Paul U. Kellogg papers
Summary Information
Paul U. Kellogg
papers 1891-1952 Kellogg, Paul
Underwood, 1879-1958
26 linear feet
(contained in 50 document boxes, 1 legal-length document box and 5 record
cartons) Language: English SW 84
The bulk of the papers
documents Kellogg's work as editor of the Survey magazines. It also contains
extensive correspondence with family members and reflects his involvement with
the various organizations, among them the American Union Against Militarism,
the Committee on Industrial Relations, the Foreign Policy Association, the
National Federation of Settlements, and the National Conference of Social Work.
This is a temporary revision of the finding aid that
provides a detailed content of most of the collection; this detailed listing
does not yet extend to a portion of the Survey Associates files contained in
five record cartons.
University of
Minnesota Libraries. Social Welfare History
Archives
Access and Use
Open for use in Social Welfare History Archives reading room.
Please contact the Archivist for copyright information.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged in three series
- Series 1. Personal
- Series 2. Survey Associates (a portion of this series is not
yet listed in detail)
- Series 3. Professional
Historical Note
Kellogg, editor of the Survey, 1909-1952, and an active social
reformer, corresponded with major figures in business, politcs, and welfare,
discussing developments in peace movements, New Deal programs, civil liberties,
the development of professional social work, and programs to assist dependent
members of society.
Collection Scope and Content Note
The bulk of the papers documents Kellogg's work as editor of the
Survey. It also contains extensive correspondence with family members and
reflects his involvement with the various organizations, among them the
American Union Against Militarism, the Committee on Industrial Relations, the
Foreign Policy Association, the National Federation of Settlements, and the
National Conference of Social Work.
Related Material
Unpublished inventory available. Please contact Archives for more
information.
Subject Terms
- This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog
of the University of Minnesota Libraries. Researchers desiring materials about
related topics, persons or places should search the catalog using these
headings.
- Kellogg,
Paul Underwood, 1879-1958
- Kellogg,
Paul Underwood, 1879-1958--Archives
- Peace movements--United
States--History--20th century.
- Social action--United
States--20th century.
- Social legislation--United States--20th century.
- Survey (New York, N.Y. : 1909)
- Survey (East Stroudsburg, Pa. : 1949)
- Survey graphic.
- Survey midmonthly.
Contents List
| Location |
Title |
| |
Series 1. Personal |
| |
Biographical |
|
Box 1 |
"Who’s Who’ ca. 1920-1950 Box 1, Folder 1 to 1 Note Biographical information on Kellogg.
|
| |
Who’s Who 1940-1952 Box 38, Folder 1
|
|
Box Legal 51 |
Passport 1917-1918 Box Legal 51, Folder 1 Note Related to European travel with the American Red Cross during
World War I
|
| |
Divorce decree 1966 Box Legal 51, Folder 2 Note Transcription of Paul and Marion Kellogg’s 1934 Mexican
divorce decree
|
|
Box 38 |
Citations, personal - Paul Kellogg 1937-1952 Box 38, Folder 2 Note Includes Wesleyan University, Planned Parenthood, and Columbia
University.
|
| |
Genealogy - the Kellogg family 1821-1842 Box 38, Folder 4 Note Includes transcribed letters from family members
|
| |
Letters of Recommendation - Paul Kellogg 1901-1902 Box 38, Folder 5
|
| |
Photographs |
|
Box 1 |
Photographs ca.1894-1955 Box 1, Folder 2 Note Photographs of Kellogg, Arthur Kellogg, the Kellogg family,
Kellogg’s birthplaced and early home, etc. The material generally is not
dated.
|
|
Box 38 |
Photographs, Family – Immediate Box 38, Folder 6 Note Paul, Marion, Richard and Mercy Kellogg (first wife and
children), Helen Hall (second wife), Mary and Frank Kellogg (parents), and
Arthur Kellogg (brother).
|
| |
Photographs, Family and Unknown n.d. Box 38, Folder 7 Note Persons other than immediate family (see 1:2); some are not
identified.
|
| |
Photographs, Professional - Survey and Unknown
Box 38, Folder 8 to 9 Note Workman’s Compensation Act, John Glenn’s 90th birthday,
Robert W. de Forest, Survey Graphic - "Calling America" series, German
industrial scenes, and unknown professionals.
|
| |
Photographs, Trips and Negatives 1908, 1913 Box 38, Folder 10 Note Paul’s European trip in 1908 and photographs (possibly
developed by Lewis Hine) of a 1913 mountain climbing trip.
|
| |
Correspondence with family and friends |
| |
Family and friends |
|
Box 1 |
Correspondence and Papers 1889,1909-1916* Box 1, Folder 3 Note Petition to Frank Kellogg from Paul and Arthur for an air
rifle, camp supply list for Kellogg’s honeymoon, and family correspondence.
Includes a poem from Paul to Arthur.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1917-1918 Box 1, Folder 4 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Material
on conditions in the Minnewaska Sanitorium, Canada .
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1919-1920 Box 1, Folder 5 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Includes
a letter to his son describing the 1919 Yale-Princeton football game and
material on schooling for his children.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1921-1924 Box 1, Folder 6 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Includes
a letter describing Penn Normal Industrial and Agricultural School and the
island on which it is located, St. Helena Island, South Carolina. Material on
Walden School, New York City, which the Kellogg children attended.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1925 Box 1, Folder 7 Note Family correspondence, correspondence re and cartoons by
Hendrik Willem Van Loon, and Paul and Arthur Kellogg’s discussions of
marriage.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1926-1927 Box 1, Folder 8 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Includes
a letter describing "Lizzie, II the family Ford.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1928 Box 1, Folder 9 Note Material indicating Kellogg’s efforts to help relatives and
friends, letters and postcards re his European trip, and a letter to his son on
flying.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1929-1933 Box 1, Folder 10 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Includes
correspondence with William M. Leiserson and William Allen White re his son,
letters of recommendation to Antioch College, a letter re an alleged assault
on a Negro woman by a policeman, and Kellogg "family trees."
|
|
Box 2 |
Correspondence and Papers 1934-1935 Box 2, Folder 11 Note Family correspondence and material re Kellogg’s divorce and
his marriage to Helen Hall.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1936-1937 Box 2, Folder 12 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Material
re the honorary doctor of letters degree conferred on Kellogg by Wesleyan
University in 1937.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1938-1943 Box 2, Folder 13 Note Correspondence with his son and material re a boundary
dispute at his Canadian summer camp at Lake Memphremagog.
|
| |
Correspondence and Papers 1944-1953 Box 2, Folder 14 Note Correspondence with family, relatives, and friends. Includes
material re Kellogg’s efforts to help Karel Mazel secure citizenship and a
letter from historian Allan Nevins expressing regret that the Survey ceased
publication in 1952.
|
| |
Family |
|
Box 39 |
Hande, Pauline 1939-1952 Box 39, Folder 11 Note Aunt of Paul Kellogg. Pauline moved in with Abby Underwood,
Paul’s first cousin, shortly before Abby died. She began to correspond with
Paul regularly after Abby’s death, sending him family letters, artifacts,
recipes, and genealogical information.
|
| |
Hunter, Jane Hall 1942-1943 Box 39, Folder 12 Note Sister of Helen Hall. Letters written to Paul primarily
concerning Helen Hall’s Red Cross Australian trip during World War II.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1913-1917 Box 39, Folder 8 Note First wife of Paul Kellogg from 1909-1934. Mostly letters
from Marion to Paul concerning family and household matters and Paul’s Red
Cross trip to Europe during World War I.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence, October
1917-1919 Box 39, Folder 9 Note Mostly letters from Paul to Marion regarding his Red Cross
trip to Europe, Marion’s pregnancy with their second child Mercy, Paul’s work
on the Survey, and family matters.
|
|
Box 40 |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1920-1922 Box 40, Folder 1 Note Letters from Paul to Marion about the construction of their
cabin in Canada, family matters, Mercy’s childhood, household affairs, and
Marion’s and Paul’s health problems.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1923 Box 40, Folder 2 Note Letters primarily concerned with Paul, Marion, and Richard
Patrick recovering from typhoid; Marion’s stay in the hospital, Paul’s and
Richard Patrick’s recuperation at the Penn School; Marion and Mercy joining
them there; Rossa Cooley of the Penn School; Marion and Paul’s long separation
due to distance and travel; and household finances.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1924-1927 Box 40, Folder 3 Note Primarily letters written at the family cabin ("camp") in
Magog, Quebec from Marion to Paul, mentioning Arthur’s divorce from Marion’s
cousin Gussie (Augusta Kellogg), Arthur’s involvement with his second wife
Florence Loeb, household matters, property rentals, and Paul’s trip to England
to give his Cambridge speech.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondance 1928 Box 40, Folder 4 Note Letters concerning family issues, Mercy’s and Marion’s
health problems, household expenses, Aunt Kitty Underwood’s illness, death and
funeral, report Marion did for Lillian Wald, Paul’s European trip to do the
Cambridge speech, the cabin in Magog (Canada), and the children’s education.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1929 Box 40, Folder 5 Note Letters concerning the children, family matters, the Magog
cabin ("camp"), rental property, and Marion working outside the home.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1930-1939 Box 40, Folder 6 Note Letters concerning family matters, the Magog cabin ("camp"),
Marion’s health, Paul’s travels and business, Marion’s and Paul’s separation
and 1934 divorce, and property expenditures and repairs (Croton and Sullivan
Street).
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence 1940-1950 Box 40, Folder 7 Note Correspondence concerned with living expenses for Marion and
the children, household expenditures (Croton, Sullivan Street, and the rental
units), and Christmas cards.
|
| |
Kellogg, Marion, Correspondence n.d. Box 40, Folder 8 Note Poem written by Marion, letter about Richard Patrick as a
baby, Paul’s typhoid , Marion’s illnesses, Marion’s sewing and crafts, the
Magog cabin ("camp") and family matters.
|
| |
Kellogg, Mary Foster Underwood 1900-1914 Box 40, Folder 9 Note Mother of Paul Kellogg. Mostly letters from Paul to "Mommy,"
especially about his 1908 European trip.
|
| |
Kellogg, Mary Foster Underwood 1904-1906 Box 40, Folder 10 Note Letters to Paul and Arthur from their mother (obtained by
purchase in 1999).
|
|
Box 41 |
Kellogg, Mercy, Correspondence 1924-1946 Box 41, Folder 1 Note Paul and Marion Kellogg’s daughter. Primarily letters and
drawings from Mercy to her father when she was a child and letters from her in
college.
|
| |
Kellogg, Richard Patrick, Correspondence 1922-1943 Box 41, Folder 2 Note Paul Kellogg’s son. Correspondence between Paul and Richard,
primarily when Richard was in the Army during World War II. Includes
correspondence from Arthur Kellogg to Richard and from Richard to Marion and
Mercy Kellogg during World War II. A written note from Richard in 1965
describes the contents of his letters and discusses Paul and Marion’s
divorce.
|
| |
Underwood, Abby, Correspondence 1922-1940 Box 41, Folder 3 Note Paul Kellogg’s first cousin. Letters to Paul Kellogg from
Abby concerning personal and family matters.
|
| |
General Correspondence with Family 1901-1952 Box 41, Folder 4 Note Letters concerning the death of Paul’s mother Mary Kellogg,
the two cyclinder engine plan of Paul De Forest (nephew of Helen Hall), Henry
Street news from Helen’s niece June ?, family news, and information about
family genealogy.
|
| |
General Correspondence with Family 1903-1904 Box 41, Folder 5 Note Letters to Paul from a cousin, a boyhood friend, and an
unidentified individual (obtained by purchase in 1999).
|
| |
Friends - individuals |
|
Box 41 |
Addams, Jane 1926, 1934 Box 41, Folder 6 Note Personal friend of Paul and Marion Kellogg and settlement
house leader. Letter regarding Lillian Wald’s birthday party and Marion and
Paul’s divorce.
|
| |
Brenner, Ann Reed (Langstroth), 1921-1946 Box 41, Folder 7 Note Close friend and financial manager of the Survey. Very
personal correspondence between Paul and Ann regarding her work on the Survey,
her three year marriage to Lovell Langstroth (during which time she retired
from the Survey), her divorce, her psychological treatment, her return to the
Survey, the close devoted friendship between her and Paul, and her struggle as
a career woman in the 1920s, 30s, and 40s.
|
| |
Calkins, Marion Clinch 1923-1928 Box 41, Folder 8 Note Close friend of Paul Kellogg and member of the Survey staff.
These letters deal primarily with her work on the Survey and personal
interactions with other Survey staff members.
|
| |
Cooley, Rossa B. 1929-1949 Box 41, Folder 9 Note Close friend and business associate of Paul’s and the head
of the Penn School. Includes letters from Rossa and her personal friend and
associate Grace Lumpkin regarding Marion’s convalescence near Rossa in 1923,
news of the Penn School, upcoming visits with Jane Addams and Paul, and a
telegram relaying Rossa’s death (from Grace Lumpkin).
|
|
Box 42 |
Douglas, Anne 1930 (?) - 1944 Box 42, Folder 1 Note A personal friend and business associate of Helen Hall’s.
Letters regarding her trip to Australia during World War II with Helen Hall;
her experiences with the culture there, witnessing the communist movements,
meeting General "Ike", and racial issues of the war.
|
| |
Eastman, Crystal 1908-1930 Box 42, Folder 2 Note Personal friend and member of the Pittsburgh Survey staff.
Personal correspondence to Paul Kellogg concerning their friendship and
visits.
|
| |
Ferber, Gertrud 1928-1931 Box 42, Folder 3 Note Personal correspondence from Germany to Paul regarding his
visits to Gertrud, news of Germany, and Gertrud obtaining a visa to visit
America. (some photos enclosed)
|
| |
Gleason, Helen, (Mrs. Arthur Gleason) 1927-1936 Box 42, Folder 4 Note Paul met Helen Gleason in Europe during World War I while
working for the Red Cross. Helen and her husband Arthur were also working for
the Red Cross. Their relationship intensified after the death of Arthur Gleason
when Helen decided to write a book about his life. These letters detail the
processes of the book, the relationship between Paul and Helen, Helen’s
depressions, her children, Paul’s visits to see her, and their joint efforts in
editing the book.
|
|
Box 2 |
Gleason, Helen Hayes (Mrs. Arthur) 1923-1924 Box 2, Folder 17 Note Material re the illness and death of Arthur Gleason and a
memorial service held for him. Includes tributes to Gleason from J. Ramsay
MacDonald, British prime minister; the British Labour Party; and Fannia M.
Cohn, secretary of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union.
|
| |
Gleason, Helen Hayes (Mrs. Arthur) 1924-1925 Box 2, Folder 18 Note Correspondence re Kellogg’s effort to encourage Helen
Gleason to write the "Story of Arthur Gleason,’ transcript of memorial service
held for him, and correspondence with friends concerned about Mrs. Gleason.
|
| |
Gleason, Helen Hayes (Mrs. Arthur) 1925-1930 Box 2, Folder 19 Note Material re Kellogg’s assistance to Helen Gleason in writing
“The Book of Arthur Gleason.’
|
|
Box 42 |
Green, Harriet 1916-1938 Box 42, Folder 5 Note Personal friend of Paul’s. Letters concerning their
friendship, interchanges, and support for one another.
|
| |
Harris, Helen 1926-1942 Box 42, Folder 6 Note Personal friend and business associate of Helen Hall. Harris
originally worked with Helen Hall on the unemployment study and was a
settlement house worker at the Kingsley House. The letters detail her career
ambitions, introducing Paul and Helen, her leadership at the Pittsburgh Girls’
Conference, events at Kingsley House, Sex Study reports, leaving Kingsley
House, Charles Cooper (director of Kingsley house), her illnesses, her
friendship with Paul, and visiting Cornwall, Paul and Helen’s summer home.
|
| |
Issler, Ann (Roller) 1929-1930 Box 42, Folder 7 Note Personal friend of Paul’s and a free lance writer and
subscription representative for the Survey. Letters detailing her work for the
Survey, Junior League meetings, her personal life, romances and marriage plans,
her writing and career aspirations, her struggles as a single career woman,
travel plans, the Lousiville Project, classes, her affection for Paul, working
for other publications besides the Survey, meeting with editors of the Atlantic
Monthly, and getting her work published.
|
| |
Leach, Agnes 1929-1943 Box 42, Folder 8 Note Personal friend and associate of the Survey. These letters
are brief, mentioning Ann Reed Brenner, regrets on meetings, and the dedication
in Paul’s book.
|
| |
Riis, Jacob 1909 Box 42, Folder 9 Note Letter of congratulations to Paul and Marion on upcoming
wedding.
|
| |
Shaw, Sadie Adele 1919-1930 Box 42, Folder 10 Note A friend of Paul’s and a member of the Survey Staff. Sadie
detailed her career ambitions and work on the Survey. Included were Sadie’s
suggestions for inner office staff functions at the Survey, her resignation
from the Survey in 1921 after what she called "a break down", and breast cancer
and her return to the Survey in 1928. Her last letter written in 1930, after
she had again left the Survey, detailed her family life, and continued
activities with the Urban League. (Note: These letters are very personal in
nature and content.)
|
| |
Stark, Sadie Lillian (Kulakofsky) 1922-1951 Box 42, Folder 11 Note Circulation staff member of the Survey (for about 3 years),
and a personal friend of Marion and Paul Kellogg. The letters detail her
experiences as the Executive Secretary for the J.C.P.S. in San Francisco, her
friendship with Paul, and her marriage and stepchildren. Includes photos of
Sadie, her stepchildren, and Arthur Gleason.
|
| |
Wald, Lillian 1929-1935 Box 42, Folder 12 Note Personal friend of Paul’s and Helen Hall’s and activist in
the settlement house movement. Personal greetings about family and friends, her
anniversary meeting, seeing Helen Hall’s manuscript, Helen Hall coming to Henry
Street, and Beulah Amidon.
|
| |
Friends - chronological |
|
Box 43 |
Correspondence, Friends 1900-1914 Box 43, Folder 1 Note European letter of introduction for Paul from W. Nelson
Gray, letter from John Fitch. Includes a photocopy of Marion and Paul during
High school in Kalamazoo.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends 1915-1920 Box 43, Folder 2 Note Letters concerning Paul’s work and personal life, including
letters from W. Nelson Gray and John Palmer Gavit.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends 1920-1925 Box 43, Folder 3 Note Correspondence regarding friends’ marriage and anniversary
announcements, wishes of good health for Paul, including Dan Lane, James Brown,
Rose Goodman, Julian Mack, Edward T. Devine, Isabel McDonald, and Jedidiah
Tingle.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends 1925-1929 Box 43, Folder 4 Note General personal correspondence from friends such as Edith
Brooks, Ethel Kawin, Bessie Bacon Goodrich, Ethel Richardson, Janet Sabloff,
Eric and Paul Arnold to Paul and his son Richard Patrick, and Charles
Cooper.
|
|
Box 2 |
Correspondence, European Trip 1928 Box 2, Folder 15 Note Includes itinerary for his trip and correspondence from
Robert Smillie, Margaret Bondfield, and other members of the British Parliament
re prospective calls on them while in Europe.
|
|
Box 43 |
Correspondence, Friends 1930-1939 Box 43, Folder 5 Note General personal correspondence from friends such as John
Palmer Gavit regarding his brother’s death, Esther Ogden regarding Paul and
Marion’s divorce, John Kingsbury and his winning the Pugsley award, and a
telegram from Guthrie McClintic regarding Ethel Waters’ testimonial.
|
| |
Correspondence, Helen Hall and Paul Kellogg Wedding
Congratulations 1934 Box 43, Folder 6 Note Wedding invitation and congratulations wishes, including
Sara Merrill, Elizabeth Faulkner Baker, Edward A. Filene, Esther Ogden, Ada
Clarke, and William and Helen Gleason.
|
|
Box 2 |
Correspondence, Foreign Policy 1938 Box 2, Folder 16 Note A. A. Berle, Jr., invited Kellogg as "one of our liberal
friends" to comment on the direction of U.S. foreign policy. Includes Kellogg’s
response and comments by staff member Beulah Amidon on response.
|
|
Box 43 |
Correspondence, 60th Birthday Congratulations to
Paul Kellogg 1939 Box 43, Folder 7 Note Guest lists for Paul’s 60th birthday party, letters of
regret for those who could not attend including Felix Frankfurter, John P.
Gavit, Columbia University (Samuel Lindsay), Julian W. Mack, Agnes Leach, Helen
Chamberlain, Viola Conklin and Anne Plimpton, Marion Kellogg, and Florence Loeb
Kellogg.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends 1940-1949 Box 43, Folder 8 Note General personal correspondence including letters from John
Glenn, Lillie Peck, John A. Kingsbury, Betty Mack, and a photo of Tolstoy’s
grave on the front of a note from A. Solokoff.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends 1950-1955 Box 43, Folder 9 Note General personal correspondence including letters from Jane
Boynton, John Fitch, Ann Golden, and New York School (regarding the storage of
the Survey papers).
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends, Christmas Cards 1917-1951 Box 43, Folder 10 Note Includes Charles Cooper, Harriet Green, Helen Hall and
Fonrose, Alain Locke, Arthur T. Strong, Joe Williams, Max Gersh, and Rachel
Gebiger.
|
| |
Correspondence, Friends n.d. Box 43, Folder 11 Note Personal correspondence with friends, including Arthur
Gleason, Marion Peck, Mary Waterhouse, Grace Lumpkin, and Raymond Swing.
|
| |
Education |
|
Box 2 |
Columbia University 1901 Box 2, Folder 20 Note Includes Columbia brochure and introductory card for Kellogg
to the president of Columbia.
|
|
Box 3 |
Columbia University, American Literature 1901-1902 Box 3, Folder 21 Note Notes for the course, taught by Professor Matthews.
|
| |
Columbia University, Economics I 1901 Box 3, Folder 22 Note Lecturers were Professors Day and Seligman. Includes notes for
the course and Kellogg’s final examination.
|
| |
Columbia University, English I and II 1901-1902 Box 3, Folder 23 Note Themes for the courses.
|
| |
Columbia University, English II 1902 Box 3, Folder 24 Note Notes for the course and Kellogg’s final examination.
|
| |
Columbia University, History 4 ca. 1901-1902 Box 3, Folder 25 Note Notes from and paper written for the course, taught by
Professor Dunning. Also includes test questions for History 4 for spring
semester 1902.
|
| |
Columbia University, Public Law 1902 Box 3, Folder 26 Note Notes for Professor Goodnow’s course, spring semester.
|
| |
Columbia University 1905, 1919, n.d. Box Legal 51, Folder 3 Note Lecture notes from a course taught by Professor Edward
Seligman, papers by Paul Kellogg about Russia and about Columbia
University.
|
|
Box 3 |
New York Charity Organization Society, Committee on
Philanthropic Education ca. 1902 Box 3, Folder 27 Note Kellogg took COS special courses in 1902. Preliminary program
for summer course and brochure re proposed twoyear training course for
philanthropic work.
|
| |
Speeches and writings |
|
Box 44 |
Speeches and writings, general 1900-1910 Box 44, Folder 1
|
| |
Speeches and writings, Pittsburgh Survey 1909-1912 Box 44, Folder 2
|
| |
Speeches and writings, general 1911-1918 Box 44, Folder 3
|
|
Box 3 |
Articles and Speeches 1908-1927 Box 3, Folder 28 Note Democracy in an industrial district, child labor legislation,
Lillian D. Wald, and "Communication Among Men," a speech which includes an
account of a meeting in Harlem where Kellogg spoke.
|
| |
Articles and Speeches 1928-1929 Box 3, Folder 29 Note Public opinion and industrial relations, social research, the
Palisades in New York, the Foreign Policy Association, unemployment, and the
International Joint Commission (U .S. and Canada).
|
| |
Articles and Speeches 1930 Box 3, Folder 30 Note Unemployment, mass credit, international relations, and social
settlements.
|
| |
Articles and Speeches 1931 Box 3, Folder 31 Note Unemployment, employment planning, and Kellogg’s statement to
the U.S. Senate hearing on unemployment relief.
|
|
Box 4 |
Articles and Speeches 1932-1933 Box 4, Folder 32 Note Primarily material on the economic situation in the nation and
the world. One speech commenting on woman’s role in life.
|
| |
Articles and Speeches 1934-1936 Box 4, Folder 33 Note Economic recovery; social workers, World War I, and the
current world situation; social settlements; social security; social workers
and unionization; and employment planning.
|
| |
Articles and Speeches 1937-1939 Box 4, Folder 34 Note Federal relief, employment planning, unemployment benefits in
New York State, emigres’ adjustment to American life, presidential address to
the National Conference of Social Work, Mary Chamberlain (former Survey staff
member), Florence Kelley, and A Message from 1914, for 1939 and after (re
war).
|
| |
Speeches and writings, general 1920-1939 Box 44, Folder 4
|
|
Box 4 |
Articles and Speeches 1940-1947 Box 4, Folder 35 Note Refugees from the Spanish Civil War, foreign policy, and
speeches to Survey Associates.
|
|
Box 44 |
Speeches and writings, general 1940-1951, n.d. Box 44, Folder 5
|
|
Box 45 |
Poetry - Paul Kellogg Box 45, Folder 1 Note Poetry written by Paul Kellogg including "The Great Beyond"
and "Heritage".
|
| |
Notes - Unknown n.d. Box 45, Folder 2 to 3
|
| |
Clippings |
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Box 4 |
Newspaper Clippings 1901-1902 Box 4, Folder 36 Note Clippings of stories primarily from the Kalamazoo Daily
Telegraph. Probably stones written by Kellogg.
|
| |
Newspaper Clippings, Kalamazoo 1915 Box 4, Folder 37 Note Kellogg saved large segments of the Kalamazoo Gazette and the
Telegraph-Press for December 30 and 31.
|
| |
Newspaper Clippings 1914-1949 Box 4, Folder 38 to 40 Note Clippings re Kellogg’s personal and professional life,
especially reporting his activities as editor of the Survey.
|
|
Box 38 |
Clippings, personal - Paul Kellogg 1913-1952 Box 38, Folder 3 Note Clippings including the garment trade dispute, war relief
work, the British labor party, Russia, speaking engagements, and personal
information.
|
| |
Condolence letters on Kellogg’s Death |
|
Box 5 |
Condolence Letters 1958 Box 5, Folder 41 to 45 Note Letters to Helen Hall on the death of Paul Kellogg. The
correspondence is arranged alphabetically.
|
| |
Condolence Letters, Partial Signatures 1958 Box 5, Folder 46 Note Letters to Helen Hall from individuals whose signatures were
incomplete. The letters are arranged chronologically.
|
| |
Condolence Letters, Associations 1958 Box 5, Folder 47 Note Resolutions or other expressions of sympathy from agencies and
associations, arranged chronologically.
|
| |
Arthur Kellogg |
|
Box 5 |
Arthur Kellogg, Correspondence and Papers 1914-1931 Box 5, Folder 48 Note Kellogg family genealogy, notice from Arthur Kellogg about
funeral arrangements for him, copy of his will, and an autograph letter signed
by Franklin D. Roosevelt.
|
|
Box 39 |
Letters from Arthur 1902-1934 Box 39, Folder 1 Note Paul Kellogg’s brother and the managing editor of the Survey
magazine. Correspondence mostly from Arthur to Paul about personal/family
matters with occasional discussion of Survey business.
|
| |
Childhood letters from Paul and Arthur 1887-1900 Box 39, Folder 2 Note Letters written by Paul and Arthur as children to "Aunty" and
their parents, Mary and Frank Kellogg.
|
| |
Letters from "Aunty" 1905-1906 Box 39, Folder 3 to 4 Note Letters from unidentified aunt (one of Marion’s sisters) to
Paul and Arthur (obtained by purchase in 1999).
|
| |
Letters from Arthur 1903-1904 Box 39, Folder 5 Note Letters from Arthur to Paul (obtained by purchase in 1999)
|
|
Box 5 |
Arthur Kellogg, Estate 1934-1935 Box 5, Folder 49 Note Correspondence and papers.
|
| |
Arthur Kellogg, Scrapbook 1893-1903 Box 5, Folder 50 Note Scrapbook of newspaper clippings and other materials relating
to Arthur and Paul Kellogg’s life in Kalamazoo, including material on their
high school graduation. Material from Michigan newspapers regarding both
men.
|
|
Box 6 |
Arthur Kellogg, Tributes to 1934 Box 6, Folder 51 Note Tributes by Paul Kellogg, Survey staff member Leon R. Whipple,
and others.
|
| |
Arthur Kellogg, Condolence Letters 1934 Box 6, Folder 52 to 53 Note Letters to Paul Kellogg on the death of his brother. Arranged
alphabetically.
|
| |
Letters of Condolence at Arthur’s death 1934 Box 39, Folder 6 Note Letters to Paul concerning Arthur’s sudden death in 1934.
|
|
Box 6 |
Arthur Kellogg, Copies of Condolence
Letters 1934 Box 6, Folder 54
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|
Box 39 |
Tributes to Arthur Kellogg 1934 Box 39, Folder 7
|
| |
Financial and personal business |
|
Box 45 |
Address Books and Travel Logs 1909, 1925, n.d. Box 45, Folder 4 Note Includes engagement calenders, daily diets, important personal
dates, and travel plans.
|
| |
Banks and Investments 1941-1944 Box 45, Folder 5
|
| |
Business Personal 1940-1952 Box 45, Folder 6 Note Includes checks drawn, receipts from Henry Street Settlement
house lodging, jury duty, publisher notice, and travel baggage claims.
|
|
Box 46 |
Insurance Policies 1931-1950 Box 46, Folder 1 Note Various insurance policies for life, fire, and home. Includes
a life insurance policy on Paul with Helen Hall as the beneficiary in 1931.
|
| |
Insurance Receipts 1905-1952 Box 46, Folder 2 Note Various receipts for personal insurance policies.
|
| |
Legal material 1906-1955 Box 46, Folder 3 Note Driver’s licenses, marriage license for Paul and Helen Hall,
and Paul’s last will and testament.
|
| |
Medical records 1935-1950 Box 46, Folder 4 Note Diet sheets, doctor bills, prescriptions, lab reports, nursing
care, and optical prescription.
|
| |
Player’s Club 1950 Box 46, Folder 5 Note Receipts and information on Paul Kellogg’s membership.
|
| |
Property Ownership 1920-1949 Box 46, Folder 6 Note Sales transactions, mortgages, attorney statements on
property, and records of sale.
|
| |
Property Ownership, Cornwall cabin - repairs and
expenses 1949 Box 46, Folder 7
|
| |
Property Ownership, Cornwall cabin - New York State
throughway 1950 Box 46, Folder 8 Note Efforts by Paul to prevent throughway from cutting across his
Cornwall propery. Includes map drawn by Paul, clippings from the paper, and
letters to people about the throughway.
|
| |
Property Ownership, Sullivan Street - repairs and
expenses 1937-1942 Box 46, Folder 9
|
| |
Tax Statements, Income 1943, 1949, 1950 Box 46, Folder 10
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|
Box 6 |
U.S. Income Tax 1913-1949 Box 6, Folder 55 to 58 Note Completed forms.
|
| |
New York State Income Tax 1919-1950 Box 6, Folder 59 Note Completed forms.
|
| |
New York City Real Estate Tax and Water
Bills 1923-1948. Box 6, Folder 60
|
|
Box 7 |
Contributions 1926-1951 Box 7, Folder 61 to 63 Note Includes receipts, membership cards, and occasional lists of
contributions by Kellogg in a given year.
|
| |
Housekeeping records, chronological 1912-1922 Box 7, Folder 64 to 72 Note Material re insurance, property, tenants, automobiles,
mortgages, boundary dispute at Kellogg’s Canadian summer camp at Lake
Memphremagog, physicians, dentists, attorneys, etc. Arranged
|
|
Box 8 |
Housekeeping records, chronological 1922-1931 Box 8, Folder 73 to 81 Note continued from previous box
|
|
Box 9 |
Housekeeping records, chronological 1932-1939 Box 9, Folder 82 to 89 Note continued from previous box
|
|
Box 10 |
Housekeeping records, chronological 1940-1953 Box 10, Folder 90 to 99 Note continued from previous box
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Housekeeping records 1912-1953 Box Legal 37, Folder 8 Note Legal length items separated from "Housekeeping" folders.
Mostly related to 184 Sullivan Street property.
|
| |
Housekeeping records (insurance) 1912-1953 Box Legal 37, Folder 9 Note Legal length items separated from "Housekeeping" folders.
Insurance policies.
|
| |
Series 2. Survey Associates |
| |
Predecessors |
|
Box 10 |
Charities 1903-1904 Box 10, Folder 100 Note Correspondence and material relating to publication plans.
Includes a letter from Joseph Lee on the proposal to extend Charities coverage
to all kinds of social efforts, and a letter from Lavinia L. Dock on district
nursing and on the churches and charity work.
|
| |
Charities and the Commons 1905 Box 10, Folder 101 Note Scattered correspondence, memoranda, and financial ma terial.
Includes minutes of a meeting of the Charities Publication Committee and
material on editorial plans for the magazine.
|
| |
Charities and the Commons 1906 Box 10, Folder 102 Note Correspondence, financial material, and plans for special
numbers. Includes material on social problems and conditions in Washington,
D.C.; a letter re the merger of Jewish Charity with Charities and the Commons;
and material re the People’s Institute, an association which furthered contacts
between "cultured" classes and “the people."
|
|
Box 11 |
Charities and the Commons 1906 Box 11, Folder 103 Note Correspondence, financial material, and publication plans.
Includes a letter-report on the year’s work, which refers to Washington, D.C.
as a "model city" and a report of work to improve social conditions in the
District of Columbia.
|
| |
Charities and the Commons 1907-1909 Box 11, Folder 104 Note Correspondence and papers re editorial plans and programs,
finance and subscriptions, and publicity. Includes a proposed investigation of
county jails (in cooperation with the National Prison Association), a report by
staff member Lilian Brandt on the department of social research, a field
report by Francis H. McLean, and a memorandum on the relationship of the
Russell Sage Foundation to the Charities Publication Committee.
|
| |
Corporate |
|
Box 11 |
Survey, Reports 1910 Box 11, Folder 105 Note Two statements by the editors of the Survey on behalf of the
Charities Publication Committee.
|
| |
Survey Associates, Constitution 1928 Box 11, Folder 106 Note (revision).
|
| |
Survey Associates, Annual Reports 1923-1947. Box 11, Folder 107 to 108
|
| |
Survey Associates, Board of Directors,
Minutes 1935-1939 Box 11, Folder 109 Note Minutes, occasional memoranda to the board and the board’s
executive committee, and material re finance, membership, editorial policy,
staff, etc.
|
| |
Survey Associates, Board of Directors,
Minutes 1940-1944 Box 11, Folder 110 Note Minutes, memoranda to the board, material on the handling of
Louis Brandeis’ bequest to Survey Associates, material on editorial and
financial matters, and Paul Kellogg’s citation by the National Committee for
Planned Parenthood at the Birth Control Federation of America conference.
|
| |
Survey Associates, Board of Directors,
Minutes 1945-1952 Box 11, Folder 111 Note Minutes, memoranda, and material on editorial plans, staff,
finance, membership, and the Survey’s continuing financial crisis.
|
| |
Survey Associates, Board of Directors, Special
Committee 1948 Box 11, Folder 112 Note The committee was appointed in June 1948, under the
chairmanship of Victor Weybright, to consider the Survey’s financial situation
and to decide whether or not to continue publication.
|
|
Box 12 |
Editor’s Memorandum to the Special Committee of the
Board of Directors 1936 Box 12, Folder 113 Note Material re the history, scope, policies, and problems of
Survey Associates.
|
| |
Financial |
|
Box 12 |
Finance, Correspondence and Papers 1936-1951 Box 12, Folder 114 to 115 Note Papers dealing generally with financial problems,
fund-raising, contributions to Survey Associates, cost of publication, etc.
Includes extensive material on the Survey’s financial crisis of the 1940’ s and
the decision to continue publication in 1948.
|
| |
Finance, Records 1924-1951 Box 12, Folder 116 to 119 Note Primarily "condensed statements" and "comparative balance
sheets." Includes occasional audit reports and budget material.
|
|
Box 13 |
Finance, Records Box 13, Folder 120 to 122 Note continued from previous box
|
| |
Louis D. Brandeis Fund 1941-1948 Box 13, Folder 123 Note Correspondence re Brandeis’ bequest (of approximately
$182,000) to Survey Associates and from persons seeking to use the funds.
Correspondents include Josephine and Pauline Goldmark, Felix Frankfurter, Roger
Baldwin, Alice Goldmark Brandeis, and other members of the Brandeis family.
Includes remarks by Felix Frankfurter and Dean Acheson at the Brandeis funeral
service.
|
| |
Charles M. Cabot Fund 1925-1939 Box 13, Folder 124 Note In his will Charles Cabot established a $50,000 trust fund for
the study of industrial conditions, naming Kellogg, Philip Cabot (Cabot’s
brother), and Edward T. Devine as trustees. Material re Philip Cabot’s request
that the unspent portion of the fund be given to the Graduate School of
Business Administration at Harvard. Correspondents include Richard C. Cabot,
Edward T. Devine, Samuel McCune Lindsay, John A. Fitch, and Morris L.
Cooke.
|
| |
Paul Hagen Fund 1941-1949 Box 13, Folder 125 Note Material re money raised by Survey Associates to send Karl B.
Frank, a member of the anti-Nazi underground who wrote under the name Pau1
Hagen, to Germany as a correspondent. He was denied security clearance by the
War Department.
|
| |
Kyron Foundation 1949-1950 Box 13, Folder 126 Note In 1949 Survey Associates formed and was the sole beneficiary
of the Kyron Foundation, which acquired the stock of the Illinois Continental
Pharmaceutical Corporation, producers of Kyron, a vitamin preparation used in
weight reduction. Correspondence and papers re the agreement, payments,
conferences, etc.
|
| |
Field Foundation 1944 Box 13, Folder 127 Note Application for financial assistance.
|
|
Box 14 |
McGregor Foundation 1937 Box 14, Folder 128 Note Application for financial assistance.
|
| |
New York Foundation 1948 Box 14, Folder 129 Note Application for financial assistance
|
| |
Rockefeller Foundation 1944-1946 Box 14, Folder 130 Note Correspondence re 1944 application and copy of 1946
application.
|
| |
Editorial |
| |
General correspondence |
|
Box 14 |
Editorial Correspondence 1909-1919 Box 14, Folder 131 Note Staff presentation to Edward T. Devine, National Council of
Churches of Christ statement (1911) on industrial relations, copies of letters
to Charles M. Cabot on conditions in the steel industry, statement to President
Wilson on social legislation before the special session of the 63rd Congress
(1913), letter from John M. Glenn, expressing his discontent on the direction
of the Survey, and minutes of an informal conference of executives of national
welfare agencies re helping the country in war time.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1919-1923 Box 14, Folder 132 Note Article by Sidney D. Gamble, "The Making of the Peking
Survey"; material for proposed special number on Russia; summary of 1923
legislative session in California; and Kellogg’s letter re Bruno Lasker.
Correspondents include Arthur Kellogg, Graham R. Taylor, and Grace House.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1924 Box 14, Folder 133 to 134 Note Article and discussion of the premillenarian movement;
material re social work, fundamentalism, and the churches; material re race
relations courses in southern colleges; Survey staff responses to Harry Emerson
Fosdick’s criticisms of the social gospel; and staff correspondence.
Correspondents include Marion "Clinch" Calkins, Geddes Smith, Joseph K. Hart,
Ozora S. Davis, and Harry Ward.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1925 Box 14, Folder 135 to 137 Note Correspondence and memoranda. Includes material on workers
education; leisure; the race relations department of the Community Council of
St. Louis, Missouri; social service and immigration; and an outline of a book
on race relations on the Pacific Coast. Correspondents include Francis Hackett,
Geddes Smith, the Foreign Language Information Service, Joseph K. Hart, Marion
"Clinch" Calkins, Leon R. Whipple, and Robert W. Bruere.
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| |
Editorial Correspondence 1926 Box 14, Folder 138 Note Primarily material re Survey staff, especially Ann Reed
Brenner and Geddes Smith.
|
|
Box 15 |
Editorial Correspondence 1927-1929 Box 15, Folder 139 Note Material on J. Ramsay MacDonald and the British Labour
Party; Kellogg’s report of a conversation with Sidney Hillman, Oswald Garrison
Villard, Lillian Wald, and MacDonald; clippings re Kellogg’s being named to the
honor roll of the Ethical Society of St. Louis. Correspondents include Arthur
Kellogg, Jane Addams, Ethel Richardson Allen, Mary Austin, and John Palmer
Gavit.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1930-1932 Box 15, Folder 140 Note Material on Gandhi, the need for a Pittsburgh research
organization on employment, and on Richard Patrick Kellogg. Correspondents
include William M. Leiserson, William Allen White, Michael M. Davis, John D.
Kenderdine, Beulah Amidon, and Robert W. De Forest.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1933-1934 Box 15, Folder 141 Note Pierce Williams’ field reports for the FERA on conditions
in eastern and middlewestern cities and on employment in lumber and metal
mining industries. Correspondents include Hendrik Willem Van Loon, William H.
Matthews, and Robert W. De Forest.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1935 Box 15, Folder 142 Note Includes staff memoranda on editorial plans, material on the
American Farm School (Salonika, Greece), Grace Coyle’s speech on group work and
social change, Mary Van Kleeck’s report on the International Industrial
Relations Institute, report of Kellogg’s being awarded the New York Evening
Post Alumni Association medal for editorial leadership, letter of resignation
from James G. McDonald (high commissioner for refugees coming from Germany),
and petition to Franklin Roosevelt opposing increased militarization of the
CCC. Correspondents include Mary Ross, James Forbes, Lillian D. Wald, and Helen
Hayes Gleason. Includes copy of Louis Brandeis’ testimony to the U.S.
Industrial Relations Commission, 1914, and of John Fitch’s article on Thomas
Mooney.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Editorial Correspondence 1935 Box Legal 37, Folder 3 Note Legal length items separated from folder 15:142.
|
|
Box 15 |
Editorial Correspondence 1936 Box 15, Folder 143 Note Includes material on staff plans, social security coverage,
and Kellogg’s letter to Julius Rosenwald on the needs of the Survey.
Correspondents include Joseph K. Hart, John Palmer Gavit, and Louis
Brandeis.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1937 Box 15, Folder 144 Note Material on tenant farmers in the South and social work in
Los Angeles, portion of a draft of a book by William H. Matthews re Pittsburgh
and the Kingsley House Settlement, and copy of 1892 letter on strikes from
Josephine Shaw Lowell to the New York Herald Tribune. Correspondents include
Lillian D. Wald, John Palmer Gavit, and Mary Ross.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1938 Box 15, Folder 145 Note Material re social insurance in Great Britain, the German
Civil Service Act of 1937, unemployment and relief, U.S. Civil Service,
Gypsies, brrth control, American Hospital Association insurance plan, medical
services in Cook County, Illinois, and social security. Includes letters re
Alexander Johnson, Kellogg’s support of Felix Frankfurter for the Supreme
Court, and Dr. Haven Emerson’s resignation from the Survey staff on the grounds
that the Survey was "medical baiting."
|
|
Box 16 |
Editorial Correspondence 1938 Box 16, Folder 146 to 147 Note continued from previous box
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1939-1940 Box 16, Folder 148 Note Material on William H. Matthews’ defense of Harry Hopkins,
the Spanish Civil War, and results of an American Association of Social
Workers’ survey of public relief programs.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1941 Box 16, Folder 149 to 150 Note Staff memoranda and material on Louis Brandeis, housing,
efforts to place control of CCC under Federal Board of Vocational Education,
and labor. Includes a telegram inviting Kellogg to a private conference on war
aims.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1942 Box 16, Folder 151 Note Routine material.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1943-1944 Box 16, Folder 152 Note Material re Flanner House (Indianapolis, Indiana), race
relations, postwar planning, and hiring of staff member Bradley Buell. .
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1945-1946 Box 16, Folder 153 Note Primarily routine correspondence and staff material.
|
|
Box 17 |
Editorial Correspondence 1947 Box 17, Folder 154 to 157 Note Material on Flanner House (Indianapolis, Indiana), housing,
the Rockefeller Foundation, displaced persons, public relations and social
work, hiring of staff members, workers education, India, the Pittsburgh Survey
and the steel industry, physics and politics. Correspondents include Harold H.
Swift, Fred K. Hoehler, Irving Dilliard, Richard Neuberger, Percy MacKaye,
Albert Mayer, Thomas Devine, and Daniel S. Gillmor. Includes material on Julian
Huxley’s interest in primitive art and a report of the Indian Arts and Crafts
Board of the U.S. Department of the Interior.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1948 Box 17, Folder 158 Note Material re Kasturba, wife of Gandhi; Edward T. Devine;
financial situation of Survey; and staff members Mollie Condon, Beulah Amidon,
and Thomas Devine.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1949 Box 17, Folder 159 to 160 Note Material re applications for positions on the Survey staff,
Miriam Van Waters and Massachusetts penology, and consumers. Includes drafts of
Lillie M. Peck’s article "Beveridge Is Not Enough," (Survey, vol. 85, October
1949).
|
|
Box 18 |
Editorial Correspondence 1950 Box 18, Folder 161 Note continued from previous box
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1950 Box 18, Folder 162 Note Material on Penn Normal Industrial and Agricultural School
(St. Helena, South Carolina) and the Committee on Research in Medical
Economics.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence 1951-1952 Box 18, Folder 163 Note Primarily material re staff matters.
|
| |
Editorial Correspondence, Halle
Schaffner 1930 Box 18, Folder 164 Note Material re the death of Halle Schaffner, staff member.
|
| |
Individuals |
|
Box 19 |
Jane Addams, "Social Service and the Progressive
Party’ 1929-1930 Box 19, Folder 171 Note Draft of chapter for her book, The Second Twenty Years at
Hull House (Macmillan, 1930).
|
| |
Rossa B. Cooley ca. 1923 Box 19, Folder 172 Note Plans and outlines for "Day Clean," a proposed book by Miss
Cooley from which the Survey drew articles, the first of which was published in
vol. 51, October 1,1923.
|
| |
Samuel S. Fels, Correspondence 1928-1933 Box 19, Folder 173 to 177 Note Correspondence and papers re Kellogg’s efforts to help Fels,
a manufacturer and businessman, write his book, This Changing World: As I See
Its Trend and Purpose (published in 1933).
|
| |
Samuel S. Fels, "This Daily Life of Ours"
ca. 1930 Box 19, Folder 178 Note Copy of early draft of manuscript by Fels, which was later
published as This Changing World: As I See Its Trend and Purpose.
|
|
Box 20 |
Samuel S. Fels, Economic Chapters, Draft 1931 Box 20, Folder 179 to 180
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Samuel S. Fels, Economic Chapters, Draft 1931 Box Legal 37, Folder 5 Note Legal length items separated from folders 20:179-180.
|
|
Box 20 |
Samuel S. Fels, This Changing World: As I See Its
Trend And Purpose (Partial Book Dummy), 1932 Box 20, Folder 181
|
| |
Samuel S. Fels, Survey Articles 1933 Box 20, Folder 182 Note Reprints of three articles, drawn from his book (This
Changing World: As I See Its Trend and Purpose.) The first article was
published in vol. 22, February 1933.
|
| |
Andrew Furuseth 1923-1924 Box 20, Folder 183 Note Correspondence and papers re a proposed series of articles
on seamen Furuseth would do in collaboration with Arthur Gleason.
|
| |
Patrick Geddes, Correspondence 1919-1926 Box 20, Folder 184 to 185 Note Geddes was a professor of sociology and civics and a city
and regional planner. Material re education, organization of universities, city
and regional planning, etc. Correspondents include Bruno Lasker and Lewis
Mumford. The Survey published a series of articles by Geddes, "Talks from My
Outlook Tower," the first of which appeared in Survey, vol. 53, February
1925.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Patrick Geddes, Correspondence 1919-1926 Box Legal 37, Folder 7 Note Legal length items separated from folders 20:184-185.
|
|
Box 20 |
Patrick Geddes, Lectures at the New School for
Social Research, New York City 1923 Box 20, Folder 186 to 187
|
|
Box 21 |
Patrick Geddes, "Regions and Cities in Surveys and
Interpretations’ 1923 Box 21, Folder 188 Note Early draft intended for use in series.
|
| |
Patrick Geddes, "From My Outlook Tower’ 1923-1924 Box 21, Folder 189 to 190 Note Revised draft from which the Survey drew its series of
articles.
|
| |
Patrick Geddes, "Frederic Le Play and His School of
Social Science’ 1924 Box 21, Folder 191 Note Draft of chapter for inclusion in Survey series, and
material re surveys, sociology, and regional and city planning.
|
| |
Patrick Geddes, Illustrative Material 1899, n.d. Box 21, Folder 192
|
| |
Henry Lowenfeld 1924 Box 21, Folder 193 Note Correspondence re and draft of "Money in Fetters. Its
History and Mystery Candidly Related," a proposed article on currency reform by
Lowenfeld. Includes correspondence from Hendrik Willem Van Loon.
|
| |
Joseph Stella ca. 1921-1925 Box 21, Folder 194 Note Material by and about Joseph Stella.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Joseph Stella 1921-1925 Box Legal 37, Folder 14 Note Legal length items separated from folder 21:194. Copies of
publications containing Stella’s art.
|
| |
Subjects and organizations |
|
Box 21 |
Academic Freedom, Freedom of Speech and
Press 1913-1916 Box 21, Folder 195 Note Kellogg’s notes; draft of his article, "The Old Freedoms
Discussed by Twentieth Century Sociologists," (Survey, vol. 33, January
9,1915); and extensive clippings re Scott Nearing, a professor of economics who
was fired by the University of Pennsylvania for his radical views.
|
|
Box 22 |
American Red Cross 1928 Box 22, Folder 196 Note Clippings and material re ARC’s work during the Puerto Rico
hurricane disaster.
|
| |
Child Labor Amendment 1923-1927 Box 22, Folder 197 Note Correspondence, clippings, press releases, and material re
the child labor amendment (proposed 20th amendment) and child labor laws in
Kansas, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania. Includes copy of a letter to Florence
Kelley on child labor problems in California.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Child Labor Amendment 1923-1927 Box Legal 37, Folder 2 Note Legal length items separated from folder 22:197.
|
|
Box 22 |
Election (Presidential) of 1916 1916 Box 22, Folder 198 Note Probably Kellogg’s working papers for an article "Three
Platforms," published in Survey, vol.36, June 24,1916. Material on the
Democratic, Republican, and Progressive party platforms.
|
| |
Floods 1936 Box 22, Folder 199 Note Material re floods in the eastern part of the U.S. and WPA
and American Red Cross relief activities.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Floods 1936 Box Legal 37, Folder 6 Note Legal length items separated from folder 22:199.
|
|
Box 22 |
"Henry Ford’s Hired Men’ 1927-1928 Box 22, Folder 200 Note Material re Kellogg’s two articles, published in Survey,
vol. 54, February 1 and March 1, 1928. Includes draft of articles,
correspondence from readers re articles, and material on relief and
unemployment in Detroit.
|
| |
"Henry Ford’s Hired Men," Materials 1922-1930 Box 22, Folder 201 Note Material re Henry Ford, profit sharing, the automobile
industry, automation, etc.
|
| |
Hospitals 1915-1917 Box 22, Folder 202 Note Correspondence and papers re hospital social service and
fire hazards in hospitals .
|
| |
Industrial Relations Commission (U.S.), 1914-1917 Box 22, Folder 203 to 204 Note Statements to the Commission by Kellogg and Edward T.
Devine, drafts of Survey articles, end extensive material re a controversy
between Kellogg and Frank P. Walsh, Commission chairman who questioned
Kellogg’s relations with wealthy persons and foundations. Includes an article,
"How Tainted Money Taints" (Pearson’s Magazine, March 1915), accusing the
Survey of being influenced by the Rockefeller Foundation and similar interests;
Kellogg’s reply; and defense of Kellogg by the New Republic, Outlook, and
others. Material on George Creel, the Rockefeller Foundation, history of the
U.S. Industrial Relations Commission, the Colorado Coal strike (1914), and the
relations of foundations to philanthropy.
|
|
Box 23 |
Industrial Relations Commission (U.S.), Drafts of
Articles n.d. Box 23, Folder 205 Note Unidentified and miscellaneous material re industrial
relations, strikes, boycott, right of labor to organize, personnel of the
Commission, etc.
|
| |
Industrial Relations and Industrial Relations
Commission, Clippings 1911-1915 Box 23, Folder 206 Note Material re Theodore Roosevelt, labor relations, genesis of
the Commission, the Colorado coal strike (1914), Frank P. Walsh, the
Rockefeller Foundation, etc.
|
| |
International Joint Commission (U.S. and
Canada) 1928 Box 23, Folder 207 Note The Commission was established to handle boundary waters and
frontier questions arising between the two countries. Correspondence with
Charles A. Magrath and Lawrence J. Burpee and draft of article (or speech) by
Kellogg.
|
| |
International Joint Commission (U.S. and Canada),
Materials 1915-1929 Box 23, Folder 208 Note Pamphlets and material relating to the Commission, sent to
Kellogg for his information and possible use in an article or speech.
|
| |
Knights of Columbus Oath 1920-1923 Box 23, Folder 209 Note The Ku Klux Klan evidently circulated a false version of the
Knights’ oath. Material re the controversy about it.
|
| |
Mexico Survey (Proposed) 1915-1917 Box 23, Folder 210 to 211 Note Kellogg’s outline for survey, pamphlets, clippings, and
material apparently used to draw up the outline. Material on Mexican-U.S.
relations and social development and conditions in Mexico.
|
| |
National Resources Committee 1938 Box 23, Folder 212 Note Report, The Problems of a Changing Population; letter of
transmittal; and a memorandum by Victor Weybright re southern senators delaying
publication of the report because it reflected unfavorably on the South.
Includes data on population trends, internal migration, health, welfare,
etc.
|
|
Box 24 |
Negro Manuscripts ca. 1946-1948 Box 24, Folder 213 Note Material on race relations in Gary, Indiana; segregation;
and racial discrimination within the U.S. Army. Correspondence with Lester B.
Granger.
|
| |
Neighbors Department 1923-1924, 1930 Box 24, Folder 214 Note Material proposed for use in Survey’s neighbors department,
including material on Mary M. Bartelme (first woman circuit court judge in
Illinois), James T. Shotwell, Roland Hayes, etc.
|
| |
New York State Commission Against Discrimination
(SCAD) 1946-1947 Box 24, Folder 215 Note Material re proposed article by Will Maslow and Max Berking
of the American Jewish Congress. Material on race relations, anti-Semitism, and
possible publication of the article in Reader’s Digest.
|
| |
Pennsylvania Series 1914-1915 Box 24, Folder 216 Note Correspondence and papers re "Social Legislation in the
Keystone State," a series of articles by F1orence Sanville, the first of which
was published in Survey, vol. 33, February 6, 1915. Material re gubernatorial
elections in Pennsylvania, prison labor and welfare, labor relations in
Pittsburgh, the Pittsburgh Survey and Kellogg’s efforts to promote the series.
Includes copies of AFL resolutions on prison labor 1897-1914.
|
| |
Playground Series 1916 Box 24, Folder 217 Note Material re "Exporting the American Playground," a series by
C. M. Goethe, the first article of which was published in Survey, vol. 36, June
3,1916. Primarily correspondence from persons in Australia, China, India,
Japan, New Zealand, Brazil, and other countries, responding to notice of the
series and commenting on local playground conditions.
|
| |
Requests for Contributions of Articles from
Britons 1913 Box 24, Folder 218 Note Kellogg requested certain persons to contribute articles on
social and economic conditions from the British point of view. Requests and
replies.
|
| |
Rural Life and Welfare 1911-1916 Box 24, Folder 219 Note Material re rural churches, farm life conditions in the
South, effects of urbanization, and ways in which the Survey might cover rural
needs and rural social work.
|
| |
Seamen’s Bill and Safety-at-Sea 1913-1916 Box 24, Folder 220 Note Correspondence, memoranda, and drafts of articles. Includes
material on conditions in the U.S. merchant marine, safety-at-sea legislation,
Great Lakes shipping, Andrew Furuseth, cancellation of steamship advertising
in the Survey, and passage of the LaFollette’s seamen’s bill (1915) and
efforts to repeal it.
|
| |
Seamen’s Bill and Safety-at-Sea 1912-1915 Box 24, Folder 221 Note Material on seamen, LaFollette’s seamen’s bill,
safety-at-sea, the United Fruit Company, International Seamen’s Union of
America, etc.
|
|
Box 25 |
Seamen’s Bill and Safety-at-Sea 1912-1916 Box 25, Folder 222 Note continued from previous box
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Seamen’s Bill and Safety-at-Sea 1913-1916 Box Legal 37, Folder 12 Note Legal length items separated from folders 220-222.
|
|
Box 25 |
Seamen’s Bill and Safety-at-Sea,
Clippings 1913-1915 Box 25, Folder 223
|
| |
Social Settlements 1930-1934 Box 25, Folder 224 Note Draft of Kellogg’s article on settlements for the
Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, exchange between Kellogg and Alvin Johnson
(encyclopedia editor) re settlements, and correspondence with Albert J. Kennedy
re his article on settlements for the Social Work Year Book, 1933 edition.
|
| |
Special Numbers 1923-ca. 1932 Box 25, Folder 225 Note Material re proposed special numbers on crime and prisons,
Palestine, children, the arts, the blind, etc. Correspondents include Samuel S.
Fels, Bruno Lasker, Ann Reed Brenner, Isaac M. Rubinow, Julian Mack, Frank
Tannenbaum, Alice S. Cheyney, Ethel Kawin, and Herman Adler.
|
| |
Special Numbers, Data 1939-1948 Box 25, Folder 226 Note Lists of special numbers, persons contributing to them, and
costs of issuing them.
|
| |
Special Numbers, Cotton (Proposed), 1920-1923 Box 25, Folder 227 Note Correspondence re child labor in the South, plan for the
number, and clippings re the boll weevil, the tariff, and the industrial beam
in the South.
|
| |
Special Numbers, Mexico 1930-1931 Box 25, Folder 228 Note Correspondence, memoranda, and list of contributors to the
number, which was published in Survey, vol. 66, May 1,1931. Includes an undated
report on border crossings, aliens, etc.
|
| |
Special Numbers, "New Germany’ 1928-1929 Box 25, Folder 229 Note Correspondence, memoranda, and press releases re the number,
which was published in Survey, vol. 61, February 1, 1929. Material largely re
Kellogg’s efforts to raise funds for the issue and to promote circulation of
it, but also includes a letter (April 26,1929) criticizing the issue for
ignoring undercurrents in Germany.
|
| |
Special Numbers, Supreme Court and Labor
(Proposed) 1922-1923 Box 25, Folder 230 Note Digest of Court decisions involving national regulation of
industrial relations, cartoons, clippings, etc.
|
| |
Special Numbers, Woods (Proposed), Correspondence
and Papers 1925-1928 Box 25, Folder 231 to 232 Note Material re utilization of wood, conservation, state
forestry and parks, U.S. Forest Products Laboratory at Madison (Wisconsin),
Save the Redwoods League, American Forestry Association, etc.
|
|
Box 26 |
Special Numbers, Woods (Proposed),
Materials 1922-1928 Box 26, Folder 233 to 235 Note Pamphlets, clippings, etc. re wood conservation, forestry,
American Wood Preservers Association, U .S. Forest Products Laboratory at
Madison, Wisconsin, etc.
|
| |
Survey of National Organizations 1914 Box 26, Folder 236 Note After receiving a letter from a southwestern university
noting the dearth of Southerners on the board of the American Association for
Labor Legislation, Kellogg sent questionnaries to "national organizations in
the social field" re composition of their boards of directors and
administrative staff. The returned forms are filed alphabetically by
association.
|
| |
Unemployment, General 1923-1932 Box 26, Folder 237 Note Press releases, speech, clippings, list of Survey articles
on unemployment, 1931-1932, etc.
|
| |
Unemployment 1936 Box 26, Folder 238 Note Material for Kellogg’s article, "Not Floods but Glaciers,"
published in Survey Graphic, vol. 25, May 1936. Data on wages in manufacturing
industries in Allegheny County (Pennsylvania) and cases from the Family
Society of Allegheny County showing the effects of unemployment.
|
| |
Unemployment, Materials 1933-1936 Box 26, Folder 239 Note Includes marked copies of University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh Business Review; Federation of Social Agencies of Pittsburgh and
Allegheny County, Social Research Bulletin; and American Iron and Steel
Institute, Steel Facts.
|
| |
"What’s Worth fighting For in American Life?"
1926 Box 26, Folder 240 Note The series (the first article of which was published in
Survey, vol. 57, February 1,1927) evolved from discussion of the 1920’s as a
"period of sag" in American life. Includes staff memoranda, lists of potential
contributors, invitations to potential contributors, etc.
|
| |
Workmen’s Compensation 1914-1915 Box 26, Folder 241 Note Correspondence, clippings, and draft of article.
Correspondents include William M. Leiserson, John B. Andrews, John M. Glenn,
Florence Kelley, Isaac M. Rubinow, Workmen’s Compensation Service Bureau,
National Civic Federation, and Workmen’s Compensation Publicity Bureau.
|
|
Box 27 |
World War I, Correspondence and Papers 1914-1917 Box 27, Folder 242 Note Includes analysis of war coverage in the technical press,
letters praising and criticizing the Survey’s coverage of the war and various
peace movements, and Kellogg’s memorandum (February 20,1917) defending his
position. Correspondents include Jane Addams, George W. Nasmyth, Edward T.
Devine, William Borah, Joseph Lee, William E. Harmon, Frederic Almy, John A.
Fitch, Bruno Lasker, and others.
|
| |
World War I, "A Canadian City [Montreal] in War
Time," Correspondence 1917-1918 Box 27, Folder 243 Note Correspondence re Kellogg’s series, the first article of
which was published in Survey, vol. 38, March 17, 1917. The series dealt with
the Patriotic Fund of Canada, which gave assistance to families of armed forces
men.
|
| |
World War I, "A Canadian City [Montreal] in War
Time," Materials 1915-1917 Box 27, Folder 244 to 247 Note Statements and reports of interviews, clippings, memorandum
on immigration prepared for the Dominions Royal Commission at Montreal, reports
of the Montreal Soldiers’ Wives’ League, etc. Includes reprints of Kellogg’s
series.
|
| |
World War I, Reconstruction 1914-1919 Box 27, Folder 248 Note Material, especially memoranda by Bruno Lasker, on social
reconstruction after the war.
|
| |
World War I, "War-Boom Towns’ 1915-1916 Box 27, Folder 249 Note Series of articles, the first of which was published in
Survey, vol. 35, December 4, 1915. Material re effect of war on a community,
memoranda with suggestions for series, and correspondence with John Ihlder,
Mary Van Kleeck, Margaret Dreier Robins, and Shelby M. Harrison.
|
| |
World War I, Pamphlets 1914-1917 Box 27, Folder 250 Note Material from World Peace Foundation, International Congress
of Women, League to Enforce Peace, Woman’s Peace Party, etc.
|
| |
World War I, Atrocity Propaganda ca. 1915 Box 27, Folder 251 Note Reports of a Russian Extraordinary Commission of Inquiry on
atrocities committed by German and Austro-Hungarian troops.
|
|
Box 28 |
World War I, Clippings 1915-1917, 1924 Box 28, Folder 252 Note Re Karl Liebknecht, Jane Addams, preparedness, women’s
groups’ peace efforts, Henry Ford’s peace expedition, pacifism, militarism,
etc.
|
| |
World War I, Henry Ford Peace Ship
cartoons 1915-1916 Box 28, Folder 253 Note Ford organized a peace expedition to Europe in 1915.
Original cartoons and copies of them.
|
| |
Editorial miscellania |
|
Box 18 |
Publishing Memoranda 1932-1933 Box 18, Folder 165 Note John Hanrahan, magazine consultant, analyzed the background
and interests of readers of the Survey and Survey Graphic and recommended
separation of the two magazines and increased work on Survey Graphic content.
Includes his report, discussion of it by Kellogg and members of the board,
publishing and circulation figures, and a "profile" of the Survey reader.
|
| |
Inquiry to Survey Midmonthly Readers 1941 Box 18, Folder 166 Note Form letter to readers asking about content and coverage,
and summary of replies received.
|
| |
Inquiry to Survey Midmonthly Readers,
Replies 1941 Box 18, Folder 167 Note Replies to inquiry, arranged as the staff numbered them
(1-50).
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Inquiry to Survey Midmonthly Readers,
Replies 1941 Box Legal 37, Folder 10 Note Legal length items separated from folder 18:167.
|
|
Box 18 |
Editor’s Itineraries 1925-1951. Box 18, Folder 168 Note Legal length items separated from folder 18:167.
|
| |
Editor’s Pacific Coast Trip 1925 Box 18, Folder 169 to 170 Note Correspondence and papers, including notes of introduction,
arrangements for lectures, staff correspondence with Kellogg, etc.
|
|
Box 28 |
Unpublished Manuscripts from
Contributors 1942-1949 Box 28, Folder 254 to 259 Note Manuscripts and often surrounding correspondence. Material
re Farm Security Administration, agriculturallabor in wartime, John Collier,
Weimar Republic, impact of World War II, atomic power, Russia, social movements
in South America, journalism, regional and city planning, juvenile delinquency,
health, bureaucracy, world government, India, etc.
|
|
Box 29 |
Survey Newspaper Clippings 1914-1949 Box 29, Folder 260 Note Primarily re coverage given to Survey articles, features,
special issues, etc.
|
| |
Operational |
|
Box 29 |
Membership Statements 1938-1952 Box 29, Folder 261 Note Members of Survey Associates contributed money beyond the cost
of a subscription. Records of income, funds, and departments to which it was
allotted, and occasional figures on number of members.
|
| |
Advertising 1923-1943 Box 29, Folder 262 Note Statements of income.
|
| |
Circulation Department 1931-1937 Box 29, Folder 263 Note Records.
|
| |
Field Work Reports 1934-1943 Box 29, Folder 264 to 267 Note Records of subscriptions sold by field workers.
|
|
Box 30 |
Promotion, Survey Graphic 1944-1948 Box 30, Folder 268 Note Reports on cost of promotion, amount of returns, and
subscriptions resulting from such efforts.
|
| |
Promotion, Materials 1924-1949 Box 30, Folder 269 to 270 Note Form letters and brochures sent to Survey Associates and
prospective subscribers and material on promotional efforts of other
magazines.
|
| |
Promotion, Appeal to Signers of Sacco-Vanzetti
Petition to Become Members of Survey Associates 1927 Box 30, Folder 271 Note Primarily letters replying to Kellogg’s offer to send the
signers introductory copies of the Survey.
|
| |
Promotion, Janet Sabloff 1950-1951 Box 30, Folder 272 Note Correspondence re her efforts to raise funds and provide
publicity for Survey. List of funds raised by Miss Sabloff, Kellogg’s personal
secretary.
|
| |
Production graphics |
|
Box 30 |
American Red Cross ca. 1919. Box 30, Folder 273 Note * Folders 273-304 contain glossy prints, cartoons, clippings
from magazines,and newspapers, and other material which the Survey staff
evidently drew on for illustrating articles.
|
| |
Art Education ca. 1921-1923. Box 30, Folder 274
|
| |
Bolshevism ca. 1921-1923. Box 30, Folder 275
|
| |
Books ca .192l-1923. Box 30, Folder 276
|
| |
Child Labor ca. 1924. Box 30, Folder 277
|
| |
Child Welfare ca. 1919-1923. Box 30, Folder 278
|
| |
Czechoslovakia 1906, ca. 1921. Box 30, Folder 279
|
| |
Disarmament 1914-1923. Box 30, Folder 280
|
| |
Facts on Disarmament ca. 1921. Box 30, Folder 281
|
| |
Foreign [sic], General ca. 1919-1923. Box 30, Folder 282
|
|
Box 31 |
Germany ca. 1919-1923. Box 31, Folder 283
|
| |
Charles Haag n.d. Box 31, Folder 284 Note Photographs of the work of Haag, a sculptor.
|
| |
Harlem ca. 1922. Box 31, Folder 285
|
| |
Hungary 1920 Box 31, Folder 286
|
| |
India ca. 1921. Box 31, Folder 287
|
| |
Indian (American) Art ca. 1922. Box 31, Folder 288
|
| |
Indians (American) ca. 1922-1926 Box 31, Folder 289
|
| |
Industry ca. 1922. Box 31, Folder 290
|
| |
Italy ca. 1922-1923. Box 31, Folder 291
|
| |
Maps 1921, n.d. Box 31, Folder 292
|
| |
Mexico ca. 1922-1924 Box 31, Folder 293 Note Includes a Weinold Reiss catalog.
|
| |
Negro ca. 1921-1922. Box 31, Folder 294
|
| |
Palestine n.d. Box 31, Folder 295
|
| |
Poverty ca. 1919-1921. Box 31, Folder 296
|
| |
Prohibition 1914-1921. Box 31, Folder 297
|
| |
Public Health ca. 1920. Box 31, Folder 298
|
| |
Russia 1920s Box 31, Folder 299 Note Photographs probably intended for use in article by Sanford
Griffith, "Russian hctory Wheels in Motion," Survey, vol. 48, July 1,1922.
|
| |
Seals and Medals, n.d. Box 31, Folder 300 Note Seals of countries, organizations, Women’s Trade Union
League, etc.
|
| |
Transportation 1921, n.d. Box 31, Folder 301
|
| |
Vienna n.d. Box 31, Folder 302
|
| |
Miscellaneous ca. 1911-1923. Box 31, Folder 303
|
|
Box 32 |
Miscellaneous n.d. Box 32, Folder 304
|
| |
Hughes Printing Company 1949 Box 32, Folder 305 Note Correspondence re printing of Survey.
|
| |
Type Talks (Type Book) 1928 Box 32, Folder 306
|
| |
Series 3. Professional |
| |
Organizations and individuals |
|
Box 32 |
Advisory Council on Economic Security to the
[President’s] Committee on Economic Security 1934-1935 Box 32, Folder 307 Note Material re naming of council (of which Kellogg was a member),
procedure for it, Kellogg’s suggestion of additional members, guaranteed
employment, and extension of coverage of workmen’s compensation. Kellogg
drafted a minority report opposing what he considered to be inadequate
unemployment insurance proposed in the council’s report. Correspondents include
Frances Perkins, Edwin E. Witte, William Green, and Frank P. Graham.
|
|
Box 47 |
Alabama Conference of Social Work 1939 Box 47, Folder 1 Note Correspondence regarding the annual social work conference in
Huntsville, Alabama, where Paul was the guest speaker.
|
| |
American Association for Labor Legislation 1933 Box 47, Folder 2 Note Regarding unemployment reserve legislation and the meeting in
Britain of the International Association of Labor Association.
|
| |
American Association of Social Work 1941-1946 Box 47, Folder 3 Note Membership information, publication notices, and
correspondence.
|
|
Box Legal 51 |
American Friends for German Freedom 1941 Box Legal 51, Folder 4 Note Memos, correspondence regarding meetings and a bibliography on
Germany.
|
|
Box 47 |
American Red Cross 1915-1918 Box 47, Folder 4 Note Paul Kellogg traveled to Europe during World War I to report
events back to America. Includes traveling certification, passports,
correspondence including the War Department, Committee on Public Information
(George Creel), European literature on the Red Cross, expense accounts,
American Red Cross literature, and Survey accounts of the trip.
|
|
Box 32 |
American Union Against Militarism 1914-1915 Box 32, Folder 308 Note Primarily correspondence re publishing a statement, Towards
the Peace That Shall Last. Correspondents include Jane Addams, Florence Kelley,
Edward T. Devine, Lillian D. Wald, Felix Adler, Louis Brandeis, William Dean
Howells, Thomas Edison, and other prominent Americans.
|
| |
American Union Against Militarism 1915 Box 32, Folder 309 Note After publishing the statement, several signers decided to
keep the group together to make further peace efforts. Includes minutes of
meeting, resolutions of the Women’s Trade Union League, report of Jane Addams’
peace efforts abroad, material on Chicago Peace Society and the Woman’s Peace
Party, Louis Brandeis’ speech on "True Americanism," Jane Addams’ address at
Carnegie Hall, etc. Correspondents include Mornay Williams, Jane Addams, Rabbi
Stephen Wise, George Kirchwey, Frederic Howe, and others.
|
| |
American Union Against Militarism 1915-1917 Box 32, Folder 310 Note Minutes of further meetings from which evolved the AUAM,
financial material, letter inquiring about conscientious objectors, Kellogg’s
draft of an invitation to join the Henry Ford peace expedition, etc.
Correspondents and subjects include Emily Greene Balch, Rosika Schwimmer, J.
Lionberger Davis, and Anna Garlin Spencer.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
American Union Against Militarism 1914-1917 Box Legal 37, Folder 1 Note Legal length items separated from folders 32:308-310.
|
|
Box 47 |
Birth Control Federation 1941-1942 Box 47, Folder 5 Note Invitations, citation, and correspondence regarding the
boycott on the part of Catholic groups in Kentucky against the Louisville
Courier Journal for printing a full page advertisment on birth control. (Copy
of the ad is enclosed.)
|
|
Box 32 |
Louis D. Brandeis, Statement Supporting His Nomination
to the Supreme Court 1916 Box 32, Folder 311 Note Signers include Kellogg, Lillian D. Wald, Florence Kelley,
John A. Fitch, Robert W. Bruere, Ernest Poole, George Alger, and others.
|
|
Box 47 |
Brandeis, Louis D., Election n.d. Box 47, Folder 6 Note Endorsement written for Louis D. Brandeis regarding his
nomination to the Supreme Court, author unknown.
|
| |
British Commonwealth Labor Conference 1928 Box 47, Folder 7 Note Programs, clippings, agendas and a copy of Paul’s speech.
|
| |
Canadian Conference on Social Work 1946 Box 47, Folder 8 Note Conference on Social Work, correspondence, travel
arrangements, confirmations, program of the conference, and notes for Paul’s
speech.
|
| |
Capital Punishment n.d. Box 47, Folder 9 Note Correspondence to Paul Kellogg from Vivian Pierce, the
director of the American League to Abolish Capital Punishment regarding the
execution of William Jones.
|
| |
Carnegie Peace Fund n.d. Box 47, Folder 10 Note Article notes, clippings, and speech on the Carnegie Peace
Fund, written by Paul Kellogg.
|
| |
Children, Professional Organizations 1939-1950 Box 47, Folder 11 Note Correspondence including Girl’s Vacation Fund, National Child
Labor Committee, The Children’s Service Center, Henry Street Settlement, Mid
Century White House Conference on Children and Youth (John Ihlder), and the New
England Home for Little Wanderers (with a copy of the resolution adopted at the
1950 Child Welfare League of America).
|
|
Box 32 |
Committee on Cultural Relations with
Mexico 1930 Box 32, Folder 312 Note Kellogg participated in a seminar in Mexico sponsored by the
Committee. Includes list of participants, outline of program, etc.
|
|
Box 47 |
Committee on Cultural Relations in Latin
America 1929, 1935 Box 47, Folder 12 Note Agenda for the Mexican seminar about the study of Mexican life
and culture (1929), and correspondence including letters of introduction for
Paul.
|
|
Box 33 |
Committee on Industrial Relations to Secure the
Appointment of a Federal Commission on Industrial Relations 1911-1917 Box 33, Folder 313 Note Kellogg was the Committee’s secretary. Includes lists of
committee members, minutes of meetings, statements of purpose and on industrial
relations, material on the bill to create a commission, and material on
reaction to President Taft’s nominees for the Commission. Correspondents and
subjects include John Haynes Holmes, Rabbi Stephen Wise, Edward T. Devine,
Graham R. Taylor, Adolph Lewisohn, John M. Glenn, George Foster Peabody, Frank
P. Walsh" John A. Fitch, and others.
|
| |
Committee on Industrial Relations to Secure the
Appointment of a Federal Commission on Industrial Relations, Chicago
Committee 1912-1913 Box 33, Folder 314 Note Graham R. Taylor was secretary of the Chicago committee.
Includes lists of members, minutes of meetings, and material protesting the
nomination of J. Mack Glenn to the commission. Correspondents include Anita
McCormick (Mrs. Emmons) Blaine, Edward T. Devine, Allen T. Burns, Samuel McCune
Lindsay, Julius Rosenwald, and others.
|
| |
Committee on Industrial Relations to Secure the
Appointment of a Federal Commission on Industrial Relations,
Publications ca. 1912 Box 33, Folder 315 Note Material on hours in the steel industry, the Industrial
Relations Commission industrial relations, etc.
|
| |
Committee on Industrial Relations to Secure the
Appointment of a Federal Commission on Industrial Relations,
Pamphlets 1912-1915 Box 33, Folder 316 Note Releases from the Committee on Coal Mine Managers, sermon by
John Haynes Holmes, report of the Industrial Relations Commission, etc.
|
|
Box 47 |
Committee on Research in Medical Economics 1941-1950 Box 47, Folder 13 Note Activities report, memo concerning President Truman’s Health
Message, 1945 budget, and a 1950 meeting.
|
| |
Conference on Demobilization and the Responsibilities
of Organized Social Agencies 1918 Box 47, Folder 14 Note Agendas, conference reports (by Charles Weller), minutes,
meeting programs, talks, Aldine Club Luncheon meeting, and National Child
Welfare Association (regarding the resolution proposed at the Conference of
Demoblization).
|
| |
Cooper, Charles - The Kingsley Association 1926, 1928, 1930 Box 47, Folder 15 Note Personal friend and business associate of Paul Kellogg’s and
the director of the Kingley Settlement (Pittsburgh). Personal and professional
correspondence.
|
|
Box 33 |
Election (Presidential) of 1924 1924 Box 33, Folder 317 Note Kellogg campaigned for the LaFollette-Wheeler Progressive
Party ticket. Includes material on response to attack on LaFollette by 48
"Roosevelt progressives," and Amos Pinchot’s letter to Wheeler defending
LaFollette.
|
|
Box Legal 37 |
Election (Presidential) of 1924 1924 Box Legal 37, Folder 4 Note Legal length items separated from folder 33:317.
|
|
Box 33 |
Foreign Policy Association 1921-1949 Box 33, Folder 318 Note Notices of meetings, minutes, clippings, 1938 letter on
conditions in Germany, and material re FPA’s tenth anniversary in 1928. Kellogg
was one of the founders and a board member of FPA.
|
|
Box 47 |
Foreign Policy Association 1935-1950 Box 47, Folder 16 Note Minutes, invitations, membership reports, budget reports,
memos, by-laws, board of directors nominations, agendas, correspondence
including Raymond Leslie Buell, Dorothy Leet, Helen Terry, Brooks Emeny, and
Clarence A. Peters.
|
|
Box 48 |
Foreign Policy Association 1951-1956 Box 48, Folder 1 Note Minutes, invitations, membership reports, budget reports,
memos, including a proposal to the Ford Foundation from the Foreign Policy
Association for a grant.
|
| |
Frankfurter, Felix 1938, 1944 Box 48, Folder 2 Note Correspondence and clipping.
|
| |
International Industrial Relations
Institute 1938, 1942, 1949 Box 48, Folder 3 Note Programs, reviews, budget information, membership
correspondence, including M.L. Fledderus (vice president of IIRI) regarding
Paul’s European trips.
|
|
Box 33 |
League of Free Nations Association 1917-1920 Box 33, Folder 319 Note Kellogg invited a group to luncheon to discuss problems of
international adjustment that would arise following the war. This group became
the Committee on Nothing at All, later the Committee on Foreign Policy, and the
LFNA. Includes minutes, speeches, and material on Russian-American
relations.
|
| |
League of Free Nations Association,
Publications 1918-1919? Box 33, Folder 320 Note Statements of principles and purpose of the LFNA.
|
| |
National Conference of Charities and
Correction 1910 Box 33, Folder 321 Note Report of the Committee on occupational standards of which
Kellogg was chairman in 1910; memorandum to the committee on standards of
living and labor on "Planks in a Living and Industrial Platform"; program of
the 1912 National Conference; and “Social Standards for Industry: A Platform’
(of the committee on standards of living and labor).
|
|
Box 34 |
National Conference of Social Work 1936-1950 Box 34, Folder 322 Note Primarily correspondence and papers re Kellogg’s presidency of
NCSW, 1939. Includes material re Kellogg’s speech to the Child Welfare League
of America at the 1938 National Conference and issues of concern to the League.
Brief material re the Survey Award presented at the 1950 National Conference
(the award, given annually for "imaginative and constructive contribution to
social work," was established in 1949).
|
|
Box 48 |
National Conference of Social Work - Buffalo
meeting 1939 Box 48, Folder 4 Note Bulletins, financial statements, time schedules, summaries,
events, conferences, and speeches.
|
| |
National Conference of Social Work - Kellogg
presidency 1938, 1939, 1941 Box 48, Folder 5 Note Chairman’s handbook, notes, Paul’s schedules, memos,
telegrams, photocopied newspaper clippings of the conference and Paul Kellogg
with wife Helen Hall, and speech notes. Correspondence regarding Paul’s
election as the president of the National Conference of Social Work including
F. Mc Farland, Elmer Scott (Civic Federation of Dallas), Paul Sifton (New York
Department of Labor), Harold S. Buttenheim (The American City/The Muncipal
Index), Harold R. Knight, John Duffy, A. L. Foster (Chicago Urban League), J.
E. Sproul (The National YMCA), Elizabeth Christman (National Women’s Trade
Union League of America), Edward T. Devine, Henry R. Ernst (County of Erie
Board of Supervisors), Florence E. Allen (United States Court of Appeals), and
Nathan Straus (United States Housing Authority).
|
| |
National Conference of Social Work - Presidential
address 1939 Box 48, Folder 6 Note Detailed notes of Kellogg’s presidential speech, "Buffalo and
Points West."
|
|
Box 34 |
National Conference of Social Work,
Clippings 1939 Box 34, Folder 323 Note Re Kellogg’s presidency of the National Conference.
|
|
Box 48 |
National Conference on Social Welfare - Tribute to
Past Presidents 1952 Box 48, Folder 7 Note Written tribute to past presidents of the NCSW by Lester B.
Granger, correspondence, and guest list.
|
|
Box 34 |
National Conference on Labor Legislation 1935-1941 Box 34, Folder 324 Note NCLL was an annual conference composed of delegates designated
by governors; Kellogg was invited by Frances Perkins. Material re three
conferences, including a report of the 1935 conference. Material on industrial
"home work," report of a wage and hours committee, and material on industrial
conditions.
|
|
Box 48 |
National Federation of Settlements 1927-1952 Box 48, Folder 8 Note Conference agendas, facts on Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt from John
M. Dowell, memos, informal dinner for Lillie Peck, receptions, reports,
correspondence to and from Charles Cooper (Kingsley house) regarding the
Unemployment Committee, Albert Kennedy’s resignation as secretary of NFS, Jane
Addams (regarding Kennedy and the Waukegan matter), and Lea D. Taylor regarding
Paul Kellogg as president of NFS.
|
| |
National Nutrition Conference for Defense 1941 Box 48, Folder 9 Note Agenda, bulletin, correspondence from the Federal Security
Agency, and Paul’s intinerary for the National Nutrition Conference for
Defense.
|
|
Box 34 |
New York State Employment Service, State Advisory
Council 1934-1940 Box 34, Folder 325 to 326 Note Kellogg chaired the advisory council. Material re the origin
and development of the council, 1934 memorandum on employment of African
Americans in the administrative offices of the New York State Employment
Service, cost of administering unemployment insurance in New York, New York
City employment service, ald operating relationships with the U.S. Employment
Service.
|
|
Box 48 |
New York State Employment 1938 Box 48, Folder 10 Note Memos, unemployment placement activities, correspondence
including Fritz Kaufman and Herbert Lehman.
|
|
Box 34 |
Office of Defense Mobilization, Mobilization
Conference 1951 Box 34, Folder 327 Note Brief correspondence and transcript of conference that was
held for editors, commentators, and columnists.
|
| |
Office of Defense Mobilization, Mobilization
Conference, Papers 1951 Box 34, Folder 328 Note Material distributed at conference and/or papers read at
it.
|
| |
Penn Normal Industrial and Agricultural School, St.
Helena Island, South Carolina 1938-1950 Box 34, Folder 329 Note Kellogg was a member of the school’s advisory board. Annual
report, minutes of executive and finance committees and trustees’ report.
|
|
Box 48 |
Penn School 1939, 1947-1949 Box 48, Folder 11 Note Mainly correspondence between Paul Kellogg, Rossa Cooley and
Linnie Schley regarding Paul’s visits, Negro veterans, board of trustees and
board meeting minutes.
|
|
Box 34 |
Pittsburgh Survey 1906-1916 Box 34, Folder 330 Note Miscellaneous material re Pittsburgh Survey, the first
community survey in the U.S., which Kellogg directed. Correspondence re
editorial work on the six-volume report of the survey, material on labor
conditions in Pittsburgh (1914), clippings, and draft of chapter (or a portion
of a chapter) by William H. Matthews. Includes a letter (June 11, 1906) from an
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, probation officer asking if it would be
possible "to make a study and a report of social conditions in Pittsburgh and
vicinity?"
|
|
Box 49 |
Pittsburgh Survey 1905-1914 Box 49, Folder 1 Note Book covers, poems written by Paul Kellogg, graphics, poems,
cartoons drawn of office staff, license for copyright, newspaper clippings, and
correspondence from the Detroit Publishing Company.
|
|
Box Legal 51 |
Pittsburgh Survey 1905-1914 Box Legal 51, Folder 5 Note Memos, personal notes of Paul’s on office meetings, Paul’s
trips, copy and storylines including the steel corporation, Pittsburgh social
bookkeeping, correspondence including John Brashear, Gifford Pinchot, Wisconsin
Tuberculosis Association, Ben Lindsey, The American Magazine, the Social Center
Association, Paul’s article "Peace and Good Will" (in The American Magazine),
Pittsburgh’s Chamber of Commerce report on housing conditions, and a piece
entitled "The Pittsburgh Survey and What it Means to Woods Run."
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Box 35 |
Progressive Party 1912-1913 Box 35, Folder 331 Note Memorandum re organization of an "Educational Council," George
Kirchwey’s memorandum on Progressive Party functions and methods, an
organization blueprint for the party, incomplete stenographic notes of a
meeting re party organization, and what is evidently material used in drafting
the party platform.
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Box Legal 37 |
Progressive Party 1912-1913 Box Legal 37, Folder 11 Note Legal length items separated from folder 35:331.
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Box 35 |
Progressive Party, Progressive National Service,
Special Committee on Sickness and Old Age Insurance, Box 35, Folder 332 Note Reports of the committee and digest of laws on workmen’s
compensation (1914). Copy of a letter from Joseph P. Chamberlain to Jane Addams
on the party implementing its plank supporting the general principle of
sickness insurance.
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Progressive Party, Publications and
Famphlets 1912-1913 Box 35, Folder 333 Note Includes Amos Pinchot’s What’s the Matter with America?,
Thomas Edison’s decision to support the progressive party, the party platform,
and publications of the Progressive National Service and the legislative
committee of the National Progressive Party in New York State.
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Box 49 |
Roosevelt, Franklin D. 1932-1948 Box 49, Folder 2 Note Includes "Memo for Mr. Roosevelt" written by Paul Kellogg,
note to Paul from President Roosevelt, letter from CIO Political Action
Committee to re-elect President Roosevelt, and correspondence from the Franklin
D. Roosevelt Memorial Foundation asking Paul for information about his
interactions with FDR.
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Box 36 |
Statement to President Roosevelt re NRA 1934 Box 36, Folder 341 Note Material re drafting of statement urging increased action
through the NRA to aid recovery. Kellogg, Helen Hall, John Lovejoy Elliot, and
Lucy Mason presented the statement to President Roosevelt in April, 1934.
Correspondents include Amos Pinchot, Oswald Garrison Villard, Morris Ernst, and
Edward T. Devine.
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Statement to President Roosevelt re NRA, Second
Edition 1934 Box 36, Folder 342 Note Letters arranged alphabetically, from persons refusing to sign
a second edition (May 23) of the statement. Among those refusing were Grace
Abbott, Jane Addams, Richard C. Cabot, John A. Fitch, John Palmer Gavit,
Pauline Goldmark, Amos Pinchot, Graham Taylor, Mary Van Kleeck, and T. Henry
Walnut.
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Box 49 |
Sacco-Vanzetti Case 1927-1928 Box 49, Folder 3 Note Correspondence mainly between Charles Cooper and Paul Kellogg
regarding the Sacco/Vanzetti case. Included is a letter between Arthur Kellogg
and Upton Sinclair regarding the case. Also, a typewritten essay on the case by
an unknown author.
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Box 36 |
Statement to President Roosevelt re NRA, Replies to
May 23 Form Letter 1934 Box 36, Folder 343 Note With the second edition (May 23) Kellogg sent a form letter
asking about steps to follow up the statement. Returned forms arranged
alphabetically, from those expressing interest in further action and willing to
sign later editions.
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Statement to President Roosevelt re NRA, "Additional
Replies’ 1934 Box 36, Folder 344 Note Replies to May 23 edition and form letter received too late to
be included in a third edition.
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Box 35 |
Sacco-Vanzetti, Correspondence and Papers 1927-1929 Box 35, Folder 334 Note Accounts of a meeting Kellogg and others had with
Massachusetts governor Alvan T. Fuller; Kellogg’s account of the arrest of
Powers Hapgood; who was addressing a group on the Boston Commons, protesting
handling of the case. Correspondents include Dr. Alice Hamilton, Waldo Cook,
John Lovejoy Elliot, Felix Frankfurter, John F. Moors, Edward S. Drown, and
others.
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Sacco-Vanzetti, Pamphlets 1925-1929 Box 35, Folder 335 to 336 Note Publications of the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee and the
Independent Sacco-Vanzetti Committee, articles, cartoons from the Daily Worker,
etc.
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Sacco-Vanzetti, Clippings 1927-1929. Box 35, Folder 337
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Social Policy Committee 1935 Box 35, Folder 338 Note The committee, which included Edward T. Devine, John Lovejoy
Elliot, Helen Hall, Oswald Garrison Villard, Bruce Bliven, and others,
organized to follow up a 1934 statement to President Roosevelt on the direction
of the New Deal. Material on the Wagner-Lewis Bill, the future of the NRA,
foreign policy, etc.
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Box 49 |
Social Policy Committee 1935 Box 49, Folder 4 Note Petition for unemployment insurance. Correspondence to Edward
T. Devine from John Glenn regarding the provisions of the Economic Security
Bill, telegrams supporting the statement, a list of names added to the
statement, and a list of the Social Policy Committee members from the United
States Senate.
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Social Security 1935 Box 49, Folder 5 Note Correspondence regarding the book, United States
Transportation.
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Box 35 |
Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign 1939-1940 Box 35, Folder 339 Note Correspondence and papers re work to assist refugees of the
Spanish Civil War. Extensive material re controversy over political involvement
of some members of the board of directors and the staff, which resulted in
members of the New York City chapter leaving the national organization to form
a separate one. Includes report, "An Inside History of the Spanish Refugee
Relief Campaign,’ 1940.
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Box 36 |
Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign 1939-1940 Box 36, Folder 340 Note continued from previous box
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Box Legal 37 |
Spanish Refugee Relief Campaign 1939-1940 Box Legal 37, Folder 13 Note Legal length items separated from folders 339-340.
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Box 49 |
Spanish Relief Embargo 1939-1940 Box 49, Folder 6 Note Pamphlets, notes, articles and correspondence regarding the
financing and sale of cotton to Spain.
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U. S. Department of State 1941, 1943 Box 49, Folder 8 Note Correspondence regarding visas for Robert and Herta Liebknecht
between Adolf Berle and Paul, and The Committee for a Democratic Foreign
Policy.
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U. S. Office of Civilian Defense 1941-1942 Box 49, Folder 9 Note Agendas, membership lists, memos, notes, bulletins, statement
by Mrs. Roosevelt for development of a Division of Civilian Participation,
Office of Civilian Defense, correspondence including Judge Justine Wise Polier,
(consultant to Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt), Community Chest and Councils, National
Resources Planning Board, and Office of Civilian Defense.
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U. S. Office of Defense Health and Welfare
Services 1941 Box 49, Folder 10 Note Minutes, lists, memos, and State Defense organization charts
and diagrams.
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U. S. Office of Production and Management 1941 Box 49, Folder 11 Note Includes correspondence from Robert C. Weaver regarding Negro
participation in the defense program.
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U. S. Senate, Unemployment Hearings
Testimony 1931-1932 Box 49, Folder 12 Note Printed booklet on the hearings for the subcommittee on
manufacturers in the United States Senate.
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Witte, Edwin 1934-1935 Box 49, Folder 13 Note Correspondence between Paul Kellogg and Edwin Witte regarding
Wagner-Lewis employment bill and employment benefits.
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Women’s International League for Peace and
Freedom 1941, 1947 Box 49, Folder 14 Note General correspondence regarding Paul’s membership on the
WILPF advisory board.
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Workmen’s Compensation 1911-12 Box 49, Folder 15 Note Correspondence written to Hon. J. M. Wainwirght regarding
workmen’s compensation, including various insurance companies, attorneys’
statements, and a copy of the proposed amendment.
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Workers’ Defense League 1943 Box 49, Folder 16 Note Minutes and correspondence asking Paul Kellogg to become a
member of the National Advisory Committee of the Worker’s Defense League.
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Box 36 |
World Citizens Association 1940 Box 36, Folder 345 Note Correspondence and material re this association which worked
to secure an "effective world order."
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Box 49 |
World Citizens Association n.d. Box 49, Folder 17 Note Memoranda and suggested topics, members of the conference,
written notes by Paul, and conference program.
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General professional correspondence,
chronological |
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Box 49 |
Correspondence, Professional 1900-1919 Box 49, Folder 18 Note Church pamphlet, poem to Edward T. Devine from Paul Kellogg,
Amherst college program, speaking engagements, and a note signed by Arthur
Kellogg concerning the Free Association.
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Box 50 |
Correspondence, Professional 1920-1929 Box 50, Folder 1 Note Correspondence including Henry R. Seager, Graham R. Taylor
(Joint Committee for the Prevention of Delinquency), Robert De Forest, Charles
J. Laue, Forbes magazine, and Renee Ramanno.
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Correspondence, Professional 1930-1939 Box 50, Folder 2 Note Correspondence including J. Edgar Hoover, Harold Wengler, Dr.
Frank Audelotte, Irene Kleinstuck, Governor H.H. Lehman (unemployment
insurance), Irwin Steingut, Beulah Amidon, Gertrude Seymour, M.B. Givens, Jane
Addams, Harold Swift and Ruth Austin.
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Correspondence, Professional 1940-1942 Box 50, Folder 3 Note Correspondence including Laura Elmore Warren (Department of
Labor), Rene Sand, Louis Brandeis, Morris Cooke, Planned Parenthood, Florence
Kellogg, and a letter to Eleanor Roosevelt.
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Correspondence, Professional 1943-1949 Box 50, Folder 4 Note Invitations to speak, papers, telegrams, correspondence
including Adolf Berle, Russell Sage Foundation, War Production Board, United
Neighborhood Houses of New York (Harriet Young), New York War Fund, World
Citizen’s Association, Eleanor Roosevelt and Edward T. Devine.
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Correspondence, Professional 1950-1955 Box 50, Folder 5 Note Invitations, correspondence including The New York Cancer
Committee, William J. Callahan, Judge Jerome Frank, The New York School of
Social Work, The Committee of 100 (Allan Knight Chalmers), and the New York
Civil Liberties Union.
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Correspondence, Professional n.d. Box 50, Folder 6 Note Agenda, advertisements, League of Nations’ committee list,
unknown writing, and correspondence.
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