This collection contains the late 19th century financial records of building contractors in Killingly, Connecticut.
Collections
Search Constraints
Start Over You searched for: Level Collection Remove constraint Level: Collection Date range 1890 Remove constraint Date range: <span class="single" data-blrl-single="1890">1890</span>Search Results
This collection contains records of locomotive engines built between 1861 and 1921 and used by the Great Western Railway.
Business records for a company in Pascoag and Woonsocket, Rhode Island, which specialized in the manufacture of windows, doors, blinds, and moldings.
Henry S. Manley Papers, 1849-1960 2.26 cubic ft.
The Henry S. Manley Papers contain materials related to Manley's legal career, research materials related to Native American issues (including material used for Manley's book The Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 1784), and some of his personal papers.
This collection contains a hand-corrected typescript of a novel later published in 1983, Tdische Anstsse.
Hinsdill Parsons Papers, 1890-1912 2 cubic ft.
The Hinsdill Parsons Papers contain materials from Parsons' employment as general counsel at General Electric beginning in 1894, as well as personal and financial papers.
Hudson Valley District Council of Carpenters Records, 1887-1990 17.52 cubic ft.
On November 14, 1946 the Carpenters' District Council of Ulster County and Vicinity was chartered. This council had local chapters in Kingston and Ellenville, New York. During the late 1940's local unions in the area began affiliating with the district council and eventually the district council, on May 4, 1949, was rechartered as the Hudson Valley District Council of Carpenters, the change of name more closely describing its jurisdiction. New local unions continued to be created, and independent local unions continued to affiliate with the district council. By the early 1950's the district council represented carpenters in Columbia, Delaware, Dutchess, Greene, Sullivan, and Ulster counties.
International Typographical Union Collection, 1870-1936 0.4 cubic ft.
The International Typographical Union (ITU) was founded on May 3, 1852 in New York City. The ITU was a US trade union for the printing trade for newspapers and other media. This collection contains proceedings of the annual meetings (1870-1887, 1902) and convention photographs (1927, 1936).
This collection contains meeting minutes from Bricklayers Local 16, Schenectady, NY.
James Sullivan was the principal of the Boy's High School in Brooklyn, New York, 1907-1916. The collection contains photographs compiled by Sullivan of the interiors of high school libraries in Albany, Buffalo, and New York City from 1916-1929. In 1940 the Department of Librarianship at the New York State College for Teachers (a predecessor of the Information Science program at the University at Albany) added photographs of high school libraries in Albany, Elmira, Glens Falls, and Malverne, as well as several school libraries in Detroit, Michigan.