Kitabı oku: «Conservatism, the Right Wing, and the Far Right: A Guide to Archives», sayfa 81
[1017d] Florida Documents collection, 1777-1979, ASM0567
Location: Special Collections, University of Miami Libraries, 1300 Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 248214, Coral Gables, Florida 33124-0320
Description: The Florida Documents Collection contains correspondence, diaries, military orders, invoices, receipts, and other documents related to various aspects of Florida history dating from 1777-1979. Contains copies of Survival of the White Race, 1980 [a tract with application for membership to The Church of The Creator]; "I Don't Hate the Homosexuals" (1977) [a political tract written by Anita Bryant condemning homosexuality, produced by her organization, Protect America's Children] [probably Anita Bryant, When the Homosexuals Burn the Holy Bible in Public...How Can I Stand by Silently [Anita Bryant Ministries mailer, no date (ca. 1977)] [reprinted in Matthew Avery Sutton, Jerry Falwell and the Rise of the Religious Right: A Brief History with Documents (Bedford/St. Martin's, 2013), pp. 102-106, online at http://pages.uoregon.edu/eherman/teaching/texts/Bryant%20When%20the%20
Homosexuals.pdf]; Let Freedom Ring! (Sarasota, Florida, 1965) [a flyer accusing the U.S. Supreme Court of "Communizing" America, and advertising reports and publications on desegregation and "the Pro-Communist Earl Warren Court"]; "Let Freedom Ring" automated telephone messaging service (Sarasota, FL) [over 200 scripts for the weekly service, attacking issues such as Nixon's weakness in the face of Communist treason, Soviet hands behind the civil rights movement, Kissinger's traitorous internationalism, the evils of welfare, anti-American betrayals of Christianity, etc.]; two cards (Miami, FL., The Truth About Cuba Committee, 1964) warning of Communist deception [with sides headed "Beware of Russian 'Peaceful Coexistence,'" "Beware of giving foreign aid to communist countries," "Beware of Russian 'Peaceful Negotiations," and "Beware of hate peddling communism," and with quotes from Stalin, Tito, etc.]; three loose handouts from The White Sentinel, a local publication in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. that opposed racial mixing and supported white supremacy; and two issues of the National Christian News (Ocala, FL), a tabloid-format, anti-Communist, anti-Semitic newspaper (vol. 13, no. 6 (1974) and vol. 14, no. 11 (1975)).
Finding aid:
http://proust.library.miami.edu/findingaids/?p=collections/findingaid&id=852
[1018] Florida Legislative Investigation Committee Records, 1954-1965, S. 1486
Location: Division of Library and Information Services, Florida Department of State, State Library and Archives of Florida, R.A. Gray Building, Second Floor, 500 South Bronough Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0250
Description: The Florida Legislative Investigation Committee was created in 1956 as a special joint committee of the Florida Legislature. The Committee was commonly referred to as the Johns Committee, after its first chairman, Charley Johns. The Committee's original mandate was to "investigate all organizations whose principles or activities include a course of conduct on the part of any person or group which would constitute violence, or a violation of the laws of the state, or would be inimical to the well being and orderly pursuit of their personal and business activities by the majority of the citizens of this state." The records include administrative files, correspondence, transcripts of testimony, information relating to various organizations under investigation, court cases, newspaper clippings, and publications. The records contain information regarding Communist and subversive organization activity, homosexuality, Ku Klux Klan, race relations, the civil rights movement, student peace movements, and anti-Castro organizations.
Reference:
Clive Webb, Rabble Rousers: The American Far Right in the Civil Rights Era (Athens and London: University of Georgia Press, 2011).
Finding aid:
http://archivescatalog.info.florida.gov/default.asp?IDCFile=/fsa/detailss.idc,SPECIFIC=1926,DATABASE=SERIES,
[1019] Records of the Florida National Organization for Women, 1971-2003, MS 123
Location: Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, 208 Smathers Library, 1508 Union Rd, Gainesville, FL 32611-7005
Description: The Records of the Florida NOW include officers' and members' correspondence, meeting minutes and agendas, reports, budgets, newsletters, and other records which chronicle the development and activities of Florida NOW from its founding in 1973 until 2003. Accession I Series 1: Administrative Records 1973-1987. [Subseries]. Florida NOW PAC, Political Research Office, and Newsletter 1973-1986, contains copies of Conte, Jo. "The New Right in Florida, Who It Is and What It Wants". 1979, and Political Research Office Proposal. Goals, Budget, Program Narrative, Reports on the Right Wing and Political Research. [1977-1978]. Accession I Series 2: Legislative Office 1971-1987. [Subseries]. Subject Files 1975-1986, contains files on abortion and sterilization. Accession I Series 3: Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Series 1973-1982. [Subseries]. Coalition Groups 1973-1981, contains a file on Minutewomen of Florida vs. ERA Florida, NOW, and Edna Saffey [threatened suit]. [Subseries]. ERA Groups and General Records 1973-1982, contains a copy of Equal Rights Amendment: Boon for Women? or Boondoggle [anti-ERA pamphlet with rebuttal by staff of Florida NOW Legislative Office. 1977, and [STOP ERA?] Fliers opposing ERA with notes on the verso. [1977?].
Websites with information:
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/browset.htm
Finding aids:
http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/spec/pkyonge/FLNOW.htm
http://www.library.ufl.edu/spec/pkyonge/FLNOW.htm
http://flnowarchive.org/mediawiki/images/UF_Library_Guide_to_the_Records_of_the_Florida_National_Organiz
ation_for_Women.pdf
[1020] Margaret Flory Papers, 1929-2009, Record Group No 86
Location: Divinity School Library, Yale University, 409 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511
Description: Correspondence, writings, subject files, and collected material document the life and work of Margaret Flory (1914-2009) and the many organizations with which she was associated throughout her long career in missions and student work. Margaret Flory was an ecumenist, leader of student religious work, and mission executive in the Presbyterian Church (USA) from 1944-1980 who began and directed innovative missions programs including Junior Year Abroad, Frontier Internships in Mission, and Bi-National Service. The series Topical Files contains files on Communism and Christianity: "Operation Abolition" (Film) (National Council of Churches (NCC), National Student Christian Federation (NSCF)); Foreign Policy (National Council of Churches of Christ of the United States of America (NCCCUSA)); Race Relations/Civil Rights; Race Relations/Civil Rights: Segregation; and Religious Right Wing Fundamentalists.
Finding aids:
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/divinity.086
http://drs.library.yale.edu/fedora/get/divinity:086/PDF
[1021] Nils och Elsa Flyg archives, 1908-1944, Refkod: 162
Location: Arbetarrörelsens arkiv och bibliotek [Labour Movement Archives and Library], Elektronvägen 2, 141 49 Huddinge, Sweden
Description: Nils Flyg (1891-1943) was a Swedish politician and chairman of the Communist Party of Sweden 1924-1929, then the Socialist Party (Socialistiska partiet), which had a pro-German, Nazi-inspired ideology. Elsa Flyg (1895-) was his wife.
Websites with information:
http://www.tobiashubinette.se/arkiv.pdf
Finding aid:
http://borge.arbark.se?162
[1022] John T. Flynn Papers, 1928-1961, Coll. 116
Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299
Description: Flynn (1882-1964) was a newspaperman, essayist, radio commentator, biographer, and author of books on current affairs. He was editor of the New Republic from 1931-1940, and commentator on the Mutual Broadcasting System from 1954-1963. His articles were published in magazines such as Harpers, National Review, and Reader's Digest. The papers include manuscripts for books and articles written by Flynn; correspondence; and research files on education, government, social security, and other subjects. The correspondence of about 7,200 letters, both with organizations and individuals, reflects Flynn's special interests. The series Correspondence contains files on American Legion Magazine (Joseph Keely); America's Future Inc.; Karl Baarslag; Willis J. Ballinger; Harry Elmer Barnes; William E. Borah; Owen Brewster; Styles Bridges; William F. Buckley, Jr.; Howard Buffett; James F. Byrnes; Taylor Caldwell (Mrs. Marcus Reback); Campaign for the 48 states; Arthur Capper; William Henry Chamberlin; Clover Manufacturing Company (Mark Brown); Committee for Constitutional Government; Constitution Party, U.S.A.; H.R. Cullen; Stephen A. Day; Devin-Adair (publishers); Robert B. Dresser; Economic Forum (L. Levitas); Charles Edison; Educational Reviewer (Lucille Cardin Crain); Ernest F. Elmhurst; Julius Epstein; Philip L. Eubank (Constitution Press); Myron C. Fagan (Cinema Educational Guild, Inc.); Bonner Fellers; James W. Fifield; John J. Fleck; For America; Foreign Policy Association; Freedoms Foundation; Foundation for Foreign Affairs; Freeman (magazine) (Frank Chodorov); Frank E. Gannett; Lewis Gannett; J. H. Gipson (Caxton Printers); Benjamin Gitlow; Barry Goldwater; Rosalie Gordon; Percy L. Greaves; Guardians of American Education, Inc. (A. G. Rudd); Ralph W. Gwinn; Frank Hanighen; Robert Harriss; Merwin K. Hart; Clare E. Hoffman; Frank E. Holman; Rush D. Holt; Herbert C. Hoover; J. Edgar Hoover; Roy Howard; H. L. Hunt; Edward Hunter; Patrick J. Hurley; Edward F. Hutton (Freedoms Foundation); William E. Jenner; Hiram W. Johnson; Harry A. Jung (American Vigilant Intelligence Federation); Vivien Kellems; Husband E. Kimmel; Know Your Enemy (Gregory G. Bern) (List of left-wing persons); Alfred Kohlberg; Ku Klux Klan, Southern Knights; William Kullgren; Alfred M. Landon; Rose Wilder Lane; William Langer; William Jett Lauck (American Association for Economic Freedom); David Lawrence; J. Bracken Lee; Isaac Don Levine; Alexander Lincoln; Charles A. Lindbergh; John Lodge; William Loeb; Eugene Lyons; Joseph R. McCarthy; Patriots for McCarthy; Robert R. McCormick; Conde McGinley (Common Sense); Carl McIntire; Russell Maguire; George Malone; Clarence E. Manion; J.B. Matthews; Henry L. Mencken; Raymond Moley; Felix Morley; Sterling Morton; George Van Horn Moseley; Karl E. Mundt; National Council for American Education; National Economic Council Inc.; National Renaissance Party; Richard M. Nixon; Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League; Gerald P. Nye; John O'Donnell; Operation America, Inc. (W.A. Orton); Pathfinder (magazine); Patriotic Research Bureau; Westbrook Pegler; Samuel B. Pettengill; J. Howard Pew; Plain Talk (magazine); John E. Rankin; Rapp-Coudert Committee (N.Y. Board of Higher Education); John J. Raskob; Reader's Digest; Carroll Reece; Douglas Reed; Henry Regnery (H. Regnery Co., publishers); William H. Regnery; Robert R. Reynolds (American Nationalists' Committee of Independent Voters); George W. Robnett; Archibald Roosevelt; Richard B. Russell; Leverett Saltonstall; George S. Schuyler; Gerald L. K. Smith; George Sokolsky; Jeremiah Stokes; George E. Sullivan; Tablet (magazine) (Patrick Scanlan); Robert A. Taft; Robert A. Taft for President Committee; Charles C. Tansill; R. A. Theobald; Dorothy Thompson; Lawrence Timbers; John B. Trevor (American Coalition and Patriotic Sons of America); Walter Trohan; United States Day Committee, Inc.; Freda Utley; Harold Varney; Harold H. Velde; George Sylvester Viereck; We, The People (Harry Everingham); Albert C. Wedemeyer; Robert H. W. Welch Jr.; Burton K. Wheeler; James L. Wick; Wendell L. Willkie; Karl A. Wittfogel; Felix Wittmer; Robert E. Wood. The series America First Committee files contains correspondence with the New York chapter of the America First Committee and Robert E. Wood. The series Reference and Source file contains files on John Roy Carlson (Under Cover), with correspondence with Senator Burton K. Wheeler, Gerald P. Nye, Merwin K. Hart, and George Robnett; Christian Front, with a letter from Albert Dilling; Dumbarton Oaks; Education, with material on Communism in schools, Educational Reviewer, and George W. Ebey (transcript of a report by General Research Company, Houston, Texas, on George Ebey); Foreign Policy (Memoranda on President Roosevelt's foreign policy, by Max Eastman, Felix Morley, William Henry Chamberlin, Andre Visson, and John T. Flynn. "Confidential Memo," a note concerning the December 6, 1944 meeting of Felix Morley, Sam Pettengill, Fred Clark, Richard Rimanoczy, Merwin K. Hart, Earl Harding, and John T. Flynn at the University Club (New York) to organize for action on foreign affairs front); Foreign Policy Association; Immigration (Correspondence with John Trevor, DeWitt Wallace); Jews (Pro- and anti-Semitic material, and manuscript of article on the Jewish question, 1945-1954); Lend-Lease (Post-war); Medicine (Socialized Medicine); Monroe Doctrine; Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League; and San Francisco Charter (United Nations) (Argument of John T. Flynn before Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in opposition to confirmation of San Francisco Charter).
References:
Inventory of the papers of John T. Flynn. Prepared by Martin Schmitt, curator of special collections. University of Oregon. Library. Eugene, 1966 (Its Occasional paper, no. 3); Catalogue of Manuscripts in the University of Oregon Library, compiled by Martin Schmitt (Eugene, University of Oregon, 1971), http://library.uoregon.edu/ec/e-asia/read/schmitt.pdf; Bernard Lemelin, "Congressman Usher Burdick Of North Dakota and The 'Ungodly Menace': Anti-United Nations Rhetoric, 1950-1958," Great Plains Quarterly, 22 (Summer 2002): 163-81, http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3323&context=greatplainsquarterly.
Websites with information:
http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative
http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/nwdalinks.html
http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/check-out-john-t-flynn-papers/
https://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html
http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b1975795
https://beta.worldcat.org/archivegrid/collection/data/18830904
http://www.worldcat.org/title/papers-1928-1961/oclc/18830904
Finding aids:
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv00698
http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/findaid/ark:/80444/xv00698
http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv00698/op=pretrieve.aspx
[1023] Förbundet kämpande demokrati, 1939-1952, SE/GUB/REA000109293
Location: Göteborgs universitetsbibliotek, Renströmsgatan 4, 405 30 Göteborg, Sweden
Description: Förbundet kämpande demokrati was formed in Stockholm on December 10, 1939, and was led by editor Ture Nerman. The association conducted anti-Nazi propaganda and promotion activities.
Websites with information:
http://www.ub.gu.se/sok/handskrift/arkiv/index.xml?id=306&detail=1
http://www.ub.gu.se/sok/handskrift/arkiv/?detail=1&id=306
http://sok.riksarkivet.se/?postid=Arkis+8DE772A9-3501-4EF4-9E8A-1A8BD8516B73&s=TARKIS08_Siv
Finding aid:
http://www.ub.gu.se/sok/handskrift/arkiv_pdf/306.pdf
[1024] Förbundet kämpande demokrati, 1940-1944, Refkod: 1548
Location: Arbetarrörelsens arkiv och bibliotek [Labour Movement Archives and Library], Elektronvägen 2, 141 49 Huddinge, Sweden
Description: Förbundet kämpande demokrati was formed in Stockholm on December 10, 1939, and was led by editor Ture Nerman. The association conducted anti-Nazi propaganda and promotion activities.
Finding aid:
http://borge.arbark.se?1548
[1025] Förbundet kämpande demokrati, Göteborgsavdelningen, SE/O258G/GSAF/2163-1
Location: Region- och Stadsarkivet Göteborg med Folkrörelsernas Arkiv [Regional and City Archives Gothenburg with the popular movements archive], Otterhällegatan 5, 411 18 Göteborg, Sweden
Description: The archives of the Gothenburg Department of the Förbundet kämpande demokrati.
Websites with information:
http://www.ub.gu.se/sok/handskrift/arkiv_pdf/306.pdf
http://sok.riksarkivet.se/?postid=Arkis+797578EA-E9D0-4E08-B73D-EA092227558F&s=TARKIS08_Siv
Finding aid:
http://www.visualarkiv.se/xtf/view?docId=SE/O258G/GSAF/2163-1.ead.xml
[1025a] Föreningen Heimdal i Uppsala, NC478-514P
Location: Handskrifts- och musikenheten [Section for Manuscripts and Music], Uppsala universitetsbibliotek, Carolina Rediviva, Dag Hammarskjölds väg 1, Box 510, SE 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden
Description: Heimdal is a conservative student organization that was formed in Uppsala in 1891. The collection contains account books, correspondence, and manuscripts for the journal Heimdal, as well as membership lists, program posters, photographs, folders, board and association records, statements, handouts, flyers, annual reports, and supporting documents.
Websites with information:
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:alvin:portal:record-11635
http://www.alvin-portal.org/alvin/view.jsf?pid=alvin-record:11635
http://www.tobiashubinette.se/arkiv.pdf
[1026] Norman Foerster Papers, 1907-1965, M0183
Location: Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Green Library, Stanford University, 557 Escondido Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-6064
Description: Norman Foerster (1887-1972) was an educator and critic. Section I: Works By Norman Foerster, contains writings on Irving Babbitt, Fascism, and Goethe and the Humanist Movement In America. Section II: Works by persons other than Norman Foerster, contains critical notes by T. S. Eliot on Foerster's Of Culture and Religion In America. Section III: Correspondence, contains correspondence with Paul Elmer More.
Finding aid:
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf058000vq/entire_text/
[1027] Norman Foerster Papers, 1918-1940, M0173
Location: Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Green Library, Stanford University, 557 Escondido Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-6064
Description: Norman Foerster (1887-1972) was a university professor and an instigator of the New Humanist movement in American criticism, which stressed the human ethical elements of existence, as distinguished from the supernatural or animal elements. Collection includes prepublication drafts, clippings, research notes, and correspondence pertaining to the New Humanism movement of the 1920's, including articles by Irving Babbitt and Paul E. More and their correspondence with Foerster, 1929-1930. Also includes correspondence with Seward Collins, W.T. Couch, T.S. Eliot, Henry Hazlitt, Gorham B. Munson, and Robert Shafer. Short biography of I.B.: Written by Irving Babbitt in response to questions put by Norman Foerster, 1929.
Finding aid:
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf9z09p0rj/entire_text/
[1028] Margaret Foley Papers, 1847-1968, MC 404
Location: Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, 3 James St, Cambridge, MA 02138
Description: Margaret Foley (1875-1957) was a Massachusetts suffragist. Series I. Personal, Family, Employment, contains a file on Anti-vaccination. Series II: Correspondence/Subject Files, contains correspondence from George Holden Tinkham, U.S. House of Representatives. Series III. Suffrage, contains clippings on anti-suffrage as well as anti-suffrage literature, most from Massachusetts, some from New York, Nevada, 1903, 1912-1915, 1917, n.d.
Website with information:
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/allFindingAids?_collection=oasis
Finding aid:
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00004
[1028a] Stephen J. Foley Right to Life papers, 1968-1981, Mss 0069
Location: Msgr. William Noé Field Archives & Special Collections Center, Walsh Library – First Floor, Seton Hall University, 400 South Orange Avenue, South Orange, NJ 07079
Description: Stephen J. Foley (1927-2015) was a lawyer and a founding member of the New Jersey Right to Life Committee. The papers include materials created and disseminated by the New Jersey Right to Life organization, including meeting notes, pamphlets and photographs, materials related to the pro-life movement in New Jersey such as newspaper articles, legal materials from court cases related to abortion, and Stephen Foley's notes and correspondence related to his involvement with Right to Life.
Websites with information:
http://academic.shu.edu/findingaids/
Finding aid:
http://academic.shu.edu/findingaids/mss0069.html
[1029] Ken Follett Collection
Location: Melvin J. Zahnow Library Archives, Saginaw Valley State University, 7400 Bay Road, University Center, MI 48710
Description: Ken Follett (1949- ) is a Welsh author of thrillers and historical novels. Files on Night over Water contain two folders of research material on British Fascism and anti-Semitism, including works by R. Gordon-Canning, A.K. Chesterton, A. Freeman, Anne Brock Griggs, Jorian Jenks, Oswald Mosley, and A. Raven Thomson.
Finding aids:
http://www.svsu.edu/~tzantow/Follett/Follett.html
http://www.svsu.edu/~tzantow/follett/Box18.html
http://librarysubjectguides.svsu.edu/Follett
[1030] Merton B. Folts Papers, 1942-1961, Coll. 60, PH 060
Location: Special Collections and University Archives, Knight Library, 2nd floor North, Mail: UO Libraries--SPC, 1299 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1299
Description: Folts was an ardent member of the John Birch Society and several other right-wing organizations such as the Conservative Education Center and the Eugene Freedom Club. The papers contain a holographic speech by Folts on patriotic themes; a book manuscript on conservative matters, primarily a pastiche of article clippings; conservative documents and newspaper clippings relating to Oregon, 1948-1958; and documents relating to the Conservative Education Center and the Freedom Club of Eugene.
Websites with information:
http://researchguides.uoregon.edu/scua-politics/conservative
http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/nwdalinks.html
http://library.uoregon.edu/tools/blogs/scua/check-out-merton-b-folts-papers/
http://library.uoregon.edu/speccoll/guides/conservative.html
http://janus.uoregon.edu/record=b3608366
Finding aids:
http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv49266/
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv49266/
[1030a] Bertie Charles Forbes Papers, 1892-1964
Location: Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries, 222 Waverly Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2010
Description: Bertie Charles Forbes (1880-1954) was an American journalist and the founder and editor of Forbes. Collection includes business and family correspondence (1897-1964); manuscript and/or published articles, biographical sketches, books and pamphlets, magazine and newspaper columns, novels, stories, speeches; and memorabilia, including clippings, photographs, and scrapbooks. In 1940-1941 Forbes, serving on the school board of Englewood, New Jersey, charged that the social science textbooks of Dr. Harold Rugg that were used in the schools were subversive and sought to ban them. Correspondents include Calvin Coolidge, Thomas Edison, William Randolph Hearst, Herbert Hoover, Eddie Rickenbacker, Robert A. Taft, Wendell Willkie, and Owen D. Young.
Websites with information:
https://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/ead/subj_list_from_db.htm
Finding aid:
http://library.syr.edu/digital/guides/print/forbes_bc_prt.htm
[1031] Mary Bowditch Forbes Papers, 1882-1961 (bulk 1890-1961), Ms. N-49.68
Location: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02215
Description: This collection consists of the papers of Mary Bowditch Forbes (1878-1961) of Milton, Mass., an ardent anti-suffragist, conservative Republican, anti-pacifist, anti-socialist, amateur poet, and admirer of Abraham Lincoln. Series I. Correspondence, 1882-1961, contains correspondence relating to Forbes's anti-suffrage and other conservative political stances, including strong anti-FDR and anti-pacifist beliefs, support of Alf Landon, and anti-socialist and anti-Communist views. Subjects include the sedition trial of Elizabeth Dilling (22 May 1944). Among the correspondents are Clara Vezin of the New Jersey Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, Wendell L. Willkie, and Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Finding aid:
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0324
[1031a] Allyn Kellogg Ford collection of historical manuscripts, 1472-1970, Coll. 01074 [microfilm; partly digital collection]
Location: Minnesota Historical Society, 345 W. Kellogg Blvd., St. Paul, MN 55102-1906
Description: 1,573 letters, cards, and documents of noted politicians, authors, colonial and Revolutionary War figures, soldiers, explorers, scientists, educators, business leaders, clergymen, and others prominent in cultural and public affairs collected by Minneapolis businessman Allyn K. Ford. Letters or autographs by Thomas Hart Benton, Edmund Burke, Nicholas Murray Butler, John Caldwell Calhoun, Calvin Coolidge, Ignatius Donnelly, Dwight David Eisenhower, Adolf Hitler, Herbert Hoover, Walter Henry Judd, Rudyard Kipling, Richard Milhous Nixon, Edward Vernon Rickenbacker, Elihu Root, Harold Edward Stassen, James Wolcott Jr. Wadsworth, Wendell Lewis Willkie (to Hamilton Holt), and Owen Wister.
Finding aid:
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/index_F.htm
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/01074.xml
[1031b] Ford Madox Ford Collection, [ca. 1850]-1973, Collection Number: 4605
Location: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, 2B Carl A. Kroch Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853
Description: Ford Madox Ford (1873-1939) was an English novelist, poet, critic and editor. Series II. Outgoing correspondence, contains correspondence to John Chamberlain, T. S. Eliot, Gorham Munson, A.R. Orage, Isabel Paterson, Ezra Pound, and Burton Rascoe. Series III. Incoming correspondence and manuscripts, contains correspondence to Ford (except where indicated) from The American Mercury (Paul Palmer), Hilaire Belloc ("The Source of Information"), The Bookman (Burton Rascoe), Gilbert Keith Chesterton (to Violet Hunt), Controversy (Gorham Munson), Thomas Stearns Eliot, Hugh Kenner (to Arthur Mizener), Arthur Mizener (to Dame Rebecca West), Alfred Richard Orage, Isabel Paterson, Ezra Loomis Pound (to Ford, to Stella Bowen), and Burton Rascoe.
Websites with information:
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/browselists/allRMC.html
Finding aid:
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM04605.html
[1032] Henry Ford General Personal Records Series, 1823-1984 (bulk 1920-1947), Accession 23
Location: Benson Ford Research Center, The Henry Ford, 20900 Oakwood Boulevard, Dearborn, MI 48124-5029
Description: Henry Ford (1863-1947) was an American industrialist and the founder of the Ford Motor Company. Contains an article by Samuel Crowther, "Henry Ford and the Jews"; a copy of letter from J. Edgar Hoover; a letter and a telegram from Herbert Hoover; and radio broadcasts on anti-Semitism and Communism by Reverend Charles Coughlin, December 4, 1938.
Finding aid:
http://www.dalnet.lib.mi.us/henryford/docs/GeneralPersonalRecordsSeries_Accession23.pdf
[1033] Henry Ford and Antisemitism Collection, 1921-1924; n.d., SC-372
Location: American Jewish Archives, 3101 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220
Description: Anti-Semitic material including correspondence and newspaper articles and publications connected with Henry Ford (1863-1947). Collected by Lucian and Lazard Kahn during the 1920s.
Websites with information:
http://americanjewisharchives.org/catalog/Record/vtls000002306
[1034] Jean Ford Collection, 1958-1990 (bulk), MS 25
Location: Special Collections, UNLV Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Box 457010, 4505 S. Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas, Nevada 89154-7010
Description: Jean Ford (1929-1998) was elected to the Nevada State Assembly as a Republican in 1972 and served two terms, from 1972-76. After losing her bid for the State Senate in 1976, she changed her political party affiliation to Democrat and ran again for State Senate in 1978. She was successful and served one term from 1978 to 1982. This collection includes political documents such as campaign materials for Ford's political campaigns and materials pertaining to campaign issues such as health services, general improvement districts, and parks and recreation, spanning from the 1960s through the 1980s. The Women's Issues series, 1964-1981, consists of four subcategories: The League of Women Voters, The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), International Women's Year (IWY), and anti-ERA/ anti-IWY materials. The anti-ERA sub-series includes "The Phyllis Schlafly Report" (1972-81, not complete), "The Eagle Forum" (1976-80, not complete), Anti-ERA/IWY news clippings, 1973-1977, and Anti-ERA news clippings, 1974-1978.
Websites with information:
https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/databases/index.php?coll=man&mode=0&subname=Social+Action
http://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/databases/index.php?coll=man&mode=1
Finding aid:
https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/ead/MS25_Ford.xml
[1035] John Ford mss., 1906-1976, LMC 1378
Location: Lilly Library, Indiana University, 1200 E. Seventh St., Bloomington, IN 47405-5500
Description: John Ford (1895-1973) was an American motion picture director. The correspondence files, 1906-1976 (bulk late 1930s-1960s), contain correspondence with Ralph Owen Brewster, Thomas Dixon, Charles Edison, Bonner Frank Fellers, James Forrestal, Patrick J. Frawley, Barry Morris Goldwater, Herbert Charles Holdridge, Patrick Jay Hurley, Clare (Boothe) Luce, Douglas MacArthur, Richard Milhous Nixon, Arthur William Radford, Ronald Reagan, Robert Alphonso Taft, James Kimble Vardaman, John Wayne, Albert Coady Wedemeyer, and Charles Andrew Willoughby.