Search Results
American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born Records, 1926-1980s
51.00 linear feet and 2 oversized volumes
American Council on Alcohol Problems Records, 1883-2015 (majority within 1920s-1960s)
7 linear feet (in 9 boxes) — 1 oversize folder
American Legion. Auxiliary. Erwin Prieskorn Unit #46 (Ann Arbor, Mich.) records, 1921-1992 (majority within 1970-1985)
3 linear feet — 3 oversize volumes
American Legion, Department of Michigan records, 1919-1999
18 linear feet — 8 oversize volumes — 1 oversize folder — 8 microfilms
Executive Committee Files, 1918-1982
Executive Committee Files (1919-1982, 4.5 rolls of microfilm, 6 linear feet) largely consist of the minutes of meetings held by the executive committee.
American National Red Cross. Isabella County Chapter (Mich.) Organizational records, 1917-1979
1.25 cubic feet (in 1 box, 3 Oversized volumes, 1 Oversized folder)
American National Red Cross, Washtenaw County Chapter records, 1916-1976
4 linear feet — 1 oversize volume
American Society for Information Science and Technology Records, 1925-2001 (majority within 1937-2000)
185 linear feet in 188 boxes — Photographs are primarily in boxes 149-156. — Audio material is primarily in boxes 172-187. — Visual material is primarily in boxes 121, 169, 173-187. — Most printed materials have been removed and cataloged separately. Newsletters are scattered throughout the collection.
Correspondence, 1897, 1932-1967
Green's correspondence file includes copies of most of his outgoing letters, as well as his incoming mail. It contains virtually no personal information, but documents Green's fieldwork, his writing and publishing, his constant search for primary sources for Berrien County history, and, to a lesser extent, his MAS activities. The correspondence details, too, his long relationship with several members of the archeological profession: John Witthoft of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission and the American Archeological Society; E. F. Greenman of the University of Michigan Museum of Archaeology and editor of the Michigan Archeologist (MAS); James Fitting of the University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology and successor to Greenman as editor of the Michigan Archeologist; and James Hibbard of the University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the correspondence is the light it sheds on the relationship between amateurs and professionals in archaeology. For all of his credentials, Green remained always conscious of being "a 'Sunday afternoon archeologist, '" and he remained either diffident or defensive in his relations with all Ph.D.s, no matter how long he had known them. On the other hand, his position was that of intermediary between the two worlds, and the professionals seemed to value him precisely because he served as their bridge to the public and vice versa.