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William G. Butt Michigan Commission On Indian Affairs Collection, 1903-1981, and undated
1.25 cubic ft. (in 1 box, 2 Oversized volumes)
University of Michigan Activities, 1927-1968
In the University of Michigan Activities series, the largest subseries (Lecture Notes and Course Materials) contains materials relating to Dow's experiences both as a teacher and a student of electrical engineering. Materials in this subseries are divided into two sub-subseries: materials created by Dow and those relating to courses taught by others. Courses Dow taught are organized by course number, and these folders contain his notes, exercises, tests, and exams given to students. In many cases there seems to be an overlap between Dow's work as a teacher and his activities conducting industrial and government research, as demonstrated by the many pieces of correspondence with corporations which Dow indicated should be included in these files. Of particular interest may be the materials relating to the basic course in electronics developed by Dow which was required of all undergraduate students in electrical engineering at Michigan since 1929. According to The University of Michigan: An Encyclopedic Survey: "the College of Engineering of the University of Michigan was one of the first engineering schools in the United States to include instruction in electronics as a major item in its curriculum." (III, 1230) The extensive documentation of the courses Dow taught, together with his correspondence about education and the curriculum, may be of interest to those studying the evolution of this innovative program. Courses taught by people other than Dow are organized alphabetically by the professor's last name; these folders contain lecture notes rather than course materials.
This series also includes the University of Michigan Research Centers subseries which contains materials relating to the founding and administration of the Aeronautical Research Center and the Engineering Research Center. Another subseries relates to the Summer Electronics Institute, of which Dow was the director. The files of the Institute include correspondence relating to the planning of the institute, programs, notes on lectures taken by him, and texts of several lectures by Institute instructors. In 1937 the topic of the Summer Institute was high vacuum electron tubes and gaseous conduction principles; in 1950 the topics were microwave electron tubes and semi-conductor electronics, and in 1955 it focused on transistor applications. Materials relating to other activities sponsored by or held at the University of Michigan are included in the Events at the University of Michigan subseries.
Miscellaneous and Personal, 1878-1902, 1933-1966
Miscellaneous and Personal (1878-1902 and 1933-1966; 0.7 linear feet) includes scattered business records of his father William A. Anderson, newspaper clippings and a scrapbook relating to Anderson's activities with the USPS, and files relating to Detroit neighborhood politics. After World War II, Anderson and his wife took an extended trip using inland waterways beginning in Detroit, going as far south as Florida, then back to Detroit using waterways along the eastern seaboard. This series includes his narrative account of that voyage as well as a scrapbook of photographs, postcards and clippings relating to the trip. Anderson's daughter Catherine was a member of the WAVES during World War II, and her letters with her father provide information on the role of women in the military services.