{"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026page=7268\u0026view=compact","prev":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026page=7267\u0026view=compact","next":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026page=7269\u0026view=compact","last":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026page=7278\u0026view=compact"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":7268,"next_page":7269,"prev_page":7267,"total_pages":7278,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":72670,"total_count":72774,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Younger, Edward E.","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070","ref_ssm":["viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070"],"id":"viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02299","_root_":"viu_viu02299","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02299_c01_c15","parent_ssi":"viu_viu02299_c01_c15","parent_ssim":["viu_viu02299","viu_viu02299_c01","viu_viu02299_c01_c15"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu02299","viu_viu02299_c01","viu_viu02299_c01_c15"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s","Series I: Correspondence (General)","Rare Books Dept. 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Correspondence\n                  (miscellaneous)","Younger, Edward E.","box \n                     A35-18L"],"title_filing_ssi":"Younger, Edward E.","title_ssm":["Younger, Edward E."],"title_tesim":["Younger, Edward E."],"normalized_title_ssm":["Younger, Edward E."],"component_level_isim":[3],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":6463,"containers_ssim":["box \n                     A35-18L"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#14/components#2069","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:35:06.559Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu02299","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02299","_root_":"viu_viu02299","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02299","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu02299.xml","title_ssm":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"title_tesim":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["RG-12/11/4.021"],"text":["RG-12/11/4.021","Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s","This collection is comprised of ca. 300,000 items.","The collection is arranged in four series: Series I: Correspondence (General); Series II: Patron-Use Files [1991- ]; Series III: Manuscripts Field Agent's Files; Series IV: Special Collections Student Assistants and Employee Files [ -1995]","The Special Collections Correspondence files pconsist chiefly of the\n         general correspondence files of Special Collections of the University of Virginia Library and like files of its predecessors, the Rare Book Department and the Manuscripts Department.","Included are patron use ledgers; patron request slips; Manuscripts Field Agent files; student assistant and employee files; dealer correspondence; thank you letters; and reference letters.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["RG-12/11/4.021"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"collection_title_tesim":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"collection_ssim":["Correspondence Files of Special Collections, University of Virginia Library  \n          \n         1931-1990s"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The files were an internal archival transfer on April 10, 2002.\n"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection is comprised of ca. 300,000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection is arranged in four series: Series I: Correspondence (General); Series II: Patron-Use Files [1991- ]; Series III: Manuscripts Field Agent's Files; Series IV: Special Collections Student Assistants and Employee Files [ -1995]\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement\n"],"arrangement_tesim":["The collection is arranged in four series: Series I: Correspondence (General); Series II: Patron-Use Files [1991- ]; Series III: Manuscripts Field Agent's Files; Series IV: Special Collections Student Assistants and Employee Files [ -1995]"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Special Collections Correspondence files pconsist chiefly of the\n         general correspondence files of Special Collections of the University of Virginia Library and like files of its predecessors, the Rare Book Department and the Manuscripts Department.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIncluded are patron use ledgers; patron request slips; Manuscripts Field Agent files; student assistant and employee files; dealer correspondence; thank you letters; and reference letters.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The Special Collections Correspondence files pconsist chiefly of the\n         general correspondence files of Special Collections of the University of Virginia Library and like files of its predecessors, the Rare Book Department and the Manuscripts Department.","Included are patron use ledgers; patron request slips; Manuscripts Field Agent files; student assistant and employee files; dealer correspondence; thank you letters; and reference letters."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":6613,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:35:06.559Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02299_c01_c15_c2070"}},{"id":"viu_viu02923_c01_c08","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02923_c01_c08#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu02923_c01_c08","ref_ssm":["viu_viu02923_c01_c08"],"id":"viu_viu02923_c01_c08","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02923","_root_":"viu_viu02923","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02923_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_viu02923_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_viu02923","viu_viu02923_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu02923","viu_viu02923_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944","Materials Relating to World War\n               II"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944","Materials Relating to World War\n               II"],"text":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944","Materials Relating to World War\n               II","\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941","6 items","Box 1"],"title_filing_ssi":"\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941","title_ssm":["\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941"],"title_tesim":["\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941"],"normalized_title_ssm":["\"Young Europe in America,\" Miss Clara\n                  Leiser \n                   1941"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"physdesc_tesim":["6 items"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":9,"containers_ssim":["Box 1"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#7","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:42:07.383Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu02923","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02923","_root_":"viu_viu02923","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02923","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu02923.xml","title_ssm":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"title_tesim":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["7690"],"text":["7690","Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944","This holding\n         consists of 13 boxes of materials.","The collection contains extensive correspondence, ca. 1930\n         to 1968, carried on by Dabney as editor of the \n          Richmond Times-Dispatch , in his\n         personal, life, and as a Pulitzer Prize- winning author. Other\n         materials deal with his books such as \n          Below the Potomac, The Dry\n         Messiah, and \n          Liberalism in the South , and\n         much useful material collected as research material for these\n         books is present. There is extensive material on the American\n         Society of Newspaper Editors which Dabney served in various\n         capacities including president. A great deal of useful\n         material on race relations, the African American, the\n         N.A.A.C.P., etc., is present. Recent political history of\n         Virginia is strongly represented in Dabney's correspondence as\n         editor of Virginia's leading newspaper, and in his personal\n         correspondence with figures such as Senator A. Willis\n         Robinson, Francis Pickens Miller, and Senator Carter\n         Glass.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["7690"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"collection_title_tesim":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"collection_ssim":["Virginius Dabney Papers, \n          \n         1941-1944"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["This holding was a gift ot the University."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This holding\n         consists of 13 boxes of materials."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection contains extensive correspondence, ca. 1930\n         to 1968, carried on by Dabney as editor of the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRichmond Times-Dispatch\u003c/title\u003e, in his\n         personal, life, and as a Pulitzer Prize- winning author. Other\n         materials deal with his books such as \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eBelow the Potomac, The Dry\n         Messiah,\u003c/title\u003eand \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eLiberalism in the South\u003c/title\u003e, and\n         much useful material collected as research material for these\n         books is present. There is extensive material on the American\n         Society of Newspaper Editors which Dabney served in various\n         capacities including president. A great deal of useful\n         material on race relations, the African American, the\n         N.A.A.C.P., etc., is present. Recent political history of\n         Virginia is strongly represented in Dabney's correspondence as\n         editor of Virginia's leading newspaper, and in his personal\n         correspondence with figures such as Senator A. Willis\n         Robinson, Francis Pickens Miller, and Senator Carter\n         Glass.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The collection contains extensive correspondence, ca. 1930\n         to 1968, carried on by Dabney as editor of the \n          Richmond Times-Dispatch , in his\n         personal, life, and as a Pulitzer Prize- winning author. Other\n         materials deal with his books such as \n          Below the Potomac, The Dry\n         Messiah, and \n          Liberalism in the South , and\n         much useful material collected as research material for these\n         books is present. There is extensive material on the American\n         Society of Newspaper Editors which Dabney served in various\n         capacities including president. A great deal of useful\n         material on race relations, the African American, the\n         N.A.A.C.P., etc., is present. 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","Mrs. Gayle Fisher, of St. Petersburg, Florida, is a genealogical researcher, who focused on her ancestral connections primarily in Southwest Virginia\n\n ","This is a genealogical collection of 49 family names arranged by Mrs. Gayle Fisher. The collection includes computer printouts of Bible records, research by others, obituaries, photographs, and other notes. \n\n\n ","English "],"unitid_tesim":["1999.7.21 "],"normalized_title_ssm":["A Guide to the Papers of Gayle Fisher"],"collection_title_tesim":["A Guide to the Papers of Gayle Fisher"],"collection_ssim":["A Guide to the Papers of Gayle Fisher"],"repository_ssm":["Roanoke Public Libraries"],"repository_ssim":["Roanoke Public Libraries"],"acqinfo_ssim":["Donated by Gayle Fisher"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["1 record storage box"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eDocuments are arranged alphabetically by surname. \u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement "],"arrangement_tesim":["Documents are arranged alphabetically by surname. "],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eMrs. Gayle Fisher, of St. Petersburg, Florida, is a genealogical researcher, who focused on her ancestral connections primarily in Southwest Virginia\n\n \u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Note "],"bioghist_tesim":["Mrs. Gayle Fisher, of St. Petersburg, Florida, is a genealogical researcher, who focused on her ancestral connections primarily in Southwest Virginia\n\n "],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis is a genealogical collection of 49 family names arranged by Mrs. Gayle Fisher. The collection includes computer printouts of Bible records, research by others, obituaries, photographs, and other notes. \n\n\n \u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content "],"scopecontent_tesim":["This is a genealogical collection of 49 family names arranged by Mrs. Gayle Fisher. The collection includes computer printouts of Bible records, research by others, obituaries, photographs, and other notes. \n\n\n "],"language_ssim":["English "],"total_component_count_is":49,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:31:55.685Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viro_Fisher00017_c01_c48"}},{"id":"viu_viu01972_c02_c71","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01972_c02_c71#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01972_c02_c71","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01972_c02_c71"],"id":"viu_viu01972_c02_c71","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01972","_root_":"viu_viu01972","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01972_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01972_c02","parent_ssim":["viu_viu01972","viu_viu01972_c02"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01972","viu_viu01972_c02"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994","Artwork \u0026 Illustrations by Chappell for\n               Books"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994","Artwork \u0026 Illustrations by Chappell for\n               Books"],"text":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994","Artwork \u0026 Illustrations by Chappell for\n               Books","Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952","Box 18"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952","title_ssm":["Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952"],"title_tesim":["Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Geoffrey\n                Chaucer 1952"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":233,"containers_ssim":["Box 18"],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#70","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:25:10.842Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01972","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01972","_root_":"viu_viu01972","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01972","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01972.xml","title_ssm":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"title_tesim":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10204-av"],"text":["10204-av","Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994","ca. 3,300 items (18\n         Hollinger boxes and seven oversize boxes, ca. 18.5 linear\n         shelf feet)","Series I: Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Files \n          Subseries A: Artwork by Chappell \u0026 Other Artists\n         (Boxes 1-2; Oversize Boxes N-1, S-34, S-35) \n          Subseries B: Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Files (Boxes\n         3-8; Oversize Boxes N-1, ) \n          Subseries C: Correspondence (Boxes 8-10) \n          Series II: Artwork \u0026 Illustrations by Warren\n         Chappell for Books, arranged by book title (Boxes 11-18;\n         Oversize Boxes S-32, S-33, S-35)","This addition to the papers of American book illustrator\n         and artist, Warren Chappell (1904-1991) consists of ca. 3,300\n         items, ca. 1870-1994, chiefly Chappell's illustrations and\n         artwork for books, dust jackets, magazines, Book-of-the-Month\n         Club announcements, keepsakes, bookplates, and Christmas card\n         designs; and individual sketches and drawings by Chappell and\n         other artists (including some pre-twentieth century artists),\n         but also including personal and professional correspondence;\n         printed material; some photographs; articles; talks and\n         speeches by Chappell; exhibition catalogs featuring Chappell;\n         reviews and notices for books illustrated or written by\n         Chappell; examples of various typefaces; political cartoons;\n         and various topical files. Also present are some manuscripts\n         and drawings by Chappell's grandfather, John Taylor Chappell\n         (1845-1915), and Samuel Michael Chappell.","The collection, 1870-1994, consists\n         chiefly of Warren Chappell's illustrations, artwork, sketches\n         and drawings; personal and professional correspondence; and\n         articles, catalogs and photographs.","S[amuel?]","English"],"unitid_tesim":["10204-av"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"collection_title_tesim":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"collection_ssim":["Warren Chappell Papers, \n          \n         1870-1994"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 3,300 items (18\n         Hollinger boxes and seven oversize boxes, ca. 18.5 linear\n         shelf feet)"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSeries I: Topical \u0026amp; Miscellaneous Files \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSubseries A: Artwork by Chappell \u0026amp; Other Artists\n         (Boxes 1-2; Oversize Boxes N-1, S-34, S-35) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSubseries B: Topical \u0026amp; Miscellaneous Files (Boxes\n         3-8; Oversize Boxes N-1, ) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSubseries C: Correspondence (Boxes 8-10) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSeries II: Artwork \u0026amp; Illustrations by Warren\n         Chappell for Books, arranged by book title (Boxes 11-18;\n         Oversize Boxes S-32, S-33, S-35)\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["Series I: Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Files \n          Subseries A: Artwork by Chappell \u0026 Other Artists\n         (Boxes 1-2; Oversize Boxes N-1, S-34, S-35) \n          Subseries B: Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Files (Boxes\n         3-8; Oversize Boxes N-1, ) \n          Subseries C: Correspondence (Boxes 8-10) \n          Series II: Artwork \u0026 Illustrations by Warren\n         Chappell for Books, arranged by book title (Boxes 11-18;\n         Oversize Boxes S-32, S-33, S-35)"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis addition to the papers of American book illustrator\n         and artist, Warren Chappell (1904-1991) consists of ca. 3,300\n         items, ca. 1870-1994, chiefly Chappell's illustrations and\n         artwork for books, dust jackets, magazines, Book-of-the-Month\n         Club announcements, keepsakes, bookplates, and Christmas card\n         designs; and individual sketches and drawings by Chappell and\n         other artists (including some pre-twentieth century artists),\n         but also including personal and professional correspondence;\n         printed material; some photographs; articles; talks and\n         speeches by Chappell; exhibition catalogs featuring Chappell;\n         reviews and notices for books illustrated or written by\n         Chappell; examples of various typefaces; political cartoons;\n         and various topical files. Also present are some manuscripts\n         and drawings by Chappell's grandfather, John Taylor Chappell\n         (1845-1915), and Samuel Michael Chappell.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This addition to the papers of American book illustrator\n         and artist, Warren Chappell (1904-1991) consists of ca. 3,300\n         items, ca. 1870-1994, chiefly Chappell's illustrations and\n         artwork for books, dust jackets, magazines, Book-of-the-Month\n         Club announcements, keepsakes, bookplates, and Christmas card\n         designs; and individual sketches and drawings by Chappell and\n         other artists (including some pre-twentieth century artists),\n         but also including personal and professional correspondence;\n         printed material; some photographs; articles; talks and\n         speeches by Chappell; exhibition catalogs featuring Chappell;\n         reviews and notices for books illustrated or written by\n         Chappell; examples of various typefaces; political cartoons;\n         and various topical files. Also present are some manuscripts\n         and drawings by Chappell's grandfather, John Taylor Chappell\n         (1845-1915), and Samuel Michael Chappell."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe collection, 1870-1994, consists\n         chiefly of Warren Chappell's illustrations, artwork, sketches\n         and drawings; personal and professional correspondence; and\n         articles, catalogs and photographs.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The collection, 1870-1994, consists\n         chiefly of Warren Chappell's illustrations, artwork, sketches\n         and drawings; personal and professional correspondence; and\n         articles, catalogs and photographs."],"names_ssim":["S[amuel?]"],"persname_ssim":["S[amuel?]"],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":234,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:25:10.842Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01972_c02_c71"}},{"id":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon).","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25","ref_ssm":["vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25"],"id":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25","ead_ssi":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","_root_":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","_nest_parent_":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05","parent_ssi":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05","parent_ssim":["vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05"],"parent_ids_ssim":["vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Mattoon Family Collection","Photographs"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Mattoon Family Collection","Photographs"],"text":["Mattoon Family Collection","Photographs","Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon).","Binder 08"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon).","title_ssm":["Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon)."],"title_tesim":["Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon)."],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young girl on hood of Model T (likely Helen Mattoon)."],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["Longwood University"],"collection_ssim":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"extent_ssm":["1 Photographic Prints"],"extent_tesim":["1 Photographic Prints"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":73,"parent_access_restrict_tesm":["There are no restrictions to access or use for research purposes."],"containers_ssim":["Binder 08"],"_nest_path_":"/components#4/components#24","timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:38:58.836Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","ead_ssi":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","_root_":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","_nest_parent_":"vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/oai/LONG/repositories_2_resources_105.xml","title_ssm":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"title_tesim":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"unitdate_ssm":["1870-1966"],"unitdate_inclusive_ssm":["1870-1966"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["LU.157","/repositories/2/resources/105"],"text":["LU.157","/repositories/2/resources/105","Mattoon Family Collection","Appomattox River (Va.)","There are no restrictions to access or use for research purposes.","The Mattoon Collection contains materials collected by Mary Venable Cox (1881-1969) and her husband, John Chester Mattoon (1872-1940). Mary Venable Cox was born at the Cox family homestead eight miles north of Farmville, VA. At the age of seven, she was sent to live with her Uncle Benjamin Cox who was the business manager of the State Normal School in Farmville. She attended the training school that was associated with the State Normal School for four years. Upon graduation from the eighth grade, she entered the State Normal School and graduated in June 1900. From 1900-1901 Mary Venable Cox taught at a private school in Winchester, VA and the following year she and her cousin Mary White Cox (daughter of Benjamin) taught in a two-room schoolhouse in Raphine, VA. In 1902, she received a scholarship to attend the Teachers College at Columbia University in New York City. She attended classes there for two years and in 1904 received a Bachelor's Diploma in Education. In the fall of that same year, she began teaching algebra at the State Normal School at Farmville and acted as assistant to her future husband John Chester Mattoon who had begun teaching there in 1902. The two were eventually married in June of 1907 at Benjamin Cox's home in Farmville. John Mattoon continued to teach at the State Normal School until the end of the spring term in 1912 at which point he accepted a position at the University of Indiana in Bloomington. In 1915, after the University of Indiana discontinued the practical vocational program, the Mattoon's moved to Baltimore, Maryland where J.C. Mattoon found work at Bartlett-Hayward \u0026 Company. From 1918-1919 Mary Venable Mattoon worked in Washington, D.C. with the Quartermaster Corps, commuting each day from Baltimore. In 1925, they moved to Woodstock, MD. It was there, that John Mattoon would pass away in 1940, after an eight-year battle with cancer. Mary Venable Mattoon remained in Woodstock until 1966 when she moved to Lancaster, Ohio to be nearer to her son's family. She passed away on March 18, 1969.","Elizabeth Kaites, the granddaughter of Mary Venable Mattoon and J.C. Mattoon, donated the Mattoon Collection to the Greenwood Library Archives in fall 2017.","This collection consists of photographs taken by J.C. Mattoon, memorabilia, ephemera, and genealogical material related to the Cox and Mattoon families. These materials range in date from the 1870s through 1966.","Greenwood Library Archives and Special Collections","Longwood University (Date of work: 1904-1912.) -- : History.","Longwood University -- : Students.","Mattoon Family.","Cox Family.","Mattoon family.","Sutton family.","Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox.","English \n.    "],"unitid_tesim":["LU.157","/repositories/2/resources/105"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"collection_title_tesim":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"collection_ssim":["Mattoon Family Collection"],"repository_ssm":["Longwood University"],"repository_ssim":["Longwood University"],"geogname_ssm":["Appomattox River (Va.)"],"geogname_ssim":["Appomattox River (Va.)"],"creator_ssm":["Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox.","Mattoon Family.","Cox Family."],"creator_ssim":["Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox.","Mattoon Family.","Cox Family."],"creator_persname_ssim":["Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox."],"creator_famname_ssim":["Mattoon Family.","Cox Family."],"creators_ssim":["Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox.","Mattoon Family.","Cox Family."],"places_ssim":["Appomattox River (Va.)"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"extent_ssm":["5.3 Linear Feet 2 legal-sized archival boxes, 3 flat boxes, and 1 photograph binder"],"extent_tesim":["5.3 Linear Feet 2 legal-sized archival boxes, 3 flat boxes, and 1 photograph binder"],"date_range_isim":[1870,1871,1872,1873,1874,1875,1876,1877,1878,1879,1880,1881,1882,1883,1884,1885,1886,1887,1888,1889,1890,1891,1892,1893,1894,1895,1896,1897,1898,1899,1900,1901,1902,1903,1904,1905,1906,1907,1908,1909,1910,1911,1912,1913,1914,1915,1916,1917,1918,1919,1920,1921,1922,1923,1924,1925,1926,1927,1928,1929,1930,1931,1932,1933,1934,1935,1936,1937,1938,1939,1940,1941,1942,1943,1944,1945,1946,1947,1948,1949,1950,1951,1952,1953,1954,1955,1956,1957,1958,1959,1960,1961,1962,1963,1964,1965,1966],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions to access or use for research purposes.\u003c/p\u003e"],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":[" Restrictions on Access"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions to access or use for research purposes."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe Mattoon Collection contains materials collected by Mary Venable Cox (1881-1969) and her husband, John Chester Mattoon (1872-1940). Mary Venable Cox was born at the Cox family homestead eight miles north of Farmville, VA. At the age of seven, she was sent to live with her Uncle Benjamin Cox who was the business manager of the State Normal School in Farmville. She attended the training school that was associated with the State Normal School for four years. Upon graduation from the eighth grade, she entered the State Normal School and graduated in June 1900. From 1900-1901 Mary Venable Cox taught at a private school in Winchester, VA and the following year she and her cousin Mary White Cox (daughter of Benjamin) taught in a two-room schoolhouse in Raphine, VA. In 1902, she received a scholarship to attend the Teachers College at Columbia University in New York City. She attended classes there for two years and in 1904 received a Bachelor's Diploma in Education. In the fall of that same year, she began teaching algebra at the State Normal School at Farmville and acted as assistant to her future husband John Chester Mattoon who had begun teaching there in 1902. The two were eventually married in June of 1907 at Benjamin Cox's home in Farmville. John Mattoon continued to teach at the State Normal School until the end of the spring term in 1912 at which point he accepted a position at the University of Indiana in Bloomington. In 1915, after the University of Indiana discontinued the practical vocational program, the Mattoon's moved to Baltimore, Maryland where J.C. Mattoon found work at Bartlett-Hayward \u0026amp; Company. From 1918-1919 Mary Venable Mattoon worked in Washington, D.C. with the Quartermaster Corps, commuting each day from Baltimore. In 1925, they moved to Woodstock, MD. It was there, that John Mattoon would pass away in 1940, after an eight-year battle with cancer. Mary Venable Mattoon remained in Woodstock until 1966 when she moved to Lancaster, Ohio to be nearer to her son's family. She passed away on March 18, 1969.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical sketch"],"bioghist_tesim":["The Mattoon Collection contains materials collected by Mary Venable Cox (1881-1969) and her husband, John Chester Mattoon (1872-1940). Mary Venable Cox was born at the Cox family homestead eight miles north of Farmville, VA. At the age of seven, she was sent to live with her Uncle Benjamin Cox who was the business manager of the State Normal School in Farmville. She attended the training school that was associated with the State Normal School for four years. Upon graduation from the eighth grade, she entered the State Normal School and graduated in June 1900. From 1900-1901 Mary Venable Cox taught at a private school in Winchester, VA and the following year she and her cousin Mary White Cox (daughter of Benjamin) taught in a two-room schoolhouse in Raphine, VA. In 1902, she received a scholarship to attend the Teachers College at Columbia University in New York City. She attended classes there for two years and in 1904 received a Bachelor's Diploma in Education. In the fall of that same year, she began teaching algebra at the State Normal School at Farmville and acted as assistant to her future husband John Chester Mattoon who had begun teaching there in 1902. The two were eventually married in June of 1907 at Benjamin Cox's home in Farmville. John Mattoon continued to teach at the State Normal School until the end of the spring term in 1912 at which point he accepted a position at the University of Indiana in Bloomington. In 1915, after the University of Indiana discontinued the practical vocational program, the Mattoon's moved to Baltimore, Maryland where J.C. Mattoon found work at Bartlett-Hayward \u0026 Company. From 1918-1919 Mary Venable Mattoon worked in Washington, D.C. with the Quartermaster Corps, commuting each day from Baltimore. In 1925, they moved to Woodstock, MD. It was there, that John Mattoon would pass away in 1940, after an eight-year battle with cancer. Mary Venable Mattoon remained in Woodstock until 1966 when she moved to Lancaster, Ohio to be nearer to her son's family. She passed away on March 18, 1969."],"custodhist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eElizabeth Kaites, the granddaughter of Mary Venable Mattoon and J.C. Mattoon, donated the Mattoon Collection to the Greenwood Library Archives in fall 2017.\u003c/p\u003e"],"custodhist_heading_ssm":["Ownership and Custodial History"],"custodhist_tesim":["Elizabeth Kaites, the granddaughter of Mary Venable Mattoon and J.C. Mattoon, donated the Mattoon Collection to the Greenwood Library Archives in fall 2017."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of photographs taken by J.C. Mattoon, memorabilia, ephemera, and genealogical material related to the Cox and Mattoon families. These materials range in date from the 1870s through 1966.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of photographs taken by J.C. Mattoon, memorabilia, ephemera, and genealogical material related to the Cox and Mattoon families. These materials range in date from the 1870s through 1966."],"names_coll_ssim":["Longwood University (Date of work: 1904-1912.) -- : History.","Longwood University -- : Students.","Mattoon family.","Sutton family."],"names_ssim":["Greenwood Library Archives and Special Collections","Longwood University (Date of work: 1904-1912.) -- : History.","Longwood University -- : Students.","Mattoon Family.","Cox Family.","Mattoon family.","Sutton family.","Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox."],"corpname_ssim":["Greenwood Library Archives and Special Collections","Longwood University (Date of work: 1904-1912.) -- : History.","Longwood University -- : Students."],"famname_ssim":["Mattoon Family.","Cox Family.","Mattoon family.","Sutton family."],"persname_ssim":["Mattoon, John C.","Cox, Mary White.","Mattoon, Helen Cox."],"language_ssim":["English \n.    "],"descrules_ssm":["Describing Archives: A Content Standard"],"total_component_count_is":208,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-04-30T21:38:58.836Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/vifarl_repositories_2_resources_105_c05_c25"}},{"id":"viu_viu02194_c01_c395","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02194_c01_c395#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu02194_c01_c395","ref_ssm":["viu_viu02194_c01_c395"],"id":"viu_viu02194_c01_c395","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02194","_root_":"viu_viu02194","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02194_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_viu02194_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_viu02194","viu_viu02194_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu02194","viu_viu02194_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files"],"text":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files","Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","2 folders","Box 52"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","title_ssm":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"title_tesim":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"physdesc_tesim":["2 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":396,"containers_ssim":["Box 52"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#394","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:20.722Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu02194","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02194","_root_":"viu_viu02194","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02194","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu02194.xml","title_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"title_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["9859-a"],"text":["9859-a","The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","ca. 10,000 items\n         (56 Hollinger boxes, 18 linear shelf feet)","Arrangement These papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.","Organization Herndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026 Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon.","Booth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines.","The collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.","There are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.","Correspondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias.","The papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["9859-a"],"normalized_title_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"collection_title_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"collection_ssim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Mr. Booton Herndon of Charlottesville, Virginia, gave\n            his papers to the Library on August 31, 1987."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 10,000 items\n         (56 Hollinger boxes, 18 linear shelf feet)"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThese papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eHerndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026amp; Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement These papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.","Organization Herndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026 Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBooth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Booth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.","There are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.","Correspondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":409,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:20.722Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02194_c01_c395"}},{"id":"viu_viu02194_c01_c396","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02194_c01_c396#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu02194_c01_c396","ref_ssm":["viu_viu02194_c01_c396"],"id":"viu_viu02194_c01_c396","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02194","_root_":"viu_viu02194","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02194_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_viu02194_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_viu02194","viu_viu02194_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu02194","viu_viu02194_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files"],"text":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","Alphabetical Files","Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","4 folders","Box 53"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971","title_ssm":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"title_tesim":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Men Can Change the\n                     World 1959-1971"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"physdesc_tesim":["4 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":397,"containers_ssim":["Box 53"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#395","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:20.722Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu02194","ead_ssi":"viu_viu02194","_root_":"viu_viu02194","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu02194","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu02194.xml","title_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"title_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["9859-a"],"text":["9859-a","The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986","ca. 10,000 items\n         (56 Hollinger boxes, 18 linear shelf feet)","Arrangement These papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.","Organization Herndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026 Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon.","Booth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines.","The collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.","There are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.","Correspondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias.","The papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["9859-a"],"normalized_title_ssm":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"collection_title_tesim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"collection_ssim":["The Booton Herndon Papers, \n          \n         1939-1986"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["Mr. Booton Herndon of Charlottesville, Virginia, gave\n            his papers to the Library on August 31, 1987."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 10,000 items\n         (56 Hollinger boxes, 18 linear shelf feet)"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eArrangement\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eThese papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e","\u003carrangement\u003e\n        \u003chead\u003eOrganization\u003c/head\u003e\n        \u003cp\u003eHerndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026amp; Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon.\u003c/p\u003e\n      \u003c/arrangement\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement"],"arrangement_tesim":["Arrangement These papers are arranged chronologically within each\n            topical folder, maintaining Herndon's original organization\n            whenever possible. A small group of unpublished manuscripts\n            of fiction and non-fiction articles compose a separate\n            series at the end of the collection.","Organization Herndon's papers have been divided into two series.\n            Series I, Alphabetical Files, is a topical arrangement of\n            his working files of various ideas for stories, articles,\n            and books. Each file contains all of the material pertinent\n            to its own subject whether correspondence, research\n            material, illustrative material, or manuscript. A few of\n            the more frequent correspondents will be listed with the\n            folder name in which they appear, and if necessary, with\n            dates of their letters. Series II, Miscellaneous Articles\n            \u0026 Stories, consists of several folders of unpublished\n            manuscripts by Herndon."],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eBooth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Booth Herndon (1915- ) has been a reporter, editor, public\n         relations consultant, free-lance writer, ghost writer, and a\n         contributor of several hundred articles and short stories to\n         national magazines."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThere are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The collection contains Booton Herndon's working files of\n         manuscripts for his books and articles together with related\n         research material, correspondence, drafts, illustrative\n         material and some proof. This collection is particularly\n         useful in showing the various stages of production of an\n         article or book by a professional writer.","There are files for projected books on the American Civil\n         Liberties Union and Mortimer Caplin, Internal Revenue\n         commissioner, and for an unpublished novel, \"Splendor in the\n         grass\" as well as books on the Ford family and motor company,\n         Leggett's department stores, Fulton Lewis, Jr., James A. Reed,\n         and exercise. Frequent topics for articles include sports,\n         particularly football, World War II, and Charlottesville and\n         Albemarle County, Virginia. Of interest is an article by Paul\n         Gaston and Thomas Hamond on public school desegregation in\n         Charlottesville, Virginia.","Correspondents include Patty Duke Astin, Roger N. Baldwin,\n         Mortimer Caplin, Arthur Hailey, Dorothy Kenyon, Fulton Lewis,\n         Jr., Littauer and Wilkinson, Robert D. Loomis, Eddie\n         Rickenbacker, William B. Spong, Max Wilkinson, and Babe\n         Zaharias."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThe papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["The papers, 1939-1986, of Booton\n         Herndon (1915- ) a free-lance writer of Charlottesville,\n         Virginia, contain typed and autograph manuscripts of his books\n         and articles, correspondence, business papers, research notes\n         and outlines, photographs, printed material, and\n         miscellany."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":409,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:20.722Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu02194_c01_c396"}},{"id":"viu_viu00259_c03_c285","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00259_c03_c285#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu00259_c03_c285","ref_ssm":["viu_viu00259_c03_c285"],"id":"viu_viu00259_c03_c285","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00259","_root_":"viu_viu00259","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00259_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_viu00259_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_viu00259","viu_viu00259_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu00259","viu_viu00259_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006","Series III: Organizations"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006","Series III: Organizations"],"text":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006","Series III: Organizations","Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969","box-folder 60:14"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969\n\t","title_ssm":["Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969\n\t"],"title_tesim":["Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969\n\t"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Men On the Go,\n\t 1969"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":891,"containers_ssim":["box-folder 60:14"],"_nest_path_":"/components#2/components#284","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:08.817Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu00259","ead_ssi":"viu_viu00259","_root_":"viu_viu00259","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu00259","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu00259.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006\n"],"title_tesim":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006\n"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["13347\n"],"text":["13347\n","Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006","Any original order has been preserved as much as possible. Files with no discernible order have been organized with similar types of material. These papers are arranged in eleven series, including:  \nSeries I:  Articles, Papers and Speeches by Julian Bond, arranged by date (Boxes 1-12) \nSeries II: Correspondence, including those labeled \"Reading Files\" (Boxes 12-36) \nSeries III: Organizations (Boxes 37-61) \nSeries IV: Invitations, Political Associates, and American Program Bureau Papers (Boxes 61-72) \nSeries V: Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by Others, arranged by type of material and then by author (Boxes 73-80) \nSeries VI: Political Papers, with two subseries:  \nSubseries A: General (Boxes 80-93) \nSubseries B: Campaign for President 1976 (Boxes 94-98) \nSeries VII: Topical Files, with two subseries:  \nSubseries A: General (Boxes 98-110) \nSubseries B: Academic Course Evaluations and Lectures (Boxes 110-112) \nSeries VIII: Family and Personal Papers, including Photographs \t\nSubseries A: Julian Bond (Boxes 113-122) \nSubseries B:  Bond Family Papers (123-126) \nSeries IX: Publicity including Newsletters, Press Releases, and News clippings (Boxes 127-132) \nSeries X: Restricted (Boxes 133-134) \nSeries XI: Audiovisual Materials\n","Julian Bond was born in Nashville, Tennessee on January 14, 1940, to educator, Dr. Horace Mann Bond and his wife, librarian Julia Washington Bond, who had traveled there from central Georgia to have her child. In 1940, Dr. Bond was president of Fort Valley State College, a black institution in central Georgia. Julian Bond attended primary school at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, where his father served as President, from 1945 until 1957, when Dr. Bond became dean of the School of Education at Atlanta University. His paternal grandparents were James Bond (1863-1929) born in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, and Jane Alice Browne (1865-1938), born in Prince George County, Maryland.\n","\nHe graduated in June 1957 from the George School, a co-educational Quaker preparatory school located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and entered Morehouse College in Atlanta in the fall. While in Atlanta, Bond founded the Committee on Appeal for Human Rights (COAHR), the Atlanta University Center student organization that coordinated student protests against segregation in Atlanta for three years. In the summer of 1960, he also joined the staff of a new Atlanta weekly newspaper,  The Atlanta Inquirer  as a reporter and feature writer.\n","\nIn January 1961, Julian Bond left Morehouse to become the Communications and Publicity Director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which was organized in 1960 at a conference of sit-in students on the campus of Atlanta University.  He held that position until September 1966, traveling to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas to help with civil rights drives and voter registration campaigns. \n","\nHe served in Georgia's House of Representatives, Atlanta's 111th District, from 1966-1975 and in the Georgia State Senate from 1975-1987. Bond was first elected to a seat created by reapportionment in the Georgia House of Representatives in 1965 but was prevented from taking office in January 1966 by members of the Georgia legislature objecting to his statements about the Vietnam War. After winning a second election in February 1966, a special House Committee again voted to bar him from office. Bond won a third election in November 1966, and in December the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Georgia House erred in not allowing him to take his seat in the legislature. On January 9, 1967, he was finally allowed to take the oath of office as a member of the Georgia House of Representative. \n","\nIn 1968, Bond was Co-Chairman of the Georgia Loyal National Delegation to the Democratic Convention. The Loyalists were successful in unseating the hand-picked regulars and Bond was even nominated as the Democratic Party's first black candidate for Vice-President of the United States, but he was too young to serve. He also considered his own campaign for President in 1975-1976, taking preliminary steps to run for office.\n","\nMore recently, he has taught popular Civil Rights history courses at American University (beginning in 1991) and the University of Virginia (beginning in 1990), and served as Chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) from February 1998 until the present. Bond has served on many national boards and committees, including serving as the first president of the Southern Poverty Law Center in 1971 and continuing as President Emeritus; President of the Atlanta NAACP from 1978-1989; and President and Founder of the Southern Elections Fund (SEF), among many others.\n","This collection consists of the political and personal papers of Civil Rights activist, Georgia State Senator and Representative, and professor, Julian Bond (1940-), ca. 1897-2006, with copies of earlier material, consisting of ca. 47,000 items (134 Hollinger boxes, 1 Card File Box and 3 Oversize boxes, ca. 60 linear feet). \n","\nThe first series, containing articles, speeches, and papers written and delivered by Julian Bond, is arranged by date if present or by an approximate date based on the subject or other internal evidence. When there is no title present on the document, the item is identified by its subject, place of delivery, or place of publication. Series one includes multiple drafts of various speeches; articles appearing eventually in print; statements and testimony before hearings, etc.; and tributes. The information in the box listing of the guide is sometimes more comprehensive than that recorded on the folder headings themselves. \n","\nThe second series consists of various types of correspondence, often with the carbon of Julian Bond's response. Some years have only the carbon of Bond's response and not the original letter. These include arrangements for speaking engagements and political appearances, even though most events were arranged for him by the American Program Bureau (see separate correspondence in Boxes 61-65); correspondence with constituents concerning issues before the Georgia legislature; requests for his photograph and biographical sketch; correspondence with political representatives from other states concerning issues of common interest before the United States Congress; correspondence with members of organizations, such as the Southern Regional Council, asking for their advice or input concerning various ideas for publications or activities that he is considering; a few topical correspondence files, such as the issue of sterilization, South Africa, and the Angela Davis case; and Georgia politics.\n","\nOther types of correspondence include derogatory or racist \"crank\" mail; general requests including political memorabilia, research information, copies of speeches and articles by Bond, autographs, permissions to reprint poems, articles, etc., and requests for speaking appearances (which overlaps somewhat with the regular chronological correspondence files and the American Program Bureau files).\n","\nThe third series includes papers and correspondence from members of various organizations concerned with voting rights, civil rights and minority issues. The largest groups of material include the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), National Urban League, the Southern Elections Fund, Southern Poverty Law Center, Southern Regional Council, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and Voter Education Project.\n","\nJulian Bond's popularity as a political and civil rights speaker is evidenced by the fourth series which includes general invitations, his contracts and correspondence with the American Program Bureau, and his Political Associates files. The organization, Political Associates, is defined in a 1971 proposal as \"an all-black Atlanta, Georgia based research group headed by Georgia State Representative Julian Bond\" which is \"initiating intensive investigations into the way black politicians - and black politics-operate.\" \n","\nThe fifth series, Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by other people, is arranged by type of material and then by author, and includes articles; books; class packets; a dissertation; interviews with Julian Bond by John Britton, William Chafe, Trevor L. Chandler, Marsha Darling, Jeffrey M. Elliot, Elizabeth Gritter, Megan Lisagor, Ulysses Prince, Plater Robinson, Thomas Rose and John Greenya,  and Mr. Scavullo; papers by various scholars;  poems; reports; speeches by others; student papers, many about Julian Bond; and theses.\n","\nThe sixth series, political papers, is divided into a general group, which includes a lot of material about his own campaigns, Atlanta elections, endorsements and planning for black candidates, the Democratic National Committee and Conventions of 1968 and 1972, the Georgia and National Democratic parties, Georgia politics, and files on voting rights activities; and a second subseries, entirely concerned with his bid for the United States presidency in 1976. \n","\nTopical files comprise the seventh series, including both correspondence and papers about various topics of interest to Julian Bond or of use in his courses on the history of Civil Rights. Also included are files on the relationship of the Barnes Foundation and Lincoln University, once headed by Bond's father, Dr. Horace Mann Bond. Subseries B of the seventh series includes course evaluations, outlines, syllabi, research material, and lecture notes for courses taught by Julian Bond at The American University, Harvard University, and the University of Virginia.\n","\nSeries eight, Family and Personal Papers, includes two subseries, the first concerning Julian Bond and the second, his extended family. His personal papers contain appointment books, activities and programs he attended, artifacts and memorabilia, honors and awards, correspondence with his family, financial files, and photographs, divided as much as possible into topics. The Bond Family subseries is chiefly concerned with Bond's parents, Horace Mann Bond and Julia Bond. \n","\nThe ninth series, Publicity, includes columns written by Bond, his Georgia State Legislature newsletters, general news clippings, clippings about Julian Bond, and press releases and statements. The tenth series consists of restricted materials. The eleventh and last series consists of all audiovisual materials found in the collection, which are also catalogued individually and given a separate number.\n","English\n"],"unitid_tesim":["13347\n"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Julian Bond\n 1897-2006"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These papers were placed at the University of Virginia on deposit by Julian Bond on June 25, 2005. They were purchased from Julian Bond by the University of Virginia Library in March 2007.\n"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eAny original order has been preserved as much as possible. Files with no discernible order have been organized with similar types of material. These papers are arranged in eleven series, including: \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries I:  Articles, Papers and Speeches by Julian Bond, arranged by date (Boxes 1-12)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries II: Correspondence, including those labeled \"Reading Files\" (Boxes 12-36)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries III: Organizations (Boxes 37-61)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries IV: Invitations, Political Associates, and American Program Bureau Papers (Boxes 61-72)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries V: Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by Others, arranged by type of material and then by author (Boxes 73-80)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries VI: Political Papers, with two subseries: \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSubseries A: General (Boxes 80-93)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSubseries B: Campaign for President 1976 (Boxes 94-98)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries VII: Topical Files, with two subseries: \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSubseries A: General (Boxes 98-110)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSubseries B: Academic Course Evaluations and Lectures (Boxes 110-112)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries VIII: Family and Personal Papers, including Photographs\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\t\nSubseries A: Julian Bond (Boxes 113-122)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSubseries B:  Bond Family Papers (123-126)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries IX: Publicity including Newsletters, Press Releases, and News clippings (Boxes 127-132)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries X: Restricted (Boxes 133-134)\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\nSeries XI: Audiovisual Materials\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Arrangement\n"],"arrangement_tesim":["Any original order has been preserved as much as possible. Files with no discernible order have been organized with similar types of material. These papers are arranged in eleven series, including:  \nSeries I:  Articles, Papers and Speeches by Julian Bond, arranged by date (Boxes 1-12) \nSeries II: Correspondence, including those labeled \"Reading Files\" (Boxes 12-36) \nSeries III: Organizations (Boxes 37-61) \nSeries IV: Invitations, Political Associates, and American Program Bureau Papers (Boxes 61-72) \nSeries V: Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by Others, arranged by type of material and then by author (Boxes 73-80) \nSeries VI: Political Papers, with two subseries:  \nSubseries A: General (Boxes 80-93) \nSubseries B: Campaign for President 1976 (Boxes 94-98) \nSeries VII: Topical Files, with two subseries:  \nSubseries A: General (Boxes 98-110) \nSubseries B: Academic Course Evaluations and Lectures (Boxes 110-112) \nSeries VIII: Family and Personal Papers, including Photographs \t\nSubseries A: Julian Bond (Boxes 113-122) \nSubseries B:  Bond Family Papers (123-126) \nSeries IX: Publicity including Newsletters, Press Releases, and News clippings (Boxes 127-132) \nSeries X: Restricted (Boxes 133-134) \nSeries XI: Audiovisual Materials\n"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eJulian Bond was born in Nashville, Tennessee on January 14, 1940, to educator, Dr. Horace Mann Bond and his wife, librarian Julia Washington Bond, who had traveled there from central Georgia to have her child. In 1940, Dr. Bond was president of Fort Valley State College, a black institution in central Georgia. Julian Bond attended primary school at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, where his father served as President, from 1945 until 1957, when Dr. Bond became dean of the School of Education at Atlanta University. His paternal grandparents were James Bond (1863-1929) born in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, and Jane Alice Browne (1865-1938), born in Prince George County, Maryland.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nHe graduated in June 1957 from the George School, a co-educational Quaker preparatory school located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and entered Morehouse College in Atlanta in the fall. While in Atlanta, Bond founded the Committee on Appeal for Human Rights (COAHR), the Atlanta University Center student organization that coordinated student protests against segregation in Atlanta for three years. In the summer of 1960, he also joined the staff of a new Atlanta weekly newspaper, \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eThe Atlanta Inquirer\u003c/title\u003e as a reporter and feature writer.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nIn January 1961, Julian Bond left Morehouse to become the Communications and Publicity Director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which was organized in 1960 at a conference of sit-in students on the campus of Atlanta University.  He held that position until September 1966, traveling to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas to help with civil rights drives and voter registration campaigns. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nHe served in Georgia's House of Representatives, Atlanta's 111th District, from 1966-1975 and in the Georgia State Senate from 1975-1987. Bond was first elected to a seat created by reapportionment in the Georgia House of Representatives in 1965 but was prevented from taking office in January 1966 by members of the Georgia legislature objecting to his statements about the Vietnam War. After winning a second election in February 1966, a special House Committee again voted to bar him from office. Bond won a third election in November 1966, and in December the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Georgia House erred in not allowing him to take his seat in the legislature. On January 9, 1967, he was finally allowed to take the oath of office as a member of the Georgia House of Representative. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nIn 1968, Bond was Co-Chairman of the Georgia Loyal National Delegation to the Democratic Convention. The Loyalists were successful in unseating the hand-picked regulars and Bond was even nominated as the Democratic Party's first black candidate for Vice-President of the United States, but he was too young to serve. He also considered his own campaign for President in 1975-1976, taking preliminary steps to run for office.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nMore recently, he has taught popular Civil Rights history courses at American University (beginning in 1991) and the University of Virginia (beginning in 1990), and served as Chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) from February 1998 until the present. Bond has served on many national boards and committees, including serving as the first president of the Southern Poverty Law Center in 1971 and continuing as President Emeritus; President of the Atlanta NAACP from 1978-1989; and President and Founder of the Southern Elections Fund (SEF), among many others.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information\n"],"bioghist_tesim":["Julian Bond was born in Nashville, Tennessee on January 14, 1940, to educator, Dr. Horace Mann Bond and his wife, librarian Julia Washington Bond, who had traveled there from central Georgia to have her child. In 1940, Dr. Bond was president of Fort Valley State College, a black institution in central Georgia. Julian Bond attended primary school at Lincoln University, Pennsylvania, where his father served as President, from 1945 until 1957, when Dr. Bond became dean of the School of Education at Atlanta University. His paternal grandparents were James Bond (1863-1929) born in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky, and Jane Alice Browne (1865-1938), born in Prince George County, Maryland.\n","\nHe graduated in June 1957 from the George School, a co-educational Quaker preparatory school located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and entered Morehouse College in Atlanta in the fall. While in Atlanta, Bond founded the Committee on Appeal for Human Rights (COAHR), the Atlanta University Center student organization that coordinated student protests against segregation in Atlanta for three years. In the summer of 1960, he also joined the staff of a new Atlanta weekly newspaper,  The Atlanta Inquirer  as a reporter and feature writer.\n","\nIn January 1961, Julian Bond left Morehouse to become the Communications and Publicity Director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which was organized in 1960 at a conference of sit-in students on the campus of Atlanta University.  He held that position until September 1966, traveling to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas to help with civil rights drives and voter registration campaigns. \n","\nHe served in Georgia's House of Representatives, Atlanta's 111th District, from 1966-1975 and in the Georgia State Senate from 1975-1987. Bond was first elected to a seat created by reapportionment in the Georgia House of Representatives in 1965 but was prevented from taking office in January 1966 by members of the Georgia legislature objecting to his statements about the Vietnam War. After winning a second election in February 1966, a special House Committee again voted to bar him from office. Bond won a third election in November 1966, and in December the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Georgia House erred in not allowing him to take his seat in the legislature. On January 9, 1967, he was finally allowed to take the oath of office as a member of the Georgia House of Representative. \n","\nIn 1968, Bond was Co-Chairman of the Georgia Loyal National Delegation to the Democratic Convention. The Loyalists were successful in unseating the hand-picked regulars and Bond was even nominated as the Democratic Party's first black candidate for Vice-President of the United States, but he was too young to serve. He also considered his own campaign for President in 1975-1976, taking preliminary steps to run for office.\n","\nMore recently, he has taught popular Civil Rights history courses at American University (beginning in 1991) and the University of Virginia (beginning in 1990), and served as Chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) from February 1998 until the present. Bond has served on many national boards and committees, including serving as the first president of the Southern Poverty Law Center in 1971 and continuing as President Emeritus; President of the Atlanta NAACP from 1978-1989; and President and Founder of the Southern Elections Fund (SEF), among many others.\n"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the political and personal papers of Civil Rights activist, Georgia State Senator and Representative, and professor, Julian Bond (1940-), ca. 1897-2006, with copies of earlier material, consisting of ca. 47,000 items (134 Hollinger boxes, 1 Card File Box and 3 Oversize boxes, ca. 60 linear feet). \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe first series, containing articles, speeches, and papers written and delivered by Julian Bond, is arranged by date if present or by an approximate date based on the subject or other internal evidence. When there is no title present on the document, the item is identified by its subject, place of delivery, or place of publication. Series one includes multiple drafts of various speeches; articles appearing eventually in print; statements and testimony before hearings, etc.; and tributes. The information in the box listing of the guide is sometimes more comprehensive than that recorded on the folder headings themselves. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe second series consists of various types of correspondence, often with the carbon of Julian Bond's response. Some years have only the carbon of Bond's response and not the original letter. These include arrangements for speaking engagements and political appearances, even though most events were arranged for him by the American Program Bureau (see separate correspondence in Boxes 61-65); correspondence with constituents concerning issues before the Georgia legislature; requests for his photograph and biographical sketch; correspondence with political representatives from other states concerning issues of common interest before the United States Congress; correspondence with members of organizations, such as the Southern Regional Council, asking for their advice or input concerning various ideas for publications or activities that he is considering; a few topical correspondence files, such as the issue of sterilization, South Africa, and the Angela Davis case; and Georgia politics.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nOther types of correspondence include derogatory or racist \"crank\" mail; general requests including political memorabilia, research information, copies of speeches and articles by Bond, autographs, permissions to reprint poems, articles, etc., and requests for speaking appearances (which overlaps somewhat with the regular chronological correspondence files and the American Program Bureau files).\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe third series includes papers and correspondence from members of various organizations concerned with voting rights, civil rights and minority issues. The largest groups of material include the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), National Urban League, the Southern Elections Fund, Southern Poverty Law Center, Southern Regional Council, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and Voter Education Project.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nJulian Bond's popularity as a political and civil rights speaker is evidenced by the fourth series which includes general invitations, his contracts and correspondence with the American Program Bureau, and his Political Associates files. The organization, Political Associates, is defined in a 1971 proposal as \"an all-black Atlanta, Georgia based research group headed by Georgia State Representative Julian Bond\" which is \"initiating intensive investigations into the way black politicians - and black politics-operate.\" \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe fifth series, Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by other people, is arranged by type of material and then by author, and includes articles; books; class packets; a dissertation; interviews with Julian Bond by John Britton, William Chafe, Trevor L. Chandler, Marsha Darling, Jeffrey M. Elliot, Elizabeth Gritter, Megan Lisagor, Ulysses Prince, Plater Robinson, Thomas Rose and John Greenya,  and Mr. Scavullo; papers by various scholars;  poems; reports; speeches by others; student papers, many about Julian Bond; and theses.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe sixth series, political papers, is divided into a general group, which includes a lot of material about his own campaigns, Atlanta elections, endorsements and planning for black candidates, the Democratic National Committee and Conventions of 1968 and 1972, the Georgia and National Democratic parties, Georgia politics, and files on voting rights activities; and a second subseries, entirely concerned with his bid for the United States presidency in 1976. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nTopical files comprise the seventh series, including both correspondence and papers about various topics of interest to Julian Bond or of use in his courses on the history of Civil Rights. Also included are files on the relationship of the Barnes Foundation and Lincoln University, once headed by Bond's father, Dr. Horace Mann Bond. Subseries B of the seventh series includes course evaluations, outlines, syllabi, research material, and lecture notes for courses taught by Julian Bond at The American University, Harvard University, and the University of Virginia.\n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nSeries eight, Family and Personal Papers, includes two subseries, the first concerning Julian Bond and the second, his extended family. His personal papers contain appointment books, activities and programs he attended, artifacts and memorabilia, honors and awards, correspondence with his family, financial files, and photographs, divided as much as possible into topics. The Bond Family subseries is chiefly concerned with Bond's parents, Horace Mann Bond and Julia Bond. \n\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\nThe ninth series, Publicity, includes columns written by Bond, his Georgia State Legislature newsletters, general news clippings, clippings about Julian Bond, and press releases and statements. The tenth series consists of restricted materials. The eleventh and last series consists of all audiovisual materials found in the collection, which are also catalogued individually and given a separate number.\n\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content\n"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the political and personal papers of Civil Rights activist, Georgia State Senator and Representative, and professor, Julian Bond (1940-), ca. 1897-2006, with copies of earlier material, consisting of ca. 47,000 items (134 Hollinger boxes, 1 Card File Box and 3 Oversize boxes, ca. 60 linear feet). \n","\nThe first series, containing articles, speeches, and papers written and delivered by Julian Bond, is arranged by date if present or by an approximate date based on the subject or other internal evidence. When there is no title present on the document, the item is identified by its subject, place of delivery, or place of publication. Series one includes multiple drafts of various speeches; articles appearing eventually in print; statements and testimony before hearings, etc.; and tributes. The information in the box listing of the guide is sometimes more comprehensive than that recorded on the folder headings themselves. \n","\nThe second series consists of various types of correspondence, often with the carbon of Julian Bond's response. Some years have only the carbon of Bond's response and not the original letter. These include arrangements for speaking engagements and political appearances, even though most events were arranged for him by the American Program Bureau (see separate correspondence in Boxes 61-65); correspondence with constituents concerning issues before the Georgia legislature; requests for his photograph and biographical sketch; correspondence with political representatives from other states concerning issues of common interest before the United States Congress; correspondence with members of organizations, such as the Southern Regional Council, asking for their advice or input concerning various ideas for publications or activities that he is considering; a few topical correspondence files, such as the issue of sterilization, South Africa, and the Angela Davis case; and Georgia politics.\n","\nOther types of correspondence include derogatory or racist \"crank\" mail; general requests including political memorabilia, research information, copies of speeches and articles by Bond, autographs, permissions to reprint poems, articles, etc., and requests for speaking appearances (which overlaps somewhat with the regular chronological correspondence files and the American Program Bureau files).\n","\nThe third series includes papers and correspondence from members of various organizations concerned with voting rights, civil rights and minority issues. The largest groups of material include the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), National Urban League, the Southern Elections Fund, Southern Poverty Law Center, Southern Regional Council, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and Voter Education Project.\n","\nJulian Bond's popularity as a political and civil rights speaker is evidenced by the fourth series which includes general invitations, his contracts and correspondence with the American Program Bureau, and his Political Associates files. The organization, Political Associates, is defined in a 1971 proposal as \"an all-black Atlanta, Georgia based research group headed by Georgia State Representative Julian Bond\" which is \"initiating intensive investigations into the way black politicians - and black politics-operate.\" \n","\nThe fifth series, Academic Papers, Speeches, and Writings, chiefly by other people, is arranged by type of material and then by author, and includes articles; books; class packets; a dissertation; interviews with Julian Bond by John Britton, William Chafe, Trevor L. Chandler, Marsha Darling, Jeffrey M. Elliot, Elizabeth Gritter, Megan Lisagor, Ulysses Prince, Plater Robinson, Thomas Rose and John Greenya,  and Mr. Scavullo; papers by various scholars;  poems; reports; speeches by others; student papers, many about Julian Bond; and theses.\n","\nThe sixth series, political papers, is divided into a general group, which includes a lot of material about his own campaigns, Atlanta elections, endorsements and planning for black candidates, the Democratic National Committee and Conventions of 1968 and 1972, the Georgia and National Democratic parties, Georgia politics, and files on voting rights activities; and a second subseries, entirely concerned with his bid for the United States presidency in 1976. \n","\nTopical files comprise the seventh series, including both correspondence and papers about various topics of interest to Julian Bond or of use in his courses on the history of Civil Rights. Also included are files on the relationship of the Barnes Foundation and Lincoln University, once headed by Bond's father, Dr. Horace Mann Bond. Subseries B of the seventh series includes course evaluations, outlines, syllabi, research material, and lecture notes for courses taught by Julian Bond at The American University, Harvard University, and the University of Virginia.\n","\nSeries eight, Family and Personal Papers, includes two subseries, the first concerning Julian Bond and the second, his extended family. His personal papers contain appointment books, activities and programs he attended, artifacts and memorabilia, honors and awards, correspondence with his family, financial files, and photographs, divided as much as possible into topics. The Bond Family subseries is chiefly concerned with Bond's parents, Horace Mann Bond and Julia Bond. \n","\nThe ninth series, Publicity, includes columns written by Bond, his Georgia State Legislature newsletters, general news clippings, clippings about Julian Bond, and press releases and statements. The tenth series consists of restricted materials. The eleventh and last series consists of all audiovisual materials found in the collection, which are also catalogued individually and given a separate number.\n"],"language_ssim":["English\n"],"total_component_count_is":1867,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:41:08.817Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu00259_c03_c285"}},{"id":"viu_viu01731_c03_c26","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01731_c03_c26#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01731_c03_c26","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01731_c03_c26"],"id":"viu_viu01731_c03_c26","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01731","_root_":"viu_viu01731","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01731_c03","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01731_c03","parent_ssim":["viu_viu01731","viu_viu01731_c03"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01731","viu_viu01731_c03"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)","Topical \u0026\n               Miscellaneous Papers"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)","Topical \u0026\n               Miscellaneous Papers"],"text":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)","Topical \u0026\n               Miscellaneous Papers","Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922","Box 5"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922","title_ssm":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922"],"title_tesim":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   \n                  1918-1922"],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":47,"containers_ssim":["Box 5"],"_nest_path_":"/components#2/components#25","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:53:14.765Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01731","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01731","_root_":"viu_viu01731","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01731","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01731.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"title_tesim":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10746-a"],"text":["10746-a","Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)","This collection\n         contains ca. 3000 items.","This collection arrived in little discernible order and has\n         been arranged into five series: \n          Correspondence (Box 1) \n          Diaries, Notebooks, and Reports (Boxes 2-3) \n          Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Papers (Boxes 4-5) \n          Photographs (Box 6) \n          Printed Material (Boxes 7-9)","Charles Turner Williams was born at Warrenton, North\n         Carolina, on October 17, 1874, the son of Thomas Clay and\n         Georgianna (Turner) Williams. He married Willie Herbert\n         Ashton, of Portsmouth, Virginia, on July 17, 1903, and had two\n         children, Charles Turner Williams, Jr. and Ann Elizabeth\n         Williams.","Williams was entirely self-taught and began his career as a\n         stenographer and newspaper reporter. He then began working in\n         the accounting and operating departments of a railway\n         business, advancing to Division Superintendent. He entered the\n         private banking business with John L. Williams \u0026 Sons,\n         Richmond, Virginia, in 1904, as the private secretary of John\n         Skelton Williams. He served as secretary to the receivers of\n         the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, 1908-1910. In 1910, he became\n         associated with Middendorf, Williams, \u0026 Company, bankers\n         in Baltimore, Maryland.","From 1912-1919, Williams was the investment manager of\n         Fidelity Trust Company in Baltimore, becoming Vice-President\n         of Fidelity Securities Corporation of Maryland in 1920. He was\n         one of the organizers of the Investment Bankers Association of\n         America and served two terms as Treasurer, 1912-1914.","When the United States entered the war in 1917, Williams\n         applied for a commission in the Army but was turned down for\n         health reasons. Because of his association with Henry P.\n         Davidson, who was the head of the American Red Cross, Williams\n         was commissioned a captain in the ARC and assigned to the\n         mission to establish a hospital in Jassy, Romania, the capital\n         of Romania at that time. To avoid the German lines, the\n         Mission had to travel the Trans-Siberian Railroad from\n         Vladivostock to Moscow. At Moscow, Williams was detached from\n         the Mission and sent to Archangel, North Russia, to meet the \n          Portonia, the ship carrying the\n         hospital supplies for Romania, and to escort the train load of\n         supplies to Jassy, Romania. Upon the completion of this\n         mission Williams returned home to Baltimore.","In 1918 the American Expeditionary Forces placed a Detroit\n         regiment (the 339th Infantry) in the port of Archangel, North\n         Russia, on August third, ostensibly with the objective of\n         guarding military stores and assisting the White Russian army\n         in repelling Bolshevik attacks. The American Red Cross wanted\n         to send a mission to help American soldiers on duty in this\n         inhospitable region, to establish an ARC hospital, and render\n         civilian relief. Because of Williams' previous experience in\n         Archangel, he was promoted to Major and put in charge of the\n         ARC Mission to Russia. The Mission sailed from New York on the\n          Ascutney on August 25, 1918.\n         Williams returned to his banking career in the United States\n         on March 6, 1919, after he had met with considerable success\n         in meeting the needs of the American and other Allied\n         soldiers, establishing the ARC hospital, and making several\n         trips into the Russian interior to supply the Russian peasants\n         with food and medicines.","The papers of American Red Cross Officer Major C.T.\n         Williams (1874-1932), a banker with Fidelity Trust Company,\n         Baltimore, Maryland, consist of ca. 3,000 items (9 Hollinger\n         boxes; 3 linear shelf feet), 1897- 1932, chiefly pertaining to\n         his work in the American Red Cross (ARC) relief missions to\n         Romania in 1917 and to Archangel, North Russia, with the\n         American Expeditionary Force in 1918-1919. The collection also\n         includes newsclippings concerning the political conventions of\n         1912 and the formation and organization of the Investment\n         Bankers Association, 1912.","This collection contains correspondence, diaries,\n         notebooks, reports, miscellaneous topical files, photographs,\n         postcards, broadsides, posters, and printed material.","The first series consists of correspondence. There is one\n         folder of personal correspondence which includes only that\n         correspondence written during Williams' first American Red\n         Cross Mission to Romania. This includes the following topics:\n         a summary of recent political events in Russia and the\n         conflict between General Lavr Kornilov and A.F. Kerensky in\n         Petrograd (1917 Sep 11); a discussion of Kornilov's advance on\n         Petrograd, the effect of the turmoil on C.T. Williams' Red\n         Cross assignment, which was to reach the port of Archangel and\n         bring Red Cross supplies unloaded from the ship \n          Portonia to Romania by train,\n         his arrangements for getting the train through Russia, mention\n         of the arrest of Kornilov and the execution of his officers,\n         and description of the area in front of Hotel Europe where\n         many of the events of the Russian Revolution transpired (1917\n         Sep 16); a description of the port of Archangel and the poor\n         conditions following the Riga retreat (1917 Sep 28); a summary\n         of the order of the Central Strike Committee in Moscow to\n         Railroad Workers (1917 Oct 7); the story of the \n          Portonia and its trouble at sea\n         (1917 Oct 18-19); Williams' impressions of the new American\n         Consul, Mr. Felix Cole (1917 Oct 19); Williams' preparations\n         for the train load of supplies to leave for Romania (1917 Oct\n         27); and pleas from Nadine de Proctor for help in leaving\n         Russia (1917 Nov 22).","The general correspondence folders which contain material\n         pertinent to Williams' first American Red Cross Mission to\n         Romania include the following topics: Williams' work as\n         Chairman of the Publicity Committee of the Liberty Loan\n         Committee for Maryland, with a financial statement (1917 Jul\n         5); a description of the preparations of the Red Cross Mission\n         to Romania prior to leaving the United States (1917 Jul 27);\n         reports on the progress of the Red Cross Mission to Romania\n         from its arrival in Japan through its train trip to Harbin,\n         Manchuria, on board the Russian government train (1917 Aug 17,\n         20, and 24); conditions in Harbin, Manchuria (1917 Aug 26);\n         Williams' reports to Lt. Col. Henry Anderson, Chairman of the\n         Commission (1917 Sep 19 \u0026 28, and Oct 11); a daily record\n         of the progress of Williams and his Romanian relief train to\n         Jassy, Romania (1917 Nov 18); and a summary of his adventures\n         on the way to his departure from Christiania, Sweden, at the\n         conclusion of his mission (1917 Dec 12).","The second group of correspondence is concerned with\n         Williams' second Red Cross Mission to Archangel, North Russia,\n         and includes: his concern over the pro-Bolshevism of Col. W.F.\n         Thompson of the American Red Cross in Russia (1918 Feb 1); an\n         interview by the Secretary of State with Arthur Glasgow and\n         Mr. Flexner concerning the general economic condition of\n         Romania (1918 Feb 7); the beginning of the Red Cross Mission's\n         voyage on the \n          Ascutney to Archangel, Russia\n         (1918 Aug 27); the story of the mascot of the \n          Ascutney, \"Rags,\" a dog from\n         Baltimore (1918 Sep 28); the American wounded in Archangel and\n         a relief expedition to the White Sea Coast villages on the\n         Kola peninsula (1918 Oct 27); the description of the Pinega\n         trip (1918 Dec 31); a summary of the condition of the American\n         hospital in Archangel when Williams left (1919 Jan 13); a\n         description of Williams' trip from Archangel through the\n         interior by sled in the Kem district to Murmansk and the poor\n         condition of the villagers they saw along the way (1919 Jan\n         20); and a description of his sled trip, cold conditions and\n         the hazardous trip by Russian coastal steamer from Murmansk to\n         Vardo, Norway (1919 Feb 1).","Other topics include: a description of the routine of the\n         American Red Cross Hospital in Archangel since Williams'\n         departure (1919 Mar 28); a summary of the ARC personnel and\n         their work in Archangel, North Russia (1919 Apr 28); the film,\n         \"Doughboys and Bolsheviki at Archangel\" (1919 May 14); the\n         request of E.J. Somoff of the All-Russian Central Union of\n         Consumers' Societies for a meeting (1919 May 22; see also 1919\n         Oct 28 and 1920 Jul 13); a list of ARC personnel who sailed\n         from the United States on August 30, 1918, with their return\n         dates (1919 Aug 23); the War Record of C.T. Williams (1925 Jul\n         1); and the \"Polar Bear Special\" bringing home the remains of\n         the United States soldiers killed in North Russia during World\n         War I and its aftermath (1929 Dec 3).","Correspondents include: Josephus Daniel, Secretary of the\n         Navy (1917 Jul 31); David R. Francis, U.S. Ambassador to\n         Russia (1918 Nov 5); DeWitt C. Poole, Jr., Charge d'Affaires\n         (1918 Nov 12, and Dec 16, 19, 20, \u0026 22); and John Skelton\n         Williams, Comptroller of Currency (1919 Mar 19).","The second series contains diaries, notebooks, and reports.\n         These include two addresses made by C.T. Williams before the\n         employees of the Fidelity Trust Company concerning the ARC\n         Mission to Romania and its adventuresome trip through Russia\n         to reach its destination (1918 Feb 6 \u0026 27); a diagram book\n         of the ARC Mission to Russia, Department of Foreign Relief\n         (undated); and the diary kept by Major Williams, August\n         through December, 1917, of the ARC Mission to Romania,\n         including original notes, some in shorthand, and a transcript\n         of the diary (for a detailed summary of the contents of the\n         diary please see the guide to #10,746).","Major C.T. Williams also kept a notebook concerning the ARC\n         Mission to North Russia which contains copies of letters,\n         telegrams, reports, cables, memoranda, and general orders, in\n         chronological order. This notebook is a detailed record of the\n         day-to-day activities and problems of the ARC Mission to\n         Archangel from the time of the recruitment of personnel to the\n         final adjustment of its financial affairs.","Specific topics of interest in this notebook include: the\n         letter authorizing C.T. Williams to act as Deputy Commissioner\n         in charge of the Red Cross expedition to Russia sailing aboard\n         the \n          Ascutney (1918 Aug 20); a list\n         of members on board for the trip to Russia, with three\n         Y.M.C.A. secretaries (1918 Aug 22); General Order #3\n         emphasizing the neutrality of the Red Cross and forbidding the\n         promotion of political views and opinions by the staff or the\n         giving of interviews while in Russia (1918 Sep 23); a summary\n         of affairs in Russia (1918 Sep 23); the influenza epidemic in\n         Murmansk (1918 Sep 25); Williams' private report to George B.\n         Case concerning the progress of the ARC Mission, especially\n         the unfortunate political activities of persons associated\n         with the ARC in Archangel and Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); a\n         description of Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); impressions of Hospital\n         No. 53 (1918 Oct 3); the National Credit Notes of Northern\n         Russia (ca. 1918 Oct 10); a review of the political, medical,\n         and military situation at the Archangel front (1918 Oct 15);\n         the Allied Supplies Committee (1918 Oct 17); the Y.M.C.A. in\n         Archangel (1918 Oct 17); difficulties with the British Red\n         Cross officer, Captain Wynn (1918 Oct 19); the relief\n         expedition to the White Sea Coast, Kola Peninsula (1918 Oct\n         25); the liquor problem in Archangel (1918 Nov 5-6); the\n         establishment of the ARC hospital in Archangel (1918 Nov 14);\n         the distribution of condensed milk to Murmansk (1918 Nov 17\n         \u0026 Dec 8); Pinega village (1918 Nov 23 \u0026 Dec 30); and\n         the Dvina River Force general medical report (1918 Dec\n         13).","Other topics in the notebook include: military stores (1919\n         Jan 6); the local ARC situation in North Russia (1919 Jan 13);\n         the Onega front work of the ARC (1919 Feb 17); Williams'\n         impressions of the Allied Expedition in North Russia (1919 Feb\n         22); the British attitude to the shortage of nurses in\n         Archangel (1919 Feb 25); ARC personnel in Archangel (1919 Apr\n         28); the unloading of the \n          Ascutney (1919 Jun 17-21, \u0026\n         27); and Admiral Newton A. McCully concerning North Russian\n         affairs (1919 Aug 16).","This series also contains a small notebook about the ARC\n         work in Romania, [1917], and begins with notes on \"Bessarabia\"\n         and the crossing of the Romanian border, discusses the state\n         of the country, especially shortages of food and supplies,\n         describes Roman and Jassy, and includes stories of the\n         hospital and individual patient cases in Jassy, Romania.","Another small notebook contains material about the trip to\n         Russia with a detailed chronological account of the ARC\n         Mission's movements, notes on North Russian currency, a\n         typescript of reporter Frazier Hunt's story of the sled trips\n         to the front in North Russia, samples of Bolshevist\n         propaganda, a description of Brest, France (1919 Feb 28), and\n         a copy of Williams' letter to his daughter while on the North\n         Sea (1919 Feb 16).","Other papers in this series include an organizational\n         summary of the ARC Mission to Romania, reports on work in the\n         ARC hospital in Romania, and a summary of the activities of\n         the ARC expedition to Northern Russia, 1918-1919.","The next series consists of topical and miscellaneous\n         files. For a complete list of these files consult the folder\n         listing at the end of the guide. Most of this material is\n         duplicated in the notebook of copies kept by Williams\n         concerning the ARC Mission to Russia. The financial papers\n         comprise both the Romanian and Russian expeditions and contain\n         records not found elsewhere in the collection. The personnel\n         file includes staff from both expeditions and a list of the\n         officers of the North Russian Expeditionary Force (n.d.).","The photograph series contains postcards of Romania, the\n         Japanese Red Cross Hospital, and Russia, Russian paper\n         currency and stamps, Norwegian stamps, as well as photographs\n         of the American Red Cross work in North Russia.","The photographs chiefly concern the American Red Cross work\n         in North Russia, Major C.T. Williams, and Russian scenes. Most\n         of these photographs were taken by Harold MacKenzie Wyckoff,\n         the American Red Cross photographer. A folder of miscellaneous\n         photographs includes: the Y.M.C.A. in Archangel, Russian,\n         British, and French leaders, American Red Cross officers, and\n         military scenes from the Archangel front and France.","Also present in this series is a photograph album of the\n         American Red Cross Mission to Russia, copyrighted by Major\n         Orrin S. Wightman, 1917, with a printed index.","The printed series includes: the American Expeditionary\n         Forces G.H.Q. Bulletins; the book \n          M Company 339th Infantry in North\n         Russia by Joel R. Moore; pamphlets pertaining to World\n         War I and its participants; maps of Russia and Europe;\n         newsclippings concerning the career of C.T. Williams,\n         politics, the Russian Revolution and the American Red Cross;\n         and Russian broadsides, posters, and newspapers.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["10746-a"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Major C.T. Williams \n          1897-1932 (bulk\n         1917-1919)"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These papers were given to the Library on June 29, 1988,\n            by Mrs. Allan McClain of Martinsville, Virginia, and Mr.\n            C.T. Williams, Jr., of Baltimore, Maryland."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["This collection\n         contains ca. 3000 items."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection arrived in little discernible order and has\n         been arranged into five series: \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eCorrespondence (Box 1) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eDiaries, Notebooks, and Reports (Boxes 2-3) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTopical \u0026amp; Miscellaneous Papers (Boxes 4-5) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePhotographs (Box 6) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003ePrinted Material (Boxes 7-9)\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["This collection arrived in little discernible order and has\n         been arranged into five series: \n          Correspondence (Box 1) \n          Diaries, Notebooks, and Reports (Boxes 2-3) \n          Topical \u0026 Miscellaneous Papers (Boxes 4-5) \n          Photographs (Box 6) \n          Printed Material (Boxes 7-9)"],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eCharles Turner Williams was born at Warrenton, North\n         Carolina, on October 17, 1874, the son of Thomas Clay and\n         Georgianna (Turner) Williams. He married Willie Herbert\n         Ashton, of Portsmouth, Virginia, on July 17, 1903, and had two\n         children, Charles Turner Williams, Jr. and Ann Elizabeth\n         Williams.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWilliams was entirely self-taught and began his career as a\n         stenographer and newspaper reporter. He then began working in\n         the accounting and operating departments of a railway\n         business, advancing to Division Superintendent. He entered the\n         private banking business with John L. Williams \u0026amp; Sons,\n         Richmond, Virginia, in 1904, as the private secretary of John\n         Skelton Williams. He served as secretary to the receivers of\n         the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, 1908-1910. In 1910, he became\n         associated with Middendorf, Williams, \u0026amp; Company, bankers\n         in Baltimore, Maryland.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eFrom 1912-1919, Williams was the investment manager of\n         Fidelity Trust Company in Baltimore, becoming Vice-President\n         of Fidelity Securities Corporation of Maryland in 1920. He was\n         one of the organizers of the Investment Bankers Association of\n         America and served two terms as Treasurer, 1912-1914.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eWhen the United States entered the war in 1917, Williams\n         applied for a commission in the Army but was turned down for\n         health reasons. Because of his association with Henry P.\n         Davidson, who was the head of the American Red Cross, Williams\n         was commissioned a captain in the ARC and assigned to the\n         mission to establish a hospital in Jassy, Romania, the capital\n         of Romania at that time. To avoid the German lines, the\n         Mission had to travel the Trans-Siberian Railroad from\n         Vladivostock to Moscow. At Moscow, Williams was detached from\n         the Mission and sent to Archangel, North Russia, to meet the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003ePortonia,\u003c/title\u003ethe ship carrying the\n         hospital supplies for Romania, and to escort the train load of\n         supplies to Jassy, Romania. Upon the completion of this\n         mission Williams returned home to Baltimore.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eIn 1918 the American Expeditionary Forces placed a Detroit\n         regiment (the 339th Infantry) in the port of Archangel, North\n         Russia, on August third, ostensibly with the objective of\n         guarding military stores and assisting the White Russian army\n         in repelling Bolshevik attacks. The American Red Cross wanted\n         to send a mission to help American soldiers on duty in this\n         inhospitable region, to establish an ARC hospital, and render\n         civilian relief. Because of Williams' previous experience in\n         Archangel, he was promoted to Major and put in charge of the\n         ARC Mission to Russia. The Mission sailed from New York on the\n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eAscutney\u003c/title\u003eon August 25, 1918.\n         Williams returned to his banking career in the United States\n         on March 6, 1919, after he had met with considerable success\n         in meeting the needs of the American and other Allied\n         soldiers, establishing the ARC hospital, and making several\n         trips into the Russian interior to supply the Russian peasants\n         with food and medicines.\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Biographical/Historical Information"],"bioghist_tesim":["Charles Turner Williams was born at Warrenton, North\n         Carolina, on October 17, 1874, the son of Thomas Clay and\n         Georgianna (Turner) Williams. He married Willie Herbert\n         Ashton, of Portsmouth, Virginia, on July 17, 1903, and had two\n         children, Charles Turner Williams, Jr. and Ann Elizabeth\n         Williams.","Williams was entirely self-taught and began his career as a\n         stenographer and newspaper reporter. He then began working in\n         the accounting and operating departments of a railway\n         business, advancing to Division Superintendent. He entered the\n         private banking business with John L. Williams \u0026 Sons,\n         Richmond, Virginia, in 1904, as the private secretary of John\n         Skelton Williams. He served as secretary to the receivers of\n         the Seaboard Air Line Railroad, 1908-1910. In 1910, he became\n         associated with Middendorf, Williams, \u0026 Company, bankers\n         in Baltimore, Maryland.","From 1912-1919, Williams was the investment manager of\n         Fidelity Trust Company in Baltimore, becoming Vice-President\n         of Fidelity Securities Corporation of Maryland in 1920. He was\n         one of the organizers of the Investment Bankers Association of\n         America and served two terms as Treasurer, 1912-1914.","When the United States entered the war in 1917, Williams\n         applied for a commission in the Army but was turned down for\n         health reasons. Because of his association with Henry P.\n         Davidson, who was the head of the American Red Cross, Williams\n         was commissioned a captain in the ARC and assigned to the\n         mission to establish a hospital in Jassy, Romania, the capital\n         of Romania at that time. To avoid the German lines, the\n         Mission had to travel the Trans-Siberian Railroad from\n         Vladivostock to Moscow. At Moscow, Williams was detached from\n         the Mission and sent to Archangel, North Russia, to meet the \n          Portonia, the ship carrying the\n         hospital supplies for Romania, and to escort the train load of\n         supplies to Jassy, Romania. Upon the completion of this\n         mission Williams returned home to Baltimore.","In 1918 the American Expeditionary Forces placed a Detroit\n         regiment (the 339th Infantry) in the port of Archangel, North\n         Russia, on August third, ostensibly with the objective of\n         guarding military stores and assisting the White Russian army\n         in repelling Bolshevik attacks. The American Red Cross wanted\n         to send a mission to help American soldiers on duty in this\n         inhospitable region, to establish an ARC hospital, and render\n         civilian relief. Because of Williams' previous experience in\n         Archangel, he was promoted to Major and put in charge of the\n         ARC Mission to Russia. The Mission sailed from New York on the\n          Ascutney on August 25, 1918.\n         Williams returned to his banking career in the United States\n         on March 6, 1919, after he had met with considerable success\n         in meeting the needs of the American and other Allied\n         soldiers, establishing the ARC hospital, and making several\n         trips into the Russian interior to supply the Russian peasants\n         with food and medicines."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe papers of American Red Cross Officer Major C.T.\n         Williams (1874-1932), a banker with Fidelity Trust Company,\n         Baltimore, Maryland, consist of ca. 3,000 items (9 Hollinger\n         boxes; 3 linear shelf feet), 1897- 1932, chiefly pertaining to\n         his work in the American Red Cross (ARC) relief missions to\n         Romania in 1917 and to Archangel, North Russia, with the\n         American Expeditionary Force in 1918-1919. The collection also\n         includes newsclippings concerning the political conventions of\n         1912 and the formation and organization of the Investment\n         Bankers Association, 1912.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis collection contains correspondence, diaries,\n         notebooks, reports, miscellaneous topical files, photographs,\n         postcards, broadsides, posters, and printed material.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe first series consists of correspondence. There is one\n         folder of personal correspondence which includes only that\n         correspondence written during Williams' first American Red\n         Cross Mission to Romania. This includes the following topics:\n         a summary of recent political events in Russia and the\n         conflict between General Lavr Kornilov and A.F. Kerensky in\n         Petrograd (1917 Sep 11); a discussion of Kornilov's advance on\n         Petrograd, the effect of the turmoil on C.T. Williams' Red\n         Cross assignment, which was to reach the port of Archangel and\n         bring Red Cross supplies unloaded from the ship \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003ePortonia\u003c/title\u003eto Romania by train,\n         his arrangements for getting the train through Russia, mention\n         of the arrest of Kornilov and the execution of his officers,\n         and description of the area in front of Hotel Europe where\n         many of the events of the Russian Revolution transpired (1917\n         Sep 16); a description of the port of Archangel and the poor\n         conditions following the Riga retreat (1917 Sep 28); a summary\n         of the order of the Central Strike Committee in Moscow to\n         Railroad Workers (1917 Oct 7); the story of the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003ePortonia\u003c/title\u003eand its trouble at sea\n         (1917 Oct 18-19); Williams' impressions of the new American\n         Consul, Mr. Felix Cole (1917 Oct 19); Williams' preparations\n         for the train load of supplies to leave for Romania (1917 Oct\n         27); and pleas from Nadine de Proctor for help in leaving\n         Russia (1917 Nov 22).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe general correspondence folders which contain material\n         pertinent to Williams' first American Red Cross Mission to\n         Romania include the following topics: Williams' work as\n         Chairman of the Publicity Committee of the Liberty Loan\n         Committee for Maryland, with a financial statement (1917 Jul\n         5); a description of the preparations of the Red Cross Mission\n         to Romania prior to leaving the United States (1917 Jul 27);\n         reports on the progress of the Red Cross Mission to Romania\n         from its arrival in Japan through its train trip to Harbin,\n         Manchuria, on board the Russian government train (1917 Aug 17,\n         20, and 24); conditions in Harbin, Manchuria (1917 Aug 26);\n         Williams' reports to Lt. Col. Henry Anderson, Chairman of the\n         Commission (1917 Sep 19 \u0026amp; 28, and Oct 11); a daily record\n         of the progress of Williams and his Romanian relief train to\n         Jassy, Romania (1917 Nov 18); and a summary of his adventures\n         on the way to his departure from Christiania, Sweden, at the\n         conclusion of his mission (1917 Dec 12).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe second group of correspondence is concerned with\n         Williams' second Red Cross Mission to Archangel, North Russia,\n         and includes: his concern over the pro-Bolshevism of Col. W.F.\n         Thompson of the American Red Cross in Russia (1918 Feb 1); an\n         interview by the Secretary of State with Arthur Glasgow and\n         Mr. Flexner concerning the general economic condition of\n         Romania (1918 Feb 7); the beginning of the Red Cross Mission's\n         voyage on the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eAscutney\u003c/title\u003eto Archangel, Russia\n         (1918 Aug 27); the story of the mascot of the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eAscutney,\u003c/title\u003e\"Rags,\" a dog from\n         Baltimore (1918 Sep 28); the American wounded in Archangel and\n         a relief expedition to the White Sea Coast villages on the\n         Kola peninsula (1918 Oct 27); the description of the Pinega\n         trip (1918 Dec 31); a summary of the condition of the American\n         hospital in Archangel when Williams left (1919 Jan 13); a\n         description of Williams' trip from Archangel through the\n         interior by sled in the Kem district to Murmansk and the poor\n         condition of the villagers they saw along the way (1919 Jan\n         20); and a description of his sled trip, cold conditions and\n         the hazardous trip by Russian coastal steamer from Murmansk to\n         Vardo, Norway (1919 Feb 1).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOther topics include: a description of the routine of the\n         American Red Cross Hospital in Archangel since Williams'\n         departure (1919 Mar 28); a summary of the ARC personnel and\n         their work in Archangel, North Russia (1919 Apr 28); the film,\n         \"Doughboys and Bolsheviki at Archangel\" (1919 May 14); the\n         request of E.J. Somoff of the All-Russian Central Union of\n         Consumers' Societies for a meeting (1919 May 22; see also 1919\n         Oct 28 and 1920 Jul 13); a list of ARC personnel who sailed\n         from the United States on August 30, 1918, with their return\n         dates (1919 Aug 23); the War Record of C.T. Williams (1925 Jul\n         1); and the \"Polar Bear Special\" bringing home the remains of\n         the United States soldiers killed in North Russia during World\n         War I and its aftermath (1929 Dec 3).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Josephus Daniel, Secretary of the\n         Navy (1917 Jul 31); David R. Francis, U.S. Ambassador to\n         Russia (1918 Nov 5); DeWitt C. Poole, Jr., Charge d'Affaires\n         (1918 Nov 12, and Dec 16, 19, 20, \u0026amp; 22); and John Skelton\n         Williams, Comptroller of Currency (1919 Mar 19).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe second series contains diaries, notebooks, and reports.\n         These include two addresses made by C.T. Williams before the\n         employees of the Fidelity Trust Company concerning the ARC\n         Mission to Romania and its adventuresome trip through Russia\n         to reach its destination (1918 Feb 6 \u0026amp; 27); a diagram book\n         of the ARC Mission to Russia, Department of Foreign Relief\n         (undated); and the diary kept by Major Williams, August\n         through December, 1917, of the ARC Mission to Romania,\n         including original notes, some in shorthand, and a transcript\n         of the diary (for a detailed summary of the contents of the\n         diary please see the guide to #10,746).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eMajor C.T. Williams also kept a notebook concerning the ARC\n         Mission to North Russia which contains copies of letters,\n         telegrams, reports, cables, memoranda, and general orders, in\n         chronological order. This notebook is a detailed record of the\n         day-to-day activities and problems of the ARC Mission to\n         Archangel from the time of the recruitment of personnel to the\n         final adjustment of its financial affairs.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eSpecific topics of interest in this notebook include: the\n         letter authorizing C.T. Williams to act as Deputy Commissioner\n         in charge of the Red Cross expedition to Russia sailing aboard\n         the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eAscutney\u003c/title\u003e(1918 Aug 20); a list\n         of members on board for the trip to Russia, with three\n         Y.M.C.A. secretaries (1918 Aug 22); General Order #3\n         emphasizing the neutrality of the Red Cross and forbidding the\n         promotion of political views and opinions by the staff or the\n         giving of interviews while in Russia (1918 Sep 23); a summary\n         of affairs in Russia (1918 Sep 23); the influenza epidemic in\n         Murmansk (1918 Sep 25); Williams' private report to George B.\n         Case concerning the progress of the ARC Mission, especially\n         the unfortunate political activities of persons associated\n         with the ARC in Archangel and Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); a\n         description of Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); impressions of Hospital\n         No. 53 (1918 Oct 3); the National Credit Notes of Northern\n         Russia (ca. 1918 Oct 10); a review of the political, medical,\n         and military situation at the Archangel front (1918 Oct 15);\n         the Allied Supplies Committee (1918 Oct 17); the Y.M.C.A. in\n         Archangel (1918 Oct 17); difficulties with the British Red\n         Cross officer, Captain Wynn (1918 Oct 19); the relief\n         expedition to the White Sea Coast, Kola Peninsula (1918 Oct\n         25); the liquor problem in Archangel (1918 Nov 5-6); the\n         establishment of the ARC hospital in Archangel (1918 Nov 14);\n         the distribution of condensed milk to Murmansk (1918 Nov 17\n         \u0026amp; Dec 8); Pinega village (1918 Nov 23 \u0026amp; Dec 30); and\n         the Dvina River Force general medical report (1918 Dec\n         13).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOther topics in the notebook include: military stores (1919\n         Jan 6); the local ARC situation in North Russia (1919 Jan 13);\n         the Onega front work of the ARC (1919 Feb 17); Williams'\n         impressions of the Allied Expedition in North Russia (1919 Feb\n         22); the British attitude to the shortage of nurses in\n         Archangel (1919 Feb 25); ARC personnel in Archangel (1919 Apr\n         28); the unloading of the \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eAscutney\u003c/title\u003e(1919 Jun 17-21, \u0026amp;\n         27); and Admiral Newton A. McCully concerning North Russian\n         affairs (1919 Aug 16).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThis series also contains a small notebook about the ARC\n         work in Romania, [1917], and begins with notes on \"Bessarabia\"\n         and the crossing of the Romanian border, discusses the state\n         of the country, especially shortages of food and supplies,\n         describes Roman and Jassy, and includes stories of the\n         hospital and individual patient cases in Jassy, Romania.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAnother small notebook contains material about the trip to\n         Russia with a detailed chronological account of the ARC\n         Mission's movements, notes on North Russian currency, a\n         typescript of reporter Frazier Hunt's story of the sled trips\n         to the front in North Russia, samples of Bolshevist\n         propaganda, a description of Brest, France (1919 Feb 28), and\n         a copy of Williams' letter to his daughter while on the North\n         Sea (1919 Feb 16).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eOther papers in this series include an organizational\n         summary of the ARC Mission to Romania, reports on work in the\n         ARC hospital in Romania, and a summary of the activities of\n         the ARC expedition to Northern Russia, 1918-1919.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe next series consists of topical and miscellaneous\n         files. For a complete list of these files consult the folder\n         listing at the end of the guide. Most of this material is\n         duplicated in the notebook of copies kept by Williams\n         concerning the ARC Mission to Russia. The financial papers\n         comprise both the Romanian and Russian expeditions and contain\n         records not found elsewhere in the collection. The personnel\n         file includes staff from both expeditions and a list of the\n         officers of the North Russian Expeditionary Force (n.d.).\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe photograph series contains postcards of Romania, the\n         Japanese Red Cross Hospital, and Russia, Russian paper\n         currency and stamps, Norwegian stamps, as well as photographs\n         of the American Red Cross work in North Russia.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe photographs chiefly concern the American Red Cross work\n         in North Russia, Major C.T. Williams, and Russian scenes. Most\n         of these photographs were taken by Harold MacKenzie Wyckoff,\n         the American Red Cross photographer. A folder of miscellaneous\n         photographs includes: the Y.M.C.A. in Archangel, Russian,\n         British, and French leaders, American Red Cross officers, and\n         military scenes from the Archangel front and France.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eAlso present in this series is a photograph album of the\n         American Red Cross Mission to Russia, copyrighted by Major\n         Orrin S. Wightman, 1917, with a printed index.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe printed series includes: the American Expeditionary\n         Forces G.H.Q. Bulletins; the book \n         \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eM Company 339th Infantry in North\n         Russia\u003c/title\u003eby Joel R. Moore; pamphlets pertaining to World\n         War I and its participants; maps of Russia and Europe;\n         newsclippings concerning the career of C.T. Williams,\n         politics, the Russian Revolution and the American Red Cross;\n         and Russian broadsides, posters, and newspapers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["The papers of American Red Cross Officer Major C.T.\n         Williams (1874-1932), a banker with Fidelity Trust Company,\n         Baltimore, Maryland, consist of ca. 3,000 items (9 Hollinger\n         boxes; 3 linear shelf feet), 1897- 1932, chiefly pertaining to\n         his work in the American Red Cross (ARC) relief missions to\n         Romania in 1917 and to Archangel, North Russia, with the\n         American Expeditionary Force in 1918-1919. The collection also\n         includes newsclippings concerning the political conventions of\n         1912 and the formation and organization of the Investment\n         Bankers Association, 1912.","This collection contains correspondence, diaries,\n         notebooks, reports, miscellaneous topical files, photographs,\n         postcards, broadsides, posters, and printed material.","The first series consists of correspondence. There is one\n         folder of personal correspondence which includes only that\n         correspondence written during Williams' first American Red\n         Cross Mission to Romania. This includes the following topics:\n         a summary of recent political events in Russia and the\n         conflict between General Lavr Kornilov and A.F. Kerensky in\n         Petrograd (1917 Sep 11); a discussion of Kornilov's advance on\n         Petrograd, the effect of the turmoil on C.T. Williams' Red\n         Cross assignment, which was to reach the port of Archangel and\n         bring Red Cross supplies unloaded from the ship \n          Portonia to Romania by train,\n         his arrangements for getting the train through Russia, mention\n         of the arrest of Kornilov and the execution of his officers,\n         and description of the area in front of Hotel Europe where\n         many of the events of the Russian Revolution transpired (1917\n         Sep 16); a description of the port of Archangel and the poor\n         conditions following the Riga retreat (1917 Sep 28); a summary\n         of the order of the Central Strike Committee in Moscow to\n         Railroad Workers (1917 Oct 7); the story of the \n          Portonia and its trouble at sea\n         (1917 Oct 18-19); Williams' impressions of the new American\n         Consul, Mr. Felix Cole (1917 Oct 19); Williams' preparations\n         for the train load of supplies to leave for Romania (1917 Oct\n         27); and pleas from Nadine de Proctor for help in leaving\n         Russia (1917 Nov 22).","The general correspondence folders which contain material\n         pertinent to Williams' first American Red Cross Mission to\n         Romania include the following topics: Williams' work as\n         Chairman of the Publicity Committee of the Liberty Loan\n         Committee for Maryland, with a financial statement (1917 Jul\n         5); a description of the preparations of the Red Cross Mission\n         to Romania prior to leaving the United States (1917 Jul 27);\n         reports on the progress of the Red Cross Mission to Romania\n         from its arrival in Japan through its train trip to Harbin,\n         Manchuria, on board the Russian government train (1917 Aug 17,\n         20, and 24); conditions in Harbin, Manchuria (1917 Aug 26);\n         Williams' reports to Lt. Col. Henry Anderson, Chairman of the\n         Commission (1917 Sep 19 \u0026 28, and Oct 11); a daily record\n         of the progress of Williams and his Romanian relief train to\n         Jassy, Romania (1917 Nov 18); and a summary of his adventures\n         on the way to his departure from Christiania, Sweden, at the\n         conclusion of his mission (1917 Dec 12).","The second group of correspondence is concerned with\n         Williams' second Red Cross Mission to Archangel, North Russia,\n         and includes: his concern over the pro-Bolshevism of Col. W.F.\n         Thompson of the American Red Cross in Russia (1918 Feb 1); an\n         interview by the Secretary of State with Arthur Glasgow and\n         Mr. Flexner concerning the general economic condition of\n         Romania (1918 Feb 7); the beginning of the Red Cross Mission's\n         voyage on the \n          Ascutney to Archangel, Russia\n         (1918 Aug 27); the story of the mascot of the \n          Ascutney, \"Rags,\" a dog from\n         Baltimore (1918 Sep 28); the American wounded in Archangel and\n         a relief expedition to the White Sea Coast villages on the\n         Kola peninsula (1918 Oct 27); the description of the Pinega\n         trip (1918 Dec 31); a summary of the condition of the American\n         hospital in Archangel when Williams left (1919 Jan 13); a\n         description of Williams' trip from Archangel through the\n         interior by sled in the Kem district to Murmansk and the poor\n         condition of the villagers they saw along the way (1919 Jan\n         20); and a description of his sled trip, cold conditions and\n         the hazardous trip by Russian coastal steamer from Murmansk to\n         Vardo, Norway (1919 Feb 1).","Other topics include: a description of the routine of the\n         American Red Cross Hospital in Archangel since Williams'\n         departure (1919 Mar 28); a summary of the ARC personnel and\n         their work in Archangel, North Russia (1919 Apr 28); the film,\n         \"Doughboys and Bolsheviki at Archangel\" (1919 May 14); the\n         request of E.J. Somoff of the All-Russian Central Union of\n         Consumers' Societies for a meeting (1919 May 22; see also 1919\n         Oct 28 and 1920 Jul 13); a list of ARC personnel who sailed\n         from the United States on August 30, 1918, with their return\n         dates (1919 Aug 23); the War Record of C.T. Williams (1925 Jul\n         1); and the \"Polar Bear Special\" bringing home the remains of\n         the United States soldiers killed in North Russia during World\n         War I and its aftermath (1929 Dec 3).","Correspondents include: Josephus Daniel, Secretary of the\n         Navy (1917 Jul 31); David R. Francis, U.S. Ambassador to\n         Russia (1918 Nov 5); DeWitt C. Poole, Jr., Charge d'Affaires\n         (1918 Nov 12, and Dec 16, 19, 20, \u0026 22); and John Skelton\n         Williams, Comptroller of Currency (1919 Mar 19).","The second series contains diaries, notebooks, and reports.\n         These include two addresses made by C.T. Williams before the\n         employees of the Fidelity Trust Company concerning the ARC\n         Mission to Romania and its adventuresome trip through Russia\n         to reach its destination (1918 Feb 6 \u0026 27); a diagram book\n         of the ARC Mission to Russia, Department of Foreign Relief\n         (undated); and the diary kept by Major Williams, August\n         through December, 1917, of the ARC Mission to Romania,\n         including original notes, some in shorthand, and a transcript\n         of the diary (for a detailed summary of the contents of the\n         diary please see the guide to #10,746).","Major C.T. Williams also kept a notebook concerning the ARC\n         Mission to North Russia which contains copies of letters,\n         telegrams, reports, cables, memoranda, and general orders, in\n         chronological order. This notebook is a detailed record of the\n         day-to-day activities and problems of the ARC Mission to\n         Archangel from the time of the recruitment of personnel to the\n         final adjustment of its financial affairs.","Specific topics of interest in this notebook include: the\n         letter authorizing C.T. Williams to act as Deputy Commissioner\n         in charge of the Red Cross expedition to Russia sailing aboard\n         the \n          Ascutney (1918 Aug 20); a list\n         of members on board for the trip to Russia, with three\n         Y.M.C.A. secretaries (1918 Aug 22); General Order #3\n         emphasizing the neutrality of the Red Cross and forbidding the\n         promotion of political views and opinions by the staff or the\n         giving of interviews while in Russia (1918 Sep 23); a summary\n         of affairs in Russia (1918 Sep 23); the influenza epidemic in\n         Murmansk (1918 Sep 25); Williams' private report to George B.\n         Case concerning the progress of the ARC Mission, especially\n         the unfortunate political activities of persons associated\n         with the ARC in Archangel and Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); a\n         description of Murmansk (1918 Sep 28); impressions of Hospital\n         No. 53 (1918 Oct 3); the National Credit Notes of Northern\n         Russia (ca. 1918 Oct 10); a review of the political, medical,\n         and military situation at the Archangel front (1918 Oct 15);\n         the Allied Supplies Committee (1918 Oct 17); the Y.M.C.A. in\n         Archangel (1918 Oct 17); difficulties with the British Red\n         Cross officer, Captain Wynn (1918 Oct 19); the relief\n         expedition to the White Sea Coast, Kola Peninsula (1918 Oct\n         25); the liquor problem in Archangel (1918 Nov 5-6); the\n         establishment of the ARC hospital in Archangel (1918 Nov 14);\n         the distribution of condensed milk to Murmansk (1918 Nov 17\n         \u0026 Dec 8); Pinega village (1918 Nov 23 \u0026 Dec 30); and\n         the Dvina River Force general medical report (1918 Dec\n         13).","Other topics in the notebook include: military stores (1919\n         Jan 6); the local ARC situation in North Russia (1919 Jan 13);\n         the Onega front work of the ARC (1919 Feb 17); Williams'\n         impressions of the Allied Expedition in North Russia (1919 Feb\n         22); the British attitude to the shortage of nurses in\n         Archangel (1919 Feb 25); ARC personnel in Archangel (1919 Apr\n         28); the unloading of the \n          Ascutney (1919 Jun 17-21, \u0026\n         27); and Admiral Newton A. McCully concerning North Russian\n         affairs (1919 Aug 16).","This series also contains a small notebook about the ARC\n         work in Romania, [1917], and begins with notes on \"Bessarabia\"\n         and the crossing of the Romanian border, discusses the state\n         of the country, especially shortages of food and supplies,\n         describes Roman and Jassy, and includes stories of the\n         hospital and individual patient cases in Jassy, Romania.","Another small notebook contains material about the trip to\n         Russia with a detailed chronological account of the ARC\n         Mission's movements, notes on North Russian currency, a\n         typescript of reporter Frazier Hunt's story of the sled trips\n         to the front in North Russia, samples of Bolshevist\n         propaganda, a description of Brest, France (1919 Feb 28), and\n         a copy of Williams' letter to his daughter while on the North\n         Sea (1919 Feb 16).","Other papers in this series include an organizational\n         summary of the ARC Mission to Romania, reports on work in the\n         ARC hospital in Romania, and a summary of the activities of\n         the ARC expedition to Northern Russia, 1918-1919.","The next series consists of topical and miscellaneous\n         files. For a complete list of these files consult the folder\n         listing at the end of the guide. Most of this material is\n         duplicated in the notebook of copies kept by Williams\n         concerning the ARC Mission to Russia. The financial papers\n         comprise both the Romanian and Russian expeditions and contain\n         records not found elsewhere in the collection. The personnel\n         file includes staff from both expeditions and a list of the\n         officers of the North Russian Expeditionary Force (n.d.).","The photograph series contains postcards of Romania, the\n         Japanese Red Cross Hospital, and Russia, Russian paper\n         currency and stamps, Norwegian stamps, as well as photographs\n         of the American Red Cross work in North Russia.","The photographs chiefly concern the American Red Cross work\n         in North Russia, Major C.T. Williams, and Russian scenes. Most\n         of these photographs were taken by Harold MacKenzie Wyckoff,\n         the American Red Cross photographer. A folder of miscellaneous\n         photographs includes: the Y.M.C.A. in Archangel, Russian,\n         British, and French leaders, American Red Cross officers, and\n         military scenes from the Archangel front and France.","Also present in this series is a photograph album of the\n         American Red Cross Mission to Russia, copyrighted by Major\n         Orrin S. Wightman, 1917, with a printed index.","The printed series includes: the American Expeditionary\n         Forces G.H.Q. Bulletins; the book \n          M Company 339th Infantry in North\n         Russia by Joel R. Moore; pamphlets pertaining to World\n         War I and its participants; maps of Russia and Europe;\n         newsclippings concerning the career of C.T. Williams,\n         politics, the Russian Revolution and the American Red Cross;\n         and Russian broadsides, posters, and newspapers."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":89,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:53:14.765Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01731_c03_c26"}},{"id":"viu_viu01404_c01_c452","type":"Subseries","attributes":{"title":"Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d.","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01404_c01_c452#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01404_c01_c452","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01404_c01_c452"],"id":"viu_viu01404_c01_c452","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01404","_root_":"viu_viu01404","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01404_c01","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01404_c01","parent_ssim":["viu_viu01404","viu_viu01404_c01"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01404","viu_viu01404_c01"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933","Legal Cases"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933","Legal Cases"],"text":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933","Legal Cases","Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d.","2 folders","Box 84"],"title_filing_ssi":"Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d.","title_ssm":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d."],"title_tesim":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d."],"normalized_title_ssm":["Young Men's Christian Association \n                   1923-1933,\n                  n.d."],"component_level_isim":[2],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"physdesc_tesim":["2 folders"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"level_ssm":["Subseries"],"level_ssim":["Subseries"],"sort_isi":453,"containers_ssim":["Box 84"],"_nest_path_":"/components#0/components#451","timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:19:32.346Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01404","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01404","_root_":"viu_viu01404","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01404","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01404.xml","title_ssm":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"title_tesim":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["2705"],"text":["2705","Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933","ca. 43,675 items\n         (116 Hollinger boxes and six oversize folders, ca. 38 linear\n         shelf feet)","I) Legal Cases \u0026 Subject Files, arranged alphabetically\n         by client name or subject (Boxes 1-84) \n          II) Estates, arranged alphabetically by client name\n         (Boxes 85-94) \n          III) Personal and Family Papers \n          Subseries A: R.W. Carrington Personal (Boxes 95- 101) \n          Subseries B: Family Papers (Boxes 102-108) \n          IV) Bank Documents -Passbooks, Registers \u0026\n         Statements (Boxes 109- 113) \n          V) Bound Volumes \u0026 Artifacts in Mini-Tray 41 (Boxes\n         114-116, \u0026 2M Ledgers) \n          VI) Oversize Folders (Oversize Tray 14 \u0026 Oversize\n         Box M-21) \n         ","Richard Watkins Carrington\n         (1888-1933) was born in Richmond, Virginia, on May 19,\n         1888, to Tazewell Morton and Julia (Watkins) Carrington.\n         Richard Carrington attended McGuire's University School of\n         Richmond, and then entered Hampden-Sydney College, graduating\n         in 1907 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Carrington received\n         his law degree from the University of Virginia in 1910, and\n         belonged to the Richmond City, Virginia State, and American\n         Bar Associations. Elected to the General Assembly as a\n         Democrat, he served in the sessions of 1918 and 1919 on the\n         general laws and insurance and banking committees. He was also\n         a director of the Union Bank of Richmond, a member of the\n         congregation of the Second Presbyterian Church, a member of\n         the Board of Directors of the Country Club of Virginia, and a\n         member of the Commonwealth Club. During the Great War,\n         Carrington entered the Officer's Training School at Fort\n         Monroe, but the armistice was signed before he saw active\n         service. On November 4, 1915, Richard Carrington married \n          Delia Davenport, a daughter of\n         Charles and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, residents of Richmond,\n         Virginia. They had two children, Richard Watkins Carrington,\n         Jr., born on January 9, 1917, and Delia Davenport, born on\n         December 14, 1919. Charles Davenport was the son of Isaac\n         Davenport, Jr. and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, was the daughter\n         of Dr. James B. McCaw.","Tazewell Morton Carrington\n         (1857-?) was a prominent figure in the tobacco industry,\n         serving as head of the Carrington Company in Richmond,\n         Virginia, one of the largest businesses dealing in leaf\n         tobacco, and president of the Tobacco Association of the\n         United States. Tazewell Carrington was born in Richmond,\n         Virginia, on February 21, 1857, to William Tucker and Bettie\n         L. (Morton) Carrington. He was educated at the McGuire School\n         at Richmond, and attended the University of Virginia for one\n         year, 1875-1876. He has served as president of the Chamber of\n         Commerce of Richmond, and as a director in both the First\n         National Bank and the Mechanics and Merchants Bank of\n         Richmond. During World War I, in 1918, T.M. Carrington was\n         state chairman of the United War Work Campaign in Virginia. He\n         was also a member and elder of the Second Presbyterian Church.\n         He was married to Julia M. Watkins (d. 1900), daughter of\n         Richard V. Watkins, on January 21, 1886, in Halifax County,\n         and they had three sons: Richard W. Carrington, who married\n         Delia Davenport; Tazewell M. Carrington, Jr., associated with\n         his father in the Richmond tobacco business, who married\n         Carter Ingram, and attended the University of Virginia,\n         1909-1911; and William Tucker Carrington, unmarried, who\n         served overseas during the Great War with the Eightieth\n         Division, A.E.F, and then became engaged in the manufacture of\n         building supplies in Richmond.","The founder of the Carrington family in Virginia was \n          George Carrington, who emigrated\n         from the British Island of Barbados, West Indies, in 1712,\n         marrying a Miss Mayo, and settling in Cumberland County,\n         Virginia, as a farmer and planter. His son, \n          Judge Paul Carrington, was born in\n         Cumberland County, becoming a distinguished attorney, a member\n         of the House of Burgesses, and in 1780, the chief justice of\n         the General Court of Virginia. He married a Miss Read, and\n         lived in Charlotte County, where his son, George Carrington,\n         was born. George Carrington fought in the Revolutionary War\n         and married a Miss Tucker; his son, the Honorable \n          John Bonaparte Carrington, was born\n         in Charlotte County, and fought in the War of 1812, before\n         serving in the Virginia Legislature from 1823-1827 and\n         1835-1836 for Halifax County. John B. Carrington married\n         Judith Winbish, a native of Halifax County. The grandfather of\n         Richard Watkins Carrington was \n          Captain William Tucker\n         Carrington (1831- 1913), an officer of the Confederacy,\n         and a tobacconist in Richmond. He married \n          Bettie Lewis Morton (1836-1916) who\n         was born in Farmville, Virginia. They had at least nine\n         children:","Tazewell Morton Carrington m. Julia M. Watkins \n          John B. Carrington m. Leila Gamble \n          Tucker Lewis Carrington, unmarried \n          Judith Carrington m. Edward R. Stettinius \n          Bessie L. Carrington, unmarried \n          Randolph Carrington \n          Mary Carr, unmarried \n          Henry Paul Carrington, Jr. m. Hazel [Dimenick?] \n          Emma Carrington, unmarried","This collection consists of the personal and professional\n         papers of the corporation lawyer and civic leader, Richard\n         Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of Richmond, Virginia, and\n         related Davenport Family. Carrington was a law student at the\n         University of Virginia, 1907-1910. The papers, ca. 1880-1933,\n         include legal case files, estate files, personal and family\n         files, investment statements, bank registers and statements,\n         bound volumes, blueprints, photographs, and financial records.\n         The legal case files and the estate files include\n         correspondence, insurance policies, property deeds, titles,\n         wills, receipts, minutes of meetings, contracts, notes, and\n         other related papers.","This collection consists of the\n         personal and professional papers of the corporation lawyer and\n         civic leader, Richard Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of\n         Richmond, Virginia, and related Davenport Family.","English"],"unitid_tesim":["2705"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"collection_title_tesim":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"collection_ssim":["Papers of Richard Watkins Carrington \n          \n         1880-1933"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["The Carrington papers were given to the University of\n            Virginia Library on March 21, 1973, by Richard Watkins\n            Carrington, Jr., of Richmond, Virginia."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 43,675 items\n         (116 Hollinger boxes and six oversize folders, ca. 38 linear\n         shelf feet)"],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eI) Legal Cases \u0026amp; Subject Files, arranged alphabetically\n         by client name or subject (Boxes 1-84) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eII) Estates, arranged alphabetically by client name\n         (Boxes 85-94) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eIII) Personal and Family Papers \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSubseries A: R.W. Carrington Personal (Boxes 95- 101) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eSubseries B: Family Papers (Boxes 102-108) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eIV) Bank Documents -Passbooks, Registers \u0026amp;\n         Statements (Boxes 109- 113) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eV) Bound Volumes \u0026amp; Artifacts in Mini-Tray 41 (Boxes\n         114-116, \u0026amp; 2M Ledgers) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eVI) Oversize Folders (Oversize Tray 14 \u0026amp; Oversize\n         Box M-21) \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003e\u003c/p\u003e"],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["I) Legal Cases \u0026 Subject Files, arranged alphabetically\n         by client name or subject (Boxes 1-84) \n          II) Estates, arranged alphabetically by client name\n         (Boxes 85-94) \n          III) Personal and Family Papers \n          Subseries A: R.W. Carrington Personal (Boxes 95- 101) \n          Subseries B: Family Papers (Boxes 102-108) \n          IV) Bank Documents -Passbooks, Registers \u0026\n         Statements (Boxes 109- 113) \n          V) Bound Volumes \u0026 Artifacts in Mini-Tray 41 (Boxes\n         114-116, \u0026 2M Ledgers) \n          VI) Oversize Folders (Oversize Tray 14 \u0026 Oversize\n         Box M-21) \n         "],"bioghist_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eRichard Watkins Carrington\n         (1888-1933)\u003c/emph\u003ewas born in Richmond, Virginia, on May 19,\n         1888, to Tazewell Morton and Julia (Watkins) Carrington.\n         Richard Carrington attended McGuire's University School of\n         Richmond, and then entered Hampden-Sydney College, graduating\n         in 1907 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Carrington received\n         his law degree from the University of Virginia in 1910, and\n         belonged to the Richmond City, Virginia State, and American\n         Bar Associations. Elected to the General Assembly as a\n         Democrat, he served in the sessions of 1918 and 1919 on the\n         general laws and insurance and banking committees. He was also\n         a director of the Union Bank of Richmond, a member of the\n         congregation of the Second Presbyterian Church, a member of\n         the Board of Directors of the Country Club of Virginia, and a\n         member of the Commonwealth Club. During the Great War,\n         Carrington entered the Officer's Training School at Fort\n         Monroe, but the armistice was signed before he saw active\n         service. On November 4, 1915, Richard Carrington married \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eDelia Davenport,\u003c/emph\u003ea daughter of\n         Charles and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, residents of Richmond,\n         Virginia. They had two children, Richard Watkins Carrington,\n         Jr., born on January 9, 1917, and Delia Davenport, born on\n         December 14, 1919. Charles Davenport was the son of Isaac\n         Davenport, Jr. and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, was the daughter\n         of Dr. James B. McCaw.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003e\u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eTazewell Morton Carrington\n         (1857-?)\u003c/emph\u003ewas a prominent figure in the tobacco industry,\n         serving as head of the Carrington Company in Richmond,\n         Virginia, one of the largest businesses dealing in leaf\n         tobacco, and president of the Tobacco Association of the\n         United States. Tazewell Carrington was born in Richmond,\n         Virginia, on February 21, 1857, to William Tucker and Bettie\n         L. (Morton) Carrington. He was educated at the McGuire School\n         at Richmond, and attended the University of Virginia for one\n         year, 1875-1876. He has served as president of the Chamber of\n         Commerce of Richmond, and as a director in both the First\n         National Bank and the Mechanics and Merchants Bank of\n         Richmond. During World War I, in 1918, T.M. Carrington was\n         state chairman of the United War Work Campaign in Virginia. He\n         was also a member and elder of the Second Presbyterian Church.\n         He was married to Julia M. Watkins (d. 1900), daughter of\n         Richard V. Watkins, on January 21, 1886, in Halifax County,\n         and they had three sons: Richard W. Carrington, who married\n         Delia Davenport; Tazewell M. Carrington, Jr., associated with\n         his father in the Richmond tobacco business, who married\n         Carter Ingram, and attended the University of Virginia,\n         1909-1911; and William Tucker Carrington, unmarried, who\n         served overseas during the Great War with the Eightieth\n         Division, A.E.F, and then became engaged in the manufacture of\n         building supplies in Richmond.\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eThe founder of the Carrington family in Virginia was \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eGeorge Carrington,\u003c/emph\u003ewho emigrated\n         from the British Island of Barbados, West Indies, in 1712,\n         marrying a Miss Mayo, and settling in Cumberland County,\n         Virginia, as a farmer and planter. His son, \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eJudge Paul Carrington,\u003c/emph\u003ewas born in\n         Cumberland County, becoming a distinguished attorney, a member\n         of the House of Burgesses, and in 1780, the chief justice of\n         the General Court of Virginia. He married a Miss Read, and\n         lived in Charlotte County, where his son, George Carrington,\n         was born. George Carrington fought in the Revolutionary War\n         and married a Miss Tucker; his son, the Honorable \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eJohn Bonaparte Carrington,\u003c/emph\u003ewas born\n         in Charlotte County, and fought in the War of 1812, before\n         serving in the Virginia Legislature from 1823-1827 and\n         1835-1836 for Halifax County. John B. Carrington married\n         Judith Winbish, a native of Halifax County. The grandfather of\n         Richard Watkins Carrington was \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eCaptain William Tucker\n         Carrington\u003c/emph\u003e(1831- 1913), an officer of the Confederacy,\n         and a tobacconist in Richmond. He married \n         \u003cemph render=\"bold\"\u003eBettie Lewis Morton\u003c/emph\u003e(1836-1916) who\n         was born in Farmville, Virginia. They had at least nine\n         children:\u003c/p\u003e","\u003cp\u003eTazewell Morton Carrington m. Julia M. Watkins \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eJohn B. Carrington m. Leila Gamble \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eTucker Lewis Carrington, unmarried \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eJudith Carrington m. Edward R. Stettinius \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eBessie L. Carrington, unmarried \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eRandolph Carrington \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eMary Carr, unmarried \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eHenry Paul Carrington, Jr. m. Hazel [Dimenick?] \n         \u003clb\u003e\u003c/lb\u003eEmma Carrington, unmarried\u003c/p\u003e"],"bioghist_heading_ssm":["Notes on the Carrington Family"],"bioghist_tesim":["Richard Watkins Carrington\n         (1888-1933) was born in Richmond, Virginia, on May 19,\n         1888, to Tazewell Morton and Julia (Watkins) Carrington.\n         Richard Carrington attended McGuire's University School of\n         Richmond, and then entered Hampden-Sydney College, graduating\n         in 1907 with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Carrington received\n         his law degree from the University of Virginia in 1910, and\n         belonged to the Richmond City, Virginia State, and American\n         Bar Associations. Elected to the General Assembly as a\n         Democrat, he served in the sessions of 1918 and 1919 on the\n         general laws and insurance and banking committees. He was also\n         a director of the Union Bank of Richmond, a member of the\n         congregation of the Second Presbyterian Church, a member of\n         the Board of Directors of the Country Club of Virginia, and a\n         member of the Commonwealth Club. During the Great War,\n         Carrington entered the Officer's Training School at Fort\n         Monroe, but the armistice was signed before he saw active\n         service. On November 4, 1915, Richard Carrington married \n          Delia Davenport, a daughter of\n         Charles and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, residents of Richmond,\n         Virginia. They had two children, Richard Watkins Carrington,\n         Jr., born on January 9, 1917, and Delia Davenport, born on\n         December 14, 1919. Charles Davenport was the son of Isaac\n         Davenport, Jr. and Ellen (McCaw) Davenport, was the daughter\n         of Dr. James B. McCaw.","Tazewell Morton Carrington\n         (1857-?) was a prominent figure in the tobacco industry,\n         serving as head of the Carrington Company in Richmond,\n         Virginia, one of the largest businesses dealing in leaf\n         tobacco, and president of the Tobacco Association of the\n         United States. Tazewell Carrington was born in Richmond,\n         Virginia, on February 21, 1857, to William Tucker and Bettie\n         L. (Morton) Carrington. He was educated at the McGuire School\n         at Richmond, and attended the University of Virginia for one\n         year, 1875-1876. He has served as president of the Chamber of\n         Commerce of Richmond, and as a director in both the First\n         National Bank and the Mechanics and Merchants Bank of\n         Richmond. During World War I, in 1918, T.M. Carrington was\n         state chairman of the United War Work Campaign in Virginia. He\n         was also a member and elder of the Second Presbyterian Church.\n         He was married to Julia M. Watkins (d. 1900), daughter of\n         Richard V. Watkins, on January 21, 1886, in Halifax County,\n         and they had three sons: Richard W. Carrington, who married\n         Delia Davenport; Tazewell M. Carrington, Jr., associated with\n         his father in the Richmond tobacco business, who married\n         Carter Ingram, and attended the University of Virginia,\n         1909-1911; and William Tucker Carrington, unmarried, who\n         served overseas during the Great War with the Eightieth\n         Division, A.E.F, and then became engaged in the manufacture of\n         building supplies in Richmond.","The founder of the Carrington family in Virginia was \n          George Carrington, who emigrated\n         from the British Island of Barbados, West Indies, in 1712,\n         marrying a Miss Mayo, and settling in Cumberland County,\n         Virginia, as a farmer and planter. His son, \n          Judge Paul Carrington, was born in\n         Cumberland County, becoming a distinguished attorney, a member\n         of the House of Burgesses, and in 1780, the chief justice of\n         the General Court of Virginia. He married a Miss Read, and\n         lived in Charlotte County, where his son, George Carrington,\n         was born. George Carrington fought in the Revolutionary War\n         and married a Miss Tucker; his son, the Honorable \n          John Bonaparte Carrington, was born\n         in Charlotte County, and fought in the War of 1812, before\n         serving in the Virginia Legislature from 1823-1827 and\n         1835-1836 for Halifax County. John B. Carrington married\n         Judith Winbish, a native of Halifax County. The grandfather of\n         Richard Watkins Carrington was \n          Captain William Tucker\n         Carrington (1831- 1913), an officer of the Confederacy,\n         and a tobacconist in Richmond. He married \n          Bettie Lewis Morton (1836-1916) who\n         was born in Farmville, Virginia. They had at least nine\n         children:","Tazewell Morton Carrington m. Julia M. Watkins \n          John B. Carrington m. Leila Gamble \n          Tucker Lewis Carrington, unmarried \n          Judith Carrington m. Edward R. Stettinius \n          Bessie L. Carrington, unmarried \n          Randolph Carrington \n          Mary Carr, unmarried \n          Henry Paul Carrington, Jr. m. Hazel [Dimenick?] \n          Emma Carrington, unmarried"],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThis collection consists of the personal and professional\n         papers of the corporation lawyer and civic leader, Richard\n         Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of Richmond, Virginia, and\n         related Davenport Family. Carrington was a law student at the\n         University of Virginia, 1907-1910. The papers, ca. 1880-1933,\n         include legal case files, estate files, personal and family\n         files, investment statements, bank registers and statements,\n         bound volumes, blueprints, photographs, and financial records.\n         The legal case files and the estate files include\n         correspondence, insurance policies, property deeds, titles,\n         wills, receipts, minutes of meetings, contracts, notes, and\n         other related papers.\u003c/p\u003e"],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content Information"],"scopecontent_tesim":["This collection consists of the personal and professional\n         papers of the corporation lawyer and civic leader, Richard\n         Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of Richmond, Virginia, and\n         related Davenport Family. Carrington was a law student at the\n         University of Virginia, 1907-1910. The papers, ca. 1880-1933,\n         include legal case files, estate files, personal and family\n         files, investment statements, bank registers and statements,\n         bound volumes, blueprints, photographs, and financial records.\n         The legal case files and the estate files include\n         correspondence, insurance policies, property deeds, titles,\n         wills, receipts, minutes of meetings, contracts, notes, and\n         other related papers."],"abstract_html_tesm":["\u003cabstract label=\"Abstract\"\u003eThis collection consists of the\n         personal and professional papers of the corporation lawyer and\n         civic leader, Richard Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of\n         Richmond, Virginia, and related Davenport Family.\u003c/abstract\u003e"],"abstract_tesim":["This collection consists of the\n         personal and professional papers of the corporation lawyer and\n         civic leader, Richard Watkins Carrington (1889-1933) of\n         Richmond, Virginia, and related Davenport Family."],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":639,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-05-01T02:19:32.346Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01404_c01_c452"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Alexandria Library","value":"Alexandria Library","hits":53},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Alexandria+Library\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"Arlington Public Library","value":"Arlington Public Library","hits":750},"links":{"self":"https://search.arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Blevel%5D%5B%5D=Subseries\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=Arlington+Public+Library\u0026view=compact"}},{"attributes":{"label":"Augusta County Historical Society","value":"Augusta 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