1809-2010
Guide to the Collection
Portions of the papers of Jean Thoits Coolidge (Series VIII) and William B.
Coolidge (Series IX) are closed to researchers until 1 Nov. 2035.
There are restrictions on the use of this collection. Users must sign an
agreement stating that they understand these restrictions before they will be
given access to this collection.
|
|
| Title: | Coolidge and Dame family
papers |
| Dates: | 1809-2010 |
| Physical Description: | 69
document boxes, 3 oversize boxes |
| Call Number: | Ms. N-2351 |
| Repository: | Massachusetts Historical Society 1154 Boylston Street Boston, MA 02215
library@masshist.org |
|
Abstract:
|
|
This collection contains the papers of the Coolidge
and Dame families, including the papers of the following individuals and their
families: Lorin Low Dame; Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame; Ruth Dame Coolidge; Richard
Bradford Coolidge; Jean Thoits Coolidge; and William Bradford Coolidge. The
collection includes correspondence, personal papers, diaries, writings,
financial papers, legal papers, political papers, printed material, and
volumes.
|
|
Below are brief biographical sketches of the individuals represented most
prominently within the collection.
George Morgan Bacon (1872-1952), known as Morgan,
was the husband of Isabel Dame Bacon and the brother-in-law of Ruth Dame
Coolidge. He was born on 28 March 1872 in Worcester, Mass. to George A. and
Susan Hillman Bacon. He had three siblings: Carl, Paul, and Anne. Morgan grew
up in Syracuse, New York, and graduated from Cornell University with a degree
in civil engineering. From 1894 to 1898, Morgan oversaw Boston street surveys
for the Boston Transit Commission and helped build the local subway. He went
into private practice in 1898 and worked on various sewer and electrical
projects. On 5 February 1898, he married Isabel Dame, and the couple brought up
five daughters in Salt Lake City. Morgan traveled throughout Utah and
neighboring states as an engineer, overseeing the construction of dams,
tunnels, canals, pipe lines, mines, power plants, and other projects. He worked
as the U.S. deputy mineral surveyor for Utah, Idaho, and Nevada and became
state engineer for Utah from 1925 to 1932. He belonged to many professional
engineering societies such as the Utah Society for Engineers, American Society
for Civil Engineers and the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education.
He was a Mason and wrote poetry as an avocation. Morgan lived and worked in
Salt Lake City until his death in 1952.
Isabel Gerry Dame Bacon (1869-1933), often called
Belle, was the daughter of Lorin L. and Isabel Arnold Dame, and an older sister
of Ruth Dame Coolidge. She was born on 7 June 1869 in Braintree, Mass. at the
home of her maternal grandparents, John Bass and Nancy B. T. Arnold. She
attended Medford High School and Symonds Kindergarten Normal Training Class in
Boston. On 5 February 1898, she married George Morgan Bacon in Medford. Early
in 1900, Morgan and Belle moved to Love, Colo. and then Colorado Springs where
Morgan worked as a civil engineer. In 1901, they settled permanently in Salt
Lake City, Utah. Isabel and Morgan had five daughters: Isabel Lyman
(1899-1973); Dorothy York (1901-1963); Lois Bigelow (1904-1986); Barbara Dame
(b.1905); and Priscilla Alden (b.1910). Isabel was an educational and social
service activist in Salt Lake City. She organized the first Salt Lake City PTA
and served as its president for many years. She also helped to establish the
Home and School League (also known as the Salt Lake Council of Parents and
Teachers) which promoted home economics and manual training. In 1917, Isabel
fought for and won passage of a law in the state legislature to aid
under-nourished children and promote mandatory education for children. She was
president of the Salt Lake City Civic Center for twelve years and was
influential in establishing a community baby clinic, a visiting nurses
association, a social welfare league and a society for mental hygiene. In 1923,
she became chairwoman of the Better Homes Committee and later served as a
member of the Utah White House Conference on Child Study and Child Care and the
Educational Relief Program. Isabel died on 10 June 1933 in Salt Lake City.
Olive Dame Coolidge Butman (1920-2008) was the
third child of Richard and Ruth Dame Coolidge. Born on 26 January 1920 in
Medford, Mass., Olive was named after her aunt, Olive Dame Campbell. She
graduated from Wellesley College in 1941 and soon after, she became a doctor's
assistant at the Pine Mountain Settlement School in Harlan, Kent.. In 1942,
Olive left the Settlement School to marry Robert Charles Butman, who she had
known since grade school. During World War II, Bob entered the navy, and they
moved to different naval facilities across the United States including
Washington, D. C., Oklahoma and Philadelphia. Olive and Bob had three children:
Marcia (b.1945); Bradford (b.1947); and John (b.1951) before settling
permanently in Concord, Mass. After raising her children, Olive worked as an
elementary school guidance counselor in the Littleton, Mass. public school
system for 17 years. An outdoor enthusiast, Olive was a sailor, skier, and
skater who summered in Nantucket, Mass. throughout her life. She died on 23 May
2008, a victim of Alzheimer's disease.
Robert Charles Butman (b.1920) was the husband of
Olive Coolidge Butman and the son-in-law of Richard and Ruth Dame Coolidge. He
was born on 9 September 1920. Bob graduated from MIT with a B.S. in electrical
engineering, and in 1941, he began working in the Department of the Navy in
Washington, D.C. A year later, he married Olive Coolidge and in 1943, entered
the navy. During World War II, Bob and Olive lived at naval facilities in
Washington D.C., Oklahoma and Philadelphia. In 1952, Bob began working at
Lincoln Labs on the MIT campus outside of Boston. He and Olive settled in
nearby Concord, Mass. where they raised three children: Marcia (b.1945);
Bradford (b.1947); and John (b.1951).
Harry M. Cary (d. ca. 1995) was the husband of
June Coolidge Cary and the son-in-law of Richard and Ruth Coolidge. He was born
in Cragsmoor, New York to Maude Simington Lyon and Henry Monfort Cary. His
father was a Universalist minister, and he grew up in Elbridge, Auburn, and
Little Falls, New York. As a teenager, he and his parents moved to Tokyo, Japan
where his father served as a Universalist missionary. Harry attended Tufts
College in the mid-1930s where he met June Coolidge. In 1936, after graduating
from Tufts, he and June moved to Japan and married. Two years later they
returned to the United States, settling in Brasstown, North Carolina and
working for the John C. Campbell Folk School. Harry became the publicity and
extension agent for the school, a position he held until 1942. With the
outbreak of World War II, Harry joined the navy as an intelligence officer.
After the war, he was recruited by the CIA where he worked until his
retirement. He and June had two sons, Lorin and Richard.
Ruth Alden Coolidge Cary (1912-1996), always
called June, was the oldest child of Richard and Ruth Dame Coolidge. A native
of Medford, Mass., she was born on 19 June 1912. June attended public
elementary and high schools in Medford, and chose Swarthmore College in
Philadelphia for undergraduate study. She transferred to the Museum School of
Fine Arts in Boston and eventually to Tufts College, the family alma mater. At
Tufts, June met her future husband, Harry Cary, before graduating in 1935. A
year later, June and Harry married in Tokyo, Japan where Harry served as a
missionary for the Universalist Church. In 1938, they moved to Brasstown, North
Carolina where Harry became the publicity and extension agent for the John C.
Campbell Folk School and June taught art classes. June and Harry had two
children, Lorin and Richard. The Cary family settled in the Washington, D.C.
area after World War II where June taught art at the Sidwell Friends School.
She passed away in 1996.
Jean Elizabeth Thoits Coolidge (1913-1996) was
the wife of William Bradford Coolidge, and the daughter- in-law of Ruth Dame
Coolidge. She was born on 27 September 1913 in Palo Alto, California, the
second child of Willis C. and Hazel Lamson Thoits. Jean grew up with four
siblings: Eleanor; Warren; Edward; and Willis. She attended San Jose State
College, but graduated from Stanford College. In 1936, Jean moved to Tokyo,
Japan to tutor the son of Cabot Coville, an American diplomat. While in Japan,
Jean met William Bradford (Bread) Coolidge and they married on 22 June 1943 in
California.
In the early 1940s, Jean became a YWCA administrator in San Jose, Calif.
Part of her work was to help Japanese-American students who had been relocated
from war zones into internment camps in the western United States to transfer
into colleges in other parts of the country. During World War II, Jean and Brad
moved to Minneapolis, Minn. and Ann Arbor, Mich. so that Brad could attend U.S.
Army Japanese language schools. After the war, they settled in Washington D.C.
where Brad worked as a State Department research analyst. Jean and Brad had
three children: Eunice Ann (b. 1947); Oliver (b. 1949); and Elizabeth (b.
1951). Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Jean and the children accompanied Brad
to his Foreign Service postings in Tokyo and Nagoya, Japan; Bangkok, Thailand
and Ankara, Turkey. Upon the family's return to the Washington, D.C. area, Jean
became involved in the River Road Unitarian Church and in community affairs.
She was especially active in the Home Study program for African-American
children at Cabin John and the Girl Scouts. Jean was also interested in the
arts and had a special talent for ikebana, kiri-e and ceramics. On 1 June 1995,
she died of cancer at her home in Bethesda.
Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1839-1926) was the
father of Richard B. Coolidge. Born on 8 April 1839 in Hallowell, Maine, he was
the third child of Merrit and Flora Coolidge. Merrit, brought up in the
Universalist Church, attended Westbrook Seminary and Tufts College. He taught
grade school in Maine during college vacations. In 1876, Merrit married Lucy
French, and the two settled in Portland where Merrit helped run the family's
wholesale foods business. He later became the treasurer of the Standard Oil
Company office in Portland. Merrit served as a trustee of Westbrook Seminary
and treasurer of the Universalist Maine State Convention. On 1 February 1926,
he died in Portland at the age of 87.
Richard Bradford Coolidge (1879-1957) was born on
14 September 1879 in Deering, Maine to Merrit B. and Lucy French Coolidge.
Richard attended the Ocean Street Grammar School in Portland and Westbrook
Seminary in Deering. In 1898 he entered Tufts College where he was a member of
Theta Delta Chi and Phi Beta Kappa and served as editor-in-chief of
The Tuftonian, a student literary magazine.
Richard met his future wife, Ruth B. Dame, at Tufts. Like Ruth, he graduated
with both a B.A. and M.A. after only four years of study. In the summer of
1903, Richard worked as a reporter for the Portland
Evening Express and considered becoming a journalist. He opted instead
for Harvard Law School, where he graduated in 1906. Soon after, Richard joined
the law firm of French and Curtiss, the practice of his uncle, William B.
French. Upon his uncle's death in 1912, Richard became a partner in the firm.
In September 1908, Richard married Ruth B. Dame and settled in Medford. They
had three children: Ruth Alden (June) (b.1912), William Bradford (b.1916) and
Olive Dame (b.1920).
Richard became active in Massachusetts politics during the 1910s. Around
1912-1914, he ran unsuccessfully for the state legislature as a Progressive
party candidate. His first successful election came in 1917, when he was
elected to the local Board of Aldermen. From 1920 to 1922, Richard served in
the Massachusetts House of Representatives for the Medford/Winchester District.
His final elective office was that of mayor of Medford, a position he held from
1923 to 1926. Richard left politics in 1926 to become president and director of
the First National Bank in Medford. He remained director until 1950 when he
became a board member of its successor Middlesex County National Bank. In
addition to his political and business contributions to Medford, Richard was
active in the social and civic life of the city. He belonged to the Medford
Historical Society and the Royall House Association and was a founder and
president of the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. A treasurer of Tufts College from
1934 to 1952, he was elected a lifetime trustee in 1950. On 17 February 1957,
Richard died at the home of his daughter Olive in Concord, Mass.
Ruth Burleigh Dame Coolidge (1880-1951) was born
on 21 November 1880 in Medford, Mass. She was the third child of Lorin L. and
Isabel Arnold Dame. Ruth attended Medford High School where her father was
principal. After graduating in 1898, she entered her father's alma mater, Tufts
College, where she was a member of the Delta Sigma sorority and the Tower Cross
Society. She also served on the editorial board of the Tufts literary magazine,
The Tuftonian. Ruth was a member of Phi Beta
Kappa and graduated in four years with both a B.A. and an M.A. After graduating
in 1902, Ruth taught in the public schools including Medford High School. Ruth
married Richard B. Coolidge in 1908, and they had three children: Ruth Alden
(June) (b.1912); William Bradford (b.1916); and Olive Dame (b.1920). Ruth
worked as a writer and journalist. She penned articles for magazines and
newspapers, specializing in pieces about colonial Massachusetts. She also wrote
several historical pageants: The Pageant of the Royall
House (1915); The Pageant of the Mystic
(1930); and The Pageant of the Centenary of Medford High
School (1935). Ruth's love of history led to her membership in many
historical organizations including the Royall House Association and the
Nantucket Historical Society. In the 1930s, she served as president of the
Medford Historical Society for four years and of the Bay State Historical
League for two. She was also a member of the Medford Shakespeare Club, the
First Parish Unitarian Church and the Medford Girl Scouts. Ruth and her family
summered in Nantucket at Hinckley Farm. On 20 September 1951, at the age of 70,
Ruth died of a heart attack while vacationing in Nantucket.
William Bradford Coolidge (1916-2010), the second
child of Richard B. and Ruth Dame Coolidge, was born on 20 January 1916 in
Medford, Mass. William, nicknamed Brad, grew up in Medford with his two
sisters, June and Olive and his maternal aunt, Daisy Dame. Brad attended
Medford High School and graduated in 1932 at the top of his class. Brad
summered in Nantucket, often with extended family. From 1933 to 1937, Brad
studied at Tufts College on a Trustees Fellowship and was editor of the college
newspaper, The Tufts Weekly in 1936, leading him
to explore a career in journalism. Upon graduating from Tufts in 1937, Brad
moved to Tokyo, Japan where his sister June and brother-in-law Harry Cary
taught at a Universalist mission. In hopes of becoming a foreign correspondent,
he wrote copy for The Japanese Advertiser, an
English-language newspaper printed in Tokyo. In 1939, he traveled as a string
correspondent for United Press to Japanese-occupied northern China, Manchuria
and Canton. While in Tokyo, Brad met his future wife, Jean E. Thoits, the
governess to the children of an American diplomat. On his return to the United
States in 1939, he courted Jean by mail before they were married on 22 June
1943. They had three children: Eunice Ann (b.1947); Oliver (b.1949); and
Elizabeth (b.1951).
In the fall of 1939, Brad returned to the United States to begin graduate
work in international affairs at Harvard University. Upon graduation in 1941,
he accepted a position with the Foreign Broadcasting Information Service (FBIS)
in Oregon where he helped to translate Japanese broadcasts for the U.S.
government. In 1944, Brad was drafted into the U.S. Army as a foreign language
specialist. He was sent to the Army Intensive Japanese Language School at the
University of Michigan in 1945 and to Alabama in early 1946 for basic training.
In the fall of 1946, Brad became an analyst for the State Department's Office
of Intelligence Research. His first assignment took him back to Tokyo where he
served as a political officer at the U.S. Embassy. He was then chosen as the
head of the American Consulate in Nagoya. After two years stateside, Brad and
his family moved to Bangkok, Thailand for a posting on the international staff
of SEATO, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization. Later, the Coolidge family
moved to Ankara, Turkey where Brad served as the assistant to Abbas Ali
Khalatbari, Secretary General of CENTO, the Central Treaty Organization for the
United States, United Kingdom, Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan.
From 1968 to 1969, Brad served as diplomat in residence at the University of
Arizona in Tucson. He retired from the State Department in 1972 and returned to
his home in Bethesda, Maryland where he became involved with the River Road
Unitarian Church, the John C. Campbell Folk School, and the Japan-America
Society. He was a member of the board of directors for the John C. Campbell
Folk School from 1976 to 1992.
Daisy Gertrude Dame (1868-1932) was the oldest
sister of Ruth Dame Coolidge. She was born on 5 March 1868 in Nantucket, Mass.,
the first of four daughters born to Lorin and Isabel Dame. Daisy attended
public school and graduated from Medford High School in 1885. A graduate of
Symonds Kindergarten Normal Training Class in Boston, Daisy taught kindergarten
beginning in 1887. In 1892 she was appointed principal of the James A. McDonald
Kindergarten in Boston, a position she held until her retirement in 1922. From
1909 to 1910, Daisy took a leave of absence without pay to help establish a
kindergarten in the mountains of Kentucky at the Oneida Institute. Daisy never
married. She lived with her mother and Ruth and Richard Coolidge and their
family in Medford, Mass. In 1922, Daisy accompanied Olive Campbell and
Marguerite Butler to Scandinavia where they studied folk schools. The trip
photographer, Daisy captured images of the trip that appear in Olive's book,
The Danish Folk School. Daisy enjoyed genealogy
and was an active member of the West Medford Reading Club. She died in
September 1932.
Lorin Low Dame (1838-1903) was the father of Ruth
Dame Coolidge. Born on 12 March 1838 in Newmarket, New Hampshire, he was the
only child of Samuel and Mary Ann Dame. In 1845, his family moved to Lowell,
Mass., where he attended public high school. From 1856 to 1860, Lorin studied
at Tufts College, and after graduation became a high school principal in
Braintree, Mass. The Civil War intervened and late in 1862, Lorin mustered into
the 15th Battery, Massachusetts' Volunteer Light Artillery as a second
lieutenant. On 1 March 1863, eight days before reporting to duty, he married a
former Braintree student, Nancy Isabel Arnold. During the war, Lorin served in
New Orleans and saw action in the Arkansas expedition and the fall of Mobile.
He was promoted to first lieutenant before mustering out on 4 August 1865.
After the war ended, Tufts College honored Lorin by granting him an M.A. Over
the next eleven years, Lorin served as the principal of high schools in several
Massachusetts towns including Lexington (1866-1867), Nantucket (1867-1869) and
Stoneham (1869-1876). In 1876, he became the principal of Medford High School,
a position he held for 27 years. In addition to administering the high school,
he taught Latin and Greek.
Lorin was an avid botanist as well as an educator. During the 1880s, he
served as president of the Middlesex Institute, and published several articles
about New England flora. He is best known for his two books,
Typical Elms and other Trees of Massachusetts
published in 1890 with an introduction by Oliver Wendell Holmes, and
The Handbook of the Trees of New England, with Ranges
Throughout the United States, co-authored with Henry Brooks and
published in 1902. In recognition of his scientific achievements, Lorin
received an honorary doctorate of science from Tufts in 1895. Literature,
writing, and history were also of keen interest to Lorin. To earn additional
income, he wrote for newspapers and magazines, often under pseudonyms including
J. Gerry, J. M. Arnold, and Viator. Lorin was a member of the West Medford
Reading Club and the Medford Historical Society. From 1895 to 1903, he served
as a trustee of Tufts College and sat on its Executive Committee. Lorin
belonged to the First Parish Unitarian Church in Medford and founded the
Unitarian club connected to the church. On 27 January 1903, he died of a heart
attack.
Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame (1844-1916) was the
mother of Ruth Dame Coolidge. She was born in Braintree, Mass. on 20 September
1844 to Nancy B. T. and John Bass Arnold. The seventh of nine children, Isabel
was a bright student and fine musician. In 1860, she met Lorin Dame, a new
teacher at her high school. They married on 1 March 1863, eight days before
Lorin mustered into the Union Army. Lorin served in the gulf theatre of the
Civil War until 1865, when he returned to teaching. He held jobs as a high
school principal in several Massachusetts cities including Lexington,
Nantucket, and Stoneham. In 1876, the couple permanently settled in Medford,
where Isabel and Lorin raised four daughters: Daisy Gertrude (b.1868); Isabel
Gerry (b.1869); Ruth Burleigh (b.1880); and Olive Arnold (b.1882). The family
summered on Nantucket and Isabel bought a house and land there called Hinckley
Farm. Isabel was socially active in Medford and belonged to many charitable
organizations and clubs. She was especially devoted to the musical work of the
Women's Club. During 1915, Isabel became ill with an eye affliction. She died
on 10 December 1916.
William Riley French (1814-1893) was the maternal
grandfather of Richard B. Coolidge. He was born on 8 June 1814 in Turner, Maine
to Charles and Nancy French. Nancy died of consumption when William was small.
At the age of ten, he was apprenticed to a cabinetmaker in Turner, who allowed
him to attend high school while working for him. After finishing his
apprenticeship, he attended Kent's Hill Academy to prepare for college, and
taught school to support himself. In the late 1830s, William entered Waterville
College (today known as Colby College), where he embraced the Universalist
Church. In 1841, after reading theology with the Rev. Zenas Thompson, he became
a Universalist minister. William preached in Lewiston and Auburn, but needed to
teach school to make a living wage. In 1843, he married Marcia Bradford in
Lewiston, and they had four children. Several years later, William moved to
Turner to become minister of the First Universalist Church. He remained in
Turner for twenty years and became a leader of the Universalist church in
Maine. In 1885, Tufts conferred upon him an honorary doctorate of divinity.
William died on 7 August 1893 after many years of illness.
Barbara Bacon McConnell (1905-2000) was the
fourth daughter of Morgan and Isabel Dame Bacon and the niece of Ruth Dame
Coolidge. Born on 11 September 1905 in Salt Lake City, Utah, she attended the
University of Wisconsin where she earned a degree in psychology. She married
Phillip McConnell and they lived in La Crosse, New Jersey, where they brought
up three sons: Mark, Allen, and David. Barbara taught 8th grade for many years.
After Phillip's death in 1959, she entered the Peace Corps in 1962 and spent 15
months in Nigeria teaching mathematics at a teacher's training college. In the
1970s, Barbara moved to Alexandria, Virginia to live near her sisters. She
traveled extensively through Europe, the former Soviet Union, China, and the
Americas. Barbara died on 1 January 2000.
Coolidge, Emma-Downing. Descendants of John and
Mary Coolidge of Watertown, Massachusetts 1630. Boston: Wright and
Potter Printing Co., 1930
French, Rev. W. R. A History of Turner, Maine
from its Settlement to 1886. Portland, Maine: Hoyt, Fogg, and Donham,
1887.
Greenwood, Frederick. Greenwood Genealogies,
1754-1914. New York: The Lyons Genealogical Co., 1914.
Morss, Charles H. "Lorin Low Dame." Medford
Historical Register, April 1903.
The Coolidge and Dame family papers are divided into the following ten
series: Lorin Low Dame papers; Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame papers; Richard
Bradford Coolidge papers; Ruth Dame Coolidge papers; Papers of the descendants
of Lorin Low Dame and Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame; Papers of families related to
Richard Bradford Coolidge; Papers of families related to Ruth Dame Coolidge;
Jean Thoits Coolidge papers; William Bradford Coolidge papers; and
Miscellaneous papers. The papers were largely collected by William Bradford
Coolidge.
The Lorin Low Dame papers primarily reflect Lorin's teaching career and his
interest in botany. Material related to Lorin's position as principal of high
schools in Medford, Stoneham, and several other Massachusetts towns includes
correspondence, lesson plans, teachers' meetings notes, printed material, and
writings. Lorin's interest in botany is seen in correspondence regarding his
botanical publications and in printed material. Lorin's writings are also a
strong part of this series, and include essays on his various interests,
historical fiction, and schoolwork. Courtship letters and several diaries are
also included in this series.
The papers of Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame, Lorin Dame's wife, include writings,
printed material, volumes, and family correspondence covering such topics as
Isabel's trip to Europe and family celebrations. The series contains
thirty-four diaries that describe daily life, household accounts, and community
activities.
The papers of Richard Bradford Coolidge, husband of Lorin and Isabel Dame's
daughter Ruth, include personal papers, financial and legal papers, and
political papers. Personal papers consisting of correspondence, diaries, and
writings reflect Richard's education at Tufts College and his family life.
Financial and legal papers relate to Richard's career with law firm French and
Curtiss and with the First National Bank of Medford, as well as his advisory
role to Olive D. Campbell and the John C. Campbell Folk School. Richard's
political papers derive from his political campaigns and positions; printed
material, writings, and correspondence relate to his two terms as a
representative in the Massachusetts legislature, two terms as mayor of Medford,
and his Progressive party campaign for the state legislature.
The papers of Ruth Dame Coolidge, Lorin and Isabel Dame's daughter, include
correspondence, personal papers, diaries, and printed material. Ruth was a
writer and amateur historian, and her pieces on local history appear in the
printed material. This series also includes scrapbooks from Ruth's high school
and Tufts College years that document social and college life.
The papers of descendants of Lorin Low Dame and Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame
pertain to Isabel Dame Bacon, George Morgan Bacon, Barbara Bacon McConnell,
Daisy G. Dame, Ruth Alden (June) Coolidge Cary, Harry M. Cary, Olive Coolidge
Butman, and Robert C. Butman. Of particular interest are: Barbara McConnell's
travel writings; Daisy Dame's papers from her trip studying folk schools in
Scandinavia and her establishment of a kindergarten in Oneida, Kentucky; June
Cary's family newspaper created in childhood and her correspondence from Japan;
and the Butman family's travel logs.
The papers of families related to Richard B. Coolidge contain material
related to the Coolidge, Bradford, and French families. The Coolidge family
subseries contains women's diaries, business papers, political papers, and
writings. Other items of interest include William Riley French's Universalist
Church account books, and Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1839-1926)'s diary as a
Tufts student.
The papers of families related to Ruth Dame Coolidge contain material
related to the Arnold, Dame, Gilman, and Thayer families, including family
correspondence, personal papers, military appointments, and newspaper
clippings.
The papers of Jean Thoits Coolidge, the wife of Richard and Ruth Dame
Coolidge's son, William Bradford Coolidge, include correspondence describing
Jean's experiences living in Japan from 1936 to 1939, her return to America and
long-distance relationship with Brad, and their life together in Minnesota and
Michigan during World War II. Japanese-American internment papers contain
correspondence and printed materials related to her work with the YWCA helping
to transfer Japanese-American students from internment camps and western war
zones to colleges in other parts of the country. The series also contains a
number of papers and tests from Jean's years at college, her journal entries
from the 1960s, ephemera and miscellaneous news clippings, and records from the
Minneapolis Blind Study Committee in 1945-1946.
The papers of William Bradford (Brad) Coolidge, son of Richard and Ruth Dame
Coolidge, include material from his time as a journalist in pre-World War II
Japan and China and his employment with the Foreign Broadcasting Information
Service and State Department. Japan and China papers include letters, writings,
and printed material. Government employment papers such as forms and
correspondence reflect Brad's diplomatic postings in Japan, Thailand, and
Turkey. This series also includes correspondence, writings, printed material,
and diaries reflecting Brad's Tufts College education, family life, and army
service.
The Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS) holds the following collections
related to the Coolidge and Dame family papers:
Lois Bigelow Bacon papers, 1872-1982; bulk: 1927-1945. Ms. N-63. (The Lois
Bigelow Bacon papers include the Lorin Low Dame diaries, 1873.)
Dame family papers, 1805-1923; bulk: 1900-1916. Ms. N-1086.
Lorin Low Dame papers, 1839-1904. P-376, reels 10-11 (microfilm). Ms. N-845
(Tall)
In addition, the John C. Campbell and Olive D. Campbell Papers #3800 are
available at the Southern Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Gift of Elizabeth J. Coolidge, Ann C. Nitzburg, and Oliver B. Coolidge,
November 2010.
Portions of the papers of Jean Thoits Coolidge (Series VIII) and William B.
Coolidge (Series IX) are closed to researchers until 1 Nov. 2035.
There are restrictions on the use of this collection. Users must sign an
agreement stating that they understand these restrictions before they will be
given access to this collection.
The Massachusetts Historical Society does not claim ownership to the
literary rights (copyright) of 20th and 21st century letters and documents
written by individuals in this collection. The
Massachusetts Historical Society cannot give permission to publish or quote
from documents by individuals for whom it does not hold copyright.
Access to these materials does not imply
permission to publish. It is the sole
responsibility of the researcher to obtain formal permission from the owners of
the literary rights (copyright) to publish or quote from documents in this
collection. Consult the reading room staff for more information.
Photocopies are for personal use only. Personal
use photocopies may not be donated or deposited in other libraries or archives,
or made available to other researchers without the written permission of the
donor.
The collection is organized into the following series:
| | | |
| I. Lorin Low Dame papers, 1850-1951 |
| | A. Correspondence, 1856-1901 |
| | B. Personal papers, 1865-1903 |
| | C. Diaries, 1857-1895 |
| | D. Writings, ca.1850-1902 |
| | E. Printed material, 1850-1951 |
| | F. Volumes, 1860-1903 |
| II. Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame papers, ca.
1850-1929 |
| | A. Correspondence, 1851-1914 |
| | B. Diaries, 1857-1929 |
| | C. Writings, ca.1855-1880 |
| | D. Printed material, 1856-1917 |
| | E. Volumes, ca. 1850-1899 |
| III. Richard Bradford Coolidge papers,
1887-1957 |
| | A. Personal papers, 1889-1957 |
| | B. Financial and legal papers, 1887-1957 |
| | C. Political material, 1912-1950 |
| IV. Ruth Burleigh Dame Coolidge papers,
1890-1957 |
| | A. Correspondence, 1897-1951 |
| | B. Personal papers, 1895-1951 |
| | C. Diaries, 1895-1934 |
| | D. Writings, 1898-1951 |
| | E. Printed material, 1896-1957 |
| | F. Volumes, 1890-1951 |
| V. Papers of descendants of Lorin L. Dame and Nancy
Isabel Arnold Dame, 1869-2008 |
| | A. George Morgan Bacon and Isabel Dame Bacon family papers,
1891-1997 |
| | B. Daisy G. Dame papers, 1869-1932 |
| | C. Harry M. and Ruth (June) Coolidge Cary family papers, 1922-2006 |
| | D. Robert C. and Olive Coolidge Butman family papers, 1924-2008 |
| VI. Papers of families related to Richard B.
Coolidge, 1810-2000 |
| | A. Bradford family papers, 1839-1906 |
| | B. Coolidge family papers, 1810-1995 |
| | C. French family papers, 1821-1945 |
| | D. Miscellaneous papers, 1882-2000 |
| VII. Papers of families related to Ruth Dame
Coolidge, 1809-1930 |
| | A. Arnold family papers, 1851-1891 |
| | B. Dame family papers, 1893-1897 |
| | C. Gilman family papers, 1809-1880 |
| | D. Thayer family papers, 1858-1930 |
| | E. Miscellaneous papers, 1884-1899 |
| VIII. Jean Thoits Coolidge papers,
1894-1995 |
| | A. Correspondence, 1931-1959 |
| | B. Personal papers, 1932-1995 |
| | C. YWCA Japanese-American internment files, 1941-1944 |
| | D. Printed material, 1894-1995 |
| | E. Volumes, 1913-ca. 1960 |
| IX. William Bradford Coolidge papers,
1908-2010 |
| | A. Correspondence, 1926-1959 |
| | B. Personal papers, 1908-2007 |
| | C. Japan and China papers, 1937-1940 |
| | D. Government papers, 1941-2002 |
| | E. Writings, 1925-2002 |
| | F. Printed material, 1916-2010 |
| | G. Volumes, 1920-1986 |
| X. Miscellaneous papers, 1893, undated |
| | | | | | | |
| Box | Folder | Volume | Contents |
| | | I. Lorin Low Dame papers,
1850-1951
This series documents Lorin L. Dame's personal and family history and his
long career as an educator. It reflects his service in the Union Army during
the Civil War and his many avocations including botany, history, literature and
writing. Lorin served as the high school principal of several Massachusetts
towns, including Stoneham and Medford. His teaching career is reflected in his
correspondence, personal papers, writings, and printed material. Personal
papers include lesson plans and notes from teachers' meetings. Writings include
Lorin's thoughts on education and an elocution exercise for students.
Lorin was also a naturalist and environmentalist. Journals, booklets, and
reports about flora illustrate Lorin's interest in the subject. Autographs and
personal notes by colleagues in booklets and reports underscore his valued
contributions to the field, as do reviews of Lorin's two monographs
Typical Elms and other Trees of Massachusetts and
The Handbook of the Trees of New England. Although
manuscripts of these two works and paperwork dealing with their publication are
not a part of collection, several letters from Oliver Wendell Holmes (who wrote
the introduction to Typical Elms) are found here.
In the late 1800s, Lorin became a proponent of preserving Massachusetts'
forests and wilderness areas. Reports and articles he wrote for the Middlesex
Fells Association document the group's efforts to preserve Middlesex Fells, a
wilderness area near Boston and Medford.
Lorin's writings are another strong and extensive element of this series.
Notes and snippets, schoolwork, poems, essays, speeches, and short stories on a
large variety of topics make up Lorin's Writings subseries. Published
scientific and literary articles as well as poems comprise the printed material
subseries. Also included are Reading Club papers and historical short fiction,
although several of Lorin's fictional pieces are incomplete or missing
significant sections. Lorin's diaries are also included in this series, as well
as his correspondence with his wife Isabel Arnold Dame.
|
| Box 1 | Folders 1-11 | | | A. Correspondence,
1856-1901
Arranged chronologicallyThis subseries includes Lorin L. Dame's courtship correspondence with his
future wife Nancy Isabel Arnold, correspondence with his Tufts College roommate
Edward Dascomb concerning college life and the Civil War, and correspondence
related to his educational and botanical work. The latter includes letters of
recommendation for Lorin's teaching career and correspondence about his books
Typical Elms and other Trees of Massachusetts and
The Handbook of the Trees of New England.
|
| | | | B. Personal papers,
1865-1903
Arranged chronologically.This sub-series consists of a Civil War return of ordnance stores document,
accounts and other financial papers, miscellaneous compositions by others,
papers from Lorin's teaching career such as a notebooks on teachers' meetings
and lesson plans, and a copy of Lorin's will.
|
| Box 1 | Folder 12 | | | | Quarterly return of ordnance stores,
1865 |
| Box 1 | Folder 13 | | | | Accounts,
1881-1889 |
| Box 1 | Folder 14 | | | | Writings by others,
1895 |
| Box 1 | Folder 15 | | | | Fire insurance policy,
1902 |
| Box 1 | Folder 16 | | | | Will (copy),
1902 |
| Box 1 | Folder 17 | | | | Notebook of teachers' meetings,
1902-1903 Includes Ruth Dame Coolidge notes and William B. Coolidge drawings.
|
| Box 1 | Folder 18 | | | | Notebook of lesson plans,
n.d. |
| | | | C. Diaries,
1857-1895
Arranged chronologicallyThis sub-series consists of Lorin L. Dame's diaries, which cover such topics
as his 1880 sightseeing trips to England and France and his trip to the World's
Fair in Bremen, Germany in 1890. Other topics include life at Tufts College,
trips to Nantucket, his career, amateur archaeology, botany and gardens, and
daily life.
|
| Box 1 | Folder 19 | | | | 1857 |
| Box 1 | Folder 20 | | | | 1871-1872 |
| Box 1 | Folder 21 | | | | 1872-1873 |
| Box 1 | Folder 22 | | | | 1873 |
| Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | 1873 |
| Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | 1874 |
| Box 2 | Folder 3 | | | | 1874-1879 |
| Box 2 | Folder 4 | | | | 1880 |
| Box 2 | Folder 5 | | | | Loose letters from diary,
1880 |
| Box 2 | Folder 6 | | | | 1890 |
| Box 2 | Folder 7 | | | | 1895 |
| | | | D. Writings,
ca. 1850-1902
Arranged alphabetically by folder titleThis series includes notes, poems, essays, speeches and multi-chapter
stories on such topics as botany, travel, education, the environment, and Lorin
L. Dame's life. Works include Reading Club papers on authors and historical
short stories such as "The Blazing Heart" and "Western Scenes: A Tale of Love
and Treachery." There are also writings related to Lorin's teaching career,
such as an elocution exercise written for his students, and notes from Lorin's
own education.
|
| Box 2 | Folder 8 | | | | "American Elm Tree,"
n.d. |
| Box 2 | Folder 9 | | | | "American Tourists and English Scenery,"
n.d. |
| Box 2 | Folder 10 | | | | "Blazing Heart,"
n.d. |
| Box 2 | Folder 11 | | | | Book accounts and story, possibly by Ruth D. Coolidge,
1895-1897 |
| Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | Botanical notes,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 2 | | | | Civics,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 3 | | | | Confessions of a victim to symptoms,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 4 | | | | Dame genealogy notebook,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 5 | | | | Documents and addresses relating to Middlesex Institute,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 6 | | | | English countryside and Ruth D. Coolidge's notes on literature,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 7 | | | | English history and law notes,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 8 | | | | English history notes,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 9 | | | | Essays and notes on education,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folders 12-14 | | | | Fragments, misc.,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 10 | | | | "Idyl of Podunk" (incomplete),
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 15 | | | | Journal of botany,
1870 |
| Box 4 | Folder 1 | | | | "Life of Audubon" and Sabbath school exercises notebook,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 2 | | | | Meal, Shells, Lessons in versification,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 3 | | | | "Middlesex Canal" (incomplete),
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 4 | | | | Middlesex Fells writings,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 5 | | | | Miscellaneous notes,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 6 | | | | My summer saunterings,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 7 | | | | Narrative of the robbery,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 8 | | | | Nobility of labor and Isaiah,
n.d. |
| Box 3 | Folder 11 | | | | Notes on New Orleans,
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 9 | | | | "Old Man of the Mountain, or Scenes of Western Life" (incomplete),
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 10 | | | | "The Orange," in Good Times,
1884 |
| Box 4 | Folder 11 | | | | Poems,
n.d. |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | "Poetry of City Life,"
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folders 12-13 | | | | Reading club papers (Carlyle, Spencer, English essayists),
ca. 1881 |
| Box 4 | Folders 14-15 | | | | Reading club papers (Shakespeare, Browning, Persiles and Sigsmunda),
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folders 16-17 | | | | Reading club papers (Podunk, London, Emerson, Meister),
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folders 18-19 | | | | Reading club papers (Darwin),
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 20 | | | | "Recess in the Wall,"
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 21 | | | | "Ro-land and Di-a-na,"
ca. 1880-1890 |
| Box 4 | Folder 22 | | | | "Rudolpho the Bravo or the Haunted Castle,"
n.d. |
| Box 4 | Folder 23 | | | | "Sachem's Day" and letters concerning the story,
1902 |
| Box 5 | Folders 1-2 | | | | School papers,
ca. 1850-1859 |
| Box 5 | Folder 3 | | | | "Shattered Altar,"
n.d. |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | "Shattered Altar,"
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 4 | | | | "Shells" and "The Air," notebook,
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 5 | | | | Short essays,
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 6 | | | | Speeches,
1890 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | Town meeting,
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 7 | | | | Tree pieces,
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 8 | | | | "True Story of Echo,"
n.d. |
| Box 5 | Folder 9 | | | | Valedictory for Isabel,
1857 |
| Box 5 | Folder 10 | | | | "Western Scenes: a Tale of Love and Treachery,"
n.d. |
| | | | E. Printed material,
1850-1951 |
| | | | | i. Ephemera,
1850-1903
Arranged chronologically.Lorin L. Dame's ephemera includes printed material from his high school and
Tufts College education and from his teaching career at Medford High School and
the Middlesex Institute. It also includes Lorin's published poems, reports,
articles, and eulogies.
|
| Box 5 | Folder 11 | | | | | Rewards of merit,
ca. 1850-1859 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | Lowell High School exam certificates,
1850-1859 |
| Box 5 | Folder 12 | | | | | District annual reports,
1857-1867 |
| Box 5 | Folder 13 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1859-1901 |
| Box 5 | Folder 14 | | | | | Tufts commencement order of exercises,
1860-1866 |
| Box 5 | Folder 15 | | | | | Pamphlet, Annual reports of the Middlesex
Institute, Report of Lorin L. Dame,
1882 |
| Box 5 | Folder 16 | | | | | Poems, L. L. Dame, "Contribution to a Vexed Question" in the
Continent, and "The Orange" in
Good Times,
1883-1884 |
| Box 5 | Folder 17 | | | | | "Historic Trees," The Granite Monthly,
Vol. VIII, Nos. 11 & 12,
1885 |
| Box 5 | Folder 18 | | | | | Pamphlet, Middlesex Fells, 1886 |
| Box 5 | Folder 19 | | | | | Pamphlet, History of Medford High
School,
1892 |
| Box 5 | Folder 20 | | | | | Pamphlets, Medford High School Order of
Exercises,
1896-1902 |
| Box 5 | Folder 21 | | | | | Tufts honorary degree article,
1902 |
| Box 5 | Folder 22 | | | | | Pamphlet, Annual Report, School Committee,
Medford, Mass.,
1903 |
| Box 5 | Folder 23 | | | | | Eulogy, "Lorin Low Dame," in Rhodora,
1903 |
| Box 5 | Folder 24 | | | | | "In Memorium,"
1903 |
| | | | | ii. Clippings,
1860-1951
Arranged chronologically.Lorin L. Dame's clippings include pieces written by him on literature and
other topics, as well as articles about his life and works, such as book
reviews and obituaries.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | L. L. Dame, "A National Literature," Gospel
Banner and Maine Family Visitant,
1860 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | The Daily True Delta,
1863 Contains Port Hudson article, possibly from Lorin L. Dame's war diary.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | "Nantucket," probably by Lorin L. Dame,
1875 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | Clippings, book reviews, and obituaries,
1891-1902 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | The Stoneham Independent,
1876 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | "Mr. Dame's Address," The Universalist,
1878 Dame's address at Tufts College commencement.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 1 | | | | | Daily Memorial,
1881 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | Congregationalist,
1886 Poem by J.M. Arnold.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | Sconset Pump,
1888 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | Medford Mercury,
1898 Wedding announcement of Isabel Dame.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | American Citizen,
1902 |
| Box 5 | Folder 25 | | | | | Obituaries,
1903 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | Obituaries and clippings,
1903-1909 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 2 | | | | | "Lorin Dame, Early Headmaster Led Colorful Pioneering Career,"
Medford Daily Mercury,
1951 |
| | | | F. Volumes,
1860-1903
Arranged chronologically |
| Box 5 | Folder 26 | | | | Autograph album,
1860-1874 |
| Box 65 | | Volume 1 | | | Album, botanical prints,
ca. 1880-1890 |
| Box 65 | | Volume 2 | | | Condolence scrapbook,
1903 |
|
|
| | | II. Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame papers,
ca. 1850-1929
This series consists of materials documenting Isabel Arnold Dame's personal
and family life. Correspondence includes letters from son-in-law George M.
Bacon and daughter Ruth Dame Coolidge, and letters on such topics as the birth
of Isabel's daughter and the Braintree High School 50th anniversary gala.
Correspondence also includes Isabel's letters to her daughters during her trip
to Europe.
Isabel's thirty-four diaries describe her daily interactions with friends
and relatives as well as her many household and community activities. They also
contain household account information, addresses, notes, and recipes. The
series also contains writings, programs, receipts, certificates, cards,
invitations, an obituary, autograph albums, and a scrapbook.
Items pertaining to Lorin L. Dame and Isabel Arnold
Dame's nuclear family have been placed in this series, although Isabel's
correspondence with Lorin is in Series I.A.- Lorin L. Dame
correspondence.
|
| Box 6 | Folders 1-12 | | | A. Correspondence,
1851-1914
Arranged chronologicallyThis subseries consists mainly of family correspondence. Family
correspondents include George M. Bacon and Ruth Dame Coolidge, writing in 1902.
There is also extensive correspondence from Isabel Arnold Dame to her daughters
during her 1904 trip to Europe. In addition, the subseries includes items
related to Henry S. Wyer, Isabel's 1911 will, RSVPs to the 50th anniversary
gala for Braintree High School, and correspondence congratulating Isabel on the
birth of her daughter. Correspondence addressed to both Lorin and Isabel also
has been placed in this subseries.
|
| | | | B. Diaries,
1857-1929
Arranged chronologicallyIsabel's thirty-four diaries span almost forty-four years of her life, from
1857 to 1914, but contain gaps including 1859, 1862-1865, 1867-1870, and 1904.
Diary entries describe Isabel's daily interactions with friends and relatives
as well as her many household and community activities. A majority of Isabel's
diaries also contain household account information, addresses, notes, and
recipes in the back section of the volumes. One memorable diary entry (3
Sept.1860) describes her first meeting with Lorin L. Dame, "A new teacher Mr.
Dame. I can't tell whether I shall like him as yet or not."
|
| Box 6 | Folder 13 | | | | Diary (almanac),
1857 |
| Box 6 | Folder 14 | | | | 1857-1858 |
| Box 6 | Folder 15 | | | | 1858 |
| Box 6 | Folder 16 | | | | 1860 |
| Box 6 | Folder 17 | | | | 1861 |
| Box 6 | Folder 18 | | | | 1866 |
| Box 6 | Folder 19 | | | | 1871 |
| Box 7 | Folder 1 | | | | 1872 |
| Box 7 | Folder 2 | | | | 1873 |
| Box 7 | Folder 3 | | | | 1874 |
| Box 7 | Folder 4 | | | | 1875 |
| Box 7 | Folder 5 | | | | 1876 |
| Box 7 | Folder 6 | | | | 1877 |
| Box 7 | Folder 7 | | | | 1878 |
| Box 8 | Folder 1 | | | | 1880 |
| Box 8 | Folder 2 | | | | 1881 |
| Box 8 | Folder 3 | | | | 1882 |
| Box 8 | Folder 4 | | | | 1883 |
| Box 8 | Folder 5 | | | | 1884 |
| Box 8 | Folder 6 | | | | 1885 |
| Box 8 | Folder 7 | | | | 1886 |
| Box 9 | Folder 1 | | | | 1887 |
| Box 9 | Folder 2 | | | | 1888 |
| Box 9 | Folder 3 | | | | 1889 |
| Box 9 | Folder 4 | | | | 1890 |
| Box 9 | Folder 5 | | | | 1891 |
| Box 9 | Folder 6 | | | | 1892 |
| Box 9 | Folder 7 | | | | 1893 |
| Box 10 | Folder 1 | | | | 1894 |
| Box 10 | Folder 2 | | | | 1895 |
| Box 10 | Folder 3 | | | | 1896 |
| Box 10 | Folder 4 | | | | 1897 |
| Box 10 | Folder 5 | | | | 1898 |
| Box 10 | Folder 6 | | | | 1899 |
| Box 11 | Folder 1 | | | | 1900 |
| Box 11 | Folder 2 | | | | 1901 |
| Box 11 | Folder 3 | | | | 1902 |
| Box 11 | Folder 4 | | | | 1903 |
| Box 11 | Folder 5 | | | | Line-a-day diary,
1905-1909 |
| Box 11 | Folder 6 | | | | Line-a-day diary,
1910-1914 |
| Box 12 | Folder 11 | | | | Loose items from diaries,
ca. 1858-1929 |
| | | | C. Writings,
ca. 1855-1880
Arranged chronologically.This subseries contains Isabel Arnold Dame's high school compositions and
other writings. These include "Ruth," a poem to her baby daughter, and the
memoir "An Old Fashioned Day at Nantasket."
|
| Box 12 | Folder 2 | | | | Braintree, Mass. high school compositions,
ca. 1855-1860 |
| Box 12 | Folder 3 | | | | Writings,
1863-1880 |
| | | | D. Printed material,
1856-1917
Arranged chronologically.Isabel Arnold Dame's ephemera includes programs, receipts, certificates,
cards, and invitations. Also here are certificates for the American Board of
Commissions for Foreign Missions and the Daughters of the American Revolution,
programs for the dedication of the Lorin L. Dame School and Braintree High
School 50th reunion, a dance card, and material related to the birth of
Isabel's daughters. A 1917 clipping contains Isabel's obituary.
|
| Box 12 | Folder 4 | | | | 1856-1860 |
| Box 12 | Folder 5 | | | | Daughters' birth mementos,
1868-1882 |
| Box 12 | Folder 6 | | | | Cards and invitations,
1879-1882 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | DAR certificate,
1896 |
| Box 12 | Folder 7 | | | | Programs for dedication of the Lorin L. Dame School and Braintree
High School 50th reunion,
1909 |
| Box 12 | Folder 8 | | | | Isabel Arnold Dame obituary,
1917 |
| | | | E. Volumes,
ca. 1850-1899
Arranged chronologically.This subseries consists of three autograph albums and a scrapbook of
clippings and ephemera related to news of the day, the Civil War, academic
topics, and medical recipes.
|
| Box 66 | | Volume 3 | | | Scrapbook,
ca. 1850-1899 |
| Box 66 | Folder 1 | | | | CD-ROM of scrapbook,
ca. 1850-1899 |
| Box 66 | Folders 2-3 | | | | Loose ephemera and clippings from scrapbook,
ca. 1850-1899 |
| Box 12 | Folder 9 | | | | Autograph album,
1857 |
| Box 12 | Folder 10 | | | | Autograph album,
1858 |
| Box 12 | Folder 11 | | | | Autograph album,
1860-1867 |
|
|
| | | III. Richard Bradford Coolidge papers,
1887-1957
The material in this series reflects the life work of Richard B. Coolidge,
illustrating his activities with business, family, school, and community. The
bulk of Richard's personal papers describe his schooling and family life.
Richard's correspondence series and diaries highlight family interactions and
his early relationship with his wife Ruth. Diaries and clippings also reflect
other personal and business interests. Writings include material from Richard's
education, as well as humorous pieces such as "Fragments from the Memoirs of
Preow" and "Something of a Dr. Johnson." The printed material includes many
Westbrook Seminary, Tufts College and Harvard Law School documents. It also
provides information on Richard's community activism, especially his role in
establishing the Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Richard's financial and legal papers include material from his career with
the law firm French and Curtiss starting in 1906, and his tenure with the First
National Bank of Medford from 1927 to 1947. Also in this subseries are three
decades of letters between Richard and his sister-in-law, Olive Dame Campbell,
concerning the operations of the John C. Campbell Folk School. A member of the
school's board of directors, Richard provided financial, legal and
administrative advice to Olive.
Richard's political papers cover several of his campaigns and political
positions, including two terms as a member of the Massachusetts legislature for
the Winchester and Medford districts from 1920 to 1922, and two terms as the
Republican mayor of Medford from 1923 to 1926. Richard's mayoral documents
include speeches, campaign ephemera and literature, and a few clippings. Also
in this subseries is campaign ephemera from his unsuccessful campaign for the
state legislature as a Progressive party candidate about 1912, including "Vote
for Richard B. Coolidge" postcards.
|
| | | | A. Personal papers,
1889-1957 |
| | | | | i. Correspondence,
1898-1956
Arranged chronologically and by subject or correspondent.The personal correspondence of Richard B. Coolidge includes letters with
family members, including his father Merrit B. Coolidge (1839-1926), mother
Lucy French Coolidge, wife Ruth Dame Coolidge, sister-in-law Daisy Dame,
daughter Ruth (June) Coolidge Cary, son William B. (Brad) Coolidge, daughter
Olive Coolidge Butman, and aunt Flora Bradford Coolidge. Topics of family
discussion include family news and business activities. Family financial
matters such as Brad's mortgage are also discussed; however, papers related to
Richard's involvement with sister-in-law Olive Dame Campbell's accounts and his
parents' estate are located in his financial and legal papers. Letters between
Richard and Ruth, including many courtship letters, have been separated from
the rest of the correspondence, as have letters that Richard saved in a wooden
box, mostly consisting of letters from Ruth.
In addition to family correspondence, Richard's personal correspondence
includes letters related to his participation in clubs and other groups,
including the Lawrence Light Guard of Medford. Richard's participation with
Tufts College alumni groups is also included here, but correspondence related
to his paid work for Tufts College as a trustee and board member is filed under
financial correspondence. A significant amount of correspondence consists of
sympathy letters sent upon the death of Richard's wife, Ruth, in 1951 and of
his brother, Arthur William Coolidge, in 1952.
|
| | | | | | a. Correspondence with Ruth Dame Coolidge, 1900-1951 |
| Box 12 | Folders 12-26 | | | | | | 1900-1903 |
| Box 13 | | | | | | | 1904-Aug. 1907 |
| Box 14 | | | | | | | Sept. 1907-25 July 1911 |
| Box 15 | Folders 1-15 | | | | | | 26 July 1911-1951 |
| Box 15 | Folders 16-20 | | | | | b. Letters from wooden box,
1906-1934 |
| | | | | | c. Personal correspondence,
1898-1956 |
| Box 15 | Folders 21-28 | | | | | | 1898-1936 |
| Box 16 | Folders 1-17 | | | | | | 1937-1951 |
| Box 16 | Folders 18-28 | | | | | | Sympathy letters,
1951-1952 |
| Box 17 | Folders 1-16 | | | | | | 1952-1956 |
| | | | | ii. Diaries,
1889-1955
Arranged chronologicallyRichard B. Coolidge's diaries reflect his high school activities, Tufts
College life, business interests, hobbies, and family life, including his early
relationship with Ruth Dame Coolidge.
|
| Box 17 | Folder 17 | | | | | 1889 |
| Box 17 | Folder 18 | | | | | 1890 |
| Box 17 | Folder 19 | | | | | 1898-1901 |
| Box 17 | Folder 20 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1934 |
| Box 18 | Folder 1 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1935 |
| Box 18 | Folder 2 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1936 |
| Box 18 | Folder 3 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1938 |
| Box 18 | Folder 4 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1939 |
| Box 18 | Folder 5 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1940 |
| Box 18 | Folder 6 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1941 |
| Box 18 | Folder 7 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1942 |
| Box 19 | Folder 1 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1943 |
| Box 19 | Folder 2 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1944 |
| Box 19 | Folder 3 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1945 |
| Box 19 | Folder 4 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1946 |
| Box 19 | Folder 5 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1947 |
| Box 19 | Folder 6 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1948 |
| Box 19 | Folder 7 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1949 |
| Box 19 | Folder 8 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1950 |
| Box 19 | Folder 9 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1951 |
| Box 19 | Folder 10 | | | | | Loose pages from daybook/diary,
1951 |
| Box 20 | Folder 1 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1952 |
| Box 20 | Folder 2 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1953 |
| Box 20 | Folder 3 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1954 |
| Box 20 | Folder 4 | | | | | Diary entries,
1954 |
| Box 20 | Folder 5 | | | | | Daybook/diary,
1955 |
| | | | | iii. Writings and notes,
1890-1952
Arranged alphabetically by folder titleThe writings and notes of Richard B. Coolidge include schoolwork from his
Ocean Street Grammar School, Westbrook Seminary, Tufts College, and Harvard Law
School education; humorous pieces; addresses; poems; and essays and notes on
law, the culture and news of the day, and Massachusetts and world history.
|
| Box 20 | Folder 6 | | | | | Addresses,
1931-1944 |
| Box 20 | Folder 7 | | | | | Biography of Preow, personality of Preow, and fragments from the
memoirs of Preow,
ca. 1910 |
| Box 20 | Folder 8 | | | | | College themes,
1900-1902 |
| Box 20 | Folder 9 | | | | | Elder Waters' successor,
1901 |
| Box 20 | Folders 10-11 | | | | | Grade school tests, math and geography,
1890-1892 |
| Box 20 | Folders 12-13 | | | | | Grade school tests, spelling, language and grammar,
1890-1893 |
| Box 20 | Folder 14 | | | | | Grammar school poem,
1894 |
| Box 20 | Folder 15 | | | | | Great War essay,
n.d. |
| Box 20 | Folder 16 | | | | | Historical notes,
n.d. |
| Box 20 | Folders 17-18 | | | | | History of Massachusetts and Medford notes,
n.d. |
| Box 20 | Folders 19-22 | | | | | Legal notes,
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 1 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 2 | | | | | Nantucket essays and notes,
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 3 | | | | | "New Man "
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 4 | | | | | Notes,
1949-52 |
| Box 21 | Folder 5 | | | | | "Olympic Hero at Colburn Hill,"
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 6 | | | | | Poems and short pieces,
1903 |
| Box 21 | Folder 7 | | | | | Post World War I Europe,
ca. 1930-1935 |
| Box 21 | Folder 8 | | | | | Shifting engine plays a new game,
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 9 | | | | | Some aspects of the American Newspaper Guild,
ca. 1950 |
| Box 21 | Folder 10 | | | | | Some idiosyncrasies of the law,
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 11 | | | | | "Something of a Dr. Johnson,"
n.d. |
| Box 21 | Folder 12 | | | | | "Valedictory," Tufts College,
1903 |
| Box 21 | Folder 13 | | | | | "Walnut Tree Hill,"
1942 |
| Box 21 | Folder 14 | | | | | "William Riley French" and "When Aubrey Wed,"
n.d. |
| | | | | iv. Printed material,
1893-1957 |
| | | | | | a. Ephemera,
1893-1957
Arranged chronologically and by subject.Richard B. Coolidge's ephemera includes printed material from his education
and alumni participation with the Ocean Street Grammar School, Westbrook
Seminary, Tufts College, and Harvard Law School. It also includes pamphlets,
writings, and programs related to Medford, Richard's participation in local
clubs, his trip to Europe, and his death.
|
| Box 21 | Folder 15 | | | | | | Ocean Street Grammar School Savings Society receipts,
1893-1894 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Ocean Street Grammar School certificate,
1894 |
| Box 21 | Folder 16 | | | | | | Westbrook Seminary report cards,
1894-1898 |
| Box 21 | Folders 17-18 | | | | | | Westbrook Seminary,
1895-1898 |
| Box 21 | Folder 19 | | | | | | Trip to Europe,
1902 |
| Box 21 | Folder 20 | | | | | | Harvard Law School ephemera,
1903-1909 |
| Box 21 | Folder 21 | | | | | | Medford,
1903-1955 |
| Box 21 | Folder 22 | | | | | | Harvard Law School report cards and bills,
1904-1906 |
| Box OS 1 | Folder OF 3 | | | | | | Harvard Law School diploma,
1906 |
| Box 21 | Folders 23-25 | | | | | | Harvard Law School Class of 1906 alumni booklets,
1922-1956 |
| Box 21 | Folder 26 | | | | | | Club Participation,
1940-1952 |
| Box 21 | Folder 27 | | | | | | Tufts College Alumni,
1952-1956 |
| Box 21 | Folder 28 | | | | | | Richard B. Coolidge memorial service,
1957 |
| Box 21 | Folder 29 | | | | | | Tributes upon death,
1957 |
| Box 21 | Folders 30-31 | | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1898-1956 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Historic Medford prints,
n.d. |
| | | | | | b. Clippings,
1898-1957
Arranged chronologically and by subject.Richard B. Coolidge's clippings include articles related to Tufts College,
the Lawrence Light Guard, Medford, and history. Clippings also include articles
related to Richard's life, such as his passing of the bar exam, marriage, and
death. Published stories written by Richard are also located in this
subseries.
|
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Tufts College,
1898-1902 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | | | "Maine Forts" and other Portland stories written by Richard
Coolidge,
1903-1908 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Bar exam article,
1906 |
| Box 21 | Folder 32 | | | | | | Marriage announcement,
1908 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Historical,
1916-1935 |
| Box 21 | Folder 33 | | | | | | Medford,
1930-1955 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Medford,
1930-1955 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Lawrence Light Guard,
1934 |
| Box 21 | Folder 34 | | | | | | Obituaries,
1957 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Obituaries,
1957 |
| | | | | v. Miscellaneous,
ca. 1900-1957
Arranged chronologically.Miscellaneous personal papers include a sketch by Richard, stamps,
genealogical material, and notes and correspondence related to the family's
Hinckley Lane property and the inheritance of family furniture.
|
| Box 22 | Folder 1 | | | | | Sketch,
ca. 1900 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | Sketch of Richard,
1929 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | Voting tally,
1930 |
| Box 22 | Folders 2-3 | | | | | Hinckley Lane notes and correspondence,
1952-53 |
| Box 22 | Folder 4 | | | | | Furniture dispersal per wills, notes, and correspondence,
1957 |
| Box 22 | Folder 5 | | | | | Bradford/Coolidge genealogical materials,
n.d. |
| Box 22 | Folder 6 | | | | | Stamps,
n.d. |
| Box 22 | Folder 7 | | | | | Hastings Lane property notes,
n.d. |
| | | | B. Financial and legal papers,
1887-1957 |
| Box 22 | Folders 8-27 | | | | i. Financial correspondence,
1903-1957
Arranged chronologically.The financial correspondence of Richard B. Coolidge primarily concerns his
legal career with the firm of French and Curtiss and his everyday financial
transactions. Also included here is correspondence related to Richard's work as
a trustee of Tufts College and his correspondence with nurse Maribel Gibbs
about the care of his aunt Flora Bradford Coolidge. In addition, there are
letters regarding Richard's attempts to sell an article and photographs by his
son William B. (Brad) Coolidge about his experience in Japan. Copies of Brad's
article and photographs are enclosed with these letters.
|
| | | | | ii. Olive Dame Campbell and John C. Campbell Folk School papers,
1919-1956
Arranged chronologically and by record type.The papers of Olive Dame Campbell and the John C. Campbell Folk School
consist of Richard B. Coolidge's correspondence and accounts related to his
sister-in-law Olive Dame Campbell and the administration of the John C.
Campbell Folk School founded by her husband in Brasstown, North Carolina.
Richard was a member of the Folk School's Board of Directors. He provided
financial, legal, and administrative advice to Olive and the Folk School.
Included in these papers is Olive's will and correspondence on the creation of
a fund in her honor at the Folk School.
|
| Box 22 | Folders 28-30 | | | | | Correspondence,
1925-1956 |
| Box 23 | Folder 1 | | | | | Account book,
1919-1942 |
| Box 23 | Folders 2-3 | | | | | Accounts,
1936-1949 |
| Box 23 | Folders 4-9 | | | | iii. Legal papers,
1926-1953
Arranged chronologically.Richard B. Coolidge's legal papers concern the estates of his mother Lucy
French Coolidge and father Merrit B. Coolidge (1839-1926), and related
mortgages. The papers also include Richard's birth certificate.
|
| | | | | iv. Volumes,
1890-1942
Arranged chronologically.Legal and financial volumes include a case docket and notebook on probate
and estate cases from Richard B. Coolidge's career with the law firm of French
and Curtiss.
|
| Box 67 | | Volume 4 | | | | Probate/Estate Information,
1890-1920 |
| Box 23 | Folder 10 | | | | | Account book,
1901-1926 |
| Box 23 | Folder 11 | | | | | All cases docket,
1915-1931 |
| Box 67 | | Volume 5 | | | | Ledger,
1936-1942 |
| Box 67 | | Volume 6 | | | | Individual and business profiles,
n.d. |
| | | | | v. Printed material,
1887-1952
Arranged chronologically and by subject.Richard B. Coolidge's financial and legal printed material includes checks,
a checkbook, Richard's notary public certificate, and pamphlets and other
material from Richard's career with law firm French and Curtiss and the First
National Bank in Medford.
|
| Box 23 | Folder 12 | | | | | Legal practice,
1907-1952 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 4 | | | | | Notary public certificate,
1928 |
| Box 23 | Folder 13 | | | | | First National Bank in Medford,
1933-1939 |
| Box 23 | Folder 14 | | | | | Checks and checkbook,
1936-1943 |
| Box 23 | Folder 15 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1887-1926 |
| | | | C. Political material,
1912-1950 |
| | | | | i. Mayoral papers,
1920-1926
Arranged chronologically and by record type.Richard B. Coolidge's mayoral papers include correspondence with
constituents and other politicians, documents nominating him as Medford's
mayor, and demographic figures on Medford. See also (iii)
Writings and (iv) Printed material in this series.
|
| Box 23 | Folder 16 | | | | | Correspondence,
1920-1925 |
| Box 23 | Folder 17 | | | | | Nomination papers,
1924 |
| Box 23 | Folder 18 | | | | | Medford recapitulation figures,
1926 |
| Box 23 | Folders 19-23 | | | | ii. Republican Finance Committee and Arthur Coolidge campaign
papers,
1950
Arranged chronologicallyRichard B. Coolidge's brother Arthur W. Coolidge was the unsuccessful
Republican candidate for Massachusetts governor in 1950. Included here is
material from Richard's campaign and correspondence with constituents and other
politicians.
|
| | | | | iii. Writings,
ca. 1913-1949
Arranged chronologicallyThe political writings of Richard B. Coolidge include his addresses and an
essay on a local politician, as well as material on the Progressive party under
which Richard ran for the state legislature.
|
| Box 24 | Folder 1 | | | | | Mr. Prime (politician) essay and notes,
ca. 1913 |
| Box 24 | Folder 2 | | | | | Progressive party,
1914 |
| Box 24 | Folder 3 | | | | | Non-mayoral political addresses,
ca. 1920-1929 |
| Box 24 | Folders 4-13 | | | | | Mayoral address binder,
1922-1926 |
| Box 24 | Folders 14-16 | | | | | Mayoral addresses,
1923-1926 |
| Box 24 | Folder 17 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1922-1949 |
| Box 24 | Folder 18 | | | | | Incomplete addresses,
n.d. |
| | | | | iv. Printed material,
1912-1950
Richard B. Coolidge's political printed material reflects his Medford
mayoral terms and campaigns and his campaign for the state legislature as a
Progressive party candidate. There is also material from Arthur W. Coolidge's
campaign for governor of Massachusetts. Material includes postcards, printed
addresses, pamphlets, posters, campaign cards, and clippings
|
| | | | | | a. Ephemera,
ca. 1912-1950
Arranged chronologically. |
| Box 24 | Folder 19 | | | | | | Progressive party campaign postcards, "Vote for Richard B.
Coolidge,"
ca. 1912-1914 |
| Box 24 | Folder 20 | | | | | | Miscellaneous mayoral items,
1920-1927 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 4 | | | | | | Miscellaneous committee posters,
1921-1927 |
| Box 24 | Folder 21 | | | | | | Pamphlet, Inaugural Address of Mayor Richard
B. Coolidge,
1923 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Mayoral campaign posters and literature, "Re-Elect Coolidge,"
1924 |
| Box 24 | Folder 22 | | | | | | Pamphlet, Inaugural Address of Hon. Richard
B. Coolidge,1925 |
| Box 24 | Folder 23 | | | | | | Pamphlet, Medford Historical
Register,
1925 |
| Box 24 | Folder 24 | | | | | | Pamphlet, Inaugural Address of Hon. Richard
B. Coolidge,
1926 |
| Box 24 | Folder 25 | | | | | | 8th District delegate campaign card,
1928 |
| Box 24 | Folder 26 | | | | | | Republican Finance Committee and Arthur Coolidge campaign,
1950 |
| | | | | | b. Clippings,
1920-1939
Richard B. Coolidge's clippings cover his political career, including his
Medford mayoral terms and his campaigns for Medford mayor and the state
legislature.
|
| Box 24 | Folder 27 | | | | | | Legislative and mayoral clippings,
1920-1926 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Mayoral clippings,
1922-1926 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 5 | | | | | | "Draft Coolidge for US Senate,"
1939 |
|
|
| | | IV. Ruth Dame Coolidge papers,
1890-1957
This series contains material related to Ruth Dame Coolidge's experiences at
Tufts College, her life-long interest in local history and writing, and her
family life. Ruth's correspondence includes family correspondence, letters of
recommendation, and engagement congratulations. Her personal papers contain
Dame genealogical items, poems, papers on the Dame and Smith estates,
obituaries, and Coolidge family artwork. This series also includes several
diaries, Tufts College essays, a poem, Ruth's "Recollections of Lorin L. Dame
and Isabel A. Dame," dance cards, holiday cards, calling cards, invitations,
Tufts College clippings, and obituaries
A writer and historian, Ruth penned many articles, essays, plays and
pageants that are included in this series. Her poems and essays published in
The Tuftonian, Tufts' literary magazine, are found
in Series III - Richard B. Coolidge papers.
During her last years of high school and her years at Tufts College from
1898 to 1902, Ruth created several scrapbooks of dance cards, letters, pressed
flowers, playbills, clippings, and photographs, which are also found in this
series.
|
| | | | A. Correspondence,
1897-1951
Arranged chronologically.This subseries includes Ruth Dame Coolidge's family correspondence with
sister Olive Dame Campbell, daughter Ruth (June) Coolidge Cary, son William
B.(Brad) Coolidge, daughter-in-law Jean Thoits Coolidge, daughter Olive
Coolidge Butman, and son-in-law Robert C. Butman. The bulk of the letters
discuss family news and activities. Other correspondence includes letters of
recommendation and engagement congratulations.
Correspondence with husband Richard B. Coolidge may
be found in Series III.A. - Richard B. Coolidge, Personal papers.
Correspondence addressed to both Ruth and her husband is filed here.
|
| Box 24 | Folders 28-35 | | | | 1897-1906 |
| Box 25 | Folders 1-19 | | | | 1907-1951 |
| | | | B. Personal papers,
1895-1951
Arranged chronologically and by subject.This subseries contains Ruth Dame Coolidge's family genealogical material,
poems, papers on the Dame and Smith estates, obituaries, and Coolidge family
artwork. The collection of Dame genealogical papers includes letters by Lorin
L. Dame, Olive Dame Campbell, and Ruth herself, as well as a marriage
certificate. The Dame and Smith estates papers relate to the inheritance of
family furniture and include a will.
|
| Box 25 | Folders 20-21 | | | | Dame genealogical items,
1895-1903 |
| Box 25 | Folder 22 | | | | Poem and photograph,
1905 |
| Box 25 | Folder 23 | | | | Wedding poem for Richard and Ruth Coolidge,
ca. 1908 |
| Box 25 | Folder 24 | | | | Family tree of Richard B. and Ruth Dame Coolidge,
1908 |
| Box 25 | Folder 25 | | | | Dame and Smith estates,
1932-1940 |
| Box 25 | Folder 26 | | | | Shakespeare Club list of plays read,
1937-1957 |
| Box 25 | Folder 27 | | | | Memorial service and obituary,
1951 |
| Box 25 | Folder 28 | | | | Poems,
n.d. |
| Box 25 | Folder 29 | | | | Calling cards,
n.d. |
| Box 25 | Folder 30 | | | | Coolidge family art work,
n.d. |
| Box 25 | Folder 31 | | | | Miscellaneous,
1911-1944 |
| | | | C. Diaries,
1895-1934
Arranged chronologically.This sub-series contains several diaries written by Ruth Dame Coolidge
concerning family, school, and social life. The 1896 diary was written during a
summer trip to Nantucket, Mass., the 1906 diary was written during Ruth's
travels to Great Britain and France, and the ca. 1933 diary was written during
Ruth's travels to Denmark.
|
| Box 25 | Folder 32 | | | | Diary,
1895 |
| Box 25 | Folder 33 | | | | Diary,
1896 |
| Box 26 | Folder 1 | | | | Travel diary,
1906 |
| Box 26 | Folder 2 | | | | Travel diary,
ca. 1933-1934 |
| | | | D. Writings,
1898-1951
Arranged alphabetically by folder title.This subseries includes Ruth Dame Coolidge's Tufts College essays, a poem,
and her "Recollections of Lorin L. Dame and Isabel A. Dame."
|
| Box 26 | Folders 3-6 | | | | College themes,
1898-1902 |
| Box 26 | Folder 7 | | | | "Piebald Pome,"
n.d. |
| Box 26 | Folder 8 | | | | "Recollections of Lorin L. Dame and Isabel A. Dame,"
ca. 1950-1951 |
| Box 26 | Folder 9 | | | | Writings, on CD-ROM (originals mold damaged),
n.d. |
| Box 26 | Folder 10 | | | | Miscellaneous,
n.d. |
| | | | E. Printed material,
1896-1957 |
| | | | | i. Ephemera,
1896-1957
Arranged chronologically and by subject.Ruth Dame Coolidge's ephemera includes many of her printed articles, essays,
plays and pageants. The majority of her pieces discuss New England and Medford
history during the colonial period. Many stem from her involvement with the
Medford Historical Society and the Royall House Association. Ruth wrote two
pageants depicting Medford's role in the Revolutionary War,
The Pageant of the Royall House and
The Pageant of the Mystic. Other material includes
dance cards, holiday cards, calling cards, and invitations. The "Coolidge
family World War II materials" folder holds ration books and a Red Cross
certificate.
|
| Box 26 | Folder 11 | | | | | Medford history materials,
1896-1944 |
| Box 26 | Folder 12 | | | | | Dance cards,
1897-1902 |
| Box 26 | Folder 13 | | | | | Legal and financial,
1898-1942 |
| Box 26 | Folder 14 | | | | | Calling cards and invitations,
1908-1952 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Pageant of the Royall House..., words
by Ruth D. Coolidge,
1915 |
| Box 26 | Folder 15 | | | | | Royall House,
1915-1952 |
| Box 26 | Folder 16 | | | | | Program, "The Reading Club of West Medford,"
1928-1929 |
| Box 26 | Folder 17 | | | | | Ruth D. Coolidge, Pageant of the
Mystic, 1930 |
| Box 26 | Folder 18 | | | | | Massachusetts history materials, 1930-1952 |
| Box 26 | Folder 19 | | | | | Ruth D. Coolidge, ed. Round about Middlesex
Fells,
1935 Includes Ruth Coolidge's article "A Foot Through the Fells"
|
| Box 27 | Folder 1 | | | | | Historical Register,
1933-1938 Includes Ruth Coolidge's play "President Washington Visits General Brooks"
and article "Simon Tufts the Third, Merchant of India."
|
| Box 27 | Folder 2 | | | | | Holiday cards,
1938 |
| Box 27 | Folder 3 | | | | | Nantucket,
1941-1949 |
| Box 27 | Folder 4 | | | | | Coolidge family World War II materials,
1942-1944 |
| Box 27 | Folder 5 | | | | | Vibrations from a Danish Bell; the John C.
Campbell Folk School,
1945 |
| Box 27 | Folder 6 | | | | | Folded Wings,
1947 |
| Box 27 | Folder 7 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1900-1957 |
| | | | | ii. Clippings,
1902-1951
Arranged chronologically.Ruth D. Coolidge's clippings include articles related to Tufts College and
obituaries.
|
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Tufts College,
1902-1903 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Tufts College article, Leslie's Weekly,
1902 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | "Little Rebel of the Lexington Road," in Youth's Companion, and other articles,
1909-1912 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Miscellaneous articles by and about Ruth D. Coolidge,
1915 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Historical Society clippings,
1915-35 |
| Box 27 | Folder 8 | | | | | Obituaries and Historical Society clippings,
1937-1951 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 1 | | | | | Obituaries,
1951 |
| | | | F. Volumes,
1890-1951
Arranged chronologicallyRuth Dame Coolidge produced several scrapbooks during her last years of high
school and her years at Tufts College from 1898 to 1902. Made up of dance
cards, letters, pressed flowers, playbills, clippings and photographs, they
document the life of a Tufts College student. They illustrate the abundance of
campus activities, the rigors of academics, and the fraternity- and
sorority-based social world. Also included in this subseries are an autograph
album and a baby book Ruth kept about the childhood of William B. Coolidge.
There are also two notebooks, one about inheritance of furniture from the
family's Hastings Lane property, and one containing notes on the history of the
American Revolution.
|
| Box 27 | Folder 9 | | | | Autograph album,
1890-1895 |
| Box 27 | Folders 10-18 | | | | Scrapbook #1,
ca. 1894-1898 |
| Box 68 | | Volume 7 | | | Scrapbook #2,
1898-1900 |
| Box 68 | Folder 1 | | | | Loose items from scrapbook #2,
1898-1900 |
| Box 69 | | Volume 8 | | | Scrapbook #3,
ca. 1900-1901 |
| Box 69 | | Volume 9 | | | Scrapbook #4,
1901-1902 |
| Box 28 | Folder 1 | | | | Scrapbook #5, Tufts commencement,
1902 |
| Box 28 | Folders 2-3 | | | | Misc. loose items from scrapbooks,
ca. 1898-1902 |
| Box 66 | | Volume 10 | | | Baby book of William B. Coolidge,
1916-1920 |
| Box 66 | Folder 4 | | | | Loose material from baby book of William B. Coolidge,
1916-1920 |
| Box 28 | Folder 4 | | | | Notebook, furniture at Hastings Lane,
1951 |
| Box 28 | Folder 5 | | | | Notebook,
n.d. |
|
|
| | | V. Papers of descendants of Lorin L. and Nancy Isabel Arnold Dame,
1869-2008
This series consists of material related to Lorin and Isabel Dame's
children, grandchildren, and their families. Series are based on family unit or
individual and include: George Morgan Bacon and Isabel Dame Bacon family; Daisy
G. Dame; Harry M. Cary and Ruth (June) Coolidge Cary family; and Robert C. and
Olive Coolidge Butman family.
The Morgan and Isabel Dame Bacon family papers subseries contains family
correspondence, subject files, writings, printed material, and volumes. Barbara
Bacon McConnell's travel letters and essays make up the bulk of the
writings.
The Daisy G. Dame papers subseries includes correspondence from her trip
studying folk schools in Scandinavia, papers from her time establishing a
kindergarten in Oneida, Kentucky, other personal papers, ephemera, and
diaries.
The Harry M. and June Coolidge Cary family papers subseries contains
correspondence, personal papers, printed material, and volumes. Highlights
include correspondence from June's time living in Japan and the family
newspaper created by June and her siblings.
The Robert C. and Olive Coolidge Butman family papers subseries consists of
correspondence, personal papers, educational printed material, and volumes on
family travel.
|
| | | | A. George Morgan Bacon and Isabel Dame Bacon family papers,
1891-1997
This subseries includes correspondence, subject files, writings, printed
material, and volumes created by the family of Morgan and Isabel Dame Bacon.
Correspondents include Lorin L. Dame, Isabel Dame Bacon, Ruth Dame Coolidge,
Morgan Bacon, and Lois B. Bacon. Subject files primarily relate to legal
negotiation over family property and to Dame and Bacon genealogy. Writings
consist of pieces by Isabel Dame Bacon and Barbara Bacon McConnell's global
travel letters and essays. Printed material includes Isabel Dame Bacon's
wedding announcement, the birth announcement of Isabel L. Bacon, pamphlets
written by Morgan Bacon, and a memorial pamphlet about Isabel Dame Bacon.
Clippings relate to Isabel Dame Bacon's work with the Civic Center and Barbara
Bacon McConnell's Peace Corps service. Also here is a genealogical notebook on
the Dame and Bacon families.
|
| Box 28 | Folders 6-11 | | | | i. Correspondence,
1897-1972
Arranged chronologically. |
| | | | | ii. Subject files,
ca. 1917-1986
Arranged alphabetically. |
| Box 28 | Folders 12-13 | | | | | Amendments to Cachalot legal materials,
1966-1981 |
| Box 28 | Folders 14-16 | | | | | Cachalot and Bacon family,
1954-1986 |
| Box 28 | Folder 17 | | | | | Dame and Bacon genealogical materials,
ca. 1917 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | | Genealogy of the Dame and Bacon families,
n.d. |
| | | | | iii. Writings,
1904-1993
Arranged chronologically by author. |
| Box 28 | Folder 18 | | | | | Isabel D. Bacon, "One Summer in Finland,"
1904 |
| Box 28 | Folder 19 | | | | | Isabel D. Bacon, "The Catholicon,"
n.d. |
| Box 28 | Folder 20 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell, "The Dames,"
n.d. |
| Box 28 | Folder 21 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Soviet Union and
Europe,
1964-1965 |
| Box 28 | Folder 22 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, copies,
1964-1992 |
| Box 28 | Folder 23 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Mexico, Europe,
Middle East, Jamaica, Panama, Caribbean,
1971-1977 |
| Box 28 | Folder 24 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Greece, England,
Canada, Australia,
1983-1985 |
| Box 28 | Folder 25 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Tunisia, Europe,
China, Colorado,
1986-1988 |
| Box 28 | Folder 26 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Alaska, Toronto,
southwest U.S., Panama Canal cruise,
1989-1991 |
| Box 28 | Folder 27 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Norway, Lesser
Antilles, Florida, Costa Rica, California, Washington DC,
1992-1993 |
| Box 28 | Folder 28 | | | | | Barbara B. McConnell travel letters and essays, Portugal,
n.d. |
| Box 28 | Folder 29 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1913 |
| | | | | iv. Printed material,
1891-1997
Arranged chronologically and by record type. |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | | Ephemera,
1891-1917 |
| Box 28 | Folders 30-34 | | | | | Ephemera,
1893-1997 |
| Box 29 | Folders 1-2 | | | | | Clippings,
1930-1986 |
| Box 29 | Folders 3-6 | | | | v. Genealogy notebook,
ca. 1931 |
| | | | B. Daisy G. Dame papers,
1869-1932
Arranged chronologically and record type.Daisy G. Dame's correspondence includes letters to family from Daisy's
1922-1923 trip studying folk schools in Scandinavia with Olive Dame Campbell
and Marguerite Butler. Letters by Olive from this trip are also present here.
Personal papers contain letters and diaries from Daisy's 1909- 1910 trip to
help establish a kindergarten in the mountains of Kentucky at the Oneida
Institute. Other personal papers include a resume, genealogical material, and
legal material. This subseries also includes Daisy's diaries, which discuss her
trip to Great Britain and France in 1906, the 1922-1923 folk school trip, daily
social and family life, and her work.
|
| | | | | i. Correspondence,
1869-1930 |
| Box 29 | Folder 7 | | | | | 1869-1917 |
| Box 29 | Folders 8-22 | | | | | 1922-1923 Letters from Daisy Dame in Scandinavia to her family.
|
| Box 29 | Folder 23 | | | | | 1929-1930 |
| | | | | ii. Personal papers,
1903-1931 |
| Box 29 | Folders 24-28 | | | | | Genealogical correspondence and notes,
1903-1931 |
| Box 29 | Folders 29-30 | | | | | Letters and diary from Oneida, Kent.,
1909-1910 |
| Box 29 | Folder 31 | | | | | Resume,
1922 |
| Box 29 | Folder 32 | | | | | Will,
1930 |
| Box 29 | Folder 33 | | | | | Family furniture history,
n.d. |
| Box 29 | Folder 34 | | | | iii. Ephemera,
1900-1932 |
| | | | | iv. Diaries,
1906-1922 |
| Box 29 | Folder 35 | | | | | Diary, trip to Europe,
1906 |
| Box 30 | Folder 1 | | | | | Diary,
1911-1915 |
| Box 30 | Folder 2 | | | | | Diary, 1916-1922 |
| | | | C. Harry M. and Ruth (June) Coolidge Cary family papers,
1922-2006
Arranged chronologically and by record type.This subseries consists of correspondence, personal papers, printed
material, and volumes created by the family of Harry M. and June Coolidge Cary.
Correspondence primarily consists of June's letters to her family about living
in Japan. Some diary entries and writings are enclosed with the letters, which
concern married life, a Japanese friend named Sachi, June's teaching and
fashion endeavors, the war, and social life. Other correspondence includes
letters from Harry M. Cary to June's family, and letters from June's mother
Ruth Dame Coolidge, father Richard B. Coolidge, sister Olive Coolidge Butman,
and aunts. Letters between Ruth Dame Coolidge and the rest of the family about
her trip to visit June in Japan are also present.
Personal papers include the family newspaper created by June and her
siblings as children. It covers family news and activities, and includes
clippings on current events, comics, poems, illustrations, advice columns,
fiction, communications between family members, event programs, and magazine
clippings. Ephemera consists of woodblock print cards made by June for the John
C. Campbell Folk School and a poem by Richard Montfort Cary. June Cary's
notebook contains songs, poems, and sketches.
|
| Box 30 | Folders 3-27 | | | | i. Correspondence,
1928-2006 |
| | | | | ii. Personal papers,
1926-1930 |
| Box 31 | Folder 1 | | | | | Sketches, June Cary,
1926-30 |
| Box 31 | Folders 2-8 | | | | | Family newspaper, ed. June Cary,
1929 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | | Pencil sketch of Priscilla Bacon Gans,
ca. 1929 |
| Box 31 | Folder 9 | | | | | Dame genealogical materials,
n.d. |
| | | | | iii. Printed material,
1935-2006 |
| Box 31 | Folder 10 | | | | | Ephemera,
ca. 1940-1970 |
| Box 31 | Folders 11-12 | | | | | Clippings,
1935-2006 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | | Clippings,
2006 |
| Box 31 | Folder 13 | | | | iv. June Cary notebook,
1922-1926 |
| | | | D. Robert C. and Olive Coolidge Butman family papers,
1924-2008
Arranged chronologically and by record type.This subseries consists of correspondence, personal papers, printed
material, and volumes created by the family of Robert C. and Olive Coolidge
Butman. Correspondence includes letters to Olive, including sympathy letters
upon the death of her father Richard B. Coolidge. Legal papers concern the
estates of Olive Dame Campbell, Richard B. Coolidge, and Ruth Dame Coolidge.
Printed material relates to the family's education at Brooks School, Hobbs
Junior High School, and Medford High School. Volumes cover family travel to
Brasstown, North Carolina, and to the American West, including Ohio,
California, Nevada, and Washington.
|
| | | | | i. Correspondence,
1935-1958 |
| Box 31 | Folders 14-15 | | | | | 1935-1956 |
| Box 31 | Folders 16-21 | | | | | Sympathy cards and letters,
1957 |
| Box 31 | Folders 22-23 | | | | | 1957-1958 |
| | | | | ii. Personal papers,
1955-1968 |
| Box 31 | Folders 24-31 | | | | | Legal papers,
1955-1968 |
| Box 31 | Folder 32 | | | | | Compositions,
n.d. |
| | | | | iii. Printed material,
1929-2008 |
| | | | | | a. Ephemera, 1929-2008 |
| Box 31 | Folder 33 | | | | | | Brooks School material,
1929-1931 |
| Box 31 | Folder 34 | | | | | | Hobbs Junior High School pamphlet and program,
1932-1934 |
| Box 31 | Folder 35 | | | | | | Medford High School material,
1936-1937 |
| Box 31 | Folder 36 | | | | | | Miscellaneous ephemera,
1936-2008 |
| | | | | | b. Clippings,
1933-2008 |
| Box 31 | Folder 37 | | | | | | Hobbs Junior High School theater,
1933 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | | | Olive Coolidge Butman,
1964 |
| Box 31 | Folder 38 | | | | | | Olive Coolidge Butman obituary,
2008 |
| | | | | iv. Volumes,
1924-1936 |
| Box 32 | Folder 1 | | | | | Trip logs, Coolidge family trips to Brasstown, North Carolina,
1924-1935 |
| Box 32 | Folder 2 | | | | | Autograph book,
1931-1933 |
| Box 32 | Folder 3 | | | | | Trip log, American West,
1936 |
|
|
| | | VI. Papers of families related to Richard B. Coolidge,
1810-2000
This series contains the papers of relatives of Richard B. Coolidge.
Material is divided into four sub-series: Bradford family; Coolidge family;
French family; and Miscellaneous papers. These sub-series include papers
relating to the following individuals and their families: Benjamin F. Bradford,
Martha Bisbee Bradford, Hannah Bradford, Philip Bradford, Lucy Greenwood
Bradford, Betsy Richardson Bradford, William Bradford, Martha Bradford Locke,
Arthur William Coolidge, Mabel Tilton Coolidge, Flora Bradford Coolidge, Henry
Franklin Coolidge, Elizabeth Willard Coolidge, Penelope Willard Coolidge, Flora
Chandler Coolidge, Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1806-1863), Lucy French Coolidge,
Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1839-1926), Sarah Albina Coolidge, Arthur Philip
French, Marcia Bradford French, William Bradford French, Elizabeth Dennis
French, William Riley French, Mary Elizabeth French Herms, and Emil Herms.
Included in this series are correspondence, personal and legal papers,
ephemera, and clippings. The Coolidge family subseries contains several notable
diaries, business papers, political papers, and writings. Much of the series'
material documents aspects of the Universalist Church in Maine and Universalist
institutions such as Westbrook Seminary in Deering, Maine and Tufts College in
Medford, Mass. The account books, articles, and notebooks of William R. French
illustrate the life of a Universalist minister and the operations of his
various congregations in Turner Center, Maine and nearby towns and cities.
The series contains much material relating to Tufts College. Five years
after the founding of Tufts, Richard B. Coolidge's father, Merrit, attended the
college. Merrit kept a journal from 1857 to 1860, documenting some of his
experiences. Thirty-eight years later, in 1898, Richard became a Tufts student.
Four years of correspondence to his parents while at Tufts provide a lively
account of life on campus. A large number of Coolidge family members attended
Tufts including William B. French, Arthur P. French, Arthur W. Coolidge, and
William B. Coolidge.
The miscellaneous papers sub-series contains papers clearly related to the
Bradford, Coolidge and French families, but not to a specific individual or
family unit.
|
| | | | A. Bradford family papers,
1839-1906
The Bradford family subseries consists of material related to the Benjamin
F. Bradford family (including wife Martha Bisbee Bradford); Hannah Bradford;
Philip Bradford family (including wives Lucy Greenwood Bradford and Betsy
Richardson Bradford); William Bradford; and Martha Bradford Locke. The
subseries contains correspondence, legal papers such as wills, and clippings,
mainly obituaries.
|
| | | | | i. Benjamin F. Bradford family papers,
1839-1865
Arranged chronologically and by record type. |
| | | | | | a. Correspondence,
1839-1850 |
| Box 32 | Folders 4-5 | | | | | | Letters to Benjamin Bradford, Jr.,
1839-1850 |
| Box 32 | Folder 6 | | | | | | Letters to Franklin Bradford,
1841-1842 |
| Box 32 | Folder 7 | | | | | | Letters to Henry Bradford,
1841-1844 |
| Box 32 | Folder 8 | | | | | b. Personal papers,
1857-1865 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 4 | | | | | c. Legal documents,
n.d. |
| | | | | ii. Hannah Bradford papers,
1863 |
| Box 32 | Folder 9 | | | | | Will of Nancy Hanson,
1863 |
| | | | | iii. Philip Bradford family papers,
1879-1906 |
| Box 32 | Folders 10-11 | | | | | Letters from William B. French,
1896-1906 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 3 | | | | | Clippings-obituary of Charles E. Bradford,
1879 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 3 | | | | iv. Martha Bradford Locke obituary (clipping),
1896 |
| OS Box 1 | Folder 4 | | | | v. William Bradford clippings,
1920 |
| | | | B. Coolidge family papers,
1810-1995
The Coolidge family subseries consists of material related to the Arthur
William Coolidge family (including wife Mabel Tilton Coolidge); Flora Bradford
Coolidge; Henry Franklin Coolidge family (including wives Elizabeth Willard
Coolidge and Penelope Willard Coolidge); Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1839-1926)
family (including wife Lucy French Coolidge); Merrit Bradford Coolidge
(1806-1863) family (including wife Flora Chandler Coolidge); and Sarah Albina
Coolidge.
The subseries includes correspondence, personal papers, and printed
material. Notable Arthur W. and Mabel Tilton Coolidge family material includes
ephemera related to Arthur's political career and Arthur's account book. Flora
Bradford Coolidge's papers include family correspondence and a detailed diary
that covers politics, the effects of war, and social and daily life. The Henry
F. Coolidge family papers primarily relate to Henry's wholesale groceries and
provisions business with his brother Merrit B. Coolidge (1839-1926). The Merrit
B. (1839-1926) and Lucy French Coolidge family papers include Lucy's writings
and Merrit's diary, which chronicles his Tufts College education as well as
family and daily life. The Merrit B. (1806-1863) and Flora Chandler Coolidge
family papers contain business and legal papers related to Merrit's Maine
mercantile partnership, textile manufacturing business, and wholesale grocery
partnership. Flora's thoughtful diary details the everyday life of a mother and
wife.
|
| | | | | i. Arthur William Coolidge family papers,
1898-1995
Arranged chronologically and by record type.This subseries includes correspondence to Arthur from Richard B. Coolidge,
ephemera related to Arthur's political career, clippings, and Arthur's account
book.
|
| Box 32 | Folder 12 | | | | | a. Correspondence,
1898-1902
Letters to Arthur W. Coolidge from Richard B. Coolidge
|
| | | | | | b. Printed material,
1910-1995 |
| Box 32 | Folder 13 | | | | | | Cards and invitations,
1910 |
| Box 32 | Folder 14 | | | | | | Political profile of Arthur W. Coolidge, ca.
1940-1949 |
| Box 32 | Folder 15 | | | | | | Arthur W. Coolidge governor's campaign papers,
1950 |
| Box 32 | Folder 16 | | | | | | Arthur W. Coolidge memorial,
1952 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 4 | | | | | | Clippings,
1950-1975 |
| Box 32 | Folder 17 | | | | | | Clippings,
1952-1995 |
| Box 32 | Folder 18 | | | | | c. Arthur W. Coolidge account book,
1899-1902 |
| | | | | ii. Flora Bradford Coolidge papers,
1854-1946
Arranged chronologically and by record type.Flora Bradford Coolidge's papers include family correspondence, printed
material, and volumes. Much of the early correspondence is with Bradford family
members living in Minnesota and with other family members. Correspondence also
includes congratulations on Flora's hundredth birthday. Ephemera includes
financial material such as receipts, a high school merit certificate, and a
ration book. Volumes include a friendship book and a five-year diary detailing
politics of the day, the effects of war, social life and club activity, and
daily life activities such as church attendance and washing clothes.
|
| | | | | | a. Correspondence,
1862-1945 |
| Box 32 | Folders 19-20 | | | | | | Letters from Bradford family,
1862-1896 |
| Box 32 | Folders 21-22 | | | | | | General correspondence,
1869-1903 |
| Box 32 | Folders 23-26 | | | | | | Letters from Richard B. Coolidge,
1898-1940 |
| Box 32 | Folder 27 | | | | | | Letters from Arthur W. Coolidge,
1908-1928 |
| Box 32 | Folder 28 | | | | | | Letters from Ruth Dame Coolidge,
1908-1944 |
| Box 32 | Folder 29 | | | | | | Letters from Olive Coolidge Butman,
1936-1944 |
| Box 32 | Folder 30 | | | | | | Letters from William B. and Jean Thoits Coolidge,
1940-1945 |
| Box 32 | Folder 31 | | | | | | 100th birthday letters and cards,
1941 |
| Box 32 | Folder 32 | | | | | | Letters from June Coolidge Cary,
1942-1943 |
| | | | | | b. Printed material,
ca. 1859-1944 |
| Box 33 | Folder 1 | | | | | | Ephemera,
ca. 1859-1944 |
| Box 33 | Folder 2 | | | | | | Clippings,
1902-1946 |
| | | | | | c. Volumes,
1854-1919 |
| Box 33 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Friendship booklet,
1854 |
| Box 33 | Folders 4-5 | | | | | | Autograph album,
1857-1884 |
| Box 33 | Folder 6 | | | | | | Five-year diary,
1914-1919 |
| | | | | iii. Henry Franklin Coolidge family papers,
1857-1879
The Henry F. Coolidge family papers consist of personal papers, real estate
documents, accounts, and legal papers relating to Henry's wholesale grocery and
provisions business with his brother Merrit B. Coolidge (1839-1926). Also here
are Penelope Willard Coolidge's accounts.
|
| Box 33 | Folder 7 | | | | | Real estate and legal papers,
1857-1879 |
| Box 33 | Folder 8 | | | | | Penelope W. Coolidge accounts,
n.d. |
| | | | | iv. Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1839-1926) family papers,
1810-1940
Arranged chronologically and by record type.The Merrit B. Coolidge (1839-1926) family papers include family
correspondence, personal papers, the writings of Merrit's wife, Lucy French
Coolidge, printed material, and Merrit's diary. Personal papers include real
estate documents and a poem and painting by Lucy. Ephemera includes Westbrook
Seminary anniversary exercises programs and notes, Maine teacher's
certificates, a marriage certificate, receipts, and a eulogy for Lucy. Merrit's
diary chronicles his Tufts College education and covers college activities such
as classes and fraternity life, family news, politics, and travel.
|
| | | | | | a. Correspondence,
1866-1939 |
| Box 33 | Folders 9-12 | | | | | | Letters to Lucy French Coolidge,
1866-1911 |
| Box 33 | Folder 13 | | | | | | Letters to Merrit B. Coolidge,
1895-1913 |
| Box 33 | Folders 14-26 | | | | | | Letters from Richard B. Coolidge,
1898-1901 |
| Box 34 | Folders 1-27 | | | | | | Letters from Richard B. Coolidge,
1902-1909 |
| Box 34 | Folder 28 | | | | | | Letters from Ruth Dame Coolidge,
1908-1911 |
| Box 34 | Folder 29 | | | | | | Postcards to Lucy French Coolidge from Ruth Dame Coolidge,
1918-1939 |
| Box 34 | Folder 30 | | | | | | Miscellaneous correspondence,
1879 |
| | | | | | b. Personal papers,
ca. 1810-1919 |
| Box 34 | Folder 31 | | | | | | Alexander Greenwood genealogy,
ca. 1810 |
| Box 34 | Folder 32 | | | | | | Warranty deeds,
1891 |
| Box 34 | Folder 33 | | | | | | Agreement of sale for real estate,
1919 |
| | | | | | c. Lucy French Coolidge writings, ca. 1870-1871 |
| Box 34 | Folder 34 | | | | | | Poem and painting,
ca. 1870 |
| Box 35 | Folder 1 | | | | | | Collected poems,
1871 |
| Box 35 | Folder 2 | | | | | | Writings, n.d. |
| | | | | | d. Printed material,
1865-1940 |
| Box 35 | Folders 3-4 | | | | | | Ephemera,
1865-1940 |
| Box 35 | Folder 5 | | | | | | Lucy French Coolidge clippings,
1897-1939 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 4 | | | | | | Lucy French Coolidge clippings,
1934-1937 |
| Box 35 | Folder 6 | | | | | e. Merrit B. Coolidge diary,
1857-1860 |
| | | | | v. Merrit Bradford Coolidge (1806-1863) family papers,
1837-1870
The Merrit B. Coolidge (1806-1863) family papers include correspondence,
business and legal papers, and the diary of Merrit's wife, Flora Chandler
Coolidge. Business and legal papers relate to Merrit's partnerships with his
brother Jefferson, including a Maine mercantile business, textile manufacturing
business, and wholesale grocery. Flora's diary details the everyday life of a
mother and wife, and includes mentions of presidential elections, her sons'
schooling, her social life and sewing circle, and her feelings about
motherhood. It also includes a clipping and letter from Henry F. Coolidge to
Merrit.
|
| Box 35 | Folder 7 | | | | | Letters to Flora Chandler Coolidge,
1862-1870 |
| Box 35 | Folders 8-9 | | | | | Business and legal papers,
1837-1854 |
| Box 35 | Folder 10 | | | | | Flora Chandler Coolidge diary,
1844-1846 |
| Box 35 | Folder 11 | | | | vi. Sarah Albina Coolidge papers,
1898-1900
Sarah A. Coolidge's papers include a letter from Richard B. Coolidge,
obituary, and undertaker's bill.
|
| | | | C. French family papers,
1821-1945
This series includes the papers of Arthur Philip French; the William
Bradford French family (including wife Elizabeth Dennis French); the William
Riley French family (including wife Marcia Bradford French); and the Elizabeth
French Herms family (including husband Emil Herms).
|
| Box 35 | Folder 12 | | | | i. Arthur Philip French ephemera,
1866-1873
This subseries consists of Arthur P. French's Bowdoin College and Tufts
College educational ephemera such as grades, matriculation records, and
bills.
|
| | | | | ii. William Bradford French family papers,
1892-1904
Arranged chronologically and by record type.Material relating to the William B. and Elizabeth Dennis French family
includes correspondence, printed material, and William's personal account
books. Correspondence consists of letters to William B. French, primarily from
Penelope French Coolidge. Ephemera includes material from William's
education.
|
| Box 35 | Folders 13-16 | | | | | Correspondence,
1892-1904 |
| Box 35 | Folders 17-19 | | | | | Personal papers,
1901-1903 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 3 | | | | | Tufts University diploma,
ca. 1870 |
| Box 35 | Folders 20-21 | | | | | William B. French account books,
1883-1884 |
| | | | | iii. William Riley French family papers,
1821-1918
Arranged chronologically and by record type.Material relating to the William R. and Marcia Bradford French family
includes correspondence, genealogical material, clippings, and volumes.
Correspondence includes birthday congratulations to William, letters
recommending him as a teacher, and letters concerning his appointment to the
Advisory Council on Religious Congresses. Clippings include the obituaries of
Marcia (1884) and William (1893). Volumes consist of writings on the history of
Turner, Maine and account books from William's work as a First Universalist
Society minister.
|
| | | | | | a. Correspondence,
1821-1893 |
| Box 35 | Folder 22 | | | | | | 1821-1878 |
| Box 35 | Folder 23 | | | | | | Letters to Marcia Bradford French,
1841 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Letter of appreciation to William R. French,
1887 |
| Box 35 | Folder 24 | | | | | | Letters from Merrit B. Coolidge,
1889-1892 |
| Box 35 | Folder 35 | | | | | | Correspondence related to appointment of William R. French to the
Advisory Council on Religious Congresses,
1893 |
| Box 35 | Folder 26 | | | | | b. Genealogical papers,
n.d. |
| | | | | | c. Printed material,
1884-1893 |
| Box 35 | Folder 27 | | | | | | Ephemera,
1886 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 3 | | | | | | Clippings,
1884-1893 |
| | | | | | d. Volumes,
1844-1918 |
| Box 35 | Folders 28-29 | | | | | | Account book, First Universalist Society of Lewiston Falls, Turner,
North Auburn, Bowdoinham, Canton and Brunswick,
1844-1892 |
| Box 35 | Folder 30 | | | | | | William R. French thermometer table,
1879-1885 |
| Box 36 | Folders 1-2 | | | | | | Subscription book for William R. French, History of Town of Turner, Maine,
1886-1891 |
| Box 36 | Folders 3-4 | | | | | | Account book, First Universalist Society of Turner,
1889-1918 |
| | | | | iv. Elizabeth French Herms family papers,
1861-1945
Elizabeth French Herms and Emil Herms family papers include family
correspondence, obituary clippings, and a volume of farm records possibly kept
by Elizabeth F. Herms.
|
| Box 36 | Folder 5 | | | | | Letters from Charles E. Bradford to Elizabeth French,
1861 |
| Box 36 | Folders 6-7 | | | | | Letters to Elizabeth French Herms,
1939-1938 |
| Box 36 | Folder 8 | | | | | Obituaries (clippings),
1945 |
| Box 36 | Folder 9 | | | | | Farm record book,
1898-1900 |
| | | | D. Miscellaneous papers,
1882-2000 |
| Box 36 | Folder 10 | | | | Writings,
1882-1885 |
| Box 36 | Folder 11 | | | | Ephemera,
1928-1938 |
| Box OS 2 | Folder OF 4 | | | | Clippings, Laurence Coolidge,
2000 |
| Box 36 | Folder 12 | | | | Clippings, Alfred G. Coffin,
n.d. |
|
|
| | | VII. Papers of families related to Ruth Dame Coolidge,
1809-1930
This series contains the papers of the Arnold, Dame, Gilman, and Thayer
families, Ruth Dame Coolidge's nineteenth century ancestors. The Arnold family
sub-series includes a poem, a print, and a hymn by Nancy Thayer Arnold, as well
as Nancy's obituary. Dame family papers consist of Samuel Dame's correspondence
and his New Hampshire militia appointment. The Gilman family subseries contains
the correspondence of Eldridge Gerry Gilman concerning the death of his
brother, general correspondence, Eldridge's will, and Mehitable Burleigh's
copybook. Thayer family papers consist of correspondence to Elisha Thayer from
son John H.B. Thayer, a poem by Elisha Thayer, and clippings. The miscellaneous
papers subseries contains material belonging to the Arnold, Dame, Gilman, or
Thayer families, but not clearly belonging to a particular family.
|
| | | | A. Arnold family papers,
1851-1891 |
| Box 36 | Folder 13 | | | | Poem,
n.d. |
| Box 36 | Folder 14 | | | | Print of unknown gentleman,
n.d. |
| Box 36 | Folder 15 | | | | Clippings - Nancy B. T. Arnold,
1851-1891 |
| | | | B. Dame family papers,
1893-1897 |
| Box 36 | Folders 16-17 | | | | Samuel Dame correspondence,
1893-1897 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | Appointment of Samuel Dame as major in 4th regiment of New Hampshire
militia,
n.d. |
| | | | C. Gilman family papers,
1809-1880 |
| Box 36 | Folder 18 | | | | Eldridge G. Gilman correspondence,
1853-1854 |
| Box 36 | Folder 19 | | | | Family correspondence,
1880 |
| Box 36 | Folder 20 | | | | Will of Eldridge Gilman,
1872 |
| Box 36 | Folder 21 | | | | Mehitable Burleigh's copybook,
1809 |
| | | | D. Thayer family papers,
1858-1930 |
| Box 36 | Folder 22 | | | | Personal papers,
1858 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | Clippings,
1930 |
| | | | E. Miscellaneous papers,
1884-1899 |
| Box 36 | Folder 23 | | | | Correspondence,
ca. 1884 |
| Box 36 | Folder 24 | | | | Emily Weeks' "History of the Class of '99,"
1899 |
|
|
| | | VIII. Jean Thoits Coolidge papers,
1894-1995
The papers of Jean Thoits Coolidge include correspondence describing Jean's
experiences living in Japan from 1936 to 1939, her return to America and
long-distance relationship with William Bradford Coolidge, and their life
together in Minnesota and Michigan during World War II. Japanese-American
internment papers contain correspondence and printed materials related to her
work with the YWCA helping to transfer Japanese-American students from
internment camps and western war zones to colleges in other parts of the
country. The series also contains a number of papers and tests from Jean's
years at college, her journal entries from the 1960s, ephemera, miscellaneous
news clippings, and records from the Minneapolis Blind Study Committee in
1945-1946.
Jean Thoits Coolidge's post-1960 correspondence is
closed to researchers until 1 Nov. 2035.
|
| | | | A. Correspondence,
1931-1959
Arranged chronologically.The bulk of Jean Coolidge's correspondence comprises letters and cards
between Jean and her family and friends describing her time in Japan from 1936
to 1939 and life after she returned to America during World War II. Some
letters in this subseries were written by Jean's sister Eleanor Thoits to her
mother and other relatives when she visited Jean in Japan in 1939. After 1940,
most correspondence consists of letters written to Jean, including many 1943
letters related to her engagement to William Bradford Coolidge.
See also Jean's YWCA/Japanese-American internment
correspondence in Subseries C.
|
| Box 37 | | | | | 1931-1936 |
| Box 38 | | | | | Jan.-Aug. 1937 |
| Box 39 | | | | | Sept. 1937-Dec. 1938 |
| Box 40 | | | | | 1939-1959 |
| | | | B. Personal Papers,
1932-1995
Arranged chronologically and by subject.Jean Thoits Coolidge personal papers consist of school papers and class
notes, genealogical material, committee records and reports, and a copy of her
obituary. School papers contain class notes, papers, and tests from Jean's
college courses. Class notes from the 1970s document her study of ceramics and
Japanese flower arrangement. The Blind Study Committee records pertain to a
study sponsored by the Board of the Council of Social Agencies on behalf of
blind persons in Minneapolis, Minn. Jean joined the committee as a staff aid in
February 1946. Records include meeting minutes and agendas, surveys, and
reports of the committee and its subcommittees. Genealogical papers include
copies of family photographs, genealogical charts, and a memorial of Jean's
mother, Hazel Lamson.
|
| Box 41 | | | | | School papers and class notes,
1932-ca. 1970s |
| Box 42 | | | | | Blind Study committee records,
1945-1946 |
| Box 43 | Folder 1 | | | | Cabin John Home Study report and memo,
1965-1985 |
| Box 43 | Folder 2 | | | | Genealogical material,
1976 |
| Box 43 | Folder 3 | | | | "Jean's obituary and service,"
1995 |
| Box 43 | Folders 4-5 | | | | Miscellaneous personal papers,
1968-1989 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 5 | | | | Thoits family tree,
n.d. |
| | | | C. YWCA - Japanese-American internment files,
1941-1944
Arranged chronologically and by record type.This subseries contains papers related to Jean Thoit's work as executive
secretary for the YWCA at San Jose State College in San Jose, Calif., and the
YWCA's efforts to assist Japanese-American students who had been placed in
western internment camps during World War II to relocate to other colleges and
universities. The files include correspondence between Jean and displaced
Japanese college students, staff of other student and charitable organizations,
co-workers, government officials, and college administrators. Letters primarily
concern efforts to help Japanese-American students transfer to colleges outside
U.S. war zones, and later, life inside Japanese-American internment camps.
Records pertain to the YWCA efforts on behalf of the Japanese-American
students, and Jean's records and notes from the 1942 Peace Training Institute.
Printed material includes U. S. Army proclamations related to the western war
zones, Japanese-American internment camp newsletters, and articles and
clippings about the internment.
|
| Box 43 | Folders 6-28 | | | | i. Correspondence,
1942-1943 |
| | | | | ii. Records,
1941-1943 |
| Box 43 | Folder 29-38 | | | | | Aug. 1941-Nov. 1943 |
| Box 44 | Folders 1-2 | | | | | Peace Training Institute records,
1942 |
| Box 44 | Folders 3-4 | | | | | YWCA songs, prayers, and essays,
n.d. |
| | | | | iii. Printed material,
1942-1944 |
| Box 44 | Folder 5 | | | | | Public proclamations,
1942-1943 |
| Box 44 | Folders 6-7 | | | | | Internment camp newsletters,
1942-1943 |
| Box 44 | Folders 8-13 | | | | | Pamphlets and articles,
1942-1944 |
| Box 44 | Folder 14 | | | | | Clippings,
1942-1944 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 6 | | | | iv. Artwork,
1943
Watercolor paintings from Heart Mountain, Wyoming, by Estelle Ishigo,
1943
|
| | | | D. Printed material,
1894-1995
Arranged chronologically.Ephemera contains Edward C. Thoits commencement exercises, the invitation to
the wedding of Jean Thoits to William B. (Brad) Coolidge, a photograph, and a
news article on the event. Clippings range from 1906 to 1995 and include
articles on Japan, northern California, the Thoits family, Brad's death and
funeral, and miscellaneous articles and editorials from the 1980s and
1990s.
|
| Box 44 | Folders 15-19 | | | | 1894-1995 |
| OS Box 2 | Folder 2 | | | | 1906-1994 |
| | | | E. Volumes,
1913-ca. 1960
Arranged chronologically.Volumes consist of a baby book documenting Jean's birth and infancy, a daily
diary written by Jean in 1938 while living in Japan, several undated journals
(ca. 1960s), a notebook of pressed leaves, and an undated sewing book.
|
| Box 45 | Folder 1 | | | | "A Record of our Baby's Life,"
1913 |
| Box 45 | Folder 2 | | | | Diary,
1938 |
| Box 45 | Folders 3-5 | | | | Journals,
ca. 1960 |
| Box 45 | Folder 6 | | | | Japanese notebook,
n.d. |
| Box 45 | Folder 7 | | | | Sewing book,
n.d. |
|
|
| | | IX. William Bradford Coolidge papers,
1908-2010
This series contains William B. (Brad) Coolidge 's correspondence, personal
papers, Japan and China papers, government papers, writings, printed material,
and volumes. Brad's correspondence covers his education, courtships, career,
and family happenings. In the Japan and China subseries, detailed letters,
writings, and newspaper clippings provide a unique glimpse of life in pre-World
War II Japan from an American perspective, and document the increasing
militarization of Japan and the Japanese occupation of eastern China.
Brad's government papers were created through his government positions with
the Foreign Broadcasting Information Service (FBIS) from 1941 to 1944 and with
the State Department from 1946 to 1972. The papers include correspondence,
printed material, and volumes from Brad's State Department postings in Japan,
Thailand, and Turkey. Brad's writings and printed material primarily consist of
educational and army material. Volumes include diaries, travel notebooks, a
diary kept during Brad's army service, and volumes created during Brad's
childhood.
Portions of William B. Coolidge's post-1960
correspondence, personal papers, Japan and China papers, government papers, and
diaries are closed to researchers until 1 Nov. 2035.
|
| | | | A. Correspondence,
1926-1959
William B. (Brad) Coolidge 's correspondents include: Elizabeth Burrel, aunt
Olive Dame Campbell, sister June Coolidge Cary, brother-in-law Harry M. Cary,
Catherine Chippendale, Lillian Colville, father Richard B. Coolidge, and mother
Ruth Dame Coolidge. There is a significant amount of courtship correspondence
with Harriet Coverdale. There is also notable correspondence with Brad's
Japanese friend Sachi about her life and societal pressures to marry. Letters
in this subseries with wife Jean Thoits Coolidge are separated from the rest of
Brad's correspondence. They concern Jean and Brad's activities when away from
each other, such as when Jean moved to the United States from Japan, and when
Brad began his Army service.
Early correspondence concerns Medford High School, Tufts College, Brad's
work for the Tufts Weekly, Harvard, and Brad's
thoughts as he decided on career and other life choices. Correspondence also
concerns family happenings and Brad and Jean's careers. In addition, Brad
writes extensively of his experience in the army from 1944 to 1946.
See also Brad's Japan and China correspondence in this
series in Subseries C, and his government correspondence in Subseries
D.
|
| | | | | i. Correspondence with Jean Thoits Coolidge,
1938-1956 |
| Box 46 | | | | | | 1938-Mar. 1943 |
| Box 47 | | | | | | Apr. 1943-Jan. 1945 |
| Box 48 | | | | | | Feb. 1945-May 1946 |
| Box 49 | | | | | | June 1946-Nov. 1946 |
| Box 50 | | | | | | Dec. 1946-Oct. 1952 |
| Box 51 | Folders 1-6 | | | | | Nov. 1952-1956 |
| | | | | ii. General correspondence,
1926-1959 |
| Box 51 | Folders 7-34 | | | | | 1926-Apr. 1937 |
| Box 52 | | | | | | May 1937-June 1939 |
| Box 53 | | | | | | July 1939-Aug. 1940 |
| Box 54 | | | | | | Sept. 1940-1942 |
| Box 55 | | | | | | 1943-1959 |
| | | | B. Personal papers,
1908-2007
Arranged chronologically and by subject.This subseries includes genealogical papers, material on family property in
Nantucket, material about the family dog King Tut, retirement planning, and
Brad's oral history.
|
| OS Box 3 | Folder 6 | | | | Genealogical papers,
1908-2005 |
| Box 56 | Folders 9-12 | | | | Genealogical papers,
1923-2005 |
| Box 56 | Folders 13-18 | | | | Nantucket, Hinckley Farm, legal,
1922-1929 |
| Box 56 | Folder 19 | | | | Watercolor and Catherine Chippendale sketch,
1933 |
| OS Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | Tufts College document,
1934 |
| Box 56 | Folders 20-25 | | | | Nantucket, Hinckley Farm, land purchase,
1934-1954 |
| Box 56 | Folder 26 | | | | "People we have known,"
1945-1976 |
| Box 56 | Folder 27 | | | | King Tut (dog),
1958-1959 |
| Box 56 | Folder 28 | | | | Eulogy of Mabel Weeks,
1964 |
| Box 56 | Folder 29 | | | | "Ideas and opportunities after retirement,"
1965-1970 |
| Box 56 | Folder 30 | | | | Global Volunteers in China,
1999 |
| Box 56 | Folder 31 | | | | Oral history,
2007 |
| Box 56 | Folder 32 | | | | Miscellaneous,
1933-1965 |
| | | | C. Japan and China papers,
1937-1940
This subseries covers William B. (Brad) Coolidge's 1937 to 1939 stay in
Japan and China. During this time, Brad wrote copy for The Japanese Advertiser and traveled as a string
correspondent for United Press to Japanese-occupied northern China, Manchuria,
and Canton. The subseries includes correspondence to family, writings from
Brad's journalistic work, his collection of clippings on politics and culture,
a diary, and his notebooks on Japan and China.
|
| Box 57 | Folders 1-15 | | | | i. Correspondence to family,
1937-1939
Arranged chronologically.Brad's letters home from Japan and China have been placed in this subseries
due to the unusual size of the paper on which they are written. The letters
cover his impressions of Japanese culture and politics, his journalistic work,
and, in December 1937, the life of his Japanese friend, Sachi.
|
| | | | | ii. Writings,
1938-1939
Arranged alphabetically by folder titleBrad's writings and notes from his time in Japan and China primarily relate
to his newspaper work, and are mainly drafts of potential articles. Brad
reported on Japanese and Chinese politics and culture. Of interest is the
folder "Life Behind the Front Door," which includes notes from Brad's
interviews of a range of Japanese people of diverse backgrounds, occupations,
and classes. The newspaper publications folder contains published versions of
articles by Brad.
|
| Box 57 | Folder 16 | | | | | "Attitudes from the Far East,"
1938 |
| Box 57 | Folder 17 | | | | | Bokuenshu,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 18 | | | | | Canton, 16 Aug. reporting,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 19 | | | | | China notes and research,
1939 |
| Box 57 | Folder 20 | | | | | Correspondent notes,
1939 |
| Box 57 | Folders 21-23 | | | | | Domei Home News Service,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 24 | | | | | First Impressions,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 25 | | | | | Japan's Continental Tide,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 26 | | | | | Japan's Patriotic Emigrants,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 27 | | | | | Japanese Ski Scene,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 28 | | | | | Japanese Weekend,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 29 | | | | | Kigensetsu,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 30 | | | | | Life behind the front door,
1938-1939 |
| Box 57 | Folder 31 | | | | | Macao as a Wartime Host,
ca. 1939 |
| Box 57 | Folder 32 | | | | | Newspaper publications of articles,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 33 | | | | | Outward Bound,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 34 | | | | | Personal notes,
1938-1939 |
| Box 57 | Folder 35 | | | | | Scraps of unidentified writings,
ca. 1938-1939 |
| Box 57 | Folder 36 | | | | | Shanghai Express,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 37 | | | | | Shantung Province Recovering,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 38 | | | | | Speech,
n.d. |
| Box 57 | Folder 39 | | | | | Wang Keh-Min,
n.d. |
| | | | | iii. Printed material,
1937-1940
Japan and China clippings have been kept in Brad's arrangement of themed
alphabetical files, with his original file titles. Some files contain multiple
themes. Clippings concern Japanese and Chinese culture and politics as well as
United States and world politics. Ephemera from Brad's time in Japan and China
consists of certificates and visas.
|
| Box 58 | Folder 1 | | | | | a. Ephemera,
1937-1939 |
| | | | | | b. Clippings,
1938-1940
Arranged alphabetically by folder title. |
| Box 58 | Folder 2 | | | | | | "Attitude toward foreign powers," writings, misc. clippings,
n.d. |
| Box 58 | Folder 3 | | | | | | "Clips to Herring,"
1940 |
| Box 58 | Folder 4 | | | | | | "Cultural etc. for America," 1938; and "Eventual articles,
lectures,"
1938 |
| Box 58 | Folder 5 | | | | | | "Japanese government policies, foreign and domestic,"
1938 |
| Box 58 | Folder 6 | | | | | | "Official texts and comments," "Prop.," and "Old folks at home,"
n.d. |
| Box 58 | Folder 7 | | | | | | "Other countries, and letters" (including sub-themes "Trade,"
"Worthwhile- mostly war," "Neutrality and interlaw"),
1938-1940 |
| Box 58 | Folder 8 | | | | | | "Other countries, and letters" (including sub-themes "Latin
America," "The Far East," "Balkans and Central Europe"),
1938-1940 |
| Box 58 | Folder 9 | | | | | | Other countries, and letters" (including sub-theme "Manchukuo"),
1938-1940 |
| Box 58 | Folders 10-12 | | | | | | "Press comments,"
1938 |
| Box 58 | Folder 13 | | | | | | "Reaction,"
1938 |
| OS Box 3 | Folders 2-4 | | | | | | Japan/China,
1938-1940 |
| | | | | iv. Volumes,
1937-1939
Arranged chronologically.Volumes from Brad's time in Japan and China include notebooks in which he
wrote about his impressions of the cultures and brainstormed article topics.
They also include a diary detailing his social life, newspaper work, and career
and life plans. Volumes also contain a clippings scrapbook, accounts, and
engagement book pages.
|
| Box 58 | Folder 14 | | | | | Scrapbook,
1937-1938 |
| Box 58 | Folder 15 | | | | | Account book,
1937-1938 |
| Box 58 | Folder 16 | | | | | Notebooks,
1937-1939 |
| Box 58 | Folder 17 | | | | | Diary/datebook,
1939 |
| Box 58 | Folder 18 | | | | | Japan-China notebook,
1939 |
| Box 58 | Folder 19 | | | | | Memo/engagement book,
1939 |
| | | | D. Government papers,
1941-2002
Arranged chronologically and by record type.William B. (Brad) Coolidge's government papers relate to his government
positions with the Foreign Broadcasting Information Service (FBIS) from 1941 to
1944 and with the State Department from 1946 to 1972. The papers contain
correspondence and other material concerning Brad's hiring, promotion, pay, and
assignments. Assignments include Brad's diplomatic postings in Japan as a
political officer at the U.S. Embassy and head of the American Consulate in
Nagoya; his posting in Thailand, as part of the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization (SEATO); and his posting in Turkey, as part of the Central Treaty
Organization for the United States, United Kingdom, Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan
(CENTO). The papers also relate to Brad's position as diplomat in residence at
the University of Arizona in Tucson from 1968 to 1969. Printed material
includes passports, FBIS reunion material, and gift souvenirs, clippings, and
Japanese event programs. Volumes include personal notes from Brad's time with
the State Department in Japan, and a notebook relating to his work with
CENTO.
|
| | | | | i. Correspondence,
1941-1976 |
| Box 59 | | | | | | 1941-1972 |
| Box 60 | Folders 1-3 | | | | | 1976 |
| Box 60 | Folder 4 | | | | ii. Personal papers - passports,
1956 |
| | | | | iii. Printed material,
1956-2002 |
| Box 60 | Folders 5-8 | | | | | Japan ephemera,
1956-1959 |
| Box 60 | Folder 9 | | | | | FBIS ephemera,
1991-2002 |
| Box 60 | Folder 10 | | | | | Miscellaneous ephemera,
1960-1966 |
| Box 60 | Folders 11-12 | | | | | Clippings,
1956-1959 |
| | | | | iv. Volumes,
1947-1968 |
| Box 60 | Folders 13-14 | | | | | Japan trip notebooks,
1947-1952 |
| Box 60 | Folder 15 | | | | | CENTO notebook,
1968 |
| | | | E. Writings,
1925-2002
Arranged alphabetically by folder titleWilliam B. (Brad) Coolidge's writings contain notes and essays from his
education at Medford High School, American University, Harvard University,
Tufts College, and the translation section of the U.S. Army's Japanese language
programs. Writings for pleasure date from later in Brad's life, such as his
vignettes from a John C. Campbell Folk School writing class.
|
| Box 60 | Folder 16 | | | | American University, "History of the American Labor Movement,"
1947 |
| Box 60 | Folder 17 | | | | Harvard University, "Far Eastern History,"
1939-1940 |
| Box 61 | Folders 1-2 | | | | Harvard University, "Government 522b,"
1941 |
| Box 61 | Folders 3-4 | | | | Harvard University, "Group Pressures in the Beginnings of American
Censorship in the World War,"
1940 |
| Box 61 | Folders 5-12 | | | | Harvard University, "International Law,"
1939-1940 |
| Box 61 | Folders 13-18 | | | | Harvard University, "Modern Far East,"
1939-1940 |
| Box 61 | Folders 19-21 | | | | Harvard University, "Recent Political Theories,"
1939-1940 |
| Box 61 | Folder 22 | | | | Poems/writings by others,
1945 |
| Box 61 | Folder 23 | | | | Public speaking and debate,
1932-1935 |
| Box 61 | Folder 24 | | | | "Reflections at 78,"
1994 |
| Box 61 | Folder 25 | | | | School papers,
ca. 1925-1934 |
| Box 61 | Folder 26 | | | | Translation section,
1946 |
| Box 61 | Folders 27-31 | | | | Tufts College, "American Foreign Policy,"
1936-1937 |
| Box 62 | Folder 1 | | | | Tufts College, "Concerning wartime propaganda,"
1935 |
| Box 62 | Folder 2 | | | | Tufts College, papers,
1939 |
| Box 62 | Folder 3 | | | | Vignettes from John C. Campbell Folk School writing classes,
1999-2002 |
| Box 62 | Folders 4-7 | | | | "Writings and Reflections,"
1939-1974 |
| Box 62 | Folders 8-9 | | | | Miscellaneous,
ca. 1985-1987 |
| | | | | See also William B. Coolidge's Japan and China
writings in subseries C ii. |
| | | | F. Printed material,
1916-2010
Arranged chronologically and by record type.Printed material in this subseries dates from William B. (Brad) Coolidge's
time at Medford High School, Tufts College, and Harvard University. There is
also material related to his army service and his interest in Nantucket and the
Potomac Canal development.
|
| | | | | i. Ephemera,
1916-2010 |
| OS Box 3 | Folders 5-6 | | | | | Vital records and letters,
1916-1995 |
| Box 62 | Folder 10 | | | | | College entrance exam and junior and senior high school report
cards,
1924-1933 |
| Box 62 | Folder 11 | | | | | Nantucket,
1929-1970 |
| Box 62 | Folder 12 | | | | | All New Hampshire high school orchestra,
1932 |
| Box 62 | Folder 13 | | | | | Medford High School graduation program and valedictorian speech,
diploma,
1933 |
| Box 62 | Folders 14-19 | | | | | Tufts College,
1933-1938 |
| Box 62 | Folder 20 | | | | | Medford High School,
1934-1936 |
| OS Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | | Medford Opera House program,
ca. 1935 |
| OS Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | | Tufts College diploma,
1937 |
| Box 62 | Folder 21 | | | | | Harvard University,
1939-1941 |
| Box 62 | Folder 22 | | | | | Army materials,
ca. 1945-1947 |
| Box 62 | Folder 23 | | | | | Medford reunion, Class of 1933,
1958-1983 |
| Box 62 | Folder 24 | | | | | Potomac Canal,
1965-1975 |
| Box 62 | Folder 25 | | | | | Tufts College Reunion, Class of 1937,
ca. 1987 |
| Box 63 | Folders 1-2 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1930-2010 |
| | | | | ii. Clippings,
1930-2010 |
| Box 63 | Folder 3 | | | | | All New Hampshire high school orchestra,
1932 |
| Box 63 | Folder 4 | | | | | Medford High School graduation,
1933 |
| OS Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | | Medford Mercury, "Scholarship Awards
for Four Students" (including Bradford Coolidge),
1933 |
| Box 63 | Folder 5 | | | | | Army articles,
1946 |
| OS Box 3 | Folder 1 | | | | | Army articles,
1946 |
| Box 63 | Folder 6 | | | | | Obituary and death notice,
2010 |
| Box 63 | Folder 7 | | | | | Miscellaneous,
1930-1981 |
| | | | G. Volumes,
ca. 1920-1986
Arranged chronologically.William B. (Brad) Coolidge's volumes consist of diaries and travel
notebooks, including a diary kept during his army service. This subseries also
includes volumes from his childhood, such as a ledger with his drawings, a cash
book and notebook kept with his sister June Coolidge Cary, and a notebook on
his boating hobby.
See also volumes in Subseries C.iv. - Japan and China
papers and in Subseries D.iv. - Government papers.
|
| Box 63 | Folder 8 | | | | Ledger containing drawings,
ca. 1920-1929 |
| Box 63 | Folder 9 | | | | June and Brad's cash book,
ca. 1920-1929 |
| Box 63 | Folder 10 | | | | Boating notebook,
ca. 1927 |
| Box 63 | Folder 11 | | | | Notebook, "Music of Nantucket by Brad and June,"
1927 |
| Box 63 | Folder 12 | | | | Diary,
1927 |
| Box 63 | Folder 13 | | | | 5-year Diary,
1933-1937 |
| Box 64 | Folder 1 | | | | Expense notebooks,
1933-1938 |
| Box 64 | Folder 2 | | | | Diary,
1940 |
| Box 64 | Folder 3 | | | | NCO Diary and Army Notebook (unbound),
1946 |
| Box 64 | Folder 4 | | | | Diary,
1959-1966 |
| Box 64 | Folder 5 | | | | Travel notebook,
1969 |
| Box 64 | Folder 6 | | | | Travel notebook,
1976 |
| Box 64 | Folder 7 | | | | Travel notebook,
1979 |
| Box 64 | Folder 8 | | | | Travel notebook,
1980 |
| Box 64 | Folder 9 | | | | Travel notebook,
1981-1986 |
| Box 64 | Folder 10 | | | | Travel notebook, memo book,
n.d. |
|
|
| | | X. Miscellaneous papers,
1893
This series consists of papers that do not clearly belong to any other
series in the collection. It includes writings, a Masonic certificate, a merit
certificate for schoolwork, accounts, cards, and a notebook on the estate
account of Sarah M. Greely.
|
| Box 64 | Folder 15 | | | Estate account of Sarah M. Greely,
1893 |
| Box 64 | Folder 11 | | | Poems and short pieces,
n.d. |
| Box 64 | Folder 12 | | | Master Mason certificate of the Grand Lodge of Mass., to Thomas
Walter Godfrey Hay,
n.d. |
| Box 64 | Folders 13-14 | | | Miscellaneous ephemera,
n.d. |
Coolidge and Dame family papers, Massachusetts Historical Society.
This collection is indexed under the following headings in
ABIGAIL,
the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers
desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should
search the catalog using these headings.
| | |
| Persons: |
| | Bacon, George Morgan, 1872-1952. |
| | Bacon, Isabel Gerry Dame, 1869-1933. |
| | Bacon family. |
| | Bradford family. |
| | Butman, Olive Dame Coolidge,
1920-2008. |
| | Butman, Robert Charles, b. 1920. |
| | Butman family. |
| | Cary, Harry M., d. ca. 1995. |
| | Cary, Ruth Alden Coolidge,
1912-1996. |
| | Cary family. |
| | Coolidge, Jean Elizabeth Thoits,
1913-1996. |
| | Coolidge, Merrit Bradford, 1839-1926. |
| | Coolidge, Richard Bradford,
1879-1957. |
| | Coolidge, Ruth Burleigh Dame,
1880-1951. |
| | Coolidge, William Bradford,
1916-2010. |
| | Coolidge family. |
| | Dame, Daisy Gertrude, 1868-1932. |
| | Dame, Lorin Low, 1838-1903. |
| | Dame, Nancy Isabel Arnold,
1844-1916. |
| | Dame family. |
| | French, W. R. (William Riley),
1814-1893. |
| | French family. |
| | McConnell, Barbara Bacon, 1905-2000. |
| | |
| Organizations: |
| | John C. Campbell Folk School (Brasstown,
N.C.) |
| | Tufts University--Students. |
| | United States. Army. Massachusetts Light
Artillery Battery, 15th (1861-1865). |
| | United States. Dept. of State. |
| | United States. Foreign Broadcast Information
Service. |
| | |
| Subjects: |
| | Account
books--1844-1942. |
| | Bankers--Massachusetts--Medford. |
| | Botanists--Massachusetts. |
| | China--Description and
travel--1901-1948. |
| | China--Foreign relations--United
States. |
| | China--Social life and customs. |
| | China--Social life and customs. |
| | Courtship. |
| | Diplomats. |
| | Europe--Description and travel. |
| | Family history, 1800-1849. |
| | Family history, 1850-1899. |
| | Family history, 1900-1949. |
| | Family history, 1950-1999. |
| | Japan--Description and
travel--1901-1945. |
| | Japanese Americans--Evacuation and relocation,
1942-1945. |
| | Japanese--United States. |
| | Japan--Foreign relations--United
States. |
| | Japan--Social life and customs. |
| | Journalists--China. |
| | Journalists--Japan. |
| | Lawyers--Massachusetts--Medford. |
| | Mayors--Massachusetts--Medford. |
| | Medford (Mass.)--Social life and
customs. |
| | Politicians--Massachusetts. |
| | School
principals--Massachusetts--Medford. |
| | School
principals--Massachusetts--Stoneham. |
| | Scrapbooks--1850-1938. |
| | Thailand--Foreign relations--United
States. |
| | Turkey--Foreign relations--United
States. |
| | United States--Foreign
relations--China. |
| | United States--Foreign
relations--Japan. |
| | United States--Foreign
relations--Thailand. |
| | United States--Foreign
relations--Turkey. |
| | United States--History--Civil War,
1861-1865--Personal narratives. |
| | United States--History--Civil War,
1861-1865--Regimental histories--Massachusetts Artillery (Light), 15th
Battery. |
| | Voyages and travels. |
| | Women travelers. |
Photographs Removed
Photographs have been removed from the collection and placed in the MHS
Photo Archives.
Museum Objects Removed
The following objects and been removed from the collection and placed in the
MHS museum collection: campaign banner, "Coolidge for Mayor," 1922; medical
case, ca. 1830s-1840s; cane, ca. 1850s-1860s; Arnold family silhouettes; sketch
of Catherine Chippendale, 29 Jan 1933; 11 sketches, primarily pencil, of
various subjects, 1926-1930, by June C. Cary.
Printed Material Removed:
The following printed items have been removed from the collection and
cataloged with the MHS printed materials:
The Children in the Wood: an Affecting Tale
(Cooperstown: H. & E. Phinney, 1838)
Home Pastimes; or Agreeable exercises for the mind,
consisting of enigmas, charades conuncrums, etc. (New York: J. S.
Redfield, 18--)
The Instruction of the Rising Generation in the
Principles of the Christian Religion Recommended (Andover: New England
Tract Society, 1818)
A Key to the Moveable Planisphere (1876)
Payson, Edward. The Bible above all Price: a Discourse
before the Bible Society of Maine (Andover: Flagg and Gould, 1818)
Teachem, Mr. The Infant School Reader
(Montpelier, Vt.: E. P. Walton & Sons, 1841)
|