Showing Collections: 41–60 of 66
Filtered By
Filter Results
Additional filters
- Subject
- Families 62
- Diaries 31
- Lawyers 20
- Clergy 18
- Account books 15
- Educators 15
- Europe -- Description and travel 15
- Connecticut 14
- Law 14
- Business 11
- Education 9
- Photoprints 9
- United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 9
- United States -- Politics and government 9
- Europe 7
- Scrapbooks 7
- West (U.S.) 7
- Women 7
- Authors 6
- Businessmen 6 ∧ less
- Language
- Japanese 1
- Names
- Dwight, Timothy, 1828-1916 6
- Webster, Noah, 1758-1843 6
- Silliman, Benjamin, 1779-1864 5
- Woolsey, Theodore Dwight, 1801-1889 5
- Baldwin, Simeon, 1761-1851 4
- Day, Jeremiah, 1773-1867 4
- Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1856-1930 4
- Morse, Jedidiah, 1761-1826 4
- Porter, Noah, 1811-1892 4
- Dana, James Dwight, 1813-1895 3
- Dwight, Timothy, 1752-1817 3
- Seward, William H. (William Henry), 1801-1872 3
- Taft, William H. (William Howard), 1857-1930 3
- Thacher, Thomas Anthony, 1815-1886 3
- Trumbull, Benjamin, 1735-1820 3
- American Bible Society 2
- Asakawa, Kan'ichi, 1873-1948 2
- Bacon, Leonard Woolsey, 1830-1907 2
- Bates, Isaac Chapman, 1780-1845 2 ∧ less
William Inglis Morse collection
The collection consists of autograph letters, business papers, and legal papers, in French and English, almost all to or by Canadians. The papers also contain an account book of Morse's transactions with the Yale Art Library and correspondence relating to the Howe family of Nova Scotia, chiefly Joseph Howe's duel with John Croke Halliburton.
Noyes family papers
Correspondence, printed matter, and memorabilia of Atherton Noyes (1862-1938) and his brother Edward Parish Noyes (1857-1913). Material concerns the undergraduate years of his brothers at Yale, classes of 1880 and 1885, Atherton Noyes' life in Colorado, and his trip to Europe in 1894-1895.
Justus Richard Pearson, Jr. papers
The papers consist of personal diaries written by Pearson from 1931-1954. They cover his last year at Cass Technical High School in Detroit, his attendance at Hopkins Grammar School, his years at Yale University, his World War II alternative service, and his graduate school career at Columbia University.
Peck family papers
Frank C. and Delia L. Porter papers
The papers consist primarily of the correspondence of Frank C. Porter (1859-1946), Yale theology professor, 1891-1927, and his wife Delia Wood Lyman Porter (1858-1933), author. The papers also include notes and research material on the Yale seal and Hebrew words by Frank Porter; manuscripts; printed matter, memorabilia, and correspondence concerning the writings of Delia Porter; the autobiography of Chester Smith Lyman; and correspondence of William Porter.
Rice family papers
Henry Cornelius Robinson papers
The papers consist of letters written to Henry C. Robinson and members of his family. The largest group is made up of over sixty letters written to him by his mother, Anne Seymour Robinson, while he was at Yale College (1850-1853) and which reflect on events and activities at the college. Other correspondents are Mary Caroline Robinson Shipman and Lewis Ledyard Weld.
Roe family papers
Sanford family papers
The papers consist of account books, letterbooks, and papers of the Sanford family of New Haven, Connecticut. The merchant activities of Nelson D. Sanford and David P. Calhoun are detailed. Also included is a microfilm of Samuel Simons Sanford's album which documents his career as a professor of applied music, and his association with Yale.
John Christopher Schwab family papers
Selden family papers
Correspondence, writings (including school essays and exercises, poetry and political essays), miscellaneous accounts, school bills, and other papers of the Selden family of Hadlyme, Connecticut. The principal family members represented are Richard Ely Selden (1797-1868), a member of the class of 1818 at Yale, a justice of the peace, and a state senator, and his son Samuel Hart Selden (1826-1891), a member of the class of 1848.
Henry Sherman family papers
The papers are made up almost entirely of scrapbooks assembled by Henry Sherman, his wife and four of his children. The scrapbooks offer vivid documentation of their lives in the period 1850-1900 in Washington, D.C. with correspondence, photographs, drawings, clippings and memorabilia of all kinds.
Charles Woodward Stearns papers
Correspondence, writings and legal and financial papers relating to Charles W. Stearns' family and his alumni activities on behalf of the Yale University class of 1837.
Tarleton family papers
Correspondence, autograph album, genealogical notes, photographs and miscellaneous papers of the Tarleton and Lightfoot families of Alabama. The major figures represented in the collection are Robert Tarleton, his wife Sarah Bernard Lightfoot Tarleton, and Sarah Bee Ross Lightfoot. Most letters were written by Robert Tarleton and date from the Civil War period. The papers also contain an 1834 letter from Marquis de Lafayette to the President of the French Chamber of Peers.
Terry family papers
Benjamin Trumbull papers
The papers contain correspondence, bills and receipts, sermons, church papers, writings, and miscellanea documenting the personal life, religious career, and literary work of Benjamin Trumbull. Sermons include material on a wide range of religious, historical, political, and social topics. Correspondence and other papers include material relating to Trumbull's family life, student years, religious responsibilities, and writings on Connecticut history, divorce, and land settlement.
William A. Tuttle family papers
The papers consist of correspondence, volumes, albums, legal and financial papers, and photographs relating to the Tuttle family of Connecticut.
Morris Franklin Tyler papers
Selden Warner papers
Correspondence and family legal and financial papers. The bulk of the papers relate to the activities of family members in the shad fishing industry near Lyme, Connecticut.
Joseph Washburn family papers
Chiefly the sermons of Joseph Washburn, together with a collection of the sayings of others, written down from memory. Also included are a sheet of maxims written out to display fine penmanship and a Yale College song book (1790). Five letters from his son, Elizur T. Washburn to various members of the family were written during 1829 to describe his trip from New York to London.