Showing Collections: 1–6 of 6
Filtered By
Filter Results
Additional filters
- Subject
- Europe -- Description and travel 5
- Clergy 4
- Diaries 4
- Families 4
- Account books 3
- Connecticut 3
- Educators 3
- Business 2
- Education 2
- Lawyers 2
- New Haven (Conn.) 2
- New Haven (Conn.) -- Social life and customs 2
- Science 2
- Social sciences 2
- United States -- Politics and government 2
- Alcohol -- Law and legislation 1
- Armed Forces 1
- Authors 1
- Businessmen 1
- Canandaigua (N.Y.) -- Social life and customs 1 ∧ less
- Names
- Dwight, Timothy, 1828-1916 4
- Dana, James Dwight, 1813-1895 3
- Gilman, Daniel C. (Daniel Coit), 1831-1908 3
- Porter, Noah, 1811-1892 3
- Silliman, Benjamin, 1779-1864 3
- Silliman, Benjamin, 1816-1885 3
- Bacon, Leonard Woolsey, 1830-1907 2
- Coit family 2
- Coit, Daniel Lathrop, 1754-1833 2
- Day, Jeremiah, 1773-1867 2
- Farnham family 2
- Gilman family 2
- Gilman, Edward W. (Edward Whiting), 1823-1900 2
- Gilman, Elizabeth Coit, 1796-1868 2
- Gilman, Maria Perit, 1824-1906 2
- Gilman, William C. (William Charles), 1795-1863 2
- Herrick, Edward Claudius, 1811-1862 2
- Hoadley, George, 1781-1857 2 ∧ less
Chauncey family papers
Farnam family papers
Daniel Coit Gilman papers
Correspondence, writings, lectures, and other papers of Daniel Coit Gilman, educator, university president, and author. Included are papers regarding Gilman's career at Yale, the University of California, and Johns Hopkins University. Important correspondents include Charles M. Andrews, James Dwight Dana, William Henry Brewer, Timothy Dwight, Benjamin Silliman, Theodore Dwight Woolsey, and Andrew Dickson White.
Gilman Family Papers
Correspondence, diaries, writings, financial records, photographs, clippings, and other papers relating to the Gilman and Coit families of New England. The bulk of the collection relates to Edward Whiting Gilman (1823-1900), his family and his work as a clergyman and foreign secretary of the American Bible Society.
William Woolsey Johnson papers
The papers consist almost entirely of family correspondence among Johnson, his wife, children, and parents, including letters from Johnson as a student at Yale University. Among the family correspondents is Theodore Dwight Woolsey, an uncle of Johnson's. Also in the papers are account books (1877-1894) and a small amount of correspondence with friends and professional associates.