Eliot, Charles William, 1834-1926
Dates
- Existence: 1834 - 1926
Biography
Charles William Eliot (1834-1926), American academic who was selected as Harvard University's president in 1869.
Found in 21 Collections and/or Records:
James Rowland Angell personal papers
Alfred Mitchell Bingham and the Common Sense collection
George Jarvis Brush family papers
Farnam family papers
Arthur Twining Hadley, president of Yale University, records
John Hays Hammond Sr. papers
Edward Mandell House papers
Letter : Asticou, Maine, to Henry James, 1921 Sep 20
TLS mentioning that Mrs. C. J. Bonaparte wants to meet with James about a biography of her husband and expressing concern for James's mother.
Letter : Buffalo, to Edward P. Clark, 1888 Feb 11
ALS with envelope.
Letter : Cambridge, Mass., to Robert S. Rantoul, 1914 Nov 5
TLS discussing Harvard's attitude toward "different denominations of Christians and the other religions."
Letter : Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Addison Van Name, 1892 Jul 18
ALS.
Letter : Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Noah Porter, 1873 Mar 17
ALS.
Letter : Harvard University, Cambridge, to Arthur H. Dutton, 1892 Dec 5
TLS expressing the opinion that the Chicago Fair should be open on Sundays.
Letter : Harvard University, Cambridge, to Mrs. Otto B. Cole, 1904 Nov 9
TLS discussing trade unions.
Letters to and regarding Dr. Newman Smyth, 1899-1904
2 TLS: one, 1899 Oct 13, to Professor George P. Fisher, informing him that Augustus Lowell approves of the idea to invite Dr. Smyth to lecture at the Lowell Institute; and one to Dr. Smyth, 1904 Aug 11, regarding the preface to the second edition of Smyth's "Through Science to Faith."
William Harrison Riley papers
The papers consist of correspondence and other papers relating to nineteenth century socialism in England and the United States. Included are two literary manuscripts by William Riley entitled Literary Cranks by One of Them and Radical Jack; copies of periodicals edited by Riley; and letters from Walter Besant, Edward Everett Hale, Rudyard Kipling, Justin McCarthy, Karl Marx, William Rossetti and John Ruskin.
Salisbury family papers
Anson Phelps Stokes family papers
John Ferguson Weir papers
Correspondence, addresses and writings, papers relating to the Yale School of the Fine Arts, and other papers of John F. Weir, artist, painter and first director of the Yale School of the Fine Arts, serving from 1869-1913. Correspondents include many persons prominent in the art world between 1870 and 1920. There is also much material on the origins and development of art education in this country and at Yale.