938), free trade and tariff reform (1887-1959), Harvard University (1891-1967), immigration (1871-1924), pacifism (1839-1940), race (1888-1936), single tax (1877-1947), suffrage (1856-1952), temperance (1828-1908), and Wianno (1905-1966). Anti-imperialism, free trade, single tax, and pacifism contain interrelated material. Many of these subjects are included in the WLG (1838) scrapbooks in SERIES IX. SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL, SERIES IV. SPEECHES AND WRITING and within the correspondence in SERIES III. Some of the subjects include periodicals and organizations which are listed separately. In addition there are general periodicals and organizations unrelated to any specific subject. The abolition files are particularly significant. These include published material on the American (1833-84) and Massachusetts (1837-41) Anti-Slavery Societies; "Anti-Slavery Reminiscences" by Elizabeth Buffum Chase; correspondence of Maria Weston Chapman, (1835, 1837), James Miller McKim (1849, 1866) and George Thompson (1835); material related to The Liberator including a subscription letter (1839); memorabilia (1858-61); printed material, including Anti-Slavery Tracts (1860, n.d.); general articles and clippings (1854-1948) and; pamphlets (1850-85) and specific printed material on the Fugitive Slave Law (1851-80) and the Kansas/Nebraska Act (1854-60). A run of The Liberator is located in the SSC Periodicals collection. British abolitionist George Thompson came to the United States with a stipend from the Anti-Slavery Women of Glasgow and Edinburgh in 1834. His letters (Feb-Apr 1835) are reports of this trip written to Miss Smeal and the Committee of the Glasgow Ladies. Correspondence of Maria Weston Chapman which includes a "Report to the Ladies of Scotland" (1835) is related to the Thompson letters. There is also a record of departed abolitionists (circa 1880) and material related to abolition reunions and anniversaries, (1886-89, n.d.). Items related to the American Freedman's Union Commission (1869, n.d.) are included in this file. There is documentation of an interesting incident involving the propriety of female store clerks. In 1849, women's rights reformers Elizabeth McClintock and Anna Southwick applied for a position in the Philadelphia wholesale business of Edward M. Davis (Lucretia Mott's son-in-law). Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote a letter in support of the women's application. Davis brought the matter before his male clerks and in the end the application was refused. Some of the employees drew caricatures of female clerks. Lucretia Mott sent the drawings to McClintock who responded in kind, enclosing drawings and a "drama." Most of the drawings are unsigned, but it is presumed that those which portray women clerks in a more positive light were drawn by McClintock or Maria Mott Davis. In addition to the drawing and skit, this file contains correspondence and items from E.M Davis Co. Free trade and tariff reform is documented by several free trade organizations: American Free Trade League (1889-1917), Free Trade League (1919-21), International Free Trade League (1918-26), and New England Free Trade League (1896-98). WLG (1838) was secretary of the American Free Trade League and edited the Free Trade Broadside of which there are copies from 1905 to 1916. Frank Wright Garrison was on the Executive Committee for the International Free Trade League and WLG (1874) was a member. In addition to executive committee minutes and printed material, there is a long sequence of related correspondence (1917-59) as well as clippings, pamphlets, and flyers. The Harvard University material relates primarily to WLG (1874), class of 1897, with a small amount of material related to David Lloyd Garrison, class of 1928. It contains class reunion material, correspondence and printed items on eight Harvard related organizations including D.K.E. (1891-92), the Harvard Club of Boston (1912-41), the Harvard Liberal Club of Boston (1918-21) and Harvard Total Abstinence League (1912, n.d.). There is also some miscellaneous correspondence (1895-1960). The immigration file relates primarily to Chinese immigration and includes material on the Chinese Defense Fund (1903-04), Chinese Equal Rights League (1892), and National Liberal Immigration League (1907-08). There are quite a few printed items (1885-1924) including pamphlets, articles, clippings, and related correspondence (1871-1908). There are thirty-one separately filed organizations plus ten folders of small amounts of organizational material. These organizations with items dating from 1897 to 1964 represent the wide range of interests and reform movements in which the Garrisons were involved. These range from liberal causes (American Civil Liberties Union, American Friends Service Committee, Free Religious Association of America, and League for Democratic Control) to conservation and birding organizations (Massachusetts Audubon Society, Nature Conservancy, and Nuttall Ornithological Club) and genealogical societies (Massachusetts Society of Colonial Dames and New England Historic Genealogical Society). The Garrison summer retreat was located on Cape Cod, at Wianno in Osterville, Massachusetts. Osterville material consists of reports, correspondence, clippings, and printed material on the Osterville Free Public Library. (WLG (1874) was on its board of trustees for many years.) There are also items related to reunions of residents of Osterville (1905-07) plus miscellaneous historical items (1877-1969). Wianno documents include blueprints (1912-27); maintenance, insurance, real estate and miscellaneous correspondence (1905-50); deeds, titles and inventories (1920-43); and correspondence, organizational documents and printed material on the on the Wianno Club (1904-33). The pacifism file contains correspondence and printed material (1907-25); a file on military training (1904-26); and correspondence and printed material on peace organizations including American Union Against Militarism, the Women's Peace Party (1915-17), and the Women's Peace Society (1920-25). There are twelve periodical titles, including an issue of the Boston Patriot (1810), The Diamond (1851-52) edited by George Garrison while a student at the Hopedale Home School, and The Liberator edited by Max Eastman (1917-18). There is an extensive and rich file of race related to racial discrimination. Subjects include anti-lynching (1888-1904), education (1894-1930), Negro troops (1898-1906), suffrage (1898-1906), and miscellaneous printed material (1895-1914). The education file contains correspondence and printed material on Berea College (1894-09), Calhoun Colored School (1909-26), Forsythe Normal and Industrial School (1902-18), Hampton Normal and Agriculture Institute (1919-21), and Tuskegee Institute (1985-1930). The largest file in this series is on the single tax. There is extensive correspondence especially with political reformer and single taxer Daniel Kiefer, writings of Henry George, and records of fifteen separate single tax organizations including various state single tax leagues, the Single Tax Party, and the United Committee for the Taxation of land Values. There are runs of eleven single tax periodicals. Printed material includes articles and pamphlets (1887-1935), clippings (1888-1928), "quotable authorities" collected by WLG (1838) (1887-1905), and miscellaneous material (1887-1932). WLG (1838), Ellen Wright Garrison, Eleanor Garrison, Agnes Garrison, WLG (1874), and Edith Stephenson Garrison were all suffragists. There is a particularly rich collection of suffrage items related to their activities. There is also suffrage material elsewhere, especially in SERIES III. CORRESPONDENCE, SERIES IV. WRITINGS AND SPEECHES, and in SERIES IX. WRIGHT FAMILY. The file contains correspondence (1898-1952); printed material and clippings, (1867-916) from both the British and American suffrage movement; memorabilia (1900-50); records of nine suffrage organizations; and documents related to three suffrage/woman's right conventions (1856, 1870, 1872). The temperance file is related to both alcohol and tobacco. It contains articles, clippings, pamphlets, and miscellaneous printed material (1879-1908), information on the Massachusetts Total Abstinence Society (n.d.), and the Women's Christian Temperance Union (1919). Of particular interest is an issue of the National Philanthropist (1828) edited by WLG (1805). |
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(1839-1998)
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12.75 linear ft.
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This series is divided into six subseries: Family, Friends and associates, Subjects, Albums, Cased images, and Oversize material. The first subseries includes photographs of the following family groups: Bliss, Chubb, Emerson, Garrison, Harwood, Norton, Phoutrides, Stephenson, Villard, and Wright. Women are filed under their married names except for those of Ellen Wright Garrison with her siblings which are located with the Wright Family. They are arranged alphabetically; photographs with multiple family members located under the name of the father. Additional photographs of individuals can be found in family groups, Albums, Cased images and Oversize material, and in the Sophia Smith Collection Flat File. The Friends and associates subseries includes photographs of individuals the Garrisons knew personally as well as photographs collected by the Garrisons. They are arranged alphabetically and include photographs of such notables as Lydia Maria Child, Frederick Douglass, George Eliot, Sara Jane Lippincott, Harriet Tubman, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Lucretia Coffin Mott, Emmeline Pankhurst, Theodore Parker, Hattie and Robert Purvis, Caroline Severance, Lucy Stone, and Wendell Phillips. There are additional photographs of famous friends contained in two albums located in the fourth subseries in box 215. The Subjects subseries includes photographs arranged by topic. These include abolition, suffrage, and houses and vacation places. There are photographs of abolitionist groups at Ambleside and Lucy Stone's House as well as the Executive Committee of the Pennsylvania Anti Slavery Society. The suffrage photographs include two groups: one of which includes Susan B. Anthony, Rebecca Spring, Charlotte Wills, and Caroline Wills, and another of Anthony, Carrie Chapman Catt, Lila Sweet Martin, Anna Howard Shaw, Harriet May Mills, and Lucy Anthony. There is also a photograph of New York suffragists in "farmerette" costumes and suffrage parades. The Houses and Vacation places are arranged alphabetically; the family homes by family (Benson, Coffin-Mott, Garrison) and then by location. The largest group of photographs is of Wianno, the Garrisons summer "colony" on Cape Cod and it includes the various cottages as well as land and seascapes. The next three subseries are arranged randomly according to size The Albums contain both family and non-family photographs, some of which may be duplicated elsewhere in the series. There are two albums of negatives. Some of the photographs have either been removed from their albums, or the pages removed from their bindings for preservation reasons. The Cased images (arranged by large, medium and small) include tintypes, daguerreotypes, and ambrotypes. Those of the Wright family are particularly fine. The Oversize material contains photographs of family including family groups, for example Thanksgiving 1886, Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall Garrison's wedding photograph, and school athletic team and class photographs of various Garrisons, especially WLG (1874). Photographs located in the Flat File are listed at the end of the box list with the rest of the Flat File items. |
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(1694-1984)
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6.25 linear ft.
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This series is arranged in two subseries. The first, Family, contains Garrison family memorabilia which encompasses either more than one Garrison or is unidentified. This subseries contains family games (n.d.), valentines and greeting card (n.d.), material on character analysis (1913-50), numerology and metaphysics (1922-26), and a box of medals and ribbons (1895-1914). Of particular interest are a series of cookbooks, household lists, accounts, recipes, and an arithmetic primer. Although many have names attached to them, their origin is unclear. It is assumed that the cookbooks were passed down through generations because the handwriting varies throughout. The earliest is dated 1694 and the latest 1834, although many are undated. Subseries two, Garrison Family contains memorabilia for twenty-eight individual Garrisons, arranged alphabetically. The largest group of material belongs to David Lloyd Garrison. Included are his art work (1918-87) (painting, drawing and art notes); birding material (1936-84) (notebooks of birds, bird records); military papers (1941-47); and travel notebooks (1947-85). Ellen Wright Garrison's material includes her hair collection and paper dolls. Items of WLG (1805) include an address book listing donations to fugitive slaves, and autopsy report (1869), and documents related to the purchase of the family home at Rockledge (1853-64). Memorabilia of WLG (1838) and WLG (1874) contains significant amounts of collected material (verse, jokes, quotes). There is a handwriting analysis for WLG (1838) and a notebook of writings from an Osterville tea (1877). There is Harvard memorabilia (1892-1931), juvenilia (1883), travel notes (1897, 1926) and a wedding guest list (1901) belonging to WLG (1874). |
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(1806-1970)
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8.5 linear ft.
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Ellen Wright married WLG (1838) in 1864. This series contains genealogical and biographical materials, correspondence, writings, and memorabilia, related to five generations of her family. "Wright family" is used loosely to include the Coffins and the Motts and their ancestors and descendants. Photographs of the Wright family are located in SERIES VII. PHOTOGRAPHS. This series is divided into three subseries: Biographical materials and memorabilia, Correspondence, and Writings. Biographical materials contains genealogical notes, correspondence and charts, anecdotes, poems and miscellaneous memorabilia. In Their Several Generations by Amice Mac Donnell Lee relates to the Yarnall family. Following this general material are biographical materials and memorabilia related to twenty-three family members. Of particular interest is the material related to Lucretia Mott, Peter Pelham, and the Wrights. Lucretia Coffin Mott's file contains clippings and printed material (1873-1930), and memorabilia which includes items related to the Motts' 50th wedding anniversary (1861). Items related to Peter Pelham include a notice of his death, accounts of a shipment of the Pelham's belongings to Florida (1824), and the settling of his estate (1827). Included in this subseries is a "Sketch of the life and character of David Wright" by Theodore M. Pomeroy (1898) and personal reminiscences of his life which he wrote in 1886. Martha Coffin Wright's biographical file includes a sketch written by Eliza Wright Osborne in the 1890s. In this sketch Osborne mentions a will written by Martha when she was a 15 years old. In 2001 her great-great grandson, James D. Livingston provided a copy, which is now included with the sketch. There are also certificates, obituaries, condolence letters, her final will (1864), and a document of disassociation from the Society of Friends (1825). In addition there are her account books (1829-52), drawings, collected verse and a small notebook entitled "Excerpts from the Portfolio of Josiah Landon, 1810" written in her hand. The second subseries, Correspondence, is divided into two sections; Letters from the Wrights and Letters to the Wrights. It includes family letters between spouses, siblings, cousins, friends, parents and children. They not only provide a view of nineteenth century social history and family life, but also give valuable insights into abolition, suffrage, women's rights and the people involved in those movements. The letters are interspersed with drawings and full of wit and humor. It should be noted that although they are arranged alphabetically by author, many were evidently handed around before being sent and are authored by two or more people, and many of these letters are round robin and were written to a number of different people. Also, in order to save paper, some letters were written in the blank spaces of other letters and some are written with the script going in two or three directions. Many of these letters have been photocopied for preservation purposes, some have been transcribed and typed copies have been included with the handwritten counterparts. There are also hand written copies made by Martha Coffin Wright for some of the letters. Of special note are letters written from Eagleswood School by Anna Coffin Temple Brown to Lucretia Coffin Mott and from Anna Davis Hallowell to Ellen Wright Garrison; Civil War letters from William Pelham Wright (1861-63), from his friend Andrew Cowan to William and David Wright (1862-63), and from Marianna Pelham Mott while she was at Gettysburg caring for her injured brother William (1863); and European travel letters from Marianna Pelham Mott (1855-69), Thomas Mott (1855-56), and Eliza Wright Osborne (1889, 1903). The letters among Lucretia Coffin Mott, Martha Coffin Wright, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Ellen Wright Garrison, Ida Husted Harper, and Victoria Claflin Woodhull provide a particularly detailed description of the seeds of the American women's movement, and the planning of the early women's right conventions, especially the first in 1848 and the third in 1856. Of further interest are early Pelham family letters to Martha Coffin Wright (1824-65); letters from Putnam Catlin, father of artists Julius and George Catlin, to Martha Coffin Wright (1828-39); and letters from Henry Blackwell (1869), Matilda Joslyn Gage (1870-72), Lucretia and Martha's cousins Mary Hussey Earle (1842-75) and Phebe Hussey Gardner (1843), Sara Jane Lippincott (Grace Greenwood) (1860-65), Wendell Phillips (1860), Parker Pillsbury (1869-73), Theodore Dwight Weld and Angelina Grimké Weld (1854-62), and a fugitive slave, L. M. Worden (1845-70). Writings, the third subseries, includes Hints to Young People On The Duties of Civil Life (1826) by James Mott, and miscellaneous writings of Lucretia Coffin Mott (1828-69) including her Discourse on Women (1850, 1869), a discourse at a Friends Meeting in New York (1866), and a statement to the Equal Rights Convention at Albany (1866). Some of these writings are copies of originals located at the Huntington Library, Swarthmore Peace Collection, and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. There are also original and typed copies of Martha Coffin Wright's diaries (1854-74) and her poetry (1844-64). Although the diaries are short entry, they contain references to such notables as Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Lucy Stone. Her miscellaneous writings include a draft of "Hints for Wives" which was read by Lucretia Coffin Mott at the Seneca Falls convention (1848). In addition, there are the Civil War writings of William Pelham Wright about the First New York Battery and a diary (1862). The former includes a list of officers, causalities and battles in which the Battery was engaged. |
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(1818-1973)
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1.75 linear ft.
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Edith Stephenson married WLG (1874) in 1906. This series contains correspondence, memorabilia, diaries, and writings of the Stephenson family dating back to the early 1800s. The authors include Edith's parents, Benjamin Turner and Lucinda ("Luda") Grant Stephenson, and her brothers and sisters. This series contains two subseries: Biographical material and memorabilia and Correspondence. Both are arranged alphabetically by person. There is a Benjamin Turner Stephensons in three generations. Each of them is identified by his birth date. The first subseries consists of genealogical material, two diaries (1870, 1892-1916), and school compositions (1868, n.d.) of Lucinda ("Luda") Grant Stephenson); financial, official and miscellaneous documents; and memorabilia. The second subseries, Correspondence, consists of Stephenson family letters, with the exception of Edith Stephenson Garrison whose correspondence is with that of the Garrison family. All letters are outgoing unless specified otherwise. Although there is some business correspondence and a small amount between family members, including courtship letters from Luda Grant to Benjamin Stephenson (1869-71). Most of the correspondence is written to Edith and WLG (1874) from Edith's parents and siblings. Benjamin Turner Stephenson (1886) was an artist, and included in an 1898 letter to Edith is a set of paper dolls. There is also a substantial number of letters from Walter Stephenson to Edith and WLG (1838) (1915-43) and David Lloyd Garrison (1918-49). The latter includes a scrapbook "file of letters together with enclosures, clippings of writings of Lucien Price and some others" (1927-29). Although it has not been possible to find him on the Stephenson family tree, it is assumed that he is a Stephenson cousin. Photographs of the Stephenson family are located in SERIES VII. PHOTOGRAPHS. |
|||
|
(1833-1908)
|
4 linear ft.
|
|
|
|
There are eighteen scrapbooks belonging Agnes Garrison, George Thompson Garrison, and WLG (1838). These contain clippings, memorabilia, correspondence, and miscellaneous printed material on a variety of subjects. Agnes's two scrapbooks (1870s-1901) contain memorabilia and primarily travel related items. Of the four scrapbooks which belonged to George, of particular interest is his "Record of the 55th Massachusetts Infantry (1868) in which George served as second lieutenant. The remaining eleven scrapbooks (1856-1908) were compiled by WLG (1838). These contain correspondence, his writings and clippings, and information related to his business ventures. Among the topics covered are football, fraternities, anti-imperialism, racial discrimination, and suffrage. Much of this material may be duplicated elsewhere in SERIES IV. WRITINGS AND SPEECHES and SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES. |
|||
|
(1833-1914)
|
|
|
|
|
This series contains fourteen items. Some are boxed with the collection while others are located in the Sophia Smith Collection reading room and the Smith College Museum of Art. One item, an ivory handled cane engraved for WLG (1838) and Ellen Wright Garrison's 40th wedding anniversary is located in the Flat File. Of interest in this series is a silk antislavery banner painted by Josiah Wolcott in the 1840s, a silver cup presented to WLG (1805) by abolitionists (1833), an engraved inkwell belonging to Ellen Wright Garrison, a statue by John Rogers entitled "The Fugitive's Story," and a statue of WLG (1805) by Anne Whitney. |
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|
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS
|
(1830-2005)
|
|
|
|
Papers
|
|
|
|
|
Boston Public Library
|
1898-1916, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 1
|
|
Harvard University
|
1950
|
|
Box 1: folder 2
|
|
Massachusetts Historical Society
|
1911-17, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 3
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1891-1968, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 4
|
|
Genealogy
|
|
|
|
|
Family trees
|
1962-80, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 5
|
|
Wendell Phillips Garrison: notes and correspondence
|
1884
|
|
Box 1: folder 6
|
|
Miscellaneous notes and correspondence
|
1880-1962, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 7
|
|
Garrison family
|
|
|
|
|
Bell, Helen Villard
|
1897
|
|
Box 1: folder 8
|
|
Benson family
|
1872, 1946, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 9
|
|
Bliss, Edith Garrison
|
1931, 1993
|
|
Box 1: folder 10
|
|
Chubb, Marion Knight Garrison
|
1968
|
|
Box 1: folder 11
|
|
Emerson
|
|
|
|
|
Claire Garrisonn.d
|
1903,
|
|
Box 1: folder 12
|
|
Robert
|
1959
|
|
Box 1: folder 13
|
|
Agnes
|
1866-1952
|
|
Box 1: folder 14
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Alice O'Reilly
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 15
|
|
Annie McKim
|
1893-94
|
|
Box 1: folder 16
|
|
Catherine Cooper
|
1967
|
|
Box 1: folder 17
|
|
1922-2003, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 18
|
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
Medical information
|
1902-50
|
|
Box 1: folder 19
|
|
Will and miscellaneous printed material
|
1914-74, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 20
|
|
Eleanor
|
1912-62, n.d.
|
|
Box 1: folder 21
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
|
|
|
|
Marriage certificate and miscellaneous material
|
1864-1964
|
|
Box 2: folder 1
|
|
1878-79
|
|
Box 2: folder 2
|
|
|
Wills
|
1908-22
|
|
Box 2: folder 3
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1882-1917
|
|
Box 2: folder 4
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1871-75
|
|
Box 2: folder 5
|
|
George
|
1955-70
|
|
Box 2: folder 6
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1876
|
|
Box 2: folder 7
|
|
James Holley
|
1954
|
|
Box 2: folder 8
|
|
Jane Wilson
|
1937
|
|
Box 2: folder 9
|
|
John Bright
|
1928-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 2: folder 10
|
|
Lloyd Kirkham
|
1932-65, n.d.
|
|
Box 2: folder 11
|
|
Lloyd McKim
|
1900
|
|
Box 2: folder 12
|
|
Lucy McKim
|
|
|
|
|
Lucy McKim Garrison, American Musician by Dena Epstein: pamphlet and related material
|
1887-1973, n.d.
|
|
Box 2: folder 13
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1864-77, 1925, 1962
|
|
Box 2: folder 14
|
|
Marian Knight
|
1962
|
|
Box 2: folder 15
|
|
Ritchie
|
1997
|
|
Box 2: folder 16
|
|
Robert Hale
|
1968, n.d.
|
|
Box 2: folder 17
|
|
Theresa Holmes
|
1915
|
|
Box 2: folder 18
|
|
Wendell Holmes
|
1894, 1969
|
|
Box 2: folder 19
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
|
|
|
|
Clippings and articles
|
1905-35, n.d.
|
|
Box 2: folder 20
|
|
Letters and Memorials of Wendell Phillips Garrison
|
1908-09
|
|
|
|
Published book
|
|
|
|
|
Related material
|
1908-09
|
|
Box 2: folder 21
|
|
"The Vigil"
|
1907
|
|
Box 2: folder 22
|
|
Will
|
1901
|
|
Box 2: folder 23
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
[See also SERIES IV. WRITINGS AND SPEECHES - WLG (1838) -Tributes] |
|
|
|
|
Biographies
|
|
|
|
|
List by WLG (1838)
|
|
|
Box 3: folder 1
|
|
Published
|
|
|
|
|
Chapman, John Jay, William Lloyd Garrison
|
1913
|
|
|
|
Cook, Frances E. An American Hero. The Story of William Lloyd Garrison
|
1888
|
|
|
|
Crosby, Ernest, Garrison the Non Resistant
|
1905
|
|
|
|
Garrison, Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children
[4v on shelf] |
1894
|
|
|
|
Correspondence
|
1880-93, n.d.
|
|
Box 3: folder 2
|
|
Notes and miscellaneous printed material
|
1880-94
|
|
Box 3: folder 3
|
|
Grimké, Archibald Henry, William Lloyd Garrison: The Abolitionist
|
1891
|
|
|
|
Smith, Goldwin, The Moral Crusader: A Biographical essay founded on "The story of Garrison's life as told by his children"
|
1892
|
|
|
|
Tchertkoff, V. G. (Vladimir Grigorevich Chertov) and F. -Holah, A Short Biography of William Lloyd Garrison, With an introductory appreciation of his life and work by Leo Tolstoy
|
1904
|
|
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison On Non-Resistance, together with a personal sketch by his daughter, Fanny Garrison Villard, and a tribute to Leo Tolstoy
|
1924
|
|
|
|
Memoirs and reminiscences
|
|
|
|
|
Howitt, Mary, "Memoir of William Lloyd Garrison"
|
1846-47
|
|
Box 4: folder 1
|
|
Norton, Garrison, "And I Will Be Heard"
|
1962
|
|
Box 4: folder 2
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1838): memoir about his father
|
1844-45
|
|
Box 4: folder 3
|
|
Mob of 1835
|
1835-1885
|
|
Box 4: folder 4
|
|
Tributes and testimonials
[See also SERIES III. CORRESPONDENCE - Letters to the Garrisons - Condolence letters] |
|
|
|
|
Public Breakfast
|
1867
|
|
Box 4: folder 5
|
|
National testimonial
|
1867
|
|
Box 4: folder 6
|
|
Obituaries
|
1879
|
|
Box 4: folder 7
|
|
Eulogy and funeral service,
|
1879
|
|
|
|
Texts and program
|
|
|
Box 4: folder 8
|
|
Correspondence
|
|
|
Box 4: folder 9
|
|
Miscellaneous tributes
|
1879
|
|
Box 4: folder 10
|
|
Memorials, statues, and portraits
|
1886-1968
|
|
Box 4: folder 11
|
|
Anniversaries
|
|
|
|
|
100th,
|
1905
|
|
|
|
Programs and addresses
|
|
|
Box 4: folder 12
|
|
Clippings and articles
|
|
|
|
|
English
|
|
|
Box 4: folder 13-14
|
|
German
|
|
|
Box 5: folder 1
|
|
115th
|
1910
|
|
Box 5: folder 2
|
|
Trial for libel of Francis Todd
|
1830-47
|
|
Box 5: folder 3
|
|
Printed materials
|
|
|
|
|
Articles
|
1879-1931, n.d.
|
|
Box 5: folder 4
|
|
Clippings
|
1831-1966, n.d.
|
|
Box 5: folder 5
|
|
Pamphlets
|
1879-1940
|
|
Box 5: folder 6
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1836-67, n.d.
|
|
Box 5: folder 7
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
|
|
|
|
Clippings
|
1889-1931, n.d.
|
|
Box 5: folder 8
|
|
Letters of recommendation
|
1862-63
|
|
Box 5: folder 9
|
|
Reminiscences dictated to Agnes Garrison
|
1909
|
|
Box 5: folder 10
|
|
Revere Railroad accident: correspondence
|
|
|
|
|
Family
|
1871
|
|
Box 5: folder 11
|
|
Friends
|
1871
|
|
Box 5: folder 12
|
|
Tributes and testimonials
|
|
|
|
|
Memorial meetings
|
1909-10
|
|
Box 5: folder 13
|
|
"Memorial tributes" (bound scrapbook)
|
1909
|
|
Box 5
|
|
Obituaries
|
1909
|
|
Box 6: folder 1
|
|
Verse
|
1879-1929, n.d.
|
|
Box 6: folder 2
|
|
"Personal tributes, poems, miscellaneous" (collected scrapbook of clippings and articles)
|
1895-1905
|
|
Box 6: folder 3
|
|
Will
|
1908
|
|
Box 6: folder 4
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
|
|
|
|
Articles and clippings
|
1893-1930
|
|
Box 6: folder 5
|
|
Funeral service
|
1964
|
|
Box 6: folder 6
|
|
Letters of recommendation
|
1897-1926
|
|
Box 6: folder 7
|
|
Medical information
|
1892-52, n.d.
|
|
Box 6: folder 8
|
|
Will and power of attorney
|
1929-53
|
|
Box 6: folder 9
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1916-64, n.d.
|
|
Box 6: folder 10
|
|
William Lloyd (1902)
|
1947-60, n.d.
|
|
Box 6: folder 11
|
|
Gould, James
|
1964-71
|
|
Box 7: folder 1
|
|
Harwood, Faith Garrison
|
1910
|
|
Box 7: folder 2
|
|
Norton
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Dyer
|
1910-23
|
|
Box 7: folder 3
|
|
Charles McKim
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 4
|
|
Garrison
|
1946, 1965, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 5
|
|
Katherine Garrison
|
1943
|
|
Box 7: folder 6
|
|
Phoutrides
|
|
|
|
|
Aristides
|
1915-23
|
|
Box 7: folder 7
|
|
Margaret Garrison
|
1956-59, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 8
|
|
Platov, Mariquita Villard
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 9
|
|
Valentine
|
|
|
|
|
Alan
|
1935-50, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 10
|
|
Lucia Garrison
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 11
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Fanny Garrison
|
1906-28, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 12
|
|
Henry
|
1896-1971, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 13
|
|
Henry H.
|
1969
|
|
Box 7: folder 14
|
|
Henry Serrano
|
1969
|
|
Box 7: folder 15
|
|
Julia B. Sanford
|
1903, 1962
|
|
Box 7: folder 16
|
|
Mariquita Serrano
|
1897, 1936
|
|
Box 7: folder 17
|
|
Mary St. John
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 18
|
|
Oswald Garrison
|
1923-59, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 19
|
|
Oswald Garrison, Jr.
|
1949-56, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 20
|
|
Friends and associates
|
|
|
|
|
Andrew, John A.
|
1861-66
|
|
Box 7: folder 21
|
|
Anthony, John Gould
|
1877
|
|
Box 7: folder 22
|
|
Anthony, Susan B.
|
1868-1906, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 23
|
|
Baldwin, William Henry
|
1905
|
|
Box 7: folder 24
|
|
Barrows, Isabel C.
|
1896, 1913
|
|
Box 7: folder 25
|
|
Berenson, Bernard
|
1934
|
|
Box 7: folder 26
|
|
Binger, Carl
|
1964
|
|
Box 7: folder 27
|
|
Birney, Fitzhugh
|
1866
|
|
Box 7: folder 28
|
|
Blackwell
|
|
|
|
|
1903-50, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 29
|
|
|
Henry Brown
|
1909
|
|
Box 7: folder 30
|
|
Katherine B.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 31
|
|
Boutwell, George Sewall
|
1905-08, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 32
|
|
Boyd, William Riley
|
1905-08, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 33
|
|
Breshkofskaya, Katherine
|
1904-25, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 34
|
|
Brooks, Phillips
|
1892-93
|
|
Box 7: folder 35
|
|
Brown
|
|
|
|
|
Hallie G.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 36
|
|
Henry "Box,"
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 37
|
|
1859-97, 1936, n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 38
|
|
|
Browning, Robert
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 7: folder 39
|
|
Buffum family
|
1887, 1904
|
|
Box 7: folder 40
|
|
Butler, Josephine
|
1907
|
|
Box 8: folder 1
|
|
Carpenter, Alice
|
1912
|
|
Box 8: folder 2
|
|
Chace
|
|
|
|
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 3
|
|
|
L. G.
|
1876
|
|
Box 8: folder 4
|
|
Channing, William Ellery
|
1842
|
|
Box 8: folder 5
|
|
Chapman, Maria Weston
[See also SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES - Abolition-Report to the Ladies of Scotland] |
1840-86, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 6
|
|
Chase
|
|
|
|
|
Donald A.
|
1938-40, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 7
|
|
Richard and William Beverly
|
1876
|
|
Box 8: folder 8
|
|
Cheney, Ednah Dow
|
1905
|
|
Box 8: folder 9
|
|
Chesson, Frederick W.
|
1888, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 10
|
|
1880
|
|
Box 8: folder 11
|
|
|
Clark
|
|
|
|
|
Alice
|
1934
|
|
Box 8: folder 12
|
|
Helen Priestman Bright
|
1900-27
|
|
Box 8: folder 13
|
|
Dr. Hilda
|
1955-63
|
|
Box 8: folder 14
|
|
John Bright
|
1904-33
|
|
Box 8: folder 15
|
|
Roger
|
1899-1961
|
|
Box 8: folder 16
|
|
William Stephens
|
1925
|
|
Box 8: folder 17
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1909, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 18
|
|
Clarke, James Freeman: James Freeman Clarke: Autobiography, Diary and Correspondence, edited by Edward Everett Hale
|
1891
|
|
|
|
Clothier, Esther Clark
|
1935, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 19
|
|
Cockerell, Sir Sydney John
|
1945-62
|
|
Box 8: folder 20
|
|
Coffin, Winthrop
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 21
|
|
Collins, Rebecca
|
1909
|
|
Box 8: folder 22
|
|
Colman, Lucy N
|
. 1890-91, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 23
|
|
Conant, Lucy
|
1887, n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 24
|
|
Crosby, Ernest Howard
|
1897-1907
|
|
Box 8: folder 25
|
|
Cutler, Elbridge J.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 8: folder 26
|
|
Daniel
|
|
|
|
|
Charles
|
1872, 1960
|
|
Box 9: folder 1
|
|
Kate
|
1858
|
|
Box 9: folder 2
|
|
Daniels, Mabel
|
1961
|
|
Box 9: folder 3
|
|
Davis, Charles
|
1936-46 n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 4
|
|
Diaz, Abby Morton
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 5
|
|
Douglass Frederick
|
1846-1947, 1962
|
|
Box 9: folder 6
|
|
Du Bois W.E. Burghardt
|
1915, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 7
|
|
Duncan, James
|
1890
|
|
Box 9: folder 8
|
|
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
|
1883-1903, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 9
|
|
Farquharson
|
May, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 10
|
|
Fawcett, Millicent Garrett
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 11
|
|
Folger family
|
1939, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 12
|
|
Follen, Charles
|
|
|
|
|
Foster, Abby Kelley
|
1887
|
|
Box 9: folder 13
|
|
Fowlds, George W
|
. 1899-1936, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 14
|
|
Fowler, Frances
|
1941-44, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 15
|
|
Fowler, Rev. Henry
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 16
|
|
Fry, Elizabeth
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 17
|
|
Gale, Philip Bartlett
|
1945, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 18
|
|
1894-1939, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 19
|
|
|
Gillette, Margaret Clarke
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 20
|
|
Goode, Edith J.
|
1970
|
|
Box 9: folder 21
|
|
Greeley, Horace
|
1872
|
|
Box 9: folder 22
|
|
Hartshorne, Rev. T.C
|
1864, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 23
|
|
Hastings, Dr. Caroline
|
1895
|
|
Box 9: folder 24
|
|
Henry, Alice
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 25
|
|
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth
|
1856-1911
|
|
Box 9: folder 26
|
|
Hoffman, Gertrude Wesselhoeft
|
1968
|
|
Box 9: folder 27
|
|
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
|
1855, n.d.
|
|
Box 9: folder 28
|
|
Howe, Julia Ward
|
1909
|
|
Box 9: folder 29
|
|
Huntington, Frederic Dan
|
1858
|
|
Box 9: folder 30
|
|
Ingersoll, Ebon C.
|
1879
|
|
Box 9: folder 31
|
|
Jackson, Francis
|
1845-68
|
|
Box 9: folder 31
|
|
Jacobs, Sophia Yarnall
|
1959-62
|
|
Box 9: folder 32
|
|
Jefferson, Joseph
|
1883
|
|
Box 9: folder 33
|
|
Johnson
|
|
|
|
|
Andrew
|
1864
|
|
Box 10: folder 1
|
|
Miriam B.
|
1881
|
|
Box 10: folder 2
|
|
Samuel
|
1854-82
|
|
Box 10: folder 3
|
|
Tom L.
|
1899-1910, n.d.
|
|
Box 10: folder 4
|
|
Joshi, Anandibai
|
1927
|
|
Box 10: folder 5
|
|
Julian, George W.
|
1851
|
|
Box 10: folder 6
|
|
Karolyi, Countess
|
1925
|
|
Box 10: folder 7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kiefer, Daniel
|
1923
|
|
Box 10: folder 8
|
|
Kindleberger, Charles P.
|
1998
|
|
Box 10: folder 9
|
|
Kittredge, Henry Crocker
|
1967
|
|
Box 10: folder 10
|
|
Kropotkin, Prince
|
1899
|
|
Box 10: folder 11
|
|
Lee, Robert Warden
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 10: folder 12
|
|
Lord, Alice Kirkham
|
1908-39
|
|
Box 10: folder 13
|
|
Lummis, Dr. Charles Fletcher
|
1957-64
|
|
Box 10: folder 14
|
|
MacKaye
|
|
|
|
|
Marion Morse and Percy
|
1913-59
|
|
Box 10: folder 15
|
|
Percy
|
1932
|
|
Box 10: folder 16
|
|
McKim
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Follen
|
1909
|
|
Box 10: folder 17
|
|
James Miller
|
1831-1975, n.d.
|
|
Box 10: folder 18
|
|
Sarah Allibone Speakman
|
1831-91
|
|
Box 10: folder 19
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1874-79, 1930-34
|
|
Box 10: folder 20
|
|
McLaren, Priscilla Bright
|
1906
|
|
Box 10: folder 21
|
|
MacVeagh, Wayne
|
1901
|
|
Box 10: folder 22
|
|
Martineau, Harriet
[See also Books (page 251), SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES - Abolition - Pamphlets and SERIES VII. PHOTOGRAPHS -Ambleside] |
|
|
|
|
Articles and pamphlets
|
1839-84
|
|
Box 11: folder 1
|
|
Society in America, v.2
|
1837
|
|
|
|
Maurer, H. B
|
. 1886-1932, n.d.
|
|
Box 11: folder 2
|
|
May
|
|
|
|
|
George E.
|
1925
|
|
Box 11: folder 3
|
|
John Joseph
|
1904
|
|
Box 11: folder 4
|
|
Rev. Joseph
|
1918
|
|
Box 11: folder 5
|
|
Samuel J.
[See also Books (page 251) and SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES - Abolition- Pamphlets] |
1840-86, n.d.
|
|
Box 11: folder 6
|
|
Merrill, Frances S.
|
1897
|
|
Box 11: folder 7
|
|
Nichol, John
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 11: folder 8
|
|
Pankhurst family
|
1912-60, n.d.
|
|
Box 11: folder 9
|
|
Park, John Edgar
|
1927
|
|
Box 11: folder 10
|
|
Parker, Theodore
|
|
|
|
|
Writings
|
1853-58, n.d.
|
|
Box 11: folder 11
|
|
Frothingham, Octavious Brooks, Theodore Parker: A Biography
|
1874
|
|
Box 11: folder 12
|
|
Pastoriza, J.J
|
|
|
|
|
Peterson, Roger Tory
|
|
|
|
|
Phillips
|
|
|
|
|
Ann
|
1886
|
|
Box 12: folder 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Articles, miscellaneous printed material and verse
|
1880-1892, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 2
|
|
Statue
|
1915
|
|
Box 12: folder 3
|
|
Writings and speeches
|
1859-92
|
|
Box 12: folder 4
|
|
Speeches, Lectures and Letters (letter to Wendell P. Garrison inserted)
|
1863, 1891
|
|
|
|
Pillsbury, Parker
|
1867-98, 1922
|
|
Box 12: folder 5
|
|
Post, Louis
|
1928, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 6
|
|
Potter, Bishop
|
1894
|
|
Box 12: folder 7
|
|
Price, Lucien ("Uncle Dudley")
[See also SERIES X. STEPHENSON FAMILY - Correspondence- Walter Stephenson to David Lloyd Garrison] |
1923-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 8
|
|
Prang, Louis, n.d
|
|
|
Box 12: folder 9
|
|
Purvis, Robert
|
1898
|
|
Box 12: folder 10
|
|
Quincy, Edmund
|
1904
|
|
Box 12: folder 11
|
|
Robinson, Edward
|
1895, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 12
|
|
Saltonstall, Leverett
|
1839
|
|
Box 12: folder 13
|
|
Sayre, Nora
|
1936-73, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 14
|
|
Severance, Caroline
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 15
|
|
Sewall, Harriet Winslow
|
1880
|
|
|
|
Seward Family
|
1865, n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 16
|
|
Shaw, Anna Howard
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 12: folder 17
|
|
Smalley, Evelyn Garnaut
|
1938
|
|
Box 12: folder 18
|
|
Smallwood, Rev. John J.
|
1892-1904, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 1
|
|
Smith, Gerrit
|
1862-1906
|
|
Box 13: folder 2
|
|
Smith, Joseph Lindon
|
1885-97, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 3
|
|
Smith, Roswell
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 4
|
|
Spence, Catherine H
|
1839, 1905
|
|
Box 13: folder 5
|
|
Stafford, Wendell Phillips
|
1912, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 6
|
|
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady
|
circa 1856, 1902, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 7
|
|
Stone, Lucy
|
1893
|
|
Box 13: folder 8
|
|
Stowe, Harriet Beecher
[See SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS - WLG (1805)- clippings] |
|
|
|
|
Sumner, Charles
|
1856-72
|
|
Box 13: folder 9
|
|
Terry, Ellen
|
1887, 1959
|
|
Box 13: folder 10
|
|
Thompson
|
|
|
|
|
1840-1913, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 11
|
|
|
Ruth Brown
|
1904
|
|
Box 13: folder 12
|
|
Tolman, Harriet S.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 13
|
|
Tolstoy, Leo
|
1892-1905, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 14
|
|
Tubman, Harriet
|
|
|
|
|
Clippings
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 15
|
|
Bradford, Sarah H., Harriet, The Moses of Her People
|
1886
|
|
Box 13
|
|
Twitchell, Eliza Stowe
|
1918
|
|
Box 13: folder 16
|
|
1895-1908, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 17
|
|
|
Webb, Alfred
|
1873-1908, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 18
|
|
Weld, Theodore Dwight
[See also SERIES V. FINANCIAL MATERIALS -WLG (1874) - Theodore Dwight Weld estate] |
1883-1909, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 19
|
|
Wells, Ida B.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 20
|
|
Whittier, John Greenleaf
|
1892-93, n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 21
|
|
Wilberforce, William
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 22
|
|
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 23
|
|
Wirth, Jacob
|
1965
|
|
Box 13: folder 24
|
|
Woodhull, Victoria
[See also SERIES X. WRIGHT FAMILY - Lucretia Coffin Mott writings] |
1871
|
|
Box 13: folder 25
|
|
Wright, Henry C.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 13: folder 26
|
|
Wright, Teresa
|
1972
|
|
Box 13: folder 27
|
|
Zakrzewska, Dr. Marie E.
|
1857-1902
|
|
Box 13: folder 28
|
|
SERIES II. DIARIES
|
(1854-1995)
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
|
|
|
|
1879-86
|
|
Box 14
|
|
|
1887-1908
|
|
Box 15
|
|
|
1909-36
|
|
Box 16
|
|
|
1937-45
|
|
Box 17
|
|
|
David
|
|
|
|
|
1950-60
|
|
Box 18
|
|
|
1961-65
|
|
Box 19
|
|
|
1966-70
|
|
Box 20
|
|
|
1971-76
|
|
Box 21
|
|
|
1977-82
|
|
Box 22
|
|
|
1983-85
|
|
Box 23
|
|
|
1986-88
|
|
Box 24
|
|
|
1989-91
|
|
Box 25
|
|
|
1992-94
|
|
Box 26
|
|
|
1995
|
|
Box 27
|
|
|
Indexes
|
|
|
Box 27: folder 1
|
|
Notes
|
|
|
Box 27: folder 2
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
Datebooks
|
1907-22
|
|
Box 28: folder 1-2
|
|
Diaries
|
1898, 1940, 1963
|
|
Box 28: folder 3
|
|
Eleanor
|
1913-15
|
|
Box 28: folder 4
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
|
|
|
|
1854-56
|
|
Box 28: folder 5
|
|
|
1857-1912
|
|
Box 29: folder 1-5
|
|
|
Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall
|
|
|
|
|
1914-29
|
|
Box 30
|
|
|
1930-45
|
|
Box 31
|
|
|
1946-61
|
|
Box 32: folder 1-7
|
|
|
Mildred Yarnall
|
1886
|
|
Box 32: folder 8
|
|
Robert Hale
|
|
|
|
|
First Trip to Europe
|
1913-14
|
|
Box 33: folder 1-3
|
|
South America
|
1959
|
|
Box 33: folder 4
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1860-68
|
|
Box 33: folder 5-6
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1856-80
|
|
Box 34: folder 1-5
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1896-97
|
|
Box 34: folder 6
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1897-1909
|
|
Box 35
|
|
SERIES III. CORRESPONDENCE
|
(1744-1996)
|
|
|
|
Family letters
|
|
|
|
|
Generation 1
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison, Abijah
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph and Mary Palmer
|
1805
|
|
Box 36: folder 1
|
|
Frances Lloyd
|
1804, 1806
|
|
Box 36: folder 2
|
|
Joseph
|
1806
|
|
Box 36: folder 3
|
|
Jones
|
1798
|
|
Box 36: folder 4
|
|
Palmer, Johanna
|
1814
|
|
Box 36: folder 5
|
|
Garrison, Frances Lloyd
|
|
|
|
|
Allen, Ephraim
|
1823
|
|
Box 36: folder 6
|
|
Farnham, Martha
|
1814-20
|
|
Box 36: folder 7-8
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
James
|
1818
|
|
Box 36: folder 9
|
|
Maria E.
|
1821
|
|
Box 36: folder 10
|
|
WLG (1805)
|
1814-22
|
|
Box 36: folder 11-12
|
|
Unidentified friends
|
1804,1807
|
|
Box 36: folder 13
|
|
Garrison, William
|
1806, 1832
|
|
Box 36: folder 14
|
|
Generation 2
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison, Charles W.
|
1841
|
|
Box 36: folder 15
|
|
Garrison, Edwin W.
|
1832-34
|
|
Box 36: folder 16
|
|
Garrison, Helen Benson
|
|
|
|
|
Benson, George
|
1848
|
|
Box 36: folder 17
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1865-73
|
|
Box 36: folder 18
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1856-71
|
|
Box 36: folder 19
|
|
WLG (1838)
|
1855-72, n.d.
|
|
Box 36: folder 20-22
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1866
|
|
Box 36: folder 23
|
|
Weston, Caroline
|
1835
|
|
Box 36: folder 24
|
|
Garrison, Maria E.
|
1821-22
|
|
Box 36: folder 25
|
|
Garrison, W. A.
|
1843-80
|
|
Box 36: folder 26
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1805)
|
|
|
|
|
Anthony, John G.
|
1874
|
|
Box 36: folder 27
|
|
Benson, George
|
1843
|
|
Box 36: folder 28
|
|
Buffum, James
|
1855
|
|
Box 36: folder 29
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1864-78
|
|
Box 36: folder 30
|
|
Frances Lloyd
|
1843
|
|
Box 36: folder 31
|
|
George Thompson
|
1876-78
|
|
Box 36: folder 32
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1846, 1870-71
|
|
Box 36: folder 33
|
|
Wendell Phillips and Lucy McKim
|
1858-78
|
|
Box 36: folder 34-35
|
|
WLG (1838)
|
1855-78
|
|
Box 36: folder 36-37
|
|
Horton, Harriet Farnham
|
1830
|
|
Box 36: folder 38
|
|
Hunt, Rev. Samuel
|
1876
|
|
Box 36: folder 39
|
|
Johnson, Oliver
|
1861
|
|
Box 36: folder 40
|
|
May, Rev. Samuel
|
1850
|
|
Box 36: folder 41
|
|
May, Samuel Jr.
|
1851
|
|
Box 36: folder 42
|
|
McKim, James Miller
|
1853
|
|
Box 36: folder 43
|
|
Mott, Lucretia Coffin
|
1840
|
|
Box 36: folder 44
|
|
Mott, Thomas
|
1868
|
|
Box 36: folder 45
|
|
Parker, Mary S.
|
1839
|
|
Box 36: folder 46
|
|
Mr. Philbrick
|
1849
|
|
Box 36: folder 47
|
|
Quincy, Edmund
|
1840-77, n.d.
|
|
Box 36: folder 48-51
|
|
Shepard, George
|
1830
|
|
Box 36: folder 52
|
|
Taylor, Bayard
|
1866
|
|
Box 36: folder 53
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1871-78
|
|
Box 36: folder 54
|
|
Walcutt, Rev.
|
1848
|
|
Box 36: folder 55
|
|
Waterson, Rev R.C
|
1868
|
|
Box 36: folder 56
|
|
Weston, Caroline
|
1871
|
|
Box 36: folder 57
|
|
Generation 3
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison, Annie McKim Dennis
|
1858, 1860?
|
|
Box 37: folder 1
|
|
Garrison, Ellen Wright
|
|
|
|
|
Ahlborn, Emily
|
1866-83
|
|
Box 37: folder 2
|
|
Anthony, Susan B.
|
1858-82
|
|
Box 37: folder 3
|
|
Brown, Anna (cousin)
|
1861, 1866, 1890
|
|
Box 37: folder 4
|
|
Chase, William Beverly
|
1861-62
|
|
Box 37: folder 5-6
|
|
Clark, Helen B.
|
1898-1916
|
|
Box 37: folder 7
|
|
Davis, Maria
|
1875
|
|
Box 37: folder 8
|
|
Delano, Mary
|
1851, n.d.
|
|
Box 37: folder 9
|
|
Family
|
|
|
|
|
"Brothers and Sisters"
|
1861
|
|
Box 37: folder 10
|
|
Suffrage
|
1898-1906
|
|
Box 37: folder 11-16
|
|
Travel
|
1901-03
|
|
Box 37: folder 17-21
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1852-1918
|
|
Box 37: folder 22-27
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
|
|
|
|
1876-98
|
|
Box 38: folder 1-23
|
|
|
1899-1919
|
|
Box 39: folder 1-19
|
|
|
1920-30
|
|
Box 40: folder 1-4
|
|
|
Annie McKim
|
1859-62
|
|
Box 40: folder 5
|
|
Charles and Margaret Carret
|
1881-1921
|
|
Box 40: folder 6-12
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1921-29
|
|
Box 40: folder 13
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1900-21
|
|
Box 40: folder 14
|
|
Eleanor
|
|
|
|
|
1890-1910
|
|
Box 40: folder 15-28
|
|
|
1911-30, n.d.
|
|
Box 41: folder 1-11
|
|
|
Francis Jackson and Theresa Holmes
|
1878-1919
|
|
Box 41: folder 12-13
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1884-1903
|
|
Box 41: folder 14
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1865-73
|
|
Box 41: folder 15
|
|
Lucy McKim
|
1859-77
|
|
Box 41: folder 16-20
|
|
Margaret Jr.
|
1910
|
|
Box 41: folder 21
|
|
Robert H.
|
1927
|
|
Box 41: folder 22
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1864
|
|
Box 41: folder 23
|
|
WLG (1805)
|
1878
|
|
Box 42: folder 1
|
|
WLG (1838)
|
|
|
|
|
1863-91
|
|
Box 42: folder 2-26
|
|
|
1892-1906
|
|
Box 43: folder 1-15
|
|
|
1907-08
|
|
Box 44: folder 1-2
|
|
|
WLG (1874)
|
1888-1930, n.d.
|
|
Box 44: folder 3-8
|
|
WLG (1902)
|
1915
|
|
Box 44: folder 9
|
|
Hallowell, Anna Davis
|
1851-68
|
|
Box 44: folder 10
|
|
Harrison, Agnes
|
1870
|
|
Box 44: folder 11
|
|
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 44: folder 12
|
|
Hilgard, Prof.
|
1910
|
|
Box 44: folder 13
|
|
Lord, Alice
|
1926
|
|
Box 44: folder 14
|
|
McLaren, Priscilla
|
1901-02
|
|
Box 44: folder 15
|
|
Morton, Mr
|
. 1863
|
|
Box 44: folder 16
|
|
Mott, Marianna Pelham
|
1859-79, n.d.
|
|
Box 45: folder 1
|
|
Nowell, Sadie
|
1877
|
|
Box 45: folder 2
|
|
Osborne
|
|
|
|
|
David
|
1867
|
|
Box 45: folder 3
|
|
Eliza Wright
|
1852-1911
|
|
Box 45: folder 4-32
|
|
Munson
|
1877-85
|
|
Box 45: folder 33
|
|
Thomas Mott
|
1872
|
|
Box 45: folder 34
|
|
Parrish, Isabel
|
1874
|
|
Box 45: folder 35
|
|
Pillsbury, Parker
|
1863
|
|
Box 45: folder 36
|
|
Plumly, John L.
|
1855-59
|
|
Box 45: folder 37
|
|
Porter, Mr., early
|
1850s
|
|
Box 45: folder 38
|
|
Pratt, Mary
|
1879
|
|
Box 45: folder 39
|
|
Randall, Mary
|
1877, 1887
|
|
Box 45: folder 40
|
|
Shaw, Emily Mott
|
1887
|
|
Box 45: folder 41
|
|
Starr, Sarah
|
1861
|
|
Box 45: folder 42
|
|
Stratton, Laura
|
1859-66
|
|
Box 46: folder 1-4
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1866-92
|
|
Box 46: folder 5-6
|
|
Weld, Theodore Dwight
|
1863-64
|
|
Box 46: folder 7
|
|
Wood, C.P.
|
1854-56, 1875
|
|
Box 46: folder 8
|
|
Wood, Hetty
|
1854-1861, n.d.
|
|
Box 46: folder 9
|
|
Wright
|
|
|
|
|
David
|
1882-97
|
|
Box 46: folder 10-13
|
|
Fanny Pell
|
1867-75
|
|
Box 46: folder 14
|
|
Flora
|
1878-79
|
|
Box 46: folder 15
|
|
Frank
|
1855-91
|
|
Box 46: folder 16-18
|
|
Martha Coffin
|
1853-66
|
|
Box 46: folder 19-31
|
|
Martha Coffin
|
1867-74
|
|
Box 47: folder 1-8
|
|
William Pelham
|
1853-63
|
|
Box 48: folder 1-2
|
|
Unidentified and fragments
|
1862, 1925, n.d.
|
|
Box 48: folder 3
|
|
Garrison, Francis Jackson
|
|
|
|
|
Buffum, Abby
|
1886
|
|
Box 48: folder 4
|
|
Clark family
|
1877-1916
|
|
Box 48: folder 5-8
|
|
Family
|
1867
|
|
Box 48: folder 9
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1877-1916
|
|
Box 48: folder 10-12
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1911, 1915
|
|
Box 48: folder 13
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1887-1908
|
|
Box 48: folder 14
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1895-1910
|
|
Box 48: folder 15
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1884
|
|
Box 48: folder 16
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
|
1906
|
|
Box 48: folder 17
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1859-1916, n.d.
|
|
Box 48: folder 18-19
|
|
May, Mr
|
. 1889
|
|
Box 48: folder 20
|
|
Mifflin G.H
|
1916
|
|
Box 48: folder 21
|
|
Norton, Katherine Garrison
|
1914-16
|
|
Box 48: folder 22
|
|
Otis, Georgina
|
1879
|
|
Box 48: folder 23
|
|
Priestman, Mary and Anna
|
1879, 1904
|
|
Box 48: folder 24
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1906-07
|
|
Box 48: folder 25
|
|
Whitney, Anne
|
1878-83
|
|
Box 48: folder 26
|
|
Garrison, George Thompson
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1857-81
|
|
Box 49: folder 1
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1853-74
|
|
Box 49: folder 2-4
|
|
Wendell P.
|
1857-83
|
|
Box 49: folder 5
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
|
1857-69
|
|
Box 49: folder 6
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1857-89
|
|
Box 49: folder 7-8
|
|
Hall, Rev. Edward H.
|
1890
|
|
Box 49: folder 9
|
|
Wright, H.C.
|
1857
|
|
Box 49: folder 10
|
|
Garrison, Lucy McKim
|
|
|
|
|
Byrne, Ann and Mary
|
1855-62
|
|
Box 49: folder 11
|
|
Cox, Mrs. Kenyon
|
1871-72, 1876
|
|
Box 49: folder 12
|
|
Davis, Anna C.
|
1850, 1865
|
|
Box 49: folder 13
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1852-76
|
|
Box 49: folder 14-19
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1865
|
|
Box 49: folder 20
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1863-65, 1869-74
|
|
Box 49: folder 21-23
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1864, 1875
|
|
Box 49: folder 24
|
|
"Home"
|
1864
|
|
Box 49: folder 25
|
|
McKim
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Follen
|
1866-69
|
|
Box 49: folder 26-27
|
|
James Miller
|
1859
|
|
Box 49: folder 28
|
|
Sarah Speakman
|
1862
|
|
Box 49: folder 29
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1863-73
|
|
Box 49: folder 30
|
|
Unidentified and fragments
|
1864-65
|
|
Box 49: folder 31
|
|
Garrison, Theresa Holmes
|
|
|
|
|
Clark, Helen B.
|
1900-05
|
|
Box 50: folder 1
|
|
Emerson, Claire ("Tita") Garrison
|
1913
|
|
Box 50: folder 2
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1901-11, n.d.
|
|
Box 50: folder 3
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1915?
|
|
Box 50: folder 4
|
|
Margaret Carret
|
1907
|
|
Box 50: folder 5
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1908
|
|
Box 50: folder 6
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1893
|
|
Box 50: folder 7
|
|
Garrison, Wendell Phillips
|
|
|
|
|
Byrne, Mary
|
1893
|
|
Box 50: folder 8
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1881-1905
|
|
Box 50: folder 9
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1874-98
|
|
Box 50: folder 10
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1877-1906
|
|
Box 50: folder 11
|
|
George Thompson
|
1864
|
|
Box 50: folder 12
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1857-72
|
|
Box 50: folder 13
|
|
Lucy McKim
|
1863-74, n.d.
|
|
Box 50: folder 14-15
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
|
1859
|
|
Box 50: folder 16
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1855-1906
|
|
Box 50: folder 17-31
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1905
|
|
Box 50: folder 32
|
|
May, Mr.
|
1888-89
|
|
Box 51: folder 1
|
|
Norton, Charles Dyer
|
1897
|
|
Box 51: folder 2
|
|
Norton, Katherine Garrison
|
1900-06
|
|
Box 51: folder 3
|
|
Norton, Harriet Dyer
|
1896-97
|
|
Box 51: folder 4
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1877
|
|
Box 51: folder 5
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1838)
|
|
|
|
|
Adams, Mr.
|
1908
|
|
Box 51: folder 6
|
|
Anthony, Susan B.
|
1882
|
|
Box 51: folder 7
|
|
Brown, Alice
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 51: folder 8
|
|
Buffum, Abby and James
|
1862-89
|
|
Box 51: folder 9
|
|
Bunker, Edward S.
|
1861
|
|
Box 51: folder 10
|
|
Clarke
|
|
|
|
|
Mr.
|
1904
|
|
Box 51: folder 11
|
|
Helen B.
|
1877-1908
|
|
Box 51: folder 12-13
|
|
Cleveland, Grover
|
1897
|
|
Box 51: folder 14
|
|
Drew, Mary
|
1864
|
|
Box 51: folder 15
|
|
Everett, William
|
1907
|
|
Box 51: folder 16
|
|
Family
|
|
|
|
|
Northwest trip
|
1880
|
|
Box 51: folder 17
|
|
Europe
|
1889, 1901
|
|
Box 51: folder 18-21
|
|
California
|
1903
|
|
Box 51: folder 22
|
|
Unidentified
|
1880
|
|
Box 51: folder 23
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1870-1906
|
|
Box 52: folder 1-11
|
|
Charles and Margaret
|
1892-02
|
|
Box 52: folder 12
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1899-1907
|
|
Box 52: folder 13
|
|
Eleanor
|
1894-1902
|
|
Box 52: folder 14-15
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
|
|
|
|
1863-85
|
|
Box 53: folder 1-22
|
|
|
1886-1900
|
|
Box 54: folder 1-17
|
|
|
1901-08, n.d.
|
|
Box 55: folder 1-9
|
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1859-09
|
|
Box 55: folder 10-13
|
|
George Thompson
|
1864
|
|
Box 56: folder 1
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1851-75
|
|
Box 56: folder 2-3
|
|
Mary Pratt
|
1879
|
|
Box 56: folder 4
|
|
Theresa Holmes
|
1896
|
|
Box 56: folder 5
|
|
Wendell Holmes
|
1905
|
|
Box 56: folder 6
|
|
Wendell Phillips and Lucy McKim
|
1854-95
|
|
Box 56: folder 7-12
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
|
1855-78
|
|
Box 56: folder 13-15
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1893-1909
|
|
Box 56: folder 16-17
|
|
Hale, Mr.
|
1886
|
|
Box 56: folder 18
|
|
Mason, Carrie
|
1908
|
|
Box 56: folder 19
|
|
McKim Mr.
|
1874
|
|
Box 56: folder 20
|
|
McLaren, Priscilla
|
1902
|
|
Box 56: folder 21
|
|
May, Samuel
|
1864
|
|
Box 56: folder 22
|
|
Norton, Katherine Garrison
|
1909
|
|
Box 56: folder 23
|
|
Osborne, Eliza Wright and Munson
|
1872-08
|
|
Box 56: folder 24
|
|
Putnam, Miss
|
1898-1906
|
|
Box 56: folder 25
|
|
Rogers, Mrs.
|
1879
|
|
Box 56: folder 26
|
|
Triplet, Mr.
|
1886
|
|
Box 56: folder 27
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Fanny
|
1861-1905
|
|
Box 56: folder 28
|
|
Henry
|
1866-67
|
|
Box 56: folder 29
|
|
Western Historical Society
|
1883
|
|
Box 56: folder 30
|
|
Weston, Caroline
|
1871
|
|
Box 56: folder 31
|
|
Wright
|
|
|
|
|
David
|
1869
|
|
Box 56: folder 32
|
|
Martha Coffin
|
1864-74
|
|
Box 56: folder 33-35
|
|
Martha Coffin and David
|
1864
|
|
Box 56: folder 36
|
|
Unidentified
|
1858-1902
|
|
Box 56: folder 37
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Cox, Mrs. Kenyon
|
1883
|
|
Box 57: folder 1
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1900-26
|
|
Box 57: folder 2
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1872-1928, n.d.
|
|
Box 57: folder 3-4
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1881-16
|
|
Box 57: folder 5
|
|
George Thompson
|
1864
|
|
Box 57: folder 6
|
|
Helen Benson
|
1862-65
|
|
Box 57: folder 7
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1883
|
|
Box 57: folder 8
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1860-1908, n.d.
|
|
Box 57: folder 9-10
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1903-25
|
|
Box 57: folder 11
|
|
May, Mr
|
. 1897
|
|
Box 57: folder 12
|
|
Villard, Harold
|
1887
|
|
Box 57: folder 13
|
|
Villard, Henry
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1895-1900
|
|
Box 57: folder 14
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1867-98, n.d.
|
|
Box 57: folder 15-16
|
|
Generation 4
|
|
|
|
|
Chubb, Marion Knight Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1957, n.d.
|
|
Box 57: folder 17
|
|
Eleanor
|
1958-68
|
|
Box 57: folder 18
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1900
|
|
Box 57: folder 19
|
|
Valentine, Lucia Norton
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 57: folder 20
|
|
Garrison, Agnes
|
|
|
|
|
Clark
|
|
|
|
|
Helen P.
|
1889-1910
|
|
Box 57: folder 21
|
|
Roger and Sarah
|
1891-1927
|
|
Box 57: folder 22-23
|
|
Family
|
|
|
|
|
Europe
|
1889-1901
|
|
Box 58: folder 1-8
|
|
Italy and Greece
|
1901
|
|
Box 58: folder 9
|
|
Europe
|
1901-02
|
|
Box 58: folder 10-14
|
|
California
|
1903
|
|
Box 59: folder 1
|
|
Europe
|
1903, 1910-11
|
|
Box 59: folder 2-4
|
|
Miscellaneous unidentified
|
1874-76
|
|
Box 59: folder 5
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Charles and Margaret
|
1876-1918
|
|
Box 59: folder 6
|
|
David Lloyd
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 59: folder 7
|
|
Eleanor
|
1897-1933, n.d.
|
|
Box 59: folder 8-16
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
|
|
|
|
1874-82
|
|
Box 59: folder 17-20
|
|
|
1883-94
|
|
Box 60: folder 1-17
|
|
|
1895-1912
|
|
Box 61: folder 1-16
|
|
|
1913-30
|
|
Box 62: folder 1-10
|
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1877-1914, n.d.
|
|
Box 62: folder 11-12
|
|
Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall
|
1878-1949
|
|
Box 62: folder 12
|
|
Mary Pratt
|
1880-81
|
|
Box 62: folder 14
|
|
Robert Hale
|
1896, 1911, 1914
|
|
Box 62: folder 15
|
|
William Lloyd (1805)
|
1877, 1879
|
|
Box 62: folder 16
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1875-1908
|
|
Box 62: folder 17-20
|
|
Willliam Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1892-1946
|
|
Box 63: folder 1-5
|
|
Harwood, Faith Garrison
|
1921
|
|
Box 63: folder 6
|
|
Jones, Laura
|
1884
|
|
Box 63: folder 7
|
|
Osborne, Eliza Wright
|
1883-1910
|
|
Box 63: folder 8-9
|
|
Randall, Mary
|
1908
|
|
Box 63: folder 10
|
|
Robinson, Edward
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 63: folder 11
|
|
Storrow, Helen Osborne
|
1943
|
|
Box 63: folder 12
|
|
Tinkham, Mrs.
|
1932
|
|
Box 63: folder 13
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Fanny Garrison
|
1878, 1897
|
|
Box 64: folder 1
|
|
Helen
|
1876-94
|
|
Box 64: folder 2-10
|
|
Oswald
|
1894-95
|
|
Box 64: folder 11
|
|
Miscellaneous and unidentified fragments
|
1886-1908, n.d.
|
|
Box 64: folder 12
|
|
Garrison, Alice Kirkham
|
1906-52, n.d.
|
|
Box 65: folder 1
|
|
Garrison, Charles and Margaret Carret
|
|
|
|
|
Aunts
|
1887, 1923, 1927
|
|
Box 65: folder 2
|
|
Emerson, Claire ("Tita")
|
1915
|
|
Box 65: folder 3
|
|
Family
|
1891, 1914
|
|
Box 65: folder 4-5
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1881-1941
|
|
Box 65: folder 6-10
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1948
|
|
Box 65: folder 11
|
|
Eleanor
|
1895-1931
|
|
Box 65: folder 12
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1877-1930
|
|
Box 65: folder 13-19
|
|
Frank and Mildred Yarnall
|
1877-1941
|
|
Box 65: folder 20
|
|
Margaret Carret
|
1914
|
|
Box 65: folder 21
|
|
Robert Hale
|
1927, 1950
|
|
Box 65: folder 22
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1882-1906
|
|
Box 65: folder 23
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1897-1942
|
|
Box 65: folder 24-25
|
|
Halliday, Mother
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 65: folder 26
|
|
McKim, Sarah Speakman.
|
1888
|
|
Box 65: folder 27
|
|
Phoutrides, Margaret Garrison
|
1933
|
|
Box 65: folder 28
|
|
Villard, Harold
|
1877
|
|
Box 65: folder 29
|
|
Garrison, Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1902, 1937
|
|
Box 66: folder 1
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1925-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 66: folder 2-4
|
|
Eleanor
|
1952-62
|
|
Box 66: folder 5
|
|
Eleanor and Frank Wright
|
1956-58
|
|
Box 66: folder 6
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1900-24, n.d.
|
|
Box 66: folder 7
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1955-60
|
|
Box 66: folder 8
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1899-1906
|
|
Box 67: folder 1-8
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1907-40, n.d.
|
|
Box 68: folder 1-9
|
|
William Lloyd (1902)
|
1924
|
|
Box 68: folder 10
|
|
Randall, Mary
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 68: folder 11
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1903
|
|
Box 68: folder 12
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 68: folder 13
|
|
Garrison, Eleanor
|
|
|
|
|
Clark
|
|
|
|
|
Helen P.B.
|
1900
|
|
Box 69: folder 1
|
|
Roger and Sarah
|
1947-53
|
|
Box 69: folder 2
|
|
Downer, E. L.
|
1963
|
|
Box 69: folder 3
|
|
Emerson, Clair ("Tita") Garrison
|
1921
|
|
Box 69: folder 4
|
|
Family
|
|
|
|
|
Smith College
|
1900-04
|
|
Box 69: folder 5-8
|
|
Denver trip
|
1906
|
|
Box 69: folder 9
|
|
Suffrage
|
1911-15
|
|
Box 69: folder 10-21
|
|
Suffrage
|
1916-19
|
|
Box 70: folder 1-7
|
|
Smith reunion
|
1919
|
|
Box 70: folder 8
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
circa 1890-1944
|
|
Box 70: folder 9-10
|
|
Charles
|
1902-10
|
|
Box 70: folder 11
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1920-21
|
|
Box 70: folder 12
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
1900-55
|
|
Box 70: folder 13-17
|
|
|
1956-64, n.d.
|
|
Box 71: folder 1-5
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1905-26
|
|
Box 71: folder 6-7
|
|
Fanny
|
1966
|
|
Box 71: folder 8
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1915
|
|
Box 71: folder 9
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1946-55
|
|
Box 71: folder 10
|
|
Margaret Carret
|
1910-11
|
|
Box 71: folder 11
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1902
|
|
Box 71: folder 12
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1894-1954, n.d.
|
|
Box 72: folder 1-15
|
|
Grierson, Margaret Storrs
|
|
|
|
|
1947-61
|
|
Box 73: folder 1-8
|
|
|
1962-74
|
|
Box 74: folder 1-4
|
|
|
Nicol, Elizabeth Pease
|
1879
|
|
Box 74: folder 5
|
|
Osborne, Eliza Wright
|
1910
|
|
Box 74: folder 6
|
|
Unidentified
|
1907, 1955
|
|
Box 74: folder 7
|
|
Garrison, Fanny
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Eleanor
|
1950-68
|
|
Box 74: folder 8
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1930
|
|
Box 74: folder 9
|
|
George and Nancy
|
1962-67
|
|
Box 74: folder 10
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1903-15, 1947
|
|
Box 74: folder 11
|
|
Garrison, Frank Wright and Mildred Yarnall
|
|
|
|
|
Clark family
|
1901-53
|
|
Box 74: folder 12
|
|
Cromwell, Otelia
|
1958
|
|
Box 74: folder 13
|
|
Family
|
1906-11
|
|
Box 74: folder 14
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1888-1933
|
|
Box 74: folder 15
|
|
Catherine E. Cooper
|
1947
|
|
Box 74: folder 16
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1914, 1924
|
|
Box 74: folder 17
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1933-61
|
|
Box 75: folder 1-5
|
|
Eleanor
|
1914-55
|
|
Box 75: folder 6
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1888-1912
|
|
Box 75: folder 7
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1912
|
|
Box 75: folder 8
|
|
John Bright
|
1933
|
|
Box 75: folder 9
|
|
Margaret Minot Carret
|
1901
|
|
Box 75: folder 10
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1888-99
|
|
Box 75: folder 11
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
1895-1936
|
|
Box 76: folder 1-9
|
|
|
1936-60, n.d.
|
|
Box 77: folder 1-7
|
|
|
Grierson, Margaret Storrs
|
1950-61
|
|
Box 77: folder 8
|
|
Leland, Marine
|
1950, 1959
|
|
Box 77: folder 9
|
|
Reed, Leonard
|
1959
|
|
Box 77: folder 10
|
|
Stephenson, Walter
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 77: folder 11
|
|
Viereck, Peter
|
1958
|
|
Box 77: folder 12
|
|
Garrison, Lloyd McKim
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1881-97
|
|
Box 78: folder 1
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1899
|
|
Box 78: folder 2
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1897-1900
|
|
Box 78: folder 3
|
|
Garrison, Margaret Carret
|
|
|
|
|
Carret, Sarah W.
|
1898-1901, n.d.
|
|
Box 78: folder 4
|
|
Family
|
1901-10
|
|
Box 78: folder 5
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1897-1937, n.d.
|
|
Box 78: folder 6-11
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1901-11
|
|
Box 78: folder 12
|
|
Eleanor
|
1902-30, n.d.
|
|
Box 78: folder 13
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1896-30
|
|
Box 78: folder 14-20
|
|
Robert Hale
|
1914, 1927, 1946
|
|
Box 78: folder 21
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1901-03, n.d.
|
|
Box 78: folder 22
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1900, 1902
|
|
Box 78: folder 23
|
|
Unidentified
|
1941, n.d.
|
|
Box 78: folder 24
|
|
Garrison, Marianne Baehrecke
|
1908
|
|
Box 79: folder 1
|
|
Garrison, Mildred Yarnall
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1900-08
|
|
Box 79: folder 2
|
|
Agnes and Frank Wright
|
1916
|
|
Box 79: folder 3
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1900
|
|
Box 79: folder 4
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1912-14
|
|
Box 79: folder 5
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1899, n.d.
|
|
Box 79: folder 6
|
|
Garrison, Philip McKim
|
1900
|
|
Box 79: folder 7
|
|
Garrison, Rhodes
|
1907
|
|
Box 79: folder 8
|
|
Garrison, Wendell Holmes
|
|
|
|
|
Cousin Jim
|
1962
|
|
Box 79: folder 9
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1912
|
|
Box 79: folder 10
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1913-17, 1920, n.d.
|
|
Box 79: folder 11
|
|
Villard, Fanny Garrison
|
1944-63
|
|
Box 79: folder 12
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1874)
|
|
|
|
|
Ahlborn, Emily
|
1921
|
|
Box 79: folder 13
|
|
Allen, J. Weston
|
1916
|
|
Box 79: folder 14
|
|
Bliss, Edith Garrison ("Yoy")
|
1926
|
|
Box 79: folder 15
|
|
Clark, Helen and Roger
|
1897-1945
|
|
Box 79: folder 16
|
|
Emerson, Claire ("Tita") and Robert
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 79: folder 17
|
|
Gale, Phillip
|
1942-44
|
|
Box 79: folder 18
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1883-1948
|
|
Box 79: folder 19-20
|
|
Charles
|
1928, 1931
|
|
Box 79: folder 22
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1910-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 79: folder 23-24
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
1899-1904
|
|
Box 80: folder 1-10
|
|
|
1905-06
|
|
Box 81: folder 1-6
|
|
|
1907-10
|
|
Box 82: folder 1-6
|
|
|
1911-48, n.d.
|
|
Box 83: folder 1-6
|
|
|
Eleanor
|
1888-1948, n.d.
|
|
Box 84: folder 1
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1886-1931
|
|
Box 84: folder 2-7
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1914
|
|
Box 84: folder 8
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1914-33, n.d.
|
|
Box 84: folder 9
|
|
John Bright
|
1926
|
|
Box 84: folder 10
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1889-1909
|
|
Box 84: folder 11-12
|
|
William Lloyd (1902)
|
1913-43
|
|
Box 84: folder 13
|
|
Norton, Katherine Garrison
|
1923
|
|
Box 85: folder 1
|
|
Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
Barton
|
1929
|
|
Box 85: folder 2
|
|
Benjamin
|
1918
|
|
Box 85: folder 3
|
|
Walter
|
1921-31
|
|
Box 85: folder 4
|
|
Valentine Alan
|
1940
|
|
Box 85: folder 5
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Fanny Garrison
|
1892
|
|
Box 85: folder 6
|
|
Oswald Garrison
|
1884-1915
|
|
Box 85: folder 7
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
|
|
|
A-Z
|
1908-24, n.d.
|
|
Box 85: folder 8
|
|
Letters to the editor and public officials
|
1916-30, n.d.
|
|
Box 85: folder 9
|
|
Unidentified
|
1909-41, n.d.
|
|
Box 85: folder 10
|
|
Outgoing
|
|
|
|
|
Indexes
|
|
|
Box 86: folder 1
|
|
1922-24
|
|
Box 86: folder 2-9
|
|
|
1925-27
|
|
Box 87: folder 1-8
|
|
|
1928-30
|
|
Box 88: folder 1-8
|
|
|
1931-33
|
|
Box 89: folder 1-6
|
|
|
Norton, Charles Dyer
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1908
|
|
Box 90: folder 1
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1898-1922, n.d.
|
|
Box 90: folder 2
|
|
Norton, Harriet Dyer
|
1900
|
|
Box 90: folder 3
|
|
Villard, Oswald Garrison
|
circa 1911
|
|
Box 90: folder 4
|
|
Unidentified
|
1896-97
|
|
Box 90: folder 5
|
|
Norton, Katherine Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1881-1940
|
|
Box 90: folder 6-12
|
|
Edith Stephenson
|
1931, 1941
|
|
Box 90: folder 13
|
|
Eleanor
|
1901-44, n.d.
|
|
Box 90: folder 14
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1903, 1926, n.d.
|
|
Box 90: folder 15
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
|
|
|
|
1885-1908
|
|
Box 90: folder 16-19
|
|
|
1909-13
|
|
Box 91: folder 1-8
|
|
|
1914-16
|
|
Box 92: folder 1-2
|
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1900, n.d.
|
|
Box 92: folder 3
|
|
Philip McKim
|
1908
|
|
Box 92: folder 4
|
|
Theresa Holmes
|
1911
|
|
Box 92: folder 5
|
|
Wendell Phillips
|
1898-1904
|
|
Box 92: folder 6
|
|
Willaim Lloyd (1838)
|
1880
|
|
Box 92: folder 7
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1896-1945, n.d.
|
|
Box 92: folder 8
|
|
Martin, Florence Hawes
|
1909
|
|
Box 92: folder 9
|
|
Norton
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Dyer
|
1907-22
|
|
Box 92: folder 10-11
|
|
Charles McKim
|
1939, 1940
|
|
Box 92: folder 12
|
|
Garrison
|
1914-41
|
|
Box 92: folder 13
|
|
Harriet Dyer
|
1896-1921
|
|
Box 92: folder 14
|
|
Valentine
|
|
|
|
|
Alan
|
1933, n.d.
|
|
Box 92: folder 15
|
|
Lucia Norton
|
1930-45
|
|
Box 92: folder 16-17
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Fanny Garrison
|
1923, n.d.
|
|
Box 93: folder 1
|
|
Oswald Garrison
|
1886, n.d.
|
|
Box 93: folder 2
|
|
Wood, Alice Cox
|
1899
|
|
Box 93: folder 3
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
|
|
|
"Children" and "Boys"
|
1920, 1924
|
|
Box 93: folder 4
|
|
Letters dictated from Beverly Hospital
|
6 Jul-8 Aug 1910
|
|
Box 93: folder 5-6
|
|
Unidentified and fragments
|
1920-41, n.d.
|
|
Box 93: folder 7
|
|
Katherine Garrison Norton Letters, 1881-1945 edited by Lucia Norton Valentine, 4 vol.
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 94
|
|
Villard
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
1939
|
|
Box 95: folder 1
|
|
Harold
|
1897-1944
|
|
Box 95: folder 2
|
|
Helen
|
1883
|
|
Box 95: folder 3
|
|
Julia
|
1935, n.d.
|
|
Box 95: folder 4
|
|
Mariquita Serrano
|
1895, n.d.
|
|
Box 95: folder 5
|
|
Oswald Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Clark, Roger
|
1942-49
|
|
Box 95: folder 6
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1895-43
|
|
Box 95: folder 7
|
|
Charles
|
1883
|
|
Box 95: folder 8
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1924-46, n.d.
|
|
Box 95: folder 9
|
|
Eleanor
|
1948
|
|
Box 95: folder 10
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1915-30
|
|
Box 95: folder 11
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1903-14
|
|
Box 95: folder 12
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1891-1909
|
|
Box 95: folder 13
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1897-1949, n.d.
|
|
Box 96: folder 1-16
|
|
Hilgard, Alice
|
1927
|
|
Box 96: folder 17
|
|
Wager, Charles H. A.
|
1920
|
|
Box 96: folder 18
|
|
Generation 5
|
|
|
|
|
Auchincloss, Lydia Garrison
|
1958
|
|
Box 97: folder 1
|
|
Binger, Clarinda ("Cloë") Garrison
|
1926
|
|
Box 97: folder 2
|
|
Bliss, Edith ("Yoy") Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1919, 1922
|
|
Box 97: folder 3
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1925-49, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 4
|
|
Eleanor
|
1968
|
|
Box 97: folder 5
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1922, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 6
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1958
|
|
Box 97: folder 7
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1921-69, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 8-12
|
|
Unidentified
|
1967, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 13
|
|
Emerson, Claire ("Tita") Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Bliss, Edith ("Yoy") Garrison
|
1934, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 14
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1922-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 15
|
|
David Lloyd and Alice ("Patty")
|
1921-77, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 16
|
|
Eleanor
|
1958-72, n.d.
|
|
Box 97: folder 17
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1913-31
|
|
Box 97: folder 18
|
|
John Bright
|
1923-25
|
|
Box 97: folder 19
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
|
|
|
|
1911-25
|
|
Box 98: folder 1-7
|
|
|
1926-35
|
|
Box 99: folder 1-7
|
|
|
1936-69, n.d.
|
|
Box 100: folder 1-8
|
|
|
Grierson, Margaret Storrs
|
1963-67
|
|
Box 101: folder 1
|
|
Harwood, Faith Garrison
|
1931-34
|
|
Box 101: folder 2
|
|
Stephenson, Luda Grant
|
1919, 1928
|
|
Box 101: folder 3
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1957
|
|
Box 101: folder 4
|
|
Emerson, Robert
|
1928, 1938
|
|
Box 101: folder 5
|
|
Garrison, Alice ('Patty")
|
|
|
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1944-48, n.d.
|
|
Box 101: folder 6
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1945-77
|
|
Box 101: folder 7
|
|
Garrison, Barbara Foss
|
1941-44, n.d.
|
|
Box 101: folder 8
|
|
Garrison, Catherine Cooper
|
1927-65
|
|
Box 101: folder 9
|
|
Garrison, David Lloyd
|
|
|
|
|
Bliss, Edith Garrison ("Yoy")
|
1921-86
|
|
Box 101: folder 10
|
|
Daniel, Yi Yi
|
1928-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 101: folder 11
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1929, n.d.
|
|
Box 101: folder 12
|
|
Eleanor
|
1858-65
|
|
Box 101: folder 13
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1957-60
|
|
Box 101: folder 14
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
circa 1910-58, n.d.
|
|
Box 102: folder 1-11
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1914-67, n.d.
|
|
Box 102: folder 12
|
|
Miscellaneous
|
1943-45
|
|
Box 102: folder 13
|
|
Garrison, George Anthony and Nancy McGilpin
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison, Eleanor
|
1961-64
|
|
Box 103: folder 1
|
|
Grierson, Margaret Storrs
|
1967-96, n.d.
|
|
Box 103: folder 2
|
|
Garrison, John Bright
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1928-45
|
|
Box 103: folder 3-4
|
|
Eleanor
|
1962-70
|
|
Box 103: folder 5
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1956-61
|
|
Box 103: folder 6
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1921-58, n.d.
|
|
Box 104: folder 1-5
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1921-43
|
|
Box 104: folder 6
|
|
Garrison, Lloyd Kirkham
|
1906-59
|
|
Box 104: folder 7
|
|
Garrison, Rhoda
|
1962-92
|
|
Box 104: folder 8
|
|
Garrison, Rhodes
|
1955-58
|
|
Box 104: folder 9
|
|
Garrison, Ritchie
|
1968
|
|
Box 104: folder 10
|
|
Garrison, Robert Hale
|
1910-73, n.d.
|
|
Box 104: folder 11
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1902) and Jane Wilson
|
|
|
|
|
Emerson, Claire ("Tita")
|
1924
|
|
Box 104: folder 12
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1924-71, n.d.
|
|
Box 104: folder 13
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1913-26, n.d.
|
|
Box 104: folder 14
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
1913-59, n.d.
|
|
Box 105: folder 1-7
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1914, n.d.
|
|
Box 105: folder 8
|
|
Hammond, Dorothea Villard
|
1925
|
|
Box 106: folder 1
|
|
Harwood
|
|
|
|
|
Faith Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Bliss, Edith Lloyd ("Yoy")
|
1948, n.d.
|
|
Box 106: folder 2
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
David Lloyd
|
1924-71, n.d.
|
|
Box 106: folder 3-6
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) and Edith Stephenson
|
circa 1915-59
|
|
Box 107: folder 1-3
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1920-55, n.d.
|
|
Box 107: folder 4
|
|
Reed
|
1936-61, n.d.
|
|
Box 107: folder 5
|
|
Krantz, Estella Garrison
|
1968
|
|
Box 107: folder 6
|
|
Norton
|
|
|
|
|
Charles McKim
|
1944, 1948
|
|
Box 107: folder 7
|
|
Garrison
|
1949, 1958
|
|
Box 107: folder 8
|
|
Martha Hutcheson
|
1948
|
|
Box 107: folder 9
|
|
Phoutrides
|
|
|
|
|
Aristides
|
1915-23
|
|
Box 107: folder 10
|
|
Margaret Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
"Family"
|
1927-42
|
|
Box 107: folder 11
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Agnes
|
1930-42
|
|
Box 107: folder 12
|
|
Eleanor
|
1957-58
|
|
Box 107: folder 13
|
|
Eleanor and Frank Wright
|
1957-58
|
|
Box 107: folder 14-15
|
|
Ellen Wright
|
1910-30
|
|
Box 108: folder 1
|
|
Frank Wright
|
1955-58
|
|
Box 108: folder 2
|
|
Margaret Carret
|
1919-20
|
|
Box 108: folder 3-9
|
|
Miscellaneous family
|
1919-58, n.d.
|
|
Box 108: folder 10
|
|
Robinson, Katherine Knight Garrison
|
1940
|
|
Box 108: folder 11
|
|
Valentine
|
|
|
|
|
Alan
|
1940
|
|
Box 108: folder 12
|
|
Lucia Norton
|
1927-48, n.d.
|
|
Box 108: folder 13
|
|
Villard, Henry H.
|
1940, 1962
|
|
Box 108: folder 14
|
|
Generation 6
|
|
|
|
|
Gould
|
|
|
|
|
Anne Garrison
|
1951-64
|
|
Box 108: folder 15
|
|
James
|
1960-96
|
|
Box 108: folder 16
|
|
Letters to the Garrisons
|
|
|
|
|
Acevedo, Pearl
|
1946, 1959, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 1
|
|
Adams
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Francis
|
1894-1929
|
|
Box 109: folder 2
|
|
James Truslow
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 3
|
|
Nathan
|
1882
|
|
Box 109: folder 4
|
|
Ahlborn
|
|
|
|
|
Emil
|
1920-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 5-6
|
|
Emily
|
1922-32, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 7
|
|
Alcott, Bronson
|
1863
|
|
Box 109: folder 8
|
|
Alder
|
|
|
|
|
Charles
|
1958
|
|
Box 109: folder 9
|
|
Margaret Rachel Bruce "Shibby"
|
1955-57
|
|
Box 109: folder 10
|
|
Allen
|
|
|
|
|
Francis, H
|
. 1937-39
|
|
Box 109: folder 11
|
|
Nathaniel
|
1898
|
|
Box 109: folder 12
|
|
Walter
|
1904-05
|
|
Box 109: folder 13
|
|
Alter, William
|
1885-88
|
|
Box 109: folder 14
|
|
Ames
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Burton
|
1916
|
|
Box 109: folder 15
|
|
Charles Gordon
|
1884-95, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 16
|
|
Angell, George T.
|
1896-1905
|
|
Box 109: folder 17
|
|
Anthony
|
|
|
|
|
Lucy E.
|
1905-15
|
|
Box 109: folder 18
|
|
|
|
Box 109
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
Ellen Wright Garrison
|
1881-1905, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 19-23
|
|
Francis Jackson
|
1891
|
|
Box 109: folder 24
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1881-1905
|
|
Box 109: folder 25-27
|
|
Unidentified fragments
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 28
|
|
Ardle, Lillian W.
|
1909-24
|
|
Box 109: folder 29
|
|
Astley
|
|
|
|
|
Frank and Muriel
|
1923-41, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 30
|
|
F. Lloyd
|
1923-56
|
|
Box 109: folder 31
|
|
Atkinson, Will J.
|
1906-07, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 32
|
|
Atwater
|
|
|
|
|
Abby
|
1879-92
|
|
Box 109: folder 33
|
|
Richard
|
1881-90
|
|
Box 109: folder 34
|
|
Avery, Susan Look
|
1903-09
|
|
Box 109: folder 35
|
|
Axon, William
|
1890-1907
|
|
Box 109: folder 36
|
|
Ayers, Mary Wilcox
|
1927-29
|
|
Box 109: folder 37
|
|
Babcock, Katharine
|
1934-40, n.d.
|
|
Box 109: folder 38
|
|
Baily, Warren Worth
|
1905-07
|
|
Box 109: folder 39
|
|
Baker, Ray Stannard
|
1905-07
|
|
Box 109: folder 40
|
|
Barbey, J.A.
|
1916-23
|
|
Box 109: folder 41
|
|
Barnet, Charles Swasey
|
1917-18
|
|
Box 110: folder 1
|
|
Barr, Carolyn ("Shorty")
|
1926-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 2-3
|
|
Barrows
|
|
|
|
|
Eliza
|
1909
|
|
Box 110: folder 4
|
|
Isabel
|
1893-1907
|
|
Box 110: folder 5
|
|
Samuel
|
1893-98
|
|
Box 110: folder 6
|
|
Barry
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Arthur
|
1916-28
|
|
Box 110: folder 7
|
|
Jane Becket
|
1920-38
|
|
Box 110: folder 8
|
|
Basset, Sara Ware
|
1944-59, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 9
|
|
Bauduin, Therese and Jean
|
1947-56, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 10
|
|
Baxter, Philip
|
1920-38
|
|
Box 110: folder 11
|
|
Beaman, Mary S.
|
1936-39, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 12
|
|
Beecher, Walter H.
|
1906-08
|
|
Box 110: folder 13
|
|
Bement, Ruth
|
1919-74, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 14
|
|
Benson
|
|
|
|
|
J.C.
|
1873
|
|
Box 110: folder 15
|
|
Thomas
|
1899
|
|
Box 110: folder 16
|
|
Berry, Benjamin H.
|
1904-05
|
|
Box 110: folder 17
|
|
Bird, Margery W.
|
1922-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 110: folder 18
|
|
Birney
|
|
|
|
|
George Henry
|
1888
|
|
Box 110: folder 19
|
|
Laura Stratton
|
1861-65
|
|
Box 110: folder 20-21
|
|
Blackwell
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison
|
|
|
|
|
William Lloyd (1838)
|
1896-1909
|
|
Box 110: folder 22
|
|
William Lloyd (1874)
|
1906-48
|
|
Box 110: folder 23-24
|
|
William Lloyd (1874) (Harriet Sewall Trust)
|
1933-44
|
|
Box 111: folder 1
|
|
Henry Brown
|
1875-1909
|
|
Box 111: folder 2
|
|
Blatch, Harriot Stanton
|
1908-09
|
|
Box 111: folder 3
|
|
Bolster, Lucy and Richard
|
1920-29
|
|
Box 111: folder 4
|
|
Bonney, Frederick P.
|
1942-43
|
|
Box 111: folder 5
|
|
Boutwell, George
|
1898-1903
|
|
Box 111: folder 6
|
|
Bowditch, W.I.
|
1885-88
|
|
Box 111: folder 7
|
|
Bowles, Samuel
|
1899-1908
|
|
Box 111: folder 8
|
|
Boyd, William Riley
[See also SERIES VI. SUBJECT FILES - Race --Education --Forsythe Normal School] |
1898-1908
|
|
Box 111: folder 9
|
|
Boynton, Theodore
|
1908-09, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 10
|
|
Bragdon
|
|
|
|
|
Henry W.
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison, David Lloyd
|
1928-44, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 11
|
|
Garrison, Edith Stephenson
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 12
|
|
Katherine
|
1933-38
|
|
Box 111: folder 13
|
|
May ("Aunt Maisie")
|
1928-38
|
|
Box 111: folder 14
|
|
Braggiotte, Gloria
|
1928-30, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 15
|
|
Brandt-Erickson, Patsy
|
1974
|
|
Box 111: folder 16
|
|
Bretz, Harold and Helen
|
1918-41
|
|
Box 111: folder 17
|
|
Bridgman, Sidney
|
1892-98
|
|
Box 111: folder 18
|
|
Bromage, Gladys
|
1926-66
|
|
Box 111: folder 19
|
|
Brown
|
|
|
|
|
Alice
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 20
|
|
Betty
|
1935-37
|
|
Box 111: folder 21
|
|
E.R.
|
1890
|
|
Box 111: folder 22
|
|
Florence A.
|
1901-13, 1963, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 23
|
|
John, Jr.
|
1886-92
|
|
Box 111: folder 24
|
|
William Wells
|
1858, 1863
|
|
Box 111: folder 25
|
|
Browne, Francis F.
|
1904-05, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 26
|
|
Bryce, James
|
1883-07, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 27
|
|
Buckingham School
|
1936-39
|
|
Box 111: folder 28
|
|
Buffum
|
|
|
|
|
Abby
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 29
|
|
James
|
1886
|
|
Box 111: folder 30
|
|
Lydia
|
1862
|
|
Box 111: folder 31
|
|
Rebekah Northey
|
|
|
|
|
Garrison William Lloyd (1805)
|
1860-61
|
|
Box 111: folder 32
|
|
Garrison, William Lloyd (1838) and Ellen Wright
|
1862-89, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 33
|
|
Ruth
|
1864, 1887
|
|
Box 111: folder 34
|
|
William
|
1855-57
|
|
Box 111: folder 35
|
|
Burleigh, Florence
|
1907-16
|
|
Box 111: folder 36
|
|
Burr
|
|
|
|
|
Allston
|
1900-41
|
|
Box 111: folder 37
|
|
Elizabeth Randolph
|
1918-32
|
|
Box 111: folder 38
|
|
H.M.
|
1913-32
|
|
Box 111: folder 39
|
|
Butler, Josephine
|
1875-90, n.d.
|
|
Box 111: folder 40
|
|
Buxton, Thomas Powell
|
1841-42
|
|
Box 111: folder 39
|
|
Cable, George Washington
|
1899-1900
|
|
Box 112: folder 1
|
|
Call
|
|
|
|
|
Anne P.
|
1928-39, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 2-6
|
|
Don
|
1937-38
|
|
Box 112: folder 7
|
|
Carnighan, M.H. and W.M.
|
1857
|
|
Box 112: folder 8
|
|
Carret
|
|
|
|
|
Frances
|
1926
|
|
Box 112: folder 9
|
|
Georgiana
|
1904
|
|
Box 112: folder 10
|
|
Grandmother
|
1926-27
|
|
Box 112: folder 11
|
|
J.F.
|
1892, 1895, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 12
|
|
Margaret
|
1874-82
|
|
Box 112: folder 13
|
|
Sarah W.
|
1892-1918, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 14-15
|
|
Carter
|
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth C.
|
1931, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 16
|
|
Frank
|
1900-02
|
|
Box 112: folder 17
|
|
Franklin Jr.
|
1903-24
|
|
Box 112: folder 18
|
|
Helen
|
1895-1900
|
|
Box 112: folder 19
|
|
Catt, Carrie Chapman
|
1906-47
|
|
Box 112: folder 20
|
|
Chace
|
|
|
|
|
Eliza G.
|
1874-86, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 21
|
|
Elizabeth Buffum
|
1884-99, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 22
|
|
Elizabeth E.
|
1914
|
|
Box 112: folder 23
|
|
Fenner
|
1922
|
|
Box 112: folder 24
|
|
Lillie Buffum
|
1917
|
|
Box 112: folder 25
|
|
Chadwick, John W.
|
1892-1902
|
|
Box 112: folder 26
|
|
Chamberlain, D.H.
|
1875-1904
|
|
Box 112: folder 27
|
|
Channing, William Henry
|
1864
|
|
Box 112: folder 28
|
|
Chapman
|
|
|
|
|
John Jay
|
1913
|
|
Box 112: folder 29
|
|
Maria Weston
|
1884-85
|
|
Box 112: folder 30
|
|
Chase
|
|
|
|
|
Donald A.
|
1938-39
|
|
Box 112: folder 31
|
|
Mary C.
|
1972-74, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 32
|
|
Phillip P.
|
1928-39
|
|
Box 112: folder 33
|
|
Stuart
|
1916-29
|
|
Box 112: folder 34
|
|
William Beverly and Edith
|
1861-62
|
|
Box 112: folder 35
|
|
Cheever, Rev. George B.
|
1885
|
|
Box 112: folder 36
|
|
Cheney, Ednah Dow
|
1890, 1897
|
|
Box 112: folder 37
|
|
Chesson
|
|
|
|
|
Amelia A.E.
|
1884-99, n.d.
|
|
Box 112: folder 38
|
|
F.W.
|
1877-87
|
|
Box 112: folder 39
|
|
Fred W.
|
1888
|
|
Box 112: folder 40
|
|
W.H.
|
1902
|
|
Box 112: folder 41
|
|
Chestnut, Charles W.
|
1903
|
|
Box 112: folder 42
|
|
Child, Lydia Maria
|
1859, 1879
|
|
Box 112: folder 43
|
|
Choate, Joseph
|
1900-29
|
|
Box 112: folder 44
|
|
Claflin, Jehiel
|
1884-91
|
|
Box 112: folder 45
|
|
Clark
|
|
|
|
|
Alice
|
1898-1946
|
|
Box 113: folder 1
|
|
Bancroft
|
1928-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 2
|
|
Eleanor
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 3
|
|
Ellery H.
|
1933-34
|
|
Box 113: folder 4
|
|
Helen Bright
|
1879-1918, n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 5-8
|
|
Hilda
|
1901
|
|
Box 113: folder 9
|
|
J. Edmund
|
1882-85
|
|
Box 113: folder 10
|
|
John Bright
|
1898-1910
|
|
Box 113: folder 11
|
|
K.
|
1905
|
|
Box 113: folder 12
|
|
Lucretia
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 13
|
|
Margaret
|
1900-08
|
|
Box 113: folder 14
|
|
Mariane
|
1951, n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 15
|
|
Mary L.
|
1938-59
|
|
Box 113: folder 16
|
|
Nathan
|
1949-50, 1985, n.d.
|
|
Box 113: folder 17
|
|
Peter
|
1937
|
|
Box 113: folder 18
|
|
Priscilla
|
1930-31
|
|
Box 113: folder 19
|
|
Roger
|
1890-1960
|
|
Box 113: folder 20-24
|
|
Rosamond
|
1972-73
|
|
Box 113: folder 25
|
|
Sarah Bancroft
|
1899-1966
|
|
Box 114: folder 1-4
|
|
Stephen
|
1930-46, 1974, n.d.
|
|
Box 114: folder 5
|
|
William
|
1900-07
|
|
Box 114: folder 6
|
|
Clothier
|
|
|
|
|
Esther Clark
|
1901-33, n.d.
|
|
Box 114: folder 7
|
|
Thompson
|
1919-29
|
|
Box 114: folder 8
|
|
Violet and Peter
|
1943-48
|
|
Box 114: folder 9
|
|
Codman, John S
|
1916-30, n.d.
|
|
Box 114: folder 10
|
|
Coffin, Winthrop and Gertrude
|
1929-34
|
|
Box 114: folder 11
|
|
Colby, Clara Bewick
|
1907
|
|
Box 114: folder 12
|
|
Colman, Lucy
|
1890
|
|
Box 114: folder 13
|
|
Conant, Lucy Scarborough
|
1883-1906, n.d.
|
|
Box 114: folder 14-23
|
|
Conway, Moncure
|
1886-1901, n.d.
|
|
Box 114: folder 24
|
|
Cook, Frederick F.
|
1888, 1899
|
|
Box 114: folder 25
|
|
Cooke, Ruth Emerson
|
1935-69
|
|
Box 114: folder 26
|
|
Corey, Eva D.
|
1897-1926, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 1
|
|
Cowin, Katherine C.
|
1922-67, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 2-3
|
|
Cox, C. F.
|
1888-92
|
|
Box 115: folder 4
|
|
Cram
|
|
|
|
|
Charles E.
|
1877-1900, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 5
|
|
Mary Wells
|
1874-1905, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 6
|
|
Robert
|
1904-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 7-10
|
|
Cromwell, Otelia
|
1934-1954
|
|
Box 115: folder 11
|
|
Crosley, Edith A.
|
1958
|
|
Box 115: folder 12
|
|
Crosby
|
|
|
|
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Eleanor D.
|
1892, n.d.
|
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Box 115: folder 13
|
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Ernest Howard
|
1897-1905
|
|
Box 115: folder 14
|
|
J.W.
|
1921-27
|
|
Box 115: folder 15
|
|
Cummings, Philip H.
|
1946-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 115: folder 16
|
|
Curran, Mary A. Lafferty
|
1914-17
|
|
Box 115: folder 17
|
|
Cushman family
|
1900-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 1
|
|
Cutler, John
|
1936-39, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 2
|
|
Cutting
|
|
|
|
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Jim
|
1929-34, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 3
|
|
R. Bayard
|
1897-98, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 4
|
|
Dahlman, Jane
|
1932-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 5
|
|
Dall, Caroline H.
|
1879-1909
|
|
Box 116: folder 6
|
|
Dalton, Susan
|
1910-41, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 7
|
|
Daniel
|
|
|
|
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Charles
|
1879-1903
|
|
Box 116: folder 8
|
|
Charles, Jr.
|
1935-38, 1952, n.d.
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|
Box 116: folder 9
|
|
Edward
|
1918-32, n.d.
|
|
Box 116: folder 10
|
|
Kate
|
1876-1932, n.d.
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|
Box 116: folder 11-17
|
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Robert M.
|
1900-05
|
|
Box 116: folder 18
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Teresa
|
1887, n.d.
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|
Box 116: folder 19
|
|
"Yi Yi"
|
1911-41, n.d.
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|
Box 116: folder 20
|
|
Davis, Charles Henry
|
1938-46
|
|
Box 116: folder 21
|
|
Day
|
|
|
|
|
Fairfield
|
1928-29
|
|
Box 117: folder 1
|
|
George Parmly
|
1915-24
|
|
Box 117: folder 2
|
|
Henry B.
|
1917-30
|
|
Box 117: folder 3
|
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Joseph
|
1928-29
|
|
Box 117: folder 4
|
|
Julia
|
1915-23
|
|
Box 117: folder 5
|
|
DeMille, Anna George
|
1928-40
|
|
Box 117: folder 6
|
|
Denton, Georgina Kay
|
1927-28, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 7
|
|
DePierrefeu
|
|
|
|
|
Dodo
|
1927-36, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 8
|
|
Elsa Tudor
|
1935-47, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 9
|
|
Katharine
|
1934-35
|
|
Box 117: folder 10
|
|
Yann
|
1935
|
|
Box 117: folder 11
|
|
Dickinson, Anna
|
1907-08
|
|
Box 117: folder 12
|
|
Dickson, Irene
|
1946-54
|
|
Box 117: folder 13-15
|
|
Dietrick, Louise
|
1930-45
|
|
Box 117: folder 16
|
|
Dole, Charles F.
|
1915-28, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 17
|
|
Donald, Malcom
|
1903-04, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 18
|
|
Douglas, David
|
1886-1909
|
|
Box 117: folder 19
|
|
Douglass, Frederick
|
1894
|
|
Box 117: folder 20
|
|
Dreier
|
|
|
|
|
Ethel
|
1931, 1956
|
|
Box 117: folder 21
|
|
John
|
1928-36, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 22
|
|
Dresel, Anna L.
|
1876-1890, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 23
|
|
DuBois, W.E.B.
|
1909
|
|
Box 117: folder 24
|
|
Duggan, Mary Alice "Polly"
|
1930, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 25
|
|
Duncan, Elsa
|
1927-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 26
|
|
DuPont, Deo
|
1927-31, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 27
|
|
Durham, Meza
|
1927-28
|
|
Box 117: folder 28
|
|
Duvall, Elizabeth
|
1973-75
|
|
Box 117: folder 29
|
|
Dwight, Theodore F.
|
1889
|
|
Box 117: folder 30
|
|
Dyer-Bennet, John
|
1930-38, n.d.
|
|
Box 117: folder 31
|
|
Eastman, Crystal
|
1918
|
|
Box 118: folder 1
|
|
Eaton
|
|
|
|
|
Elma
|
1974, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 2
|
|
Peg
|
1974, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 3
|
|
Edison, Thomas A.
|
1883-94
|
|
Box 118: folder 4
|
|
Ehrich, Louis
|
1896-1909
|
|
Box 118: folder 5
|
|
Eisenhower, Dwight D.
|
1952
|
|
Box 118: folder 6
|
|
Ellis, Allan V.
|
1918-23
|
|
Box 118: folder 7
|
|
Emerson, Fran
|
1935-38, 1947
|
|
Box 118: folder 8
|
|
Endicott, William, Jr.
|
1876-1909
|
|
Box 118: folder 9
|
|
Epstein, Dena
|
1957-65
|
|
Box 118: folder 10
|
|
Estlin, Mary
|
1876-1902
|
|
Box 118: folder 11
|
|
Evans, Rebecca Winsor
|
1936-53, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 12
|
|
Facio-Lince, Daniel and Nohra
|
1964-71
|
|
Box 118: folder 13
|
|
Fairbanks, Calvin
|
1865-98
|
|
Box 118: folder 14
|
|
Farrison, W. Edward
|
1949-52
|
|
Box 118: folder 15
|
|
Fentress, Louise
|
1928-29, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 16
|
|
Fish, W.H.
|
1896-1905
|
|
Box 118: folder 17
|
|
Fisher, Iris
|
1927-30
|
|
Box 118: folder 18
|
|
Flint, Martha E.
|
1913-29, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 19
|
|
Flynn, Patrick
|
1904-09
|
|
Box 118: folder 20
|
|
Forbes
|
|
|
|
|
1919-55
|
|
Box 118: folder 21
|
|
|
John Murray
|
1881-95
|
|
Box 118: folder 22
|
|
Foster, Abby Kelley
|
1883
|
|
Box 118: folder 23
|
|
Fowlds, George
|
1907-23
|
|
Box 118: folder 24
|
|
Fowler, Francis
|
1940-46
|
|
Box 118: folder 25
|
|
Frayer, William
|
1935-36
|
|
Box 118: folder 26
|
|
Freeman, Elizabeth
|
1911
|
|
Box 118: folder 27
|
|
Fukui, Eiko
|
1925-41, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 28
|
|
Fuller, Lucy Derby and Samuel Richard
|
1897-1906
|
|
Box 118: folder 29
|
|
Fyffe, Elizabeth
|
1909-52, n.d.
|
|
Box 118: folder 30
|
|
Gaines, Mary L.
|
1926-29
|
|
Box 119: folder 1
|
|
Galbraith, F.W.
|
1900-17
|
|
Box 119: folder 2
|
|
Gale, Philip B.
|
1940-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 3
|
|
Gannett, Mary Thorn Lewis
|
1887-89
|
|
Box 119: folder 4
|
|
Gardner, Bertram
|
1896-1912, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 5
|
|
Garland, Hamlin, 189?-
|
1904
|
|
Box 119: folder 6
|
|
Gay
|
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth Neall
|
1895
|
|
Box 119: folder 7
|
|
S.M.
|
1896-1900
|
|
Box 119: folder 8
|
|
George
|
|
|
|
|
Henry
|
1888-97
|
|
Box 119: folder 9-10
|
|
Henry, Jr.
|
1891-1909, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 11
|
|
Marie M.
|
1897
|
|
Box 119: folder 12
|
|
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins
|
1896, 1898
|
|
Box 119: folder 13
|
|
Goldthwait, Frances and Joel
|
1939-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 14
|
|
Golz, Joseph
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 15
|
|
Gorham, Florence
|
1915-36
|
|
Box 119: folder 16
|
|
Gould, Elizabeth Porter
|
1892
|
|
Box 119: folder 17
|
|
Gowan, Rosa
|
1889
|
|
Box 119: folder 18
|
|
Grady, Anna Elizabeth
|
1928-32, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 19
|
|
Graecen, Bertha and Walter
|
1929-59, n.d.
|
|
Box 119: folder 20
|
|
Gray, Maria Freeman
|
1899-1909
|
|
Box 119: folder 21
|
|
Greener, Richard
|
1879
|
|
Box 119: folder 22
|
|
Gregory, Eugene M.
|
1925-29
|
|
Box 119: folder 23
|
|
Grew, Mary
|
1859-1889
|
|
Box 119: folder 24
|
|
Grierson, Margaret Storrs
|
1947-97, n.d.
|
|
Box 120: folder 1-14
|
|
Grimké
|
|
|
|
|
Archibald
|
1900
|
|
Box 121: folder 1
|
|
Francis J.
|
1905
|
|
Box 121: folder 2
|
|
Sarah
|
1865
|
|
Box 121: folder 3
|
|
Griscom family
|
1936-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 4
|
|
Guerrier, George P.
|
1899-1905, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 5
|
|
Guyot, Yve
|
1907
|
|
Box 121: folder 6
|
|
Habicht, Max and Elizabeth
|
1929-60, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 7
|
|
Hadley, Amos I.
|
1900-41
|
|
Box 121: folder 8
|
|
Hale
|
|
|
|
|
Edward Everett
|
1880-97
|
|
Box 121: folder 9
|
|
Nancy
|
1925
|
|
Box 121: folder 10
|
|
Hall
|
|
|
|
|
Bolton
|
1906-33
|
|
Box 121: folder 11
|
|
Edward
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 12
|
|
Edward R.
|
1885, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 13
|
|
H.R.
|
1863-72, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 14
|
|
Halle, Ann
|
1936-41
|
|
Box 121: folder 15
|
|
Halliday, Eliza W.
|
1900
|
|
Box 121: folder 16
|
|
Hallowell, Penrose ("Buck")
|
1897-1946, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 17
|
|
Halvorsan, Anne
|
1940-42, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 18
|
|
Hamill, Esther
|
1935-48, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 19
|
|
Hamlin, Charles E.
|
1893-97
|
|
Box 121: folder 20
|
|
Harper, Ida Husted
|
1909
|
|
Box 121: folder 21
|
|
Hartwell, Fred
|
1927-28, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 22
|
|
Harwood, Mary R.
|
1934-43
|
|
Box 121: folder 23
|
|
Hastings, John K.
|
1900-06
|
|
Box 121: folder 24
|
|
Hauser, Elizabeth J.
|
1906-08, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 25
|
|
Hautermans, Elsa
|
1936-40, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 26
|
|
Henry, Richard K., Sr.
|
1938-43
|
|
Box 121: folder 27
|
|
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth
|
1856-1906
|
|
Box 121: folder 28
|
|
Hill, Leslie Pinckney
|
1906, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 29
|
|
Hills
|
|
|
|
|
Katherine
|
1906-07
|
|
Box 121: folder 30
|
|
William Henry
|
1882-1915, n.d.
|
|
Box 121: folder 31-33
|
|
Hillyer, Jeanne and Robert
|
1961-62
|
|
Box 122: folder 1
|
|
Himes, Joshua V.
|
1885-90
|
|
Box 122: folder 2
|
|
Hoar, George Frisbie
|
1892
|
|
Box 122: folder 3
|
|
1881-95
|
|
Box 122: folder 4
|
|
|
Holbrook
|
|
|
|
|
Arthur "Sandy" and Sue
|
1925-45, n.d.
|
|
Box 122: folder 5
|
|
Bertha and Arthur T.
|
1926-45
|
|
Box 122: folder 6
|
|
Holley, Sallie
|
1865
|
|
Box 122: folder 7
|
|
Holmes, Clara
|
1879
|
|
Box 122: folder 8
|
|
Holmes, John Haynes
|
1915-23
|
|
Box 122: folder 9
|
|
Holt, Byron W.
|
1899-1924
|
|
Box 122: folder 10
|
|
Hooker, Isabella Beecher
|
1870-89
|
|
Box 122: folder 11
|
|
Hopper, Lue
|
1854-61
|
|
Box 122: folder 12
|
|
Hoskin, John and Kate
|
1855-89, n.d.
|
|
Box 122: folder 13
|
|
Houghton, Henry O.
|
1877-95
|
|
Box 122: folder 14
|
|
Howard, Harold S.
|
1928
|
|
Box 122: folder 15
|
|
Howe, Julia Ward
|
n.d.
|
|
Box 122: folder 16
|
|
Howells, William Dean
|
1899
|
|
Box 122: folder 17
|
|
Howland, Emily
|
1896-1908
|
|
Box 122: folder 18
|
|
Hubbard
|
|
|
|
|
Hope
|