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Collection

Daniel J. Zutt letters, 1922-1923

4 items

The collection consists of four letters, dating from November 20, 1922, to June 29, 1923, that Daniel Zutt wrote to his mother Elise Hartmetz Zutt while he was studying in Berlin and traveling around Europe. The letters primarily discuss Zutt's social activities and the economic situation in the Weimar Republic.

The collection consists of four letters, dating from November 20, 1922, to June 29, 1923, that Daniel Zutt wrote to his mother Elise Hartmetz Zutt while he was studying in Berlin and traveling around Europe. The letters primarily discuss Zutt's social activities and the economic situation in the Weimar Republic.

While in Berlin, Zutt boarded with the Rehse household at Hektorstrasse 5 in Halensee. He discusses his frustration with the bureaucratic police registration process for foreigners and his difficulty in finding time to write home and keep his diary. Zutt traveled around Germany including Mainz, Worms, and Aachen to visit family as well as sight-see with another American. He celebrated Thanksgiving, visited the American embassy in Berlin, and attended a Berlin Philharmonic concert courtesy of free tickets from his landlady and her violinist daughter. Zutt intersperses German words in his letters and notes that he socialized with Germans to learn the language, including attending cabarets. Zutt comments on costs, the untenable economic situation, uncertainty over the value of the German mark, export rules, and the food shortage. Zutt later studied in Paris, France, but returned to Berlin for a stay in 1923, traveling through former WWI battle zones.

Collection

Daniel Katz papers, 1925-1997

9 linear feet

Professor of psychology at the University of Michigan, known for his work in social psychology, organizational behavior and race relations; papers document his teaching and research activities 1925-1997, and involvement in professional organizations.

Daniel Katz's papers document his research and teaching activities from 1925 to 1997. His papers reflect the major issues and trends in social psychology, from its early development through its edification as a discipline. The development of Katz's thinking and work is illuminated through his extensive correspondence with contemporaries, articles and other publications, and research materials.

The Katz collection is divided into nine series: Personal; Professional Correspondence; Office of War Information; Professional organizations and related; Research and Surveys; Teaching and course materials; Articles; Published/Unpublished Materials; and Topical Files.

Collection

Danielle Fosler-Lussier interview of Richard Crawford, 2006

1 folder

Professor of musicology at Ohio State University specializing in musicology and diplomatic history. Consists of an oral history interview with University of Michigan Professor Richard Crawford.

The collection is an oral history interview--documented via a 34-page transcript and as well as a recording on two CDs--with University of Michigan Professor Richard Crawford. The interview deals exclusively with the 1965 University of Michigan Jazz Band tour of Central and South America.

Collection

Daniel Morgan collection, 1764-1951 (majority within 1764-1832)

63 items

The Daniel Morgan collection is made up of financial records, legal documents, correspondence, and other items related to General Daniel Morgan and to Willoughby Morgan, his son.

The Daniel Morgan collection is made up of 63 financial records, legal documents, correspondence, and other items related to General Daniel Morgan and to Willoughby Morgan, his son. The majority of the collection consists of accounts, bonds, promissory notes, and other documents pertaining to Daniel Morgan's financial affairs. Accounts and invoices record Morgan's purchases of clothing, wagon-related equipment and services, and other items. Some of the later items do not concern Morgan directly but have his legal endorsement. Also included are two outgoing letters by Morgan, a 9-page legal document about a lawsuit against Morgan, and a deposition that Morgan gave in a different dispute. Other items are a bond regarding Morgan's marriage to Abigail Curry (March 30, 1773) and Morgan's political address to the citizens of Allegheny County about politics and the militia (January 17, 1795). Three of the documents pertain to enslaved and free African Americans (November 6, 1773; June 13, 1789; and March 28, 1799). Later items mostly pertain to the estate of Willoughby Morgan, Daniel Morgan's son. James Graham wrote two letters to unknown recipients in 1847 and 1856 about his efforts to write Daniel Morgan's biography, which he subsequently published.

Printed items include a map of the surrender of Yorktown (undated), a newspaper article from a Winchester, Virginia, paper about the possible disinterment of Daniel Morgan's remains (August 18, 1951), and printed portraits of Daniel Morgan with manuscript and facsimile autographs.

Collection

Daniel R. Hundley diary, 1859

1 volume

The Daniel R. Hundley diary was kept by an Alabamian while he was in Chicago seeking a career as an author. The diary contains daily records of his activities, and his reactions as a southern Baptist, living in the North, to national and international political issues such as abolition. Of particular interest are his scathing comments on John Brown and his "assassins," whose fates he followed very closely in the days after the Harper's Ferry raid.

Daniel R. Hundley kept a diary while he was in Chicago seeking a career as an author. The diary contains daily records of his activities and his reactions as a southern Baptist, living in the North, to national and international political issues such as abolition. He wrote of current political and social events and of his deepening poverty. Interspersed with the political commentary are notes on the progress of Hundley's sick wife, whose condition he described almost daily. Hundley was not employed, but often went into the city, sold produce from the farm, and was an avid hunter of small game, especially passenger pigeons, quail, and rabbits. Throughout the year, Hundley worked on writing a book to explain the South and slavery to northerners. This volume was eventually published in 1860 as Social Relations In Our Southern States . Chapter titles include: "Southern Yeoman," "Middle Classes in the South," "Southern Bully," "Cotton Snobs," and "Negro Slavery in the South." He occasionally sent philosophical essays to The Harbinger and to Harper’s Weekly, but they were rejected for publication. Though not a secessionist, he was strongly pro-slavery, which caused some friction with his northern neighbors. Finally he sent his wife and children off to live with his father in Alabama and left for New York to study for the ministry.

Below are several highlights from the diary:
  • January 1: Hundley listed his debts and assets and voiced approval for Senator Stephen Douglas over Senate candidate Abraham Lincoln.
  • January 30: Hundley discussed reading Livingston’s "Travels in Africa" and points out abolitionists' inconsistencies.
  • February 5: Hundley recorded that his wife’s grandmother died in Virginia, leaving 17 family servants to her and her other grandchildren. The relatives in Virginia wanted to pay Hundley's wife for her share of the slaves, so that they would not have to be sold.
  • February 27: Hundley reported that some Chicagoans had contributed $10,000 to purchase Mount Vernon from a relative of George Washington.
  • February 28: Hundley wrote that General Daniel Sickles had shot and killed United States Attorney for the District of Columbia Philip Barton Keys for having an affair with Sickles's wife.
  • April 21: Hundley heard Henry Ward Beecher lecture and concluded that he was only a second-rate man with little grasp of intellect or depth of thought: "His forte is neither reason nor common sense."
  • July 1: Hundley wrote that Napoleon III’s Franco-Austrian war had depressed grain prices and that he wanted to buy some wheat on speculation. However, the depression in the grain market had caused some of the most prominent grain dealers in Chicago to fail.
  • October 18: Hundley learned of John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry. He referred to Brown as a "crimson sinner," and called for his life as punishment for the raid.
  • October 20: Hundley revealed his happiness at the deaths of Brown's sons: they lie "stark dead upon the sail of Slavery."
  • October 22: Hundley incorrectly assumed that Harper's Ferry would "prove the death-blow of [the Republican] party, and will force them to abandon their separate organization and unite with the general position."
  • October 27: Hundley mentioned that an "ultra Republican [...] believed Brown would be canonized as a martyr for Liberty in one hundred years from to-day."
  • October 29: Hundley reported that William H. Seward was implicated in "the sad affair of Harper's Ferry," and Hundley predicted the end of Seward's political career.
  • November 2: Hundley wrote of Brown’s conviction.
  • December 1: Hundley worried about the "imminent dissolution of the Union." He argued with an abolitionist that the Bible sanctioned slavery.
  • December 2:, Hundley expressed his hope that the Union would be saved and that Brown's actions would not cause it to rupture.
  • December 21: his brother arrived from Alabama with $2,000, which enabled him to pay off his creditors. He put his wife, his three young children, and a servant on a train for Alabama and set off for New York City for the winter, where he planned to enroll in a seminary and study to become a Baptist minister.
Collection

Daniel R. Rupp, Michigan History Collection, 1858, 2025, and undated

4 cubic ft. (in 6 boxes, 3 film cannisters)

This artificial collection which Rupp purchased from various sources, documents Michigan history and tourism, including Indigenous people of Michigan; Ernest Hemingway, his family, and movies based on his books; and the Louise Obermiller papers (partial) which documents disputes over ownership of lands of the Odawa and Ojibwa bands in Little Traverse Bay area.

This artificial collection, which Rupp purchased from various sources, documents Michigan history and tourism, including Indigenous people of Michigan; Ernest Hemingway, his family, and movies based on his books; and the Louise Obermiller papers (partial) which documents disputes over ownership of lands of the Odawa and Ojibwa bands in Little Traverse Bay area. Each of these series is further described below. The collection consists of paper-based and audio-visual formats, mostly correspondence, legal documents, and property records, photographs, photograph albums, moving image films, and a partial printing block of a hymn in Odawa. The text is predominantly in English, except for the printing block and one partial note page in German. Series are organized by size, format, alphabetically and chronologically, except for the Obermiller series. The original order of the Obermiller series was destroyed by the time the material arrived in the Clarke, so Archivist Marian Matyn followed the original order as illustrated by the University of Notre Dame Archives finding aid. Boxes 1-5 are .5 letter-size, Box 6 is .5 legal-size and Box 7 is a cubic foot box containing three archival film cannisters. The collection is in good physical condition. For more detail see the series description.

The first series in the collection is Michigan history and tourism (in Box 1, Box 3, 1 folder in Box 6, and one moving image film reel). This series includes printed tourism brochures and photographic glass slides (in Box 1), photographs, photograph albums, postcards, a printing block for a hymn in Odawa, undated, a stereoscopic view of “Ojibwe children, and letters (in Box 3).

Series 1:

The glass slides are all undated. They are mostly mass-produced, tinted, some with text. Most of the mass-produced slides are part of multiple series created by Keystone View Company or Underwood and Underwood of the Song of Hiawatha as reenacted by Indigenous people. The most unique slides in the collection are two by the Detroit Photographic Co. of Indigenous men fishing in the rapids of Sault Ste Marie. The first slide is the black and white photographic slide, while the second is a tinted version of the first. There are also some homemade slides of another sequence of the Song of Hiawatha and of the Hiawatha Pagenat at Portage Lake. A slide of Pocahontas saving John Smith is a black and white photograph of a drawing. There is also a photographic slide of a bronze tablet (marker) documenting Marquette’s Funeral.

The creators of the two undated photograph albums are unidentified, as are most of the images. One of the photograph albums, with images from the late nineteenth to early twentieth century, has several images documenting the photographer as a white woman. Most of the photographs appear to be of her family at their home and farm. The second photograph album contains portraits of unidentified African American people, mostly from the first half of the twentieth century, with a few which may be very late nineteenth century. One 1952 baby portrait is identified by full name as Nanita Ruth Brown (1952-2006), who lived her entire life in California.

The printing block is of a partial hymn with text in Odawa, undated, which was wrapped in tattered Messenger, v. X no. 5, July 1905 from the Holy Childhood Church and School, Harbor Springs, which was used as packing material. The printing block was retained as an example by the Clarke. It was one of a large number of similar printing blocks in Odawa and English of hymns and prayers, which were transferred to the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indian’s Department of Repatriation, Archives and Records.

Completing this series is an example of Petoskey History, one folder of Correspondence from Bertha Rundell in Petoskey to her husband, John A. Rundell in Detroit, 1913, 1917. Box 6 (legal-size folders) includes 1 folder of undated photographs of an Indigenous woman and man in a canoe on a river, photographed by Gruett Chandler. These photographs are printed on the back of a partial, damaged sign.

There is also one moving image film, in its own cannister, “When Michigan Was Young,” 1964. Film ID No. 78141-2. ID Number: Film No. 78141-2. Format: 16mm, Black and White, Optical Soundtrack, Polyester bas. Date: 1964. Size: 1,000 ft. Information off Original Can(s): “D1048 When Michigan Was Young,” “Instructional Communications Center Northern Michigan University Marquette, Michigan.” Information off Original Leader(s): “When Michigan Was Young D1048” “Film Library Northern Michigan University.” Overview of Scenes: [Note: This film is composed of still artistic representations of settlers and Indigenous people of Michigan and the Midwest from the ice age through the 18th century. ] Animation of Michigan’s lakes forming. Still artistic representation of mammoths. Indigenous people fishing and farming. Indigenous people building canoes. “When Michigan Was Young Copyright 1964 Consumers Power Company” opening title. “Collection Detroit Public Library”, “C.W. Jefferys from the Imperial Oil Collection”, “William L. Clement Library University of Michigan”, “Michigan Historical Collections”, “Transportation Library University of Michigan”, “Michigan Historical Commission”, “Pontiac Motor Division General Motors Corporation”, “Public Archives of Canada”, “The Ohio Historical Society”, “State Historical Society of Wisconsin”, “The Indiana Historical Society”, “The Royal Ontario Museum”, “The National Lumberman’s Bank of Muskegon”, “The American Museum of Natural History”, “Chicago Natural History Museum” and “The Kenneth Jewell Chorale” in the introductory credits. Map of Michigan. Still artistic representation of settlers interacting with Indigenous people. Large ships on water. Settlers speaking with indigenous people. Indigenous people cooking over a fire. Settlers building houses and walls. Indigenous people fighting one another with bows. Map of rivers from the Atlantic Ocean to Lake Huron. Animation of a line from Lake Huron to Like Michigan then to Wisconsin. A Settler leading a group of Indigenous people. Settlers shooting Indigenous people with guns. Settlers assembling canoes. Settlers walking in the rain. Map of rivers within Michigan. Settlers hunting animals with Indigenous people. Settlers and Indigenous people at a meeting in a log cabin. Burning buildings. Settlers kicking indigenous people out of a building. Map of Michigan with the label “Quebec.” Settlers and Indigenous people fighting. A settler cutting of an Indigenous person’s hair in a fight. Indigenous people capturing women and children. Map of Indiana and Illinois with American flags. Map of Michigan with British flag. American and British soldiers at a standoff. Map of Michigan and Wisconsin with the label “Northwest Territory.” Settlers and Indigenous people signing a document. Map of Michigan with an American flag. Settlers cutting down trees and building log cabins. “By Portafilms” end credit. [Note: The film was released by perennial Education.] Physical Information: .055 shrinkage. Miscellaneous Information: None.

Series 2:

The second series is Ernest Hemingway-related materials (in Boxes 2 and 7). This series, mainly in Box 2, consists mostly of secondary source movie material connected to his books; clippings; postcards and programs of Ernest Hemingway festivals. The exceptions to this are his mother’s sketch of her cabin, undated; his grandfather Anson T. Hemingway’s 1923 diary; family photographs, 1897, 1904, 1912, 1924, undated; and a Photographic Postcard of Marcelline and Ernest in Walloon Lake at Windemere, with a note from Dr. C. Hemingway to his sister, Miss Sarah Stitsman, 1911.

Anson T. Hemingway’s 1923 diary, January 1-December 31 (Scattered), is notable because it is the year that his wife, Adelaide Edmonds, died on January 5. The diary has scattered entries with many empty pages. The majority of his very brief daily listing of Oak Park, Illinois, church and social events and activities, news of family and friends, including visits, weddings, funerals, and letters received, his and his “Wife”’s health, her death and funeral. He often includes the weather and interesting news bits he likely read in the newspaper, such as election information and manufacturing statistics on Ford cars (which he noted on January 29). Anson refers to Grace, his daughter, as Daughter or Grace, and he refers to his daughter-in-law as Grace Hall Hemingway (GHH) or Dr. CEH and wife. Anson’s son, Clarence, who is mentioned often in the diary, is referred to as Dr. Ed, Dr. Clarence, or Dr. CEH. Ernest Hemingway is mentioned twice in the diary, as Anson heard that Ernest and Hadley were in Italy (April 7), and later, in Toronto (September 21). For a detailed inventory of when Ernest, his parents or siblings are mentioned in the diary, see the listing Archivist Marian Matyn prepared and added to the Diary’s folder.

The rest of the series includes a Screenplay adaption of “For Whom The Bell Tolls” by R. V. O’Neil, undated; Islands in the Stream” Paramount Press Book, 1976; and “To Have and Have Not” Script, 2nd Rev. Final 1944, 20th century photocopy, undated. There is a professionally recorded Caedmon Tape, Ernest Hemingway Reading, Reel-to-Reel Tape, [1965].

Box 6 (legal-size folders) includes 1 folder of Hemingway, Ernest, “Islands in the Stream,” Color Movie Lobby Cards, #1, #5, each measures 11x114 inches, 1962.

There are two moving image Hemingway film reels, each in its own film cannister: “My Old Man,” 1970 and “Hemingway - Heroes -”, “DuPont Hemingway Act I Reel I,” 1961.

Film ID No. 78141-1. Format: 16mm, Color, Optical Soundtrack, Polyester base. Date: 1970 Size: 450 ft. “My Old Man” Information off Original Can(s): none Information off Original Leader(s): “Metro-Cleveland Educational Resource Center 4300 Brook Park Road Cleveland, Ohio 44134”, “FC-5375 My Old Man”, “E 47760 My Old Man”, “DEL/GEN/ILL/EBF – ‘My Old Man’ – Commentary”, “GFL 126741” Overview of Scenes: “Encyclopaedia Britannica Educational Corporation” title screen. Introductory credits. People carrying luggage in a crowded area. Still photographs of Paris streets and buildings. Horse racing. Still photographs of a child and then adolescent. More horse racing. Joe, a teenaged boy, and Butler, his father, sit at a cafe outdoors and talk. Joe makes eye contact with a teenaged girl. She smiles at him then leaves. Joe sitting next to a tree while Butler jumps rope. More horse racing. A horse jockey sitting at a cafe outside. Joe and Butler stare at him. Joe and Butler walk and talk. Joe and Butler walk and talk on another day. Man leading a horse at stables. Butler sitting outside with two other men speaking to him. Joe hands him a newspaper and the other two men leave. Joe walks and talks with a different man. End credits. Physical Information: No shrinkage. (The film is on a polyester base.) Miscellaneous Information: More information on the film’s cast and crew can be found here: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt16758152/?ref_=fn_ttl_ttl_6 The version of the film in the Clarke seems to be an abbreviated version or a promotional short of the full film. The full film can be found here: https://www.britannica.com/video/tale-narrator-Hemingway-impulses-childhood-illusions-My-1970/-138917 (These resources were accessed on March 18, 2025.)

Film ID No. 78141-3. Format: 16mm, Black and White, Optical Soundtrack, Polyester base. Date: 1961 Size: 1,800 ft. Information off Original Can(s): None. Information off Original Leader(s): “Hemingway – Heroes -”, “DuPont Hemingway Act I Reel I” journalist from 1934 to 1970.] Still images of Hemingway as a young child into a young adult. Men duck hunting. Child Hemingway loading a shotgun. Still images of Hemingway as a young adult. Newspaper articles written by Hemingway. Hemingway in a high school yearbook. Poster of Uncle Sam recruiting for the army. Newspaper articles about the war. World War I nurses. The Red Cross. Destroyed buildings. Explosions and gunfire. Trenches. Warfare. Veteran in a wheelchair. Still images of Hemingway writing. Back to Huntly at the desk. Still images of Hemingway. Moving images of men fly fishing in a river. Ducks flying in clearing. Hemingway standing next to a young woman. Streets and storefronts in France. Hemingway opens a bottle of alcohol. Streets with people walking on them. A skyline with the Eiffel tower. “La Rotonde” sign. More storefronts. Man with an eyepatch with glasses overtop of it. Men in military uniforms walking on street. Soldiers salute. Closeup of Benito Mussolini in uniform. Soldiers on motorcycles with body shields. Army marching. Senior woman smelling a flower. A player piano playing. Men and women dancing. Back to Huntly at the desk. Still images of Hemingway. Man hanging a “Pamplona Running of the Bulls” poster. Band marching on the streets. A parade. A fireworks show. The running of the bulls. Bulls ramming into people. People in a colosseum. Band playing in colosseum seats. A matador fighting a bull. Still images of a matador stabbing the bull. A waterfall. A windmill. “Viva España” sign. Soldiers crawling on the ground. Dead soldiers on battlefield. Soldiers marching on the street. Soldiers loading machine guns. Soldiers on bridge. Back to Huntly at the desk. Hemingway with animal trophies. An African savannah. Elephants, gazelles, giraffes and zebras. A mountain. Still images of Hemingway. A building in the savannah burning. Tanks moving through woods. Hemingway fishing from a boat. Hemingway interviewed in his house in Florida near a pool. Hemingway shows off his hunting trophies. “Julian Claman,” “Chet Huntly,” “Andrew Duggan,” and “NBC News” end credits. Physical Information: .035 shrinkage. Miscellaneous Information: More information on the film’s cast and crew can be found here: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0566742/ (This resource was accessed on March 18, 2025.)

Series 3:

The third series is part of the Obermiller papers. This series, in Boxes 4-5 and all but two folders in Box 6, documents the combined efforts of Louise Obermiller, Michigan Indigenous people, and their white allies to substantiate and defend claims to land ownership on behalf of Odawa and Ojibwa bands in Little Traverse Bay as stipulated in treaties signed with the United States government in 1836 and 1855. There is clear documentation in the collection of broken promises by whites to Indigenous landowners, illegal abstracts of title created to sell communally owned Indigenous land. Properties in and near Bay View and Harbor Springs are discussed in the collection. While a majority of the correspondents are from Michigan’s Northern through central Lower Peninsula, others are from the Upper Peninsula, and out-of-state, mostly in Ohio, where Louise was based. Materials include property records; major correspondence are between Louise Obermiller, Effie Obermiller, Odawa and Ojibwa chiefs and tribal members, government officials, lawyers, judges, and community members throughout northern and central Michigan; and legal records including court records, lists of treaty signatories and claimants, affidavits, testimonies, and depositions. Also included are a few empty envelopes and a Druggist’s Bond of Henry W. Rodenbaugh, of Reidsville, Van Buren County, Michigan, 1902; with a photocopy, 2022.

Processing Notes:

This collection is part of a much larger collection that Daniel Rupp offered to the Clarke Historical Library in 2024. Many of the materials in the original collection were either duplicates of materials the Clarke already had in its collections or were outside of the Clarke’s collecting parameters. These materials were returned to Rupp in 2025. Of the materials retained at the Clarke Historical Library, publications were separately cataloged. By then, the original order of the unpublished materials was lost. Archivist Marian Matyn used the original order of the Obermiller collection, as demonstrated by Notre Dame Archives finding aid, as a guide to reconstruct the original order of the Oberrmiller materials. Order by size, format, title and date was imposed upon the rest of the collection. Acidic materials were photocopied to preserve the originals. Both photocopies and originals were maintained in the collection. No materials were withdrawn during processing. Films, originally on metal and plastic reels, were spliced, viewed via projection, described, and archivally housed in vented cannisters with cores by archives film student Max Maksymowski according to national film standards.

Collection

Daniel R. Sivil Papers, 1940-1993 (majority within 1977-1983)

0.5 linear feet

Daniel R. Sivil was active in the gay and lesbian civil rights and advocacy movement of the 1980s. b He was a founding member of the Michigan Organization for Human Rights and president of the Association of Suburban People, a gay-lesbian organization devoted to social and political activity. Files relating to organizational and advocacy efforts; correspondence with Henry Messer and other activists; and photographs.

The papers of Daniel Ross Sivil provide insight into the gay and lesbian civil rights and advocacy movement of the early 1980s on both a personal and professional level. Sivil's writings and correspondence with peers demonstrates the joys and difficulties of presiding over a grassroots gay and lesbian organization (including fundraising, attracting members, and competing with similar organizations) and lobbying for gay rights in general. The papers have been divided into three series; Activities, Correspondence, and Photographs.

Collection

Daniel Satterthwaite papers, 1855-1856, 1859

1 oversize box

Diary and diploma belonging to Daniel Satterthwaite, University of Michigan Class of 1859. Caricature sketch of the full class of 1859, including Satterthwaite, by Stephen H. Webb.

This collection consists of material related to Daniel Satterthwaite, a University of Michigan graduate from the class of 1859. His diary, dated between 1855 and 1856, contains his personal thoughts on student life, religious activities, farming, and events current to the time. Excerpts from the diary were printed in volume 35 of The Michigan Alumnus, a publication run by the Alumni Association of the University of Michigan. The collection also includes his 1859 bachelor's degree diploma from the University of Michigan, as well as a caricature of the class of 1859 that was sketched by Stephen H. Webb.

Collection

Daniel Tsang papers, 1970-1978

2 linear feet

Student at the University of Michigan, member of the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO). Topical files concerning the organization and strike of the GEO in 1975; also papers relating to affirmative action and issues relating to gay University students.

The Tsang papers consist of topical files, printed material, and press releases relating to the formation of the Graduate Employees Organization at the University of Michigan and the strike of its members. There are also topical files relating to affirmative action and problems confronting gay University students.

Collection

Daniel W. Coxe collection, 1802-1838 (majority within 1802-1812, 1816-1838)

13 items

The Daniel W. Coxe collection contains incoming and outgoing correspondence, financial records, and documents related to the Philadelphia merchant's business affairs in the early 1800s. Many of the financial records concern Coxe's accounts with London firm Barclay & Salkeld, particularly regarding shipments of cotton and flour.

The Daniel W. Coxe collection (13 items) contains incoming and outgoing correspondence, financial records, and documents related to the Philadelphia merchant's business affairs in the early 1800s. Six sets of accounts and one additional financial document pertain to Coxe's relationship with the London firm Barclay & Salkeld and to shipments of cotton from New Orleans to English ports. Two indentures concern mortgages for land in Pennsylvania, made between Daniel Coxe and the State Bank at Trenton (December 26, 1816) and between Daniel Coxe and Warnet Myers of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (April 25, 1828). The remaining four items pertain to Philadelphia property prices (July 25, 1810), financial accounts between Daniel Coxe and James S. J. Massey (May 2, 1817), a violation made by the Bank of the United States in relation to the Philadelphia mayor's campaign against counterfeiters (April 20, 1835), and some of the financial affairs of the Rail Road and Banking Company (September 29, 1838).