1000006q=(electronic finding aid available) OR (electronic container list available)&physicalLocation=sch&isManuscript=true100Cookbook of Harriet C. Merrick, 1842Merrick, Harriet C.creatormixed materialtextCookbooks.-19th centuryRecipes.mauMassachusetts1842monographicengEnglish1 folder.unmediatedThe Merrick cookbook offers an important glimpse into New England foodways and contains some practical advice related to the upkeep of the home. Most of the recipes are desserts, including currant pudding, jumbles and gingerbread, which may have been family favorites. Other desserts were created to mark special events, such as election cake. Most of the recipes are legibly handwritten in ink. There are a few, written in pencil, that may be difficult to read. Also included are notes and recipes, which were signed by or attributed to relatives or friends, including Cornelia [?], Mary I. Barstow and Fanny Stebbins.Harriet C. Merrick Cookbook, 1842. A/M5685. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Available on microfilm (C-74, #570, 35 mm.) at the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Harriet C. Merrick was most likely born in New England, possibly in the town of Springfield, Massachusetts.Materials in English.Electronic finding aid available https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01779/catalogMerrick, Harriet CCooking, AmericanHome economicsHome economicsCooking, AmericanSCHA/M5685; M-133, D26232008777https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990028852250203941/catalogArthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard UniversityA/M5685; M-133, D26https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01779/catalogElectronic reproduction. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard College Library Digital Imaging Group, 2020.
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)engPapers of June Brenner Judson, 1923-2011Judson, June Brenner1929-creatormixed materialAwards.Photographs.Plays.Radio programsRadio public service announcements.Radio scriptsScrapbooks.Short storiesmauMassachusetts19232011monographicengEnglishvideorecordingvideocassette7.3 linear feet. (17 + 1/2 file boxes) plus 1 folio folder, 2 folio + folders, 1 oversize folder, 1 supersize folder, 16 photograph folders, 1 folio photograph folder, 1 oversize photograph folder.1 videocassette: sound, color ; 1/2 in.Arranged in four series: I. Biographical and personal. II. Professional activities. III. Family papers. IV. Photographs and audiovisual.Collection includes biographical scrapbooks; correspondence among family members, personal friends, and colleagues in the theatre; plays and other writings by Judson; promotional material related to her performances, directorial work, and photographs. Also included are art works, and writings of Judson's mother, Mabel Brenner, a self-taught artist; and radio transcripts and programs, clippings, legal briefs, and related material of Judson's great aunts, Bess Belmore, a popular radio personality during the 1940s, and Charlotte Slavitt, a criminal lawyer and published writer.June Brenner Judson Papers, 1923-2011. MC 960. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Actress, director, and playwright June Brenner Judson was born in 1929 to Mabel (Brooks) and Jacob Brenner. She grew up in North Easton, Massachusetts, where her father established a medical practice. Judson attended Cushing Academy (1944-1946) in Ashburnam, Massachusetts. While pursuing an undergraduate degree at Pembroke College at Brown University, Judson married Arnold Judson, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1949; couple had two children, Pamela Faith Judson (1952) and Jill Elizabeth Judson (1955). Judson's theatrical career began in the mid 1950s. In addition to performing in workshops and plays sponsored by the DeCordova Museum, she also joined their teaching faculty. Small local theatres and theatre companies, including Atma Theatre, the Poet's Theatre, the Lexington Theatre Guild and the Concord Players, provided Judson with further opportunities to hone her acting skills. In the early 1960s, she moved to London to study acting and stagecraft, earning a certificate of completion from the British Council Theatre. After returning to the United States in the late 1960s, Judson performed at local and regional theatres, colleges, historical societies, community centers, and other public venues.Judson's major theatrical accomplishments include writing, directing and producing Freedom and Angelina, a highly acclaimed drama-forum, which was performed in New York City and twenty-five community venues in eastern Massachusetts, including towns where Angela Grimke spoke during the 19th century. Judson's work with the Peoples Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts was another notable achievement. She initially formed Theatre in Process as a workshop component of the People's Theatre to introduce the plays of emerging playwrights. After the closure of the People's Theatre in 1982, Theatre In Process continued its work at local venues, and eventually established its own headquarters. During her long and successful career, Judson served on numerous advisory boards and councils committed to the arts, including the Governor's Council on the Arts and Humanities. She also helped renew interest in small theaters in the Boston area; many of which are now defunct. June Brenner Judson died on October 16, 2010.Materials in English.Electronic finding aid available https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01618/catalogThere is related material: People's Theatre Records, 1964-1982 at Houghton Library.Belmore, Bess1894-1971Brenner, Maybelle1906-1988Judson, June Brenner1929-Slavitt, Charlotte1905-1988Concord Players (Concord, Mass.).DeCordova and Dana Museum and Park.1900-1999ActressesUnited StatesAuthors, American20th centuryCommunity TheatreMassachusettsCambridgeDramatistsUnited StatesExperimental theatreUnited StatesJewish womenUnited StatesPulp literatureRadio actors and actressesTheatersStudy and teachingTheatersEnglandLondonTheatersGermany (West)TheatersMassachusettsVoyages and travelsWomen artistsUnited StatesWomen dramatistsUnited StatesWomen in radio broadcastingUnited StatesWomen lawyersUnited StatesWomen writersUnited StatesWomen lawyersWomen in radio broadcastingWomen artistsTravelPulp literatureJewish womenAuthors, AmericanBoston (Mass.)Social life and customs20th centuryEuropeDescription and travelUnited StatesEuropeSCHMC 960; Vt-203122386738https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990096023270203941/catalogArthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard UniversityMC 960; Vt-203
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)engPapers of Rachel Josefowitz Siegel, 1929-2016Siegel, Rachel Josefowitz.creatormixed materialAudiotapes.Diaries.Essays.Family records.Interviews.Oral histories.Photographs.Speeches.Transcripts.mauMassachusetts19292016monographicengEnglishsound recordingsound cassette5.84 linear feet. (14 file boxes) plus 2 folio folders, 1 oversize folder, 7 photograph folders.55 sound cassettes : analog.Collection includes biographical information, personal and professional correspondence, conference material, and audiotapes and transcripts of group sessions and interviews with older women conducted by Siegel for a book that was never completed.Rachel Josefowitz Siegel Papers, 1929-2016. MC 928. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Clinical social worker, feminist psychotherapist, and writer, Rachel Josefowitz Siegel was born in 1924 in Berlin, Germany, to Lithuanian Jewish parents. Raised in Switzerland, she emigrated to the United States in 1939 and was awarded a bachelors degree from Simmons College in 1944. She married Benjamin M. Siegel, had three children, and became a community volunteer for the Ithaca, New York, chapter of Hadassah, as a tutor in the Ithaca public schools, and as a board member for a number of local social service agencies. In 1973 she returned to school, earning a masters degree from the Syracuse University School of Social Work. Siegel was in private practice as a psychotherapist for many years, and conducted group sessions, interviews, and workshops on women's issues, especially aging, Jewish culture, sexuality. She was the co-author of Women Changing Therapy: New Assessments, Values, and Strategies in Feminist Therapy (1983), Jewish Women in Therapy: Seen but Not Heard (1991), and Jewish Mothers Tell Their Stories: Acts of Love and Courage (2000).Materials in English.Electronic finding aid available https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01589/catalogSiegel, Rachel JosefowitzAdvanced Feminist Therapy Institute.National Association of Social Workers.National Women's Studies AssociationSyracuse UniversityAmerican Orthopsychiatric AssociationFeministsUnited StatesFeminist therapyJewish womenUnited StatesOlder womenUnited StatesSex discrimination against womenLaw and legislationUnited StatesSocial workersUnited StatesVoyages and travelsWomen college teachersUnited StatesWomenEmploymentWomenEducationWomenLegal status, laws, etcUnited StatesWomenSocial conditionsWomenSocial networksWomen's rightsCongressesSocial workersOlder womenJewish womenFeminist therapyUnited StatesSCHMC 928; T-427869314773https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990104673140203941/catalogArthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University2007-M86; 2007-M96; 2007-M164; 2010-M69
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)engPapers of Anne Cabot Wyman, 1849-2011Wyman, Anne Cabotcreatormixed materialDiariesAwards.EssaysNewspapersPhotographsPhotograph albums.Short storiesSpeechesmauMassachusetts18492011monographicengEnglish20.85 linear feet (50 file boxes) plus 2 folio folders, 3 folio + folders, 14 photograph folders, 1 folio photograph folder, 1 folio + photograph folder, 3 photograph albums, 1 object.Arranged in four series: I. Biographical and personal. II. Other correspondence. III. Professional activities. IV. Photographs.Collection includes biographical and personal papers, professional correspondence, datebooks, family history, photographs, and articles by and about Anne Cabot Wyman.Collection is open for research.Collection stored off site: researchers must request access 36 hours before use.Anne Cabot Wyman Papers, 1849-2011. MC 944. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Prize winning journalist Anne Cabot Wyman was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1929, the daughter of Anne Cabot and Jeffries Wyman, a Harvard professor of bio-chemistry. A graduate of the Baldwin School, she briefly attended McGill University and later transferred to Radcliffe College where she graduated in 1953. In the mid-1960s Wyman, an avid traveler and licensed pilot, became the Boston Globe's first full-time travel writer. She joined the Globe's editorial board in 1970 and five years later became the first woman to be appointed chief editor of the editorial pages. She remained at the Globe for 30 years. Wyman authored Kipling's Cat: A Memoir of My Father (2010), and edited Letters from Japan (2000) and Alaska's Journal (2010). She died in 2014.Materials in English.Gift of Penny Dincauze, 2015-2017. schElectronic finding aid available #u https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/sch01602/catalogThere is related material: Wyman Family Archive 1711-2010 at the Harvard University Archives.There is related material: Jeffries Wyman Papers, 1832-1936 at the Harvard Medical Library, Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine.n-us---n-us-maWyman, Anne CabotWyman, Jeffries, Jr. 1901-1995Wyman, Anne CabotBaldwin SchoolAlumni and alumnaeMcGill UniversityAlumni and alumnaeRadcliffe CollegeAlumni and alumnaeWinsor School (Boston, Mass.)Globe Newspaper Co.EmployeesRadcliffe CollegeGlobe Newspaper Co.1900-1999Air pilotsUnited StatesEditorsUnited StatesJournalistsUnited StatesVoyages and travelsWomen air pilotsUnited StatesWomen editorsUnited StatesWomen journalistsUnited StatesWomen travelersWomen journalistsWomen editorsWomen air pilotsUniversities and collegesAlumni and alumnaeManners and customsJournalistsEmployeesEditorsAir pilotsBoston (Mass.)Social life and customs20th centuryNaushon Island (Mass.)Social life and customs20th centuryUnited StatesMassachusettsBostonSCHMC 944907975273https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/99153818782503941/catalog
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)engMarch for Life collection, 2017mixed materialPostersPosters.mauMassachusetts2017monographicengEnglish1 folder, 1 supersize folder.Collection consists of signs carried at the march, photographs, a button, and a hat from the 2017 March for Life. More material may be added later.Collection is open for research.Portions are closed during digitization.March for Life collection. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Beginning in 1974, the March for Life has been an annual rally protesting abortion, held in Washington, DC, on or around the anniversary of the Supreme Court case legalizing abortion, Roe v. Wade.Materials in English.Gift of Charmaine Yoest and Jennifer Marshall, 2017. schMarch for Life, Inc.Education & Defense Fund.March for Life (44th : 2017 : Washington, D.C.)AbortionGovernment policyCitizen participationPro-life movementUnited StatesProtest movementsUnited StatesProtest movementsPro-life movementAbortionGovernment policyCitizen participationUnited StatesSCH2017-M51; MC 925980369180https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990149392890203941/catalogArthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University2017-M51; MC 925http://id.lib.harvard.edu/images/8001352624/catalogElectronic reproduction. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard College Library Digital Imaging Group, 2017.
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)engPapers of Patricia M. Kelly, 1981-2016Kelly, Patricia M.1944-2016creatormixed materialHistoryDiariesDiaries.mauMassachusetts19812016monographicengEnglish1.4 linear feet (1 carton, 2 half file boxes)Collection includes travel diaries and notebooks (most concerning food), 1981-2014; itineraries of culinary trips, 2003-2015; notebooks containing books read, meals eaten; letters from Julia Child; papers by Kelly for Radcliffe Seminars classes, 1992-1996; bird watching notes; articles about her brother James F. Kelly, an Xavarian Brother who died in 2011; family photographs; etc.Collection is open for research.Collection stored off site: researchers must request access 36 hours before use.Patricia M. Kelly Papers. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.Culinary historian and educator, Patricia M. Kelly was the daughter of Dorothy (Vigneault) and Joseph Kelly and the sister of James F. Kelly. She studied at Regis College (BA) and Northeastern University (MA) and taught history and anthropology at Hull High School (Hull, Massachusetts) before developing culinary arts programs at Essex Agricultural School and North Shore Community College. A founder of the Culinary Historians of Boston, she co-authored the Bibliography of Culinary History: Food Resources in Eastern Massachusetts, and published Luncheonette: Ice Cream, Beverage, and Sandwich Recipes from the Golden Age of the Soda Fountain (1989). She also assisted Julia Child in indexing some of her best-selling cookbooks, and contributed articles to the Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink. Kelly died in Boston, Massachusetts.Materials in English.Gift of her executrix, Anne Fraser, 2017-2018.Child, JuliaKelly, Patricia M1944-2016Child, JuliaCookingHistoryVoyages and travelsVoyages and travelsCookingSCH2017-M38--2018-M117975161618https://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990149221110203941/catalogArthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University2017-M38--2018-M117
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(Revision 1.117 2017/02/14)eng