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Collection Thumbnail | Title | Formats | Subjects |
19th-Century Maps of the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia 19th-century maps of the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia. Most of these maps were published in Western Europe, and nearly all the others were published in Russia or in the United States. The maps are products of--or were designed to support--the major European and Russian activities in the region: exploration, scientific research, resource exploitation, conquest, and administration. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Middle East African Studies Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia Geography |
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American Environmental Photographs, 1891-1936 Images from more than 4,500 glass lantern slides, glass negatives, and photographic prints, created by faculty members and students of the University of Chicago Department of Botany between 1891 and 1936, influential in the development of modern ecological studies. These photographs provide an overview of important representative natural landscapes across the nation |
Formats Digital Images Photographs |
Subjects University of Chicago History of Science Environmental Science |
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American Institute of Indian Studies The AIIS collection from the Center for Art and Archaeology in Gurgaon, Haryana, India, has over 125,000 photographs in the collection. The images fall into the broad categories of architecture, sculpture, terracotta, painting and numismatics. |
Formats Digital Images Photographs |
Subjects South Asia Southern Asia Art Architecture |
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American Recipes, 1855-1905 Manuscript collection of cooking recipes. Includes recipes and home remedies. Also includes newspaper clippings, pasted in, with additional loose recipes in multiple hands, laid in. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects History |
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Ancient Near East and the Mediterranean World Materials from the Library's Ancient Near East and Classics collections, focusing on volumes published between 1850 - 1950, many of which have a significant number of illustrations or plates. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals Images Photographs |
Subjects Classics Ancient Near East |
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Anderson, William H. and the Anti-Saloon League. Papers, 1903-1928 Contains correspondence, press releases, speeches, and reports. Material documents Anderson's work with the Anti-Saloon League and the League's relations with John D. Rockefeller and the Black Belt Farms Company. Correspondents include Charles S. Whitman, two-time governor of New York. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects History |
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Asian Cities - Late 19th- and early 20th-century maps Late 19th- and early 20th-century sheet maps of Asian (or partly Asian) cities that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. Several of the cities portrayed in these maps are now among the world's largest, but they were all much smaller places during the years when the maps were compiled. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Chinese Studies Japanese Studies Korean Studies Maps |
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Bakwin, Dr. Harry and Dr. Ruth Morris Bakwin. Soviet Posters. Collection This collection contains nineteen Soviet political posters produced in the early 1930s, collected by the American physicians Dr. Harry Bakwin and Dr. Ruth Morris Bakwin during two trips to the Soviet Union. The majority of the posters promote the First Five Year Plan (1928-1932), a series of industrial targets designed by the Stalinist regime to build up heavy industry in the Soviet Union. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia |
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Baldwin, Loammi. Papers, 1821-1842 Loammi Baldwin was a pioneering civil engineer who lived in Massachusetts from 1780 to 1838. He planned and executed public works projects in several Eastern states including canals, public monuments, dams, and tunnels. His lifework was a series of dry docks he built on commission by the United States government in 1833. The collection contains 247 handwritten letters both from and to Baldwin and his business associates, colleagues, and family members. The letters reveal aspects of Baldwin's personal life as well as his professional projects and meditations. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Before and after the fire: Chicago in the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s Sheet maps of Chicago from the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois History Maps |
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Bekker, Immanuel. Papers, 1806-1853 Immanuel Bekker (1785-1871) Philologist. The Papers consist entirely of correspondence addressed to Bekker. Some are semi-official communications (Niebuhr, W.V.Humboldt); many are of a scholarly nature, occasionally with extensive Greek quotations. Those written by Bekker's closer intimates are often typical of the need felt in the Romantic era to open one's heart to a friend, while a few are no more than short invitations (Reimer). The letters cover the period 1806 to 1853. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Classics |
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Bond Photograph Library Photographs taken during World War II by an American serviceman, Frank Bond. |
Formats Digital Photographs |
Subjects Southern Asia History South Asia |
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Brainerd, Mary Bowen. Papers. 1895-1915 Mary Bowen Brainerd, writer. The Mary Bowen Brainerd Papers consist of correspondence, research notes, and drafts of a dissertation. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Literature University of Chicago |
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Butler-Gunsaulus Collection, 1527-1915 Chiefly letters and manuscripts by notable American men such as John Adams, William Cullen Bryant, DeWitt Clinton, Stephen A. Douglas, Frederick Douglass, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Horace Greeley, Washington Irving, Andrew Jackson, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, William Henry Seward, George Washington and many more. Also contains a small number of manuscripts by Europeans, including Erasmus and the Marquis de Lafayette. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Caballero, Fernán. Papers, 1855-1877 Fernán Caballero, pseudonym of Cecilia Francisca Josefa de Arrom, (1796-1877), Spanish author. The papers consists primarily of correspondence from Caballero to French scholar Antoine de Latour, but also includes other correspondence, manuscripts and articles. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Spanish Literature Portuguese Literature |
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Carter, Henry Kendall. Papers, 1823-1880 The Henry Kendall Carter Papers (1823-1880, bulk 1840-1870) are made up of business documents, primarily concerning Carter's time in New Orleans (circa 1842-1874), personal and business correspondence, and personal memo books and diaries (1850-1878). Together, these items shed light on business life in Antebellum New Orleans, and on the realities of personal and business life in a divided country during the Civil War. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Center for the Art of East Asia Digital Collections Materials from art historical research conducted by the Center for the Art of East Asia in collaboration with cultural institutions around the world. Features photographs, videos, audio clips, and 3D models of dispersed objects that came from China’s Buddhist cave complexes, temples, funerary tombs, and their original environments. |
Formats Digital Images Photographs Video |
Subjects Art Chinese Studies East Asian Studies |
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Central Europe - 18th-Century Maps Maps of the area in the middle part of Europe that, in the 18th century, was largely administered by members of the German-speaking nobility. Its boundaries, with some notable exceptions, coincided roughly with those of the then somewhat moribund Holy Roman Empire. It incorporated present-day Germany, Austria, Hungary, and the Czech Republic, and large parts of Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia, and the Kaliningradskaia oblast' as well as northeastern Italy and German-speaking Switzerland. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects European History Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia Geography Maps |
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Century of Progress - International Exposition Publications, 1933-1934 Published informational and promotional material produced for the Century of Progress Exhibition, Chicago, Illinois, 1934. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois American History |
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Cervantes: Text and Image Collection of scanned editions of Don Quixote and associated texts focusing on illustrations and critical texts. Created in conjunction with the Ekphrasis in the Age of Cervantes conference hosted by the University of Chicago in 2004. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Spanish Literature Portuguese Literature |
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Chicago Committee of Fifteen. Records, 1909-1927 Also known as Manuscript Codex 1028, these twenty-six volumes were gathered for an investigation of Chicago crime, focusing on prostitution and the illegal sale of alcohol. Notes are from on-scene investigations, summaries of court records and newspaper clippings. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Chicago and Illinois |
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Chicago Shimpo [シカゴ新報] The Chicago Shimpo [シカゴ新報], which publishes articles in Japanese and English, is the only Japanese-American newspaper in the Chicago media market. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Japanese Studies Chicago and Illinois Journalism |
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Chicago in the 1890s Sheet maps of Chicago in the 1890s that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. The 1890s were an extraordinary decade for Chicago, perhaps the only period in the city's history when its status as a "world city" would be disputed by few. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects American History Chicago and Illinois Maps Geography |
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Chicago in the 1920s and 1930s: the view from the Chicago School (the Social Science Research Committee maps) "During the 1920s and 1930s numerous scholars at the University of Chicago did research on Chicago itself. These scholars, whose work is sometimes associated with the label "Chicago School," or "Chicago School of Sociology," played a major role in establishing urban studies as an important academic enterprise. All of these maps were produced under the aegis of the Social Science Research Committee or its immediate predecessor, the Local Community Research Committee. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Sociology American History Chicago and Illinois Maps |
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Chicago, 1900-1914 Sheet maps of Chicago from the years between 1900 and the onset of World War I. The maps portray a city where much that was true of Chicago in the 1890s remained the case. Chicago continued to grow, reaching a population (not counting suburbs) of nearly 2.2 million in 1910, and perhaps 2.4 million in 1914, when (by some measures) it was still the world’s sixth largest city. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois American History Maps |
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The Chicagoan A jazz-aged magazine, modeled on the New Yorker, that aimed to portray the city as a cultural hub and counter its image as a place of violence and vice. The magazine contains a wealth of material on the literary, cultural, artistic, athletic and social milieu of Chicago between 1926-1934. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois American Literature American History |
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Chopin Early Editions Digitized version of the Library's collection of early printed editions of Chopin's musical compositions. The collection can be searched by a variety of data points including uniform title, genre, plate number, dedicatee, publisher. place of publication, etc., allowing scholars to study the differences between scores as they were published concurrently in different countries with variant texts. |
Formats Digital Music Scores |
Subjects Music |
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Davis, Jefferson, Trial Papers. MS 979, 1865-1868 These fourteen documents indicate the legal entanglements, ambiguous delays, political floundering, and shifting of responsibilities that occurred during the period from Jefferson Davis' first indictment for treason, on May 10, 1866, through March 6, 1868, when the trial, finally set for March 26, 1868, was postponed again. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Digital Dictionaries of South Asia Dictionaries that encompass the languages of the current nation-states of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals Reference Works |
Subjects Linguistics South Asia Southern Asia |
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Digital South Asia - Maps Catalogs of maps and maps themselves, ranging from historical to topographic as well as GIS data |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Maps South Asia Southern Asia |
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Digital South Asia Library Digital resources for the study of South Asia. |
Formats Digital |
Subjects South Asia Southern Asia |
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Duckworth, Sir John Thomas. Papers, 1808-1812 Contains correspondence, naval orders and instructions, and reports. Also includes an 1811 broadside printed in Newfoundland. Topics highlight some of Duckworth's decisions as British governor and naval commander of Newfoundland on the eve of the War of 1812. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects History |
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Early Modern Maps of the Americas The Early Modern Maps of the Americas Collection follows the representation of the Americas in early modern cartography. The maps date from the 16th through the 18th centuries giving a wide perspective of how the Americas were illustrated. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects European History Geography Maps Native American Studies Special Collections |
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Electronic Full Text Sources (EFTS) The Library makes available a wide variety of full-text, searchable scholarly texts. A large number are mounted under PhiloLogic, the University of Chicago's Full-Text System. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Literature |
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Electronic Open Stacks (EOS) Interface for page-turned image-based (facsimile) books. The collection primarily contains materials from the Ancient Near East and Classics collections. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Classics Ancient Near East |
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European Transportation Maps of the 19th Century Maps showing European transportation facilities during the 19th century documenting an extraordinary change. At the beginning of the 19th century movement was largely along dirt roads and depended on horses or foot travel. By the end of the 19th century, transportation had become enormously faster, more reliable, and more comfortable. I that did not show railroad lies. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects History European History Maps |
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Field, Eugene. Correspondence, 1884-1895 Eugene Field, writer, poet. The Eugene Field Correspondence consists of 301 letters written to Eugene Field by various admirers, friends, family members, and business associates during the years 1884 - 1895. The collection also contains newspaper and magazine clippings pertaining for the most part to Field and his poetry. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Literature |
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Goodrich, Adelaide Eunice. Collection, ca. 1837-1916 Adelaide Eunice Goodrich (1861-19??). Actress and author. Collection contains prompt books of plays, scrapbooks, photographs, and a small group of patents and other legal documents of her father H. C. Goodrich. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Theater |
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Goodspeed Manuscript Collection 68 New Testament manuscripts including Greek, Syriac, Ethiopic, Armenian, Arabic, and Latin manuscripts ranging in date from the 5th to the 20th centuries. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Books & Journals |
Subjects Religion Medieval Studies |
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Government College of Arts and Crafts (Chennai) The Museum of Contemporary Art, housed within the Government College of Arts and Crafts, has a photograph collection dated from the mid 1800s. The subjects of these photographs range from the hill tribes of Niligiris to pagodas and monuments of the Madras Presidency to guns and antiques from Fort St. George. |
Formats Digital Images Photographs |
Subjects South Asia Southern Asia Architecture Anthropology |
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Government maps of Chicago in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s During the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, there was a slow growth in the planning role of municipal governments in many large American cities, including Chicago. Cartographic materials of various sorts were one of the byproducts of this growth. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects American History Political Science Chicago and Illinois Maps Geography |
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Gregorian Chant Digital Manuscript Collection The Gregorian Chant Manuscript Collection was digitized from a set of microforms that came to the University of Chicago Library in the 1990s. Reproductions were obtained from various Western European institutions, libraries, and religious houses mainly in France and England. The collection of liturgical codex manuscripts dates from the 9th through 17th centuries with a concentration in the 12th and 13th centuries and include antiphonaries, missals, graduals, breviaries, sacramentaries, kyriales, tropers, sequentiaries, and others. The first twelve titles in this collection have been digitized and can be accessed from the Library's online catalog. |
Formats Digital Microform |
Subjects Music |
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Hart, Schaffner and Marx Labor Agreement. Records, 1919-1920 The Hart, Schaffner and Marx Labor Agreement grew out of the unsuccessful nineteen-week strike of workers in the Chicago men’s clothing industry in 1910. It was initially signed by representatives of the workers and Hart, Schaffner and Marx and represented a compromise between the United Garment Worker’s (UGW) demand for a closed shop and the management desire for an open one. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Heaton, David F. Papers, 1837-1853 The David F. Heaton Papers contain personal and professional correspondence, documenting Heaton's work as a clerk in the General Land Office during the presidency of Andrew Jackson and in the private sector as an expert in land transfer and ownership. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Hensley Photo Library Photographs taken during World War II by an American serviceman, Glenn S. Hensley. |
Formats Digital Photographs |
Subjects History Southern Asia South Asia |
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Hyde Park Center. Collection, 1910-1917 Established in 1908, the Hyde Park Center was an independent welfare organization providing services to children and youth in the neighborhood, such as a free kindergarten and playground, clubs and activities, and job training for youth. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Chicago and Illinois |
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Islamic Lithographs Collection The Islamic Lithographs Collection, acquired by the University of Chicago Library in 2004, consists of approximately 330 nineteenth- to twentieth-century Arabic lithograph printed books, mostly published in Iran and India, through Egypt, Turkey, and the Levant are also represented. Over 200 titles in this collection have been digitized and can be accessed from the Library's online catalog. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Arabic Area Studies Islamic Studies Middle East Religion Special Collections |
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Italian Women Writers (IWW) The Italian Women Writers project (IWW) is a long-term research endeavor to preserve and provide access to an extensive corpus of literature written by Italian women authors. |
Formats Digital |
Subjects Italian Literature |
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Keagle Photograph Library Photographs taken during World War II by an American serviceman, Robert Keagle. |
Formats Digital Photographs |
Subjects History Southern Asia South Asia |
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Lane, Ebenezer, Family. Papers, 1811-1866 The Ebenezer Lane Family Papers contain materials relating to Lane and his son, also named Ebenezer. The papers of the father (1793-1866) document his career as an attorney and judge, with materials including financial records, legal documents, letterbooks, notes on law cases, and a travel diary. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Chicago and Illinois |
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Late 19th- and Early 20th-Century European City-Planning Maps Late 19th- and early 20th-century European city-planning maps that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. Some are maps of actual plans for the future, not all of which (for example those of Cabourg and Moscow) were actually carried out. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects History Political Science Maps |
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Latin American Cities - Late 19th- and early 20th-century maps Late 19th- and early 20th-century sheet maps of Latin American cities that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects History Latin American Studies Maps Geography |
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Lee, Elon N. and Edson S. Bastin. Papers, 1864-1919 Elon N. Lee and Edson S. Bastin, early students. The Elon N. Lee and Edson S. Bastin Papers consist of Edson S. Bastin's correspondence (1866-1919), Elon Lee's diary (1864-1865), drafts of essays, and miscellaneous ephemera concerning the Old University of Chicago (1867-1881). |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois American History |
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Lewis, Fielding. Papers, 1783-1900 Fielding Lewis, plantation owner. Papers contain business records, legal documents, tax receipts and other records that document the management of an ante-bellum plantation on the James River. The collection also includes receipts for purchase of slaves as well as daily expenses. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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Lincoln Collection. Lincoln Miscellaneous Manuscripts, 1587-1924 The Lincoln Miscellaneous Manuscript section of the William E. Barton Collection of Lincolniana contains material relating to Abraham Lincoln, his parentage, the Civil War, and his presidency. Included are briefs, pardons, and commissions in Lincoln's hand, original letters of Mary Todd Lincoln, one of the few extant letters written by Lincoln to his wife, a letter written by Willie Lincoln while accompanying his father on a trip to Chicago, and letters written by members of the Lincoln cabinet and other notable political and military figures of the time. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History |
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The Manna Dey Collection This collection includes news clippings and memorabilia documenting the long and varied career of Manna Dey. Dey was a renowned vocalist, musician, music director, and playback singer from Kolkata, India. |
Formats Digital |
Subjects Southern Asia South Asia Music |
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The Maps of Heinrich Kiepert Geographer Heinrich Kiepert (1818-1899) is generally reckoned one of the more important scholarly cartographers of the second half of the 19th century. This Web page provides access to some Kiepert maps held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Classics Middle East Geography Maps |
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Middle East Photograph Archive A digital archive of early photographs of the Middle East. Most of the photographs date to the second half of the nineteenth century. The archive is particularly strong in photographs of nineteenth century Cairo. |
Formats Digital Photographs |
Subjects Middle East Ancient Near East Photography |
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Middle Eastern Posters. Collection The Middle Eastern Posters collection comprises posters produced by government offices and private organizations, primarily in Iran and Afghanistan. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects Political Science Middle East |
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Murdock, Fanny Bristol and Sarah Bristol Family. Papers, 1836-1866 These papers contain the personal correspondence of Fanny Murdock, her mother Sarah Bristol, and other family members in the mid-19th century. They document the family life and war-related difficulties of a Mississippi family. Material in the collection dates from 1836 to 1866. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Women's Studies |
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North Korean Stamp Collection The images found here in the North Korean Stamp Collection provide a valuable window into shifting politics and culture of North Korea and a different perspective of the nation’s historical place in the modern world. The Collection also serves as a well-curated primary resource for scholars to expand Korean studies in the philatelic realm. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects Korean Studies Area Studies |
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O'Hara, James E. Papers, 1866-1970 James E. O'Hara (1844-1905), Lawyer and Republican Congressman, 1883-1887. Contains letters from family and constituents, photographs, a biographical sketch (1970) written by O'Hara's granddaughter, Vera Jean O'Hara Rivers, and memorabilia. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Images |
Subjects American History African-American Studies |
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Old University of Chicago. Records, 1856-1890 The first University of Chicago, a Baptist school, was incorporated in 1857 on land donated by Senator Stephen A. Douglas. The University closed in 1886 due to financial difficulties. The records contain records of the Board of Trustees, and faculty, matriculation records, catalogs, student publications, and other historical materials, including two scrapbooks. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects University of Chicago |
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Paper Dolls. Collection This collection consists of paper dolls and accompanying paper clothing and accessories. The dolls were found in an 1839 volume of the New York Mirror, a weekly gazette of literature and the fine arts. Made by hand from scraps of magazines and wallpaper, the dolls are each unique, well-preserved examples of a typically fragile and ephemeral folk art. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects University of Chicago Art |
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Paris in the 19th Century Maps and views of 19th-century Paris that are held at the University of Chicago Library's Map Collection. The maps document the transformation of Paris from a compact city of half a million in 1800 into an industrial metropolis of nearly 3.5 million a century later. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects History Maps European History Geography |
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Philip M. Klutznick: Community Builder, Jewish and Civic Leader, Diplomat Digital archive drawn from the Philip M. Klutznick Papers highlighting his multi-faceted life and career as a pioneering community developer, philanthropist, United Nations representative, U.S. Secretary of Commerce and leader of the American and international Jewish community. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois American History |
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Philologic Full-text Collection Searchable full-texts available via the locally-developed Philologic full-text search, retrieval and analysis tool. The collection includes texts from Bibliopolis, Chadwyck-Healey, Alexander Street Press, the ARTFL project and others which cover a variety of humanities disciplines in a variety of languages. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Literature History Religion |
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Planning Maps of Midwestern Cities in the 1920s and 1930s Government planning maps of Midwestern cities from the 1920s and 1930s. Most of the maps are zoning or land-use maps. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Political Science American History Maps Geography |
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Postcard Collection of Colonial Korea The Postcard Image Collection of Colonial Korea was created between 1900 and 1945 in Korea or abroad. It captures over 8,000 postcard images of Korea. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects Korean Studies |
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Prass, Marjorie Whitney. Papers, 1927-2008 This collection contains papers, photographs, costumes and ephemera belonging to Marjorie Whitney Prass, an alumna of the University of Chicago and an avid dancer. The bulk of the collection is comprised of over 200 pieces of costume clothing, accessories and props. The majority were made for Prass by her mother, Mathilde Muller Whitney, for performances at the University of Chicago. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Photographs |
Subjects University of Chicago Theater |
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Rose and Chess Two medieval French manuscripts written and decorated in France ca. 1365, Le Roman de la Rose and Le Jeu des échecs moralisé, were originally bound together but later separated and have once again been reunited both in the University of Chicago Library collections and as digital facsimiles. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Medieval Studies French Literature |
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Russian Satirical Journals, 1905-1907 The University of Chicago Library’s collection Russian Satirical Journals, 1905-1907 consists of 110 titles in 378 issues. It is primarily comprised of journals, but some newspapers, broadsides, and illustrated periodicals are also included. The full collection has been digitized. This collection documents some of the most important events of the period known as the first Russian Revolution of 1905-1907. It was during this unprecedented rise of national self-identity that the first Russian Constitution and Russian Parliament were initially created. The first Russian Revolution was a period of struggle for political, social and human rights, and the press, which had previously been subject to censorship, enjoyed a new freedom which had never before appeared in Russia. |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects History Slavic/Eastern Europe/Eurasia European History Political Science |
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Salloch, William and Marianne, Collection of Prints and Drawings: People with Books. 1500-1814 The eight prints and drawings in the collection depict people reading or holding books in various settings. The works date from the 16th through 19th centuries. Two etchings by Rembrandt are included. |
Formats Digital Images |
Subjects Art History of Print |
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Social Scientists Map Chicago Geographer Chauncy Harris often argued that Chicago in the first half of the 20th century was the most studied city in the world. This claim is unprovable, but there were certainly an enormous number of scholarly studies of Chicago between the 1920s and the middle of the 20th century. Many of these included maps. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects Sociology Political Science American History Chicago and Illinois Maps |
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The Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae A digital version of the Library's extensive collection of Antonio Lafreri's Renaissance-era Speculum Romanae Magnificentiae prints and maps which depicted major monuments and antiquities in Rome. The site also contains a set of virtual itineraries through Rome, guided by scholars from around the country. |
Formats Digital Images Maps |
Subjects Classics European History Art Architecture |
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Starr, Frederick. Liberian Research Collection, 1892-1914 Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago Frederick Starr maintained these research materials for his book, Liberia: Description, History, Problems. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects African Studies Anthropology |
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Starr, Frederick. Papers, 1868-1935 Contains professional and personal correspondence; research material; field notebooks; diaries; class lecture notes; memorabilia; photographs; bibliographies; and scrapbooks. Correspondents include Frank Boas, W.E.B. Du Bois, Federico Gamboa, William Rainey Harper, John Haynes Holmes, Jenkin Lloyd Jones, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Julius Rosenwald, and Albion Small. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Photographs |
Subjects University of Chicago Anthropology African Studies Latin American Studies Japanese Studies |
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United States Supreme Court: Portraits and Autographs This collection is based on a bound album of manuscripts collected by Louis Silver (JD ’28), a noted rare book collector. It was donated to the Law School Library in the late 1950’s. The album contains letters and other signed documents from Supreme Court Justices, plus portraits and/or photographs of those Justices. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Images |
Subjects U.S. Law Law American History |
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The University of Chicago Photographic Archive Ongoing project to digitize the Archival Photographic Files which contain more than 60,000 images and are the principal archive of historic photographs of individuals, buildings, and events associated with the University of Chicago. |
Formats Digital Images Photographs |
Subjects University of Chicago Architecture |
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University of Chicago. Founders' Correspondence, 1886-1892 Consists of typewritten transcripts of correspondence between John D. Rockefeller, founding donor of the University of Chicago, and others involved in the establishment of the University. Correspondents include William Rainey Harper, Thomas W. Goodspeed, Frederick T. Gates, and others. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects University of Chicago |
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University of Chicago. Laboratory Schools. Work Reports. Records. 1898-1934 The Laboratory School Work Reports Records are made up of monthly and quarterly reports about the Elementary and Secondary division of the University of Chicago's Laboratory School. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects University of Chicago |
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University of Chicago. Office of the President. Harper, Judson and Burton Administrations. Records, 1869-1925 This collection contains records of the University of Chicago Office of the President, covering the administrations of the first three presidents of the University: William Rainey Harper (1891-1906), Harry Pratt Judson (1906-1923), and Ernest DeWitt Burton (1923-1925). Included are administrative records such as correspondence, memoranda, and reports. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects University of Chicago |
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University of Chicago. Office of the Registrar. World War I Service. Records, 1917-1919 The World War I Service Records consist of 3X5 cards recording war service of University of Chicago students, including dates of enlistment and discharge, ranks and assignments, and war service credit given by the University, 1917-1919. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects University of Chicago History |
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Urban Rail Transit - Late 19th- and early 20th-century maps Late 19th- and early 20th-century urban rail transit maps that roughly illustrate the history of urban rail transit between the 1860s and the 1920s. These years were the heyday of urban rail transit. Virtually every city in the Western world and in its colonial offshoots had street railroads during much or all of this period. |
Formats Digital Maps |
Subjects History Maps European History American History |
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Wagoners' Guild of Apolda, Germany. Records. 1677-1862 This small collection contains documents relating to the Wagoners' Guild of Apolda, Germany, and its members. It consists of 33 pieces from 1677-1862, including a journeyman's passbook of 1820, numerous certificates of apprenticeship and journeyman's work, birth certificates, and miscellaneous guild documents. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects History |
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Wallin, Madeline. Papers, 1887-1955 Madeline Wallin was one of the first female graduate students at the University of Chicago. A student of political science, she received her Ph.M. in 1893. Contains personal correspondence, graduate school papers, articles, and photographs. Includes accounts of student life at the new University of Chicago and material relating to the University of Chicago Settlement League. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Women's Studies University of Chicago |
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Wells, Ida B. Papers, 1884-1976 Ida B. Wells, (1862-1931) teacher, journalist and anti-lynching activist. Paper contain correspondence, manuscript of Crusade for Justice: the Autobiography of Ida B. Wells, diaries, copies of articles and speeches by Wells, articles and accounts about Wells, newspapers clippings, and photographs. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Women's Studies Chicago and Illinois African-American Studies |
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Whitman, Walt, "The Bible as Poetry." Manuscript, 1883 Original manuscript of Whitman's essay, first published in The Critic in 1883. Included with the manuscript are two portraits of Whitman, a copy of the published essay and Whitman's cover letter to the publishers Jeannette Leonard Gilder and Joseph B. Gilder. Codex MS 263. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects English Literature |
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Winston, Thomas. Papers, 1854-1927 Thomas Winston was a physician with Illinois troops during the Civil War. These papers relate primarily to Winston's activities as a surgeon during the Civil War. Includes biographical material, case histories, lists of medical supplies, receipts for effects of soldiers, and various documents relating to individual soldiers. Also contains some material relating to real estate after the Civil War. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Medicine |
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Woodhouse's English-Greek Dictionary, 1910 A keyword searchable edition of S. C. Woodhouse's English-Greek Dictionary: A Vocabulary of the Attic Language (London: George Routledge & Sons, 1910) |
Formats Digital Books & Journals |
Subjects Classics |
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Woodruff, Timothy Lester. Papers, 1897-1909 Timothy Lester Woodruff (1858-1913), Republican politician. Lieutenant Governor of New York, 1896-1902. Contains correspondence and a speech. Material deals primarily with campaigns, patronage, and other political issues, some with references to Theodore Roosevelt and Lemuel Quigg. Correspondents include Thomas Platt, Frank S. Black, John D. Rockefeller, James Sherman, and James Wadsworth. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects American History Political Science |
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World's Columbian Exposition. Records, 1891-1895 This collection includes documents and ephemera from the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. It includes photographs, newspaper clippings, reports, guides, and visitor memorabilia. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Books & Journals Photographs |
Subjects Chicago and Illinois |
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Yerkes Glass Plates Collection The Yerkes Glass Plate Collection consists of more than 175,000 photographic glass plates negatives and their associated logbooks located at the University of Chicago and Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, WI. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts Images Photographs |
Subjects Astronomy & Astrophysics University of Chicago |
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Yoshitoyo, Ichiryusai. Mashin teate kiho no ben, Makiyama Sensei demp 1800s Handwritten text in Japanese, "About the special way to treat the measles; Dr. Makiyama's remedy." Illustrated with colored woodcut. Includes typescript translation of text from Japanese into English. |
Formats Digital Archives & Manuscripts |
Subjects Japanese Studies History of Medicine |