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Williamstown (Vt.) library inventory, [circa 1903]-1907
1 volume
This manuscript contains a list of books purchased by a small library apparently located in Williamstown, Vermont, kept roughly between 1903-1907. The volume includes authors' names, two pages of patrons' names, and which books the patrons checked out. There are approximately 26 pages of written content; the rest of the volume is blank.
Subjects appear to include religious subjects, fiction (i.e. Louisa May Alcott), and nonfiction.
William Wheeler account book, 1805-1818
1 volume
William Wheeler of Massachusetts kept this account book between 1805 and 1815 to record personal accounts and financial transactions relating to his lumber business. It contains references to exploring the areas of Partridge Island and Deposit, New York, to buy land, contracts for lumbering rights, and rafting lumber down the Delaware River to Philadelphia. There are also mentions of bear meat, deer meat, whiskey and other alcohols, and services such as pasturing horses and delivering bushels of wheat.
William Youse orderly book, 1814
1 volume
This orderly book was kept by Lieutenant William Youse of the Second Regiment, First Rifle Brigade of the United States Army while he was stationed at Camp Springfield and Camp Hampstead in Baltimore, Maryland in 1814. Entries mostly consist of reports, general orders, and court martials.
Wisconsin and Minnesota Friendship Photograph Album, ca. 1910s-1918
approximately 245 photographs in 1 album
The Wisconsin and Minnesota friendship photograph album contains approximately 245 photographs documenting a friend group of young women.
The album (18 x 29.5 cm) has black cloth covers and black paper pages. Contents generally progress chronologically starting from the 1910s while the friend group appears to be in college before documenting their lives once they get married and start having families. Numerous images have witty captions, likely referencing inside jokes. Photographs primarily consist of individual and group portraits showing the women partaking in various activities including striking comical poses together, attending costume and fraternity parties, holding picnics, and going on various other adventures. Also present are views of the University of Wisconsin-Stout in Menominee, Wisconsin, Hamline University in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and Loring Park in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Halfway through the album begins to document members of the friend group getting married and starting families of their own, with photographs mainly depicting young children, homes, and group vacations including a trip to Salt Lake City, Utah. The last few pages also include images of a World War I-era soldier and nurses with facemasks (possibly indicating involvement with treating Spanish influenza victims).
Photographs showing instances of blackface and other racially insensitive costumes are present.
Woman's travel diary, 1865
1 volume
She made notes and observations about daily life aboard the ship, the fine accommodations, clothing, children, St. Lawrence River travel, food, and "making fun of the yanks." The woman wrote about the funeral of an indigenous child near Novia Scotia on page three of folio seven. In some entries, the writer used racial epithets.