The surviving papers bearing on the development and
administration of the College during Butterfield's
nineteen years as its president make up this file. Its
materials come from the standing files of the Archives
and from two lots of Secretary's papers. These files have
been arranged in subject groups under headings which are
representative of those which survived in the original
lots. Groupings and subject headings are sometimes
generic, such as "Administrative Planning" and "Personnel
and Organization"; others represent the names of specific
projects, such as "Survey of the College, 1910", or
defined eras, such as "World War I on Campus", and others
refer to specific agencies, such as the State "Food
Supply Commission", or the "Mass. (State) Commission on
Investigation of Agricultural Education". Several
otherwise unclassifiable folders are gathered under
"General".
The heading "Administrative Planning" covers material
on the general organization of the College such as its
"business" or purchasing and accounting practices, its
overall financial support, and data on the "cost of
instruction". Related materials may be found under "Mass.
(State) Commission on Investigation of Agricultural
Education . . . " and "Mass. (State) Legislation."
Butterfield's College budgetary materials have been
removed to Archives RG 4/2 Budgets. Admissions and
Attendance comprise mainly materials regarding the
quarrel between the College and the State Dept. of
Education over the use of secondary school agricultural
course credits to fulfill entrance requirements. Related
materials are under "Student Matters--Regan Case."
The "Agricultural Survey" was a title given by
Butterfield to a series of censuses and surveys at both
the individual and community levels of economic,
physical and cultural resources of rural Massachusetts.
It seems not to have been thought of as a single
project--and it never was funded as such--but as a
framework within which to coordinate a variety of
smaller, more manageable studies, such as of soil surveys
and/or censuses of religious facilities, to be done by
College, governmental, religious and private agencies.
Some related material is under "Mass. Agricultural
Development Committee".
Under "Alumni" are materials relating to the post
World War I revival and activities of the Associate
Alumni, fund raising in support of the activities of the
Social Services Commission, (a student group), and
statistical survey and other data on alumni. The file of
"Associations" includes correspondence and materials
relating to state and national institutional and
professional organizations interested in rural
betterment, and associations of educational institutions
in most of which Butterfield was active. Among these are
the New England Federation for Rural Progress, the New
England Research Council on Marketing and Food Supply
(see also MS 28) and religious organizations. For
material on attendance, see under "Admissions and
Attendance" above.
"Buildings and Grounds" covers materials generated in
connection with planning and managing the College's
grounds, such as Manning's reports of 1911 and 1914, with
analyses for the need for new buildings such as a library
and dormitories, and with the dedication ceremonies for
such buildings as Memorial Hall and the Mt. Toby
watchtower built during Butterfield's presidency. Some
related materials are under "Student Life" and "World War
I on Campus" and in Archives RG 6/15; Campus Planning. A
plan for a proposed barracks-dormitory and additional
material related to the Manning plans of 1911 are in
Archives RG 6/15. The Committee on Food Production was
organized by the Governor in response to Butterfield's
comments, in March 1917, first as part of the State's
Committee on Public Safety and later as part of the War
Food Board. Butterfield served as chairman until the
committee was subsumed under Hoover's War Food
Administration early in 1918. (See also "Food Supply
Committee" below.) For other material on Butterfield's
activities during this period, see "World War I on
Campus", "General--Butterfield-Watts correspondence", and
President Lewis' papers.
"Conferences" comprises materials bearing on the
College's programs of short courses, summer schools and
conferences, and on meetings of outside organizations on
campus. With the development of the Extension Service,
most of the institutional programs of this nature
eventually became its responsibility. "Departments"
includes materials bearing on their administration and
instructional programs, present and prospective, and on
Butterfield's grouping of them into five divisions.
Included are materials on the areas of rural social
science, physical education and intercollegiate
athletics, and military science, and on a proposed
program in vocational guidance. Related papers are with
"World War I on Campus".
Under "Experiment Station" are some of its
administrative papers, and materials bearing on the ten
year career on this campus of the U.S. Northeastern
Forestry Experiment Station, now at Upper Darby, PA. The
materials in the "Extension Service" section of the files
reflect Butterfield's active interest in the development
of its organization and programs, its network of
extension agents, its conferences and short courses, the
boys' and girls' (now 4-H) club work, some early work in
community planning, and other material. Included too are
the replies to Butterfield's 1906 national survey of
extension services.
"Faculty Committees" includes administrative papers
relating to committees of faculty and other College
personnel, such as the Course of Study Committee. It
contains the surviving papers of the Committee on the
Agricultural Program, which was made up of administrative
staff members and which had as its purpose the proposal
of programs and legislation bearing on Massachusetts
agriculture and rural life. A similar group, the Food
Supply Committee, is set out separately. Minutes,
working papers and memoranda of faculty committees such
as that for the Course of Study have been placed in
Archives RG 40. Under "Farmers' Organizations" is
correspondence and materials on such statewide and
regional organizations of farmers as the Farm Bureau, the
Grange and the New England Milk Producers' Association.
For the most part, Butterfield was not personally active
in the affairs of these organizations, but he had
extensive dealings with many of them. For materials on
Fees, see "Tuition and Fees".
The Food Supply Committee was a post-World War I
campus group the purposes of which were to manage studies
of the state's food supply situation, to develop the
notion of the Massachusetts Agricultural College as the
state's "Food Supply College", and to find ways to
promote the College's programs with the public and the
Legislature. It produced at least the typescript of a
report. Related materials are under "Public Relations".
(See also "Committee on Food Production") Material filed
under "General" covers a variety of subjects, including
the foreshortened College semi-centennial celebration of
1917 and the gala of 1921, materials on the College
seal, a compilation of materials on the purpose of the
College, etc.
The "Graduate School" file includes material bearing
on the development and administration of several
postgraduate programs. A folder on Butterfield's
"Inauguration" as College President is followed by
materials on the Massachusetts Agricultural Development
Committee, a body representing public and private
agricultural interests. Formed at Butterfield's behest,
it was designed to plan the State's rural development and
to lobby for that plan; it seems to have expired with the
onset of World War I. Related material may be found under
"Extension", "Faculty Committees --Agricultural Program",
and "Food Supply Committee".
Under the heading "Mass. (State)" are a variety of
correspondence, memoranda, background papers, and other
materials dealing with relations between the College and
the administrative and legislative agencies of
Massachusetts. Among the most interesting groups of
materials are those relating to the Commission on
Investigation of Agricultural Education, also known as
the Seelye Commission, which investigated the operations
of the College in 1916 and 1917; the Department of
Education and the Division of Administration and Finance,
both of which contain much material on the difficulties
created by the 1919 reorganization of the State
government whereby the College was placed under the
control of the Department of Education; Legislation, a
chronological group of materials bearing on a variety of
proposed laws affecting the College; and the
Legislature's visit to the campus of May, 1923, an
enterprise orchestrated by Butterfield and one of his
last attempts to promote legislative support of the
institution. Further materials on the public support
campaign are under "Public Relations" and "Food Supply
Committee".
"Personnel and Organization" contains materials
related to the College's rules of employment, faculty
members and staff, their salaries and assignments, and
similar topics. Further materials may be found under
"Administrative Planning". Under "Public Relations" are
copies of early press releases of the College and
material connected with the Public Support Campaign of
1920-1923, one element of which was the visit of the
Legislature to the campus in 1923. Press clippings are in
Series 1. Following Butterfield's letter of "Resignation"
is material on "Scholarships and Trust Funds" including
those of the College and those which had an impact
here.
Materials under "Student Activities" bear on organized
extra-curricular activities. Related material is found
under "Alumni". "Student Life" bears on the room, board
and costs of students, including the surveys of 1914 and
1920, fraternity matters, and the scarlet fever epidemic
of 1913. Related material is under "Departments:
Physical Education". Material on "Student Matters" deals
with academic matters and includes material on student
exchange programs, scholarship, and farm practice.
"Survey of the College" (1910) is a collation of
responses to questions and questionnaires which
Butterfield sent out in 1909 and 1910 to students,
faculty and staff members, and administrators of other
colleges on a variety of subjects. Butterfield ran a
number of polls from 1908 until World War I which have
survived in these files. Most are filed with the topics
addressed by the specific surveys. This one is set apart
because it was gathered and summarized as a single
project. The individual surveys are arranged in the order
in which they are listed and summarized in the "Index of
Digests and Reports", folder 264.
Under "U.S. Govt" are the record copies of reports
submitted to the U.S. Bureau of Education, correspondence
and materials on the development of the Smith-Lever bill
to supply federal funds to state extension services, and
on the Page and Smith-Hughes bills, both relating to
vocational education in agriculture. Related materials
are under "Extension Service" and "Mass. State
Legislation". Record copies of reports submitted to
federal agencies by the Treasurer have been transferred
to Archives RG 4.
"Women's Program", originally called "Women's Work",
includes correspondence, memoranda and other papers on
the establishment of academic programs and living
quarters for women students, which eventually led to
developing the School of Home Economics and to building
the first true dormitory for women on campus, the Abigail
Adams House. Under World War I are a variety of materials
dealing with Massachusetts Agricultural College students
and alumni military service during that war, the draft
status of College personnel and students, contributions
of the College to the war effort, its postwar
reconversion and the war history of the College, and the
dedication of Memorial Hall during the semi-centennial
celebration of 1921. Other materials on this period are
found under "Committee on Food Production",
"Buildings--Memorial Hall", "Departments--Military
Science", and in President Lewis' Papers.
Plans accompanying Manning's report on the campus
grounds have been removed to Archives RG's 6/15 Planning,
36/100 and 40/11 Waugh.