Collections : [New York State Modern Political Archive]
New York State Modern Political Archive
Elected officials, interest groups, and activists from New York State.
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Start Over You searched for: Collecting Area New York State Modern Political Archive Remove constraint Collecting Area: New York State Modern Political Archive Date range 1920 to 1929 Remove constraint Date range: <span class="from" data-blrl-begin="1920">1920</span> to <span class="to" data-blrl-end="1929">1929</span>Search Results
Albany Typographical Union No. 4, Communications Workers of America Records, 1850-1988 27 reels of microfilm
Constitutions and Rules of Order, 1850-1955 1 reels of microfilm
Printed copies of the Albany Typographical Union's constitutions and rules of order.
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU), Hudson Valley Area Joint Board Records, 1919-1990, Undated 13.43 cubic ft.
Hudson Valley Area Joint Board, 1919-1989 8.39 cubic ft.
This series contains records related to the Hudson Valley Area Joint Board. This series is divided into four sub-series. The first sub-series contains the subjetc files of the Joint Board. The second sub-series contains records relating to the Textile Workers Union of America (TWUA), also known as the Amalgamated Clothing and Textiles Workers Union (ACTWU). The third sub-series cotnains local chapter files and the fourth sub-series is contains records associated with the union councils of the AFL-CIO.
Subject Files, 1947-1989, Undated 1.59 cubic ft.
This sub-series contains the subject files of the Hudson Valley Area Joint Board. Included in the subject files are records relating to the organization of the Board, arbitration documents, contracts, correspondence, meeting minutes, and bylaws and constitutions. This series also contains records relating to the Berkshire Joint Board, which the Hudson Valley Area Joint Board oversaw until it left in 1969 to join the Conneticut Joint Board. This series also contains buttons that were worn by the union members to show political support.
Minutes of the General Meetings, 1926-1990 0.34 cubic ft.
The General Meetings of the Albany Branch of the AAUW meet monthly and are open to the public. The meetings comprise the major social outlet of the branch serving to attract new members. The General Meetings are generally held at public meeting places at which the officers relay branch news and proposed activities to the members. Guest speakers are often invited to share their knowledge with the branch community at the General Meetings. Guest lecturers are typically established professionals from the Albany community. Speech topics tend to reflect current social issues and their impact on women and society. The minutes contain the following gaps: 1965-1985, and 1987. The available documentation spanning the years from 1986-1991, are very sparse, however.
Arthur H. Estabrook Papers, 1908-1962 2.0 cubic ft.
Assembly Files, 1906-1932 3.4 cubic ft.
Rhoda Fox Graves' personal and political papers are interfiled. Much of what is contained in these records are correspondence between her constituents and fellow legislators, legislative bills, and pamphlets distributed by various Republican organizations. Personal letters and records reflecting daily activities are included as well as files dating before her election into the Assembly.
Rhoda Fox Graves Papers, 1906-1948 14.03 cubic ft.
Associated Industries of New York State/Business Council of New York State Records, 1996 December 19 - 2017 March 27 10.02 cubic ft.
Board of Directors and Executive Committee, Meetings Minutes, 1914-45., 1910-2010, Undated 2.2 cubic ft.
Arranged chronologically and interfiled, except for the minutes of the Executive Committee meetings, 1915-19. Minutes through 1968 are glued into scrapbooks.
The highlights of Miles' life up to about 1945 are contained in a typewritten manuscript of 138 pages. This item, meant for his children and grandchildren, is divided into eleven chapters and titled True Tales From Tin Lizzy Times and Other Sketches. Biographical information can be found on Boyd Fisher (chap. VI), the force behind the Ohio Relief Production Units (1934-1935) and the Rural Electrification Administration; Sally Rand (chap. IX), the exotic dancer; Franklin Roosevelt's Aunt Bessie (chap. X) and John Pratt Whitman (chap.XI), mystic, teacher, social worker, actor, journalist and author who is Miles' "most unforgettable character". This series also includes a five page statement, written in 1986, concerning his undergraduate experience at Antioch College as well as materials related to his first published article in 1932.
Autobiographical and Family Correspondence, 1907-1993 1.2 cubic ft.
This first series is further divided into two sub-series: (1) autobiographical and biographical; and (2) family correspondence.
Eugene P. Link Papers, 1907-1993 7 cubic ft.
Biographical, 1932-2001, Undated 0.85 cubic ft.
This series contains Norman Studer's curriculum vitae, a partial autobiography, a brief biography, memorial tributes, family photographs, family records, and correspondence. The correspondence has been identified by correspondent's name only when the volume or significance warrants such separation; however, the bulk of the correspondence is arranged chronologically. Notable correspondents include Pete and Toshi Seeger and David Dunaway, Seeger's biographer as well as a former Camp Woodland camper.