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Barbara Bates Center for the Study of The History of Nursing [Contact Us]
1885-1977
Extent: 19.2 linear feet
This collection contains photographs related to Philadelphia General Hospital. Images includes people, activities, buildings,
and equipment, ranging in date from the early 1900s through the 1970s.
Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]
1883-2014
(Bulk: 1920-1936)
Creator:
Scott, Alexander
Extent: 0.2 linear foot
Alexander Scott was born in 1854 in Camberwell, Surrey, the son of the famed British portrait painter for the Illustrated
London News, Thomas Dewel Scott. He became known as a world traveler, landscape painter and collector of Asian antiquities.
This collection was donated to the Penn Museum in 2011 by Anne Bowbeer, the wife of Alexander Scott's nephew, following the
death of Mabel Scott Hall, Alexander Scott's widow
Library at the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies [Contact Us]
1739-1981
(Bulk: 1880-1981)
Extent: 7 linear feet (15 document cases and 2 short top boxes)
Library at the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies [Contact Us]
1884-1991
(Bulk: 1907-1919)
Extent: 4 linear feet (6 manuscript boxes, 1 large box and three large binders)
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1818-2000
(Bulk: 1907-1998)
Creator:
Charlotte Cushman Club (Philadelphia, Pa.).
Extent: 16.6 linear feet (26 boxes)
Founded in 1907, the Charlotte Cushman Club was originally intended to provide respectable lodgings for actresses appearing
in Philadelphia theaters. In the years of World War II the Club ceased to provide residential services, becoming a favorite
gathering place of theater lovers as well as of the many actresses and actors visiting the city with their touring companies.
The Charlotte Cushman Club Records offer insight into the activities, the administration, and the membership of the Club during
the whole life of the organization, until its closure in 1998. The collection also includes part of the holdings of the former
Club’s museum and library.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1876-1970
(Bulk: 1944-1962)
Creator:
Bradley, Sculley, 1897-
Extent: 2.5 linear feet (6 boxes)
Edward Sculley Bradley (1897-1987) was a scholar, author, educator, and administrator at the University of Pennsylvania. He
was a prolific writer and editor, serving as editor of the General Magazine and History Chronicle, Philadelphia, 1945-1956.
He published biographies of literary figures George Henry Boker and Henry Charles Lea, as well as editions of works by Mark
Twain, Stephen Crane, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Walt Whitman. Bradley was considered an international expert on Whitman, editing
several important editions of the poet's Leaves of Grass. The Sculley Bradley papers include his personal and professional
correspondence dating from 1923 to 1962, material from several literary censorship cases for which he testified, corrected
drafts of his manuscripts for the Comprehensive Reader's Edition, Norton Critical Edition, and Variorum edition of Leaves
of Grass, ephemera and graphics associated with Walt Whitman, and a small amount of material on other authors.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1880-1992
Creator:
Ormandy, Eugene, 1899-1985
Extent: 16.75 linear feet (76 volumes and boxes)
Eugene Ormandy served as the conductor/musical director of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra from 1931 to 1936 and the Philadelphia
Orchestra from 1937 to 1980.This collection of photographs documents the career and life of Eugene Ormandy from the early
1880s to the early 1990s, with the bulk of the photographs dating from the 1940s to the 1970s.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1884-1993
Creator:
Huber, Evelyn Manuel, 1917-2002
Mumford, Lewis, 1895-1990, Author Mumford, Sophia Wittenberg, 1899-1997 Extent: 0.42 linear feet (1 box + 1 book)
This collection contains letters from Lewis and Sophia Mumford to Evelyn Manuel Huber, Lewis Mumford's cousin once removed.
The letters date from 1959 to 1993 and document the private and professional activities of Lewis and Sophia Mumford. A family
photo album of the Baron, Huber and Mumford families is also included.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1723-2006
(Bulk: 1967-2006)
Creator:
Gotham Book Mart.
Extent: 79 linear feet (95 boxes)
The Gotham Book Mart (1920-2006) was one of New York City’s most iconic bookstores during the 20th century. Founded by Frances
Steloff (1887-1989), the daughter of poor Russian-Jewish immigrants, the Book Mart became a social center for the New York
literati and a focal point for literary modernism in the United States. Steloff’s successor, independent literary manuscript
dealer Andreas Brown (1933-), maintained the store’s focus on avant garde and small press publications while incorporating
his own interests in postcards and genealogy. This collection contains 91 boxes of material relating to the daily operation
of the Book Mart; correspondence, biographical, and legal material from both Brown and Steloff; postcard and genealogical
material collected by Brown; photographs of the store, its employees, and events which took place there; and manuscripts and
ephemera offered for sale.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1575-1991
(Bulk: 1812-1930)
Creator:
Furness Family
Extent: 10 linear feet (20 boxes and one oversized folder)
The H.H. Furness Memorial Library focuses on the study of Shakespeare and other Tudor and Stuart dramatists. Horace Howard
Furness (1833-1912) and his son Horace Howard Furness Jr. (1865-1930) founded and edited the Variorum Shakespeare and their
library was donated to the University of Pennsylvania in 1932. This collection contains personal correspondence to and from
Rev. William Henry Furness (1802-1896), Horace Howard Furness, and Horace Howard Furness, Jr., largely relating to Shakespearean
study and the H.H. Furness Memorial library; notebooks; copies of speeches and articles; and other assorted items relating
to Shakespearean scholarship or to the Furness family.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1869-2014
(Bulk: 1958-2013)
Creator:
DePreist, James, 1936 -
Extent: 130 boxes (+ 2 map drawer folders)
James DePreist (1936-2013) was an African-American conductor of international renown. This collection primarily documents
James DePreist's conducting career, with a focus on the 1980s and 1990s with the Oregon Symphony, including organizational
records, concert programs, press coverage, scores, and recordings.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1833-2007
Creator:
Wallis, Jane Wright Proctor, 1875-1956
Extent: 10 linear feet (18 boxes)
A Philadelphia native, Jane Wright Proctor Wallis (1875-1956) was the daughter of Sarah Jane Wright and Josiah Kendall Proctor
(the founder and owner of several prominent city businesses) and a mother of ten children. The Jane Wright Proctor Wallis
family papers provide a glimpse into early 20th-century family life through correspondence, scrapbooks, photographs, and memorabilia.
The collection dates from 1833 to 2007, revealing a pride in the history and genealogy of the Proctor Wallis family across
its many generations. In addition to familial topics, this collection features many materials documenting events of the early
20th Century as well as various Philadelphia-area social and charitable clubs.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1886-1990
Creator:
Sellin, Johan Thorsten, 1896-1994
Extent: 82 boxes
The Johan Thorsten Sellin Papers include correspondence; biographical materials; drafts of writings; notes; clippings about
Sellin’s work; minutes; reprints of criminology articles; memorabilia; and some photographs. The material is largely professional,
not personal, and documents Sellin’s research as a penologist and his career as a teacher of sociology and criminology, as
well as his works in Swedish-American causes.
Barbara Bates Center for the Study of The History of Nursing [Contact Us]
1871-1992
Creator:
Lankenau Hospital School of Nursing.
Extent: 52.5 linear feet
This collection chronicles the long history of one of Philadelphia's most respected diploma schools of nursing, that of the
Lankenau Hospital. It contains records which span the entire life of the school, from its inception in 1899 (at Lankenau's
institutional predecessor, the German Hospital) to its eventual close in May of 1992.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1880-2004
(Bulk: 1898-1975)
Creator:
Mahler, Alma, 1879-1964
Werfel, Franz, 1890-1945 Extent: 134 boxes
The collection comprises the personal papers of Alma Mahler, the personal and professional papers of Franz Werfel, memorabilia
related to Gustav Mahler, and the research files of Adolf D. Klarmann concerning Franz Werfel. Materials include correspondence
to and from Alma Mahler and Franz Werfel, as well as to and from Adolf Klarmann, sometimes on behalf of Alma; writings of
Alma, such as diaries and memoirs, as well as her musical compositions; writings of Werfel, such as poems, plays, novels,
novellas and stories, and essays; memorabilia relating to Alma, her parents, Gustav Mahler, and Werfel, such as clippings,
programs, and personal documents; photographs; and audio files, such as interviews and songs. Also included are Klarmann’s
research notes and writings on Werfel, as well as material relating to Klarmann’s work as editor of Werfel’s writings.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1851-2000
(Bulk: 1873-1992)
Extent: 6 linear feet (8 boxes)
Wolrd's fairs and expositions have been held internationally from 1851 and continue into the present. This collection comprises
written materials, memorabilia, and, to a more limited extent, other materials such as photographs and musical recordings
from or related to world's fairs and expositions that took place between 1851 and 1992. Most expositions recognized by the
Bureau International des Expositions (BIE) are represented, as well as many that are not officially recognized by the BIE.
Some non-world's fair events are also represented to a limited extent. While events from around the world are featured in
the collection, it primarily centers on expositions that occurred in the United States.
Barbara Bates Center for the Study of The History of Nursing [Contact Us]
1856-2008
Extent: 1.87 linear feet
The Bates Center's Small Collections are various, unrelated accessions that have been individually assigned collection numbers.
Many of the Small Collections consist of a single folder.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1865-1976
Creator:
Cret, Paul Philippe, 1876-1945
Extent: 39 boxes (+ one map drawer)
One third of the collection comprises correspondence, including exchanges with professional colleagues and clients as well
as a few family members. With the exception of a substantial group of letters written by Cret to his wife while serving in
World War I, there is little personal material. None of the correspondence files contains comprehensive representation of
the transactions of Cret and/or his firm on any given project. The remainder of the Papers includes writings by Cret, project
and teaching materials (incomplete), notes, biographical material, and photographs.
Barbara Bates Center for the Study of The History of Nursing [Contact Us]
1871-1988
Creator:
Presbyterian School of Nursing.
Extent: 152 linear feet
This collection documents the founding, flourishing and eventual closing of the Presbyterian School of Nursing, a hospital-based
nursing school in Philadelphia. The hospital itself was founded in 1871 under the sponsorship of the Presbyterian Church.
Its nurse training program was begun in 1889. The collection's strength is the relative completeness of student records, good
documentation of the school's curricula and teaching materials. The supportive role both the Ladies Aid Society and the Alumni
Association played in the growth of the School are evident in these records.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1875-1997
Creator:
Mumford, Lewis, 1895-1990
Mumford, Sophia Wittenberg, 1899-1997 Extent: 23.22 linear feet (48 boxes, 1 oversized folder)
The Sophia Wittenberg Mumford papers contain, correspondence, writings, diaries, photographs, memorabilia, audio-visual material,
financial and legal material documenting the private and public life of Sophia and her husband Lewis Mumford. A large majority
of this collection is remnants of Lewis Mumford's papers that remained in their house upon his death in 1990 and were finally
transferred to the University of Pennsylvania after her death in 1997.
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts [Contact Us]
1879-1977
Creator:
Frank, Waldo David, 1889-1967
Extent: 63 linear feet (132 boxes, 1 oversized folder)
The papers document the literary career and the personal and professional life of twentieth-century American novelist and
writer Waldo David Frank. Comprising correspondence, writings, publicity, writings by others, memorabilia, photographs, scrapbooks,
and clippings spanning from 1879 to 1977, the collection contains 132 boxes and 3565 folders. The correspondence documents
Frank's personal and professional relationships with writers, editors, artists, friends, and family. Letters from friendships
with other writers and artists such as Jean Toomer, Sherwood Anderson, Alfred Stieglitz, Lewis Mumford, Van Wyck Brooks, and
Hart Crane document congenial collaborations, sharing of ideas, and disagreements. The writings contain his notebooks, major
works, articles, essays, and early writings tracing Frank's works and ideas of society and culture with psychological and
social themes of man and his environment. Frank's passion for the culture and study of Spain, Latin America, and Mexico is
apparent in correspondence and his research, preserved through notes and photographs of South America and Mexico. Letters
and photographs display Frank's relationships with family members, his wives (Margaret Naumburg, Alma Magoon Frank, and Jean
Klempner Frank) and his children. The materials in this collection divulge not only the writings of Waldo Frank, but the struggles
of the writer and his encounters with himself and society as he seeks his vision of truth in the world. He was courageous
in the face of his critics and his political enemies even when experiencing both written and physical attacks. Even though
Frank claimed he was an outsider he was embraced by the people and cultures he championed and studied. Although largely forgotten
by the end of his lifetime, his correspondence, writings, and ideas remain, providing insight into literary circles, political
ideas, and historical events in the United States and Latin America during the early- to mid-twentieth century.
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