Format • | Manuscript Collection | [X] |
Subject • | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(15)
| • | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(8)
| • | Social settlements -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(8)
| • | African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(7)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. |
(7)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(7)
| • | Europe -- Description and travel -- 1800-1918. |
(6)
| • | Businessmen -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(5)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. |
(5)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social conditions. |
(5)
| • | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(5)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Economic conditions. |
(4)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Foreign population. |
(4)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Race relations. |
(4)
| • | Community centers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Community development -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Community development, Urban -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. |
(4)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland |
(4)
| • | Urban renewal -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Arts -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Appropriations and expenditures. |
(3)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Emigration and immigration |
(3)
| • | Cuyahoga County (Ohio) -- Politics and government. |
(3)
| • | Eaton, Cyrus Stephen, 1883-1979. |
(3)
| • | Europe -- Description and travel. |
(3)
| • | Friendly societies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Gardens -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority. |
(3)
| • | Heights Benevolent and Social Union (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(3)
| • | Hungarian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. |
(3)
| • | Immigrants -- Ohio -- Cleveland |
(3)
| • | Industrial relations -- United States. |
(3)
| • | Industries -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | International relations. |
(3)
| • | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. |
(3)
| • | Italians -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. |
(3)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. |
(3)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. |
(3)
| • | Jews, Hungarian -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Kucinich, Dennis J., 1946- |
(3)
| • | Political campaigns -- Ohio. |
(3)
| • | Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States. |
(3)
| • | Steel industry and trade -- Ohio. |
(3)
| • | Voinovich, George V., 1936- |
(3)
| • | Voyages and travels. |
(3)
| • | Wade family -- Periodicals. |
(3)
| • | Abortion -- Government policy -- United States. |
(2)
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| Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 21 | Title: | Anthony Palermo, Jr. Papers
| | | Creator: | Palermo, Anthony Jr. | | | Dates: | 1990-1993 | | | Abstract: | Anthony Palermo, Jr. (b. 1926) was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up in the Collinwood neighborhood of Cleveland. After serving in the United States Army Air Force during World War II, Palermo attended the Case Institute of Technology, graduating in 1949 with a degree in electrical engineering. He worked for the Picker X-Ray Corporation, developing x-ray and CAT scan systems. Palermo had an avid interest in local history, and he founded the South Euclid Historical Society and wrote the history of St. Gregory the Great Church (now known as Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish). The collection consists of Palermo's research and written recollections of the history of the South Euclid, Ohio, aircraft beacon; Bluestone Quarries; and Euclid Beach Park/Collinwood neighborhood baseball teams. | | | Call #: | MS 5189 | | | Extent: | 0.20 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Baseball -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Bluestone (Ohio) -- History. | Collinwood (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | Euclid Beach Park (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | South Euclid (Ohio) -- History.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 22 | Title: | Philip Smead Bird Papers
| | | Creator: | Bird, Philip Smead | | | Dates: | 1873-1950 | | | Abstract: | Philip Smead Bird (1886-1948) was a Presbyterian minister who served the Church of the Covenant, First Presbyterian, in Cleveland, Ohio. He was active in many social, educational and social welfare organizations including the Consumers' League of Ohio, The Cleveland Peace Committee, the Cleveland Emergency Peace Campaign, and the Masters School in Dobbs Ferry, New York. The collection consists of correspondence, sermons, addresses, personal papers, tax records, passports, diaries, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks, miscellaneous papers, and papers relating to the Masters School in Dobbs Ferry, New York. | | | Call #: | MS 3808 | | | Extent: | 14.80 linear feet (16 containers and 2 oversize volumes) | | | Subjects: | Bird, Philip Smead, 1886-1948. | Clergy -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Presbyterian Church -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Clergy | Sermons, American. | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Peace -- Religious aspects.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 23 | Title: | Anthony J. Celebrezze Papers
| | | Creator: | Celebrezze, Anthony J. | | | Dates: | 1944-1962 | | | Abstract: | Anthony J. Celebrezze (1910-1998) was the son of Italian immigrants to Cleveland, Ohio, who had a long career in law and government, serving as an Ohio state senator, Mayor of Cleveland, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and a federal judge. The collection consists of correspondence, reports, minutes, legal briefs and opinions, financial documents, speeches, ordinances, resolutions, lists, charts, maps and miscellaneous printed matter relating to the administration of Cleveland's municipal government during Celebrezze's five terms as Mayor (1953-1962). | | | Call #: | MS 3884 | | | Extent: | 3.40 linear feet (4 containers) | | | Subjects: | Celebrezze, Anthony J. (Anthony Joseph), 1910-1998 | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Public relations -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Municipal government. | Port districts -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Civil defense. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Public buildings. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Public works. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 24 | Title: | Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association of the United States and Canada, Local 80 Records
| | | Creator: | Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association of the United States and Canada, Local 80 | | | Dates: | 1920-1977 | | | Abstract: | Local 80 was chartered in 1890 as a Cleveland, Ohio, Local of the Operative Plasterers (est. 1864). Local 80 was dropped in 1898 but rechartered in 1899. The cement masons were admitted to the union in 1914. Membership in the Local was and is predominantly Italian. The collection consists of constitutions, minutes of regular and executive meetings, agreements with contractors' associations, correspondence, financial reports and records, arbitration and court cases, and membership records. | | | Call #: | MS 4055 | | | Extent: | 6.20 linear feet (7 containers) | | | Subjects: | Cement industry workers -- Labor unions -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Plasterers -- Labor unions -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Building trades -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Construction industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Employees | Collective labor agreements -- Construction industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Wages -- Cement industry workers -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Wages -- Building trades -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Cement industry workers -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Plasterers -- Ohio -- Cleveland
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 25 | Title: | Jeptha Homer Wade Family Papers
| | | Creator: | Wade, Jeptha Homer Family | | | Dates: | 1771-1957 | | | Abstract: | The Wade family was a prominent nineteenth and early twentieth century Cleveland, Ohio, family with business interests in the telegraph and railroad industries, mining, manufacturing, and banking. Jeptha Homer Wade spent his early life as an apprentice to a tanner and as a carpenter. He next turned his interest to the emerging telegraph industry. In 1849, he organized the Cleveland and Cincinnati Telegraph Company. In 1857, Wade moved to Cleveland as the Western Union Telegraph Company's first general agent. His business interests were extensive in Cleveland, including the Cleveland Rolling Mill Company and the Citizens Savings and Loan Association. Randall Palmer Wade worked with his father in the telegraph business, moving with him to Cleveland in 1857. His business interests included the Cuyahoga Mining Company; the Citizens Savings and Loan Association; the Cleveland Banking Company; the American Sheet and Boiler Plate Company, and the Chicago and Atchison Bridge Company. Jeptha Homer Wade II also worked in the telegraph industry; he later joined the banking community in Cleveland. He was an active philanthropist, serving as a trustee of the Western Reserve Historical Society, Western Reserve University, Adelbert College, and the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. He was an incorporator of the Cleveland Museum of Art in 1913, and later established a purchasing fund for the Museum. The collection consists of correspondence, wills, diaries, autobiographical sketches, memoranda, deeds, contracts, drawings, financial records, passport documents, land grants, notes, receipts, newspaper clippings, and scrapbooks, relating to Jeptha Homer Wade and his role in the telegraph industry in the Midwest, and to his son, Randall Palmer Wade, and grandson, Jeptha Homer Wade, Jr. Includes letters from or about Ezra Cornell, Amos Kendall, Samuel F.B. Morse, and James A. Garfield. Personal correspondence related to members of the Wade family, including Ellen Howe Garretson Wade and Ellen Howe Garretson, is included, as is travel journals written by various family members. The Wade family interest in spiritualism, particularly that of Jeptha Homer Wade after the death of his son Randall in 1876, is well documented in his personal correspondence. A calendar of correspondence for the collection is available in the appendix to the register. | | | Call #: | MS 3292 | | | Extent: | 5.60 linear feet (15 containers and 17 reels of microfilm) | | | Subjects: | Wade family -- Periodicals. | Howe family. | Buckminster family. | Stone family. | McGaw family. | Garretson family. | Wade, Jeptha Homer, 1811-1890. | Wade, Randall Palmer, 1835-1876. | Wade, Jeptha Homer, 1857-1926. | Wade, Ellen Garretson, 1859-1917. | Garretson, Ellen M. Howe. | Cleveland and Cincinnati Telegraph Company. | Western Union Telegraph Company. | Telegraph -- United States -- History. | Railroads -- United States -- History. | Mineral industries -- United States -- History. | Spiritualism -- United States. | Asia -- Description and travel. | United States -- Description and travel. | Alaska -- Description and travel. | Europe -- Description and travel. | Africa -- Description and travel.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 26 | Title: | Anthony J. Celebrezze Papers, Series II
| | | Creator: | Celebrezze, Anthony J. | | | Dates: | 1929-1977 | | | Abstract: | Anthony J. Celebrezze (1910-1998) was an Ohio state senator (1950-1953), mayor of Cleveland (1953-1962), Secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1962-1965), and federal judge for the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals (1965-1980). The collection consists of correspondence, clippings, honorary certificates and resolutions, publications, speeches, and scrapbooks, covering Celebrezze's political and judicial career, and relating to Cleveland's budgetary, city planning, civil defense, public transportation and urban renewal issues during the 1950s and 1960s, and to the anti-poverty, civil rights, education, and health insurance programs of Presidents Kennedy & Johnson. Includes correspondence of John Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Hubert Humphrey, Frank Lausche, Stephen M. Young, Michael DiSalle, Thomas Burke, Jack P. Russell, and Ralph Locher. | | | Call #: | MS 4046 | | | Extent: | 24.51 linear feet (22 containers, 23 oversize volumes, and 1 oversize folder) | | | Subjects: | Celebrezze, Anthony J. (Anthony Joseph), 1910-1998 | Cleveland (Ohio). Mayor. | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Urban renewal -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Political campaigns -- Ohio. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Appropriations and expenditures. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Civil defense. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Officials and employees. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Public works. | Streets -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Transit systems. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. | Ohio -- Politics and government. | United States -- Social policy.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 27 | Title: | Hiram House Social Settlement Records
| | | Creator: | Hiram House Social Settlement | | | Dates: | 1893-1972 | | | Abstract: | Hiram House is a pioneer Cleveland, Ohio, social settlement founded in 1896 by a group of Hiram College students led by George Bellamy, who later became Commissioner of Recreation for the city of Cleveland. During the height of its growth the settlement offered a full range of social, educational and recreational activities, but since 1948 it has concentrated its resources on Hiram House Camp in the suburb of Chagrin Falls, Ohio. Before 1948 its primary service area was centered in a neighborhood populated primarily by Jews, Italians and African Americans. The collection consists of minutes, resolutions, financial statements, ledger books, legal papers, correspondence, and employment and administrative policy materials of Hiram House, correspondence and legal and financial papers of George Bellamy, and correspondence from Samuel Mather and other supporters of the settlement. | | | Call #: | MS 3319 | | | Extent: | 38.00 linear feet (78 containers and 17 oversize volumes) | | | Subjects: | Hiram House Social Settlement (Cleveland, Ohio) | Immigrants -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Social settlements -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Community centers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Recreation centers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | School facilities -- Extended use -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Camps -- Ohio -- Chagrin Falls. | African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social conditions.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 28 | Title: | Bertha Blue Family Papers
| | | Creator: | Blue, Bertha Family | | | Dates: | 1908-1989 | | | Abstract: | Bertha Blue was a member of a well known African American family in Cleveland, Ohio. She was a teacher at the Murray Hill Elementary School located in Little Italy, an Italian immigrant neighborhood on Cleveland's East side, from 1903 to 1947. The collection consists of Bertha Blue's art course notebook, correspondence, newspaper clippings, St. John African Methodist Episcopal newsletters, scrapbooks, and Jane Lee Darr's resume and writings. The collection also contains newspaper clippings on Blue's friend, Noble Sissle. | | | Call #: | MS 4630 | | | Extent: | 0.20 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Blue, Bertha, ca. 1877-1963. | Darr, Jane Lee. | Sissle, Noble, 1889- | St. John African Methodist Episcopal Church (Cleveland, Ohio). | Murray Hill Elementary School (Cleveland, Ohio). | African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | African American women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | African American women teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 30 | Title: | Cleveland Cultural Garden Federation Records
| | | Creator: | Cleveland Cultural Garden Federation | | | Dates: | 1916-1976 | | | Abstract: | The Cleveland Cultural Garden Federation was founded in 1925 by Leo Weidenthal as the Civic Progress League. In 1926 the name was changed to the Cleveland Cultural Garden League, and in 1952 to the Cleveland Cultural Garden Federation. Weidenthal conceived the idea of a series of gardens, each having a central theme concerning the history of a single nationality group in Cleveland, Ohio. The City of Cleveland and the Work Projects Administration did much of the work on the earlier gardens after a 1927 ordinance set aside areas of Rockefeller Park next to the Shakespeare Garden for the development of similar gardens with ethnic themes. The collection consists of articles of incorporation, constitutions, minutes, correspondence, histories, speeches, financial records, proclamations, publications, clippings, scrapbooks, and miscellaneous material including membership lists, resolutions, press releases, certificates, programs, and invitations. The minutes and correspondence contain information on the role of the Work Projects Administration in helping to build the gardens. | | | Call #: | MS 3700 | | | Extent: | 2.51 linear feet (6 containers and 1 oversize folder) | | | Subjects: | Cleveland Cultural Garden Federation. | Community gardens -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Gardens -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Ethnic relations. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Foreign population.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 31 | Title: | Clare Benedict Collection
| | | Creator: | Benedict, Clare | | | Dates: | 1796-1961 | | | Abstract: | Clare Benedict was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the daughter of George Stone Benedict and Clara Woolson Benedict. She was the niece of author Constance Fenimore Woolson. Benedict was an author in her own right, writing books that dealt with family history, biography of Woolson, and general topics. Constance Fenimore Woolson was born in Claremont, New Hampshire, the daughter of Charles Jarvis Woolson and Hannah Pomeroy. She was a niece of James Fenimore Cooper. Woolson and her family moved to Cleveland in 1840. Woolson attended the Cleveland Female Seminary and was a graduate of Madame Chegaray's finishing school in New York City. She later lived in Florida, and then spent the rest of her life in Europe. Woolson published many works of fiction during her lifetime. The collection consists of books, letters, letter fragments, notes, notebooks, photographs, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, bound magazines, poems, essays, genealogies, invitations, programs, a memorial book, tickets, postcards, lithographs, sketches, watercolors, brochures, press notices, reviews, birth records, receipts, a military commission, signatures, a constitution, and a nail. In many cases, authors of books contained in the collection wrote inscriptions to either Clare Benedict or Constance Fenimore Woolson. Included are two books inscribed by Henry James, along with a letter written by him to Benedict. Excerpts of letters, notes, postcards, photographs, and other manuscript material concerning either the author or the subject of a book were placed into each volume, most likely by Clare Benedict. Some of the books and manuscript materials appear to have originally belonged to Constance Fenimore Woolson, and include letters, notes, letter fragments, poems, a poetry notebook, and other items. | | | Call #: | MS 4830 | | | Extent: | 6.00 linear feet (6 containers) | | | Subjects: | Benedict, Clare. collector. | Woolson, Constance Fenimore, 1840-1894. | Benedict family. | Woolson family. | Pomeroy family. | Mather family. | Fynmore family. | Cooper family. | Benedict, George Stone, 1840-1871. | Women authors, American -- 19th century. | Women authors, American -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cooperstown (N.Y.) -- History.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 32 | Title: | Odette V. and Paul Wurzburger Family Papers
| | | Creator: | Wurzburger, Odette V. and Paul Family | | | Dates: | 1927-2006 | | | Abstract: | Odette Valabregue Wurzburger was a French resistance fighter during World War II, a lawyer and teacher, and an active community leader, especially in the arts. She was born in Avignon, France, in 1909, and she died in Cleveland in 2006. Her husband, Paul Wurzburger was an entrepreneur, inventor, patron of the arts, and honorary consul of France. He was born in 1904 in Lyon, France, and died in 1974 in Cleveland. He entered the United States in 1941 and became a citizen in 1946. He became honorary consul of France in Cleveland in 1962. Paul's father, Hugo Wurzburger, was born in 1887 in Heilbronn, Germany, and died in Cleveland in 1952. Paul's mother, Marguerite Bacharach Wurzburger, was born in Lyon, France, in 1882 and died in Cleveland in 1967. The couple escaped Nazi-occupied France in 1941 and went first to Cuba, arriving in the United States in August 1942. Hugo Wurzburger was a successful industrialist and inventor. He invented several synthetic fabrics and also manufactured pipe fittings, the patents for which were licensed to Cleveland's Weatherhead Company before World War II. Paul's first wife, Margarethe (later Marguerite) Wolf (1900-1976), was born in Germany and died in Cleveland. The couple lived in Liechtenstein in the early 1930s and came to the United States in 1941, where he continued his father's association with the Weatherhead Company. With degrees from universities in Strasbourg and Frankfort, Paul Wurzburger held patents for various valves in the United States, Canada, Germany, Holland, Great Britain, Australia, Japan, France, Sweden, Italy and Belgium. Throughout his career as an engineer, he was associated with three different firms: Ermeto, Flomet, and Patex. Among other activities, Paul Wurzburger was a trustee for the Salk Institute of Biological Studies and the Musical Arts Association. He was Vice-President of the Federation of French Alliances in the United States for the Central States and chairman of the board of Maison Francaise de Cleveland. He was also on the Case Western Reserve University Board of Overseers and a commander in the French Legion d'honneur. Odette Valabregue earned a law degree from the University of Montpellier in 1930 and was a judge in France prior to the German occupation. As part of her legal career in pre-war France, she was a strong advocate of social services for children. From 1943 to 1945 she was a volunteer in the French underground, saving the lives of many Jews, including her own parents. Her pseudonym during her work with the French resistance was Anne-Marie; under this name, she published a brief account of her experiences during and immediately after the war. This account appeared in French in 1945, as a chapter in a book edited by Suzanne Normand, Liberte Ship (Paris: Editions NAGEL, 1945). Odette Valabregue came to the United States in 1960 when she married Paul Wurzburger, after his divorce from Marguerite (Wolf) Wurzburger. Odette Wurzburger continued her professional activities in Cleveland and became an active member of the community. A member of the American Bar Association, she taught classes for the Case Western Reserve University School of Law and was an adjunct professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego. She spoke often on law and biology and the human genome. Her interests in music and art led to significant achievements, especially her idea for an international piano competition, eventually known as the Cleveland International Piano Competition. She was on the boards of the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art and actively involved in fostering Franco-American relations through her work with the Maison Francaise and the Cleveland Council of World Affairs. She was a member of Suburban Temple-Kol Ami and a generous donor to the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland. The collection consists of articles, affidavits, applications, certificates, correspondence, identification cards, invitation, license agreements, lists, memoirs, newspaper clippings, notes, patents, receipts, tickets, and visas. | | | Call #: | MS 5070 | | | Extent: | 2.00 linear feet (2 containers) | | | Subjects: | Wurzburger, Odette V., (Odette Valabregue), 1909-2006 | Wurzburger, Paul, 1904-1974. | Wurzburger, Hugo, 1887-1952 | Wurzburger, Marguerite Bacharach, 1882-1967 | Weatherhead Company (Firm : Cleveland, Ohio) | Cleveland Museum of Art. | Cleveland Orchestra. | Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Cleveland International Piano Competition. | World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- France. | French Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | German Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Arts -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Mechanical engineering -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Inventors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hydraulics. | France -- Emigration and immigration. | Germany -- Emigration and immigration. | Cuba -- Description and travel.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 33 | Title: | Reuben and Dorothy Silver Karamu Collection
| | | Creator: | Gift of Dorothy Silver | | | Dates: | 1915-2016 | | | Abstract: | Reuben and Dorothy Silver were active in Karamu House, a performing arts center and theater, founded in 1915 as an interracial social settlement in Cleveland, Ohio. During their tenure, the Silvers were instrumental in presenting works by African American authors such as Langston Hughes and LeRoi Jones, as well as classics from the American theater. Urban unrest in the community surrounding Karamu and the growing popularity of the Black Arts Movement in the 1960s and 1970s forced a reconsideration of Karamu's goals as they related to interracial theater. During this period, Karamu endured major personnel and financial crises. After leaving Karamu, Reuben served as the chairman of Cleveland State University's theatre department for seventeen years (1976-1993). Reuben and Dorothy remained active in the theatre community. The collection consists of advertisements, correspondence, documents, directors notes, newspaper clippings, photographs, press releases, reports, scripts, speeches and miscellaneous printed material including Karamu publications, workshop schedules, programs, and handbills. Most of the material contained in this collection is concerned with Karamu House and the Silvers' roles there as Theater Director and Theater Assistant from 1955-1976. The collection also includes material related to finding a replacement executive director for Reuben and Reuben's work after leaving Karamu, and letters to family members in Israel. | | | Call #: | MS 5438 | | | Extent: | 16.81 linear feet (22 containers, including five oversized boxes and one oversized folder) | | | Subjects: | Karamu Theatre | African American theater -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Community theater -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | African Americans in the performing arts -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Silver, Reuben, 1925- | Silver, Dorothy, 1929-
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 34 | Title: | Grasselli Family Papers
| | | Creator: | Grasselli Family | | | Dates: | 1778-1967 | | | Abstract: | Eugene R. Grasselli (1810-1882) came to the United States from Strasbourg, France in 1836. He established a chemical plant in Cleveland, Ohio in 1866 and pioneered the refining of sulfuric acid. The plant was incorporated as the Grasselli Chemical Corporation in 1885 with Eugene's son Caesar A. as its first president and other family members as directors. Caesar's son, Thomas S., followed him as president. The company grew to include 28 plants before it was sold to du Pont in 1928. The collection consists of personal and business papers of Eugene R., Caesar A., and Thomas S. Grasselli and other members of the Grasselli family, including wills, deeds, a marriage certificate, correspondence (with translations of some of the letters written in French), broadsides, minutes, invoices, receipts, diaries, ledgers, patents, letter press books, financial records, and drafts of Caesar A.'s autobiography. | | | Call #: | MS 3311 | | | Extent: | 5.90 linear feet (7 containers) | | | Subjects: | Subjects Grasselli family. | Grasselli, Eugene Ramiro, 1810-1882. | Grasselli, Caesar Augustin, 1850-1927. | Grasselli, Thomas Saxton, 1874-1942. | Grasselli Chemical Company (Cleveland, Ohio) | Chemical plants -- United States.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 36 | Title: | George V. Voinovich Papers
| | | Creator: | Voinovich, George V. | | | Dates: | 1979-2003 | | | Abstract: | George Victor Voinovich was born in 1936 and grew up on the east side of Cleveland, Ohio. He attended Ohio University for his undergraduate studies and received his law degree from Ohio State University in 1961. Following his marriage to Janet Allan in 1962, he established a law practice in his Collinwood neighborhood. He was elected to the Ohio House of Representatives in 1966, became Cuyahoga County Auditor in 1971, and was elected a Cuyahoga County commissioner in 1976. He also served one term as Lieutenant Governor under James A. Rhodes. Voinovich was elected mayor of the city of Cleveland in 1979 and served for ten years, restructuring the city's finances, promoting neighborhood revitalization, and supporting development of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, among other achievements. The National Civic League awarded the city of Cleveland the "All American City Award" three times during Voinovich's tenure. He was elected Governor of Ohio in 1990. From 1999-2011, he represented Ohio in the United States Senate. The collection consists of calendars, correspondence, itineraries, lists, magazines, memoranda, newspaper clippings, notes, press releases, reports, schedules, and speeches. | | | Call #: | MS 5318 | | | Extent: | 4.60 linear feet (6 containers) | | | Subjects: | Mayors -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 37 | Title: | George S. Dively Papers
| | | Creator: | Dively, George S. | | | Dates: | 1814-1988 | | | Abstract: | George S. Dively was a prominent business and civic leader and philanthropist in Cleveland, Ohio. Born in Pennsylvania to Michael A. and Martha A. (Dodson) Dively, he attended Lock Haven State College, earned a B.S. in electrical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh in 1925, and a M.B.A. from Harvard University in 1929. During the Great Depression, he worked at North American Refractories and at Republic Steel Corporation. He joined the Harris-Seybold-Potter Company of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1937, becoming director in 1941, vice president and general manager in 1944, and president in 1947. The company became the Harris-Intertype Corporation in 1957, and later the Harris Corporation. He served as president and chairman of the board from 1954-1961, continuing as board chairman from 1961 until his retirement in 1972. In 1971, his book, The Power of Professional Management, was published. He was a co-founder of the Cleveland One Percent Plan, whose mission was to encourage corporate support for higher education. Dively endowed a professorship in electrical engineering at Case Western Reserve University, where he served as vice chairman of the University Board of Trustees. In 1956 he endowed the Geo. S. Dively Foundation to assist various charitable and educational interests. He married Harriet Seeds in 1933. In 1969, he married Juliette Gaudin. The collection consists of correspondence, genealogy, memorials, minutes, reports, conference proceedings, speeches, lectures, financial reports, legal documents, annual reports, publications, articles, reprints, newspaper clippings, books, pamphlets, brochures, newsletters, scrapbooks, presentations, and awards. | | | Call #: | MS 4634 | | | Extent: | 6.41 linear feet (7 containers and 1 oversize folder) | | | Subjects: | Dively, George S., 1902-1988. | Dively family. | Harris-Intertype Corporation -- History. | Harris Corporation -- History. | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Businessmen -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 38 | Title: | Cyrus S. Eaton Papers
| | | Creator: | Eaton, Cyrus S. | | | Dates: | 1901-1978 | | | Abstract: | Cyrus Stephen Eaton (1883-1979) was a prominent Canadian-American capitalist and financier. He was an outspoken critic of other businessmen, supporter of labor, promoter of better U.S.-Soviet relations, and organizer of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs. The collection consists of correspondence, pamphlets, annual reports, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, notes, office memoranda, speeches, writings, appointment diaries and calendars, scrapbooks, documents, publications, cartoons, honorary degrees, certificates, maps, and surveys, relating to Eaton's business, political, and personal affairs. | | | Call #: | MS 3913 | | | Extent: | 422.50 linear feet (424 containers and 4 oversize folders) | | | Subjects: | Eaton, Cyrus Stephen, 1883-1979. | Eaton family. | United Nations. | United States. Securities and Exchange Commission. | Banks and banking -- United States. | East-West trade (1945- ). | Industrial relations -- United States. | Railroads -- United States. | Nuclear disarmament. | International relations. | Industry and state -- United States. | Iron mines and mining -- United States. | United States -- Foreign relations -- Soviet Union. | Soviet Union -- Foreign relations -- United States.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 39 | Title: | David Warshawsky Family Papers
| | | Creator: | Warshawsky, David Family | | | Dates: | 1913-1983 | | | Abstract: | David Warshawsky was an insurance agent and writer who was active in the Cleveland, Ohio, Jewish community. He served on the Group Work Council of the Jewish Welfare Federation, and he was involved with Council Educational Alliance and Camp Wise. He worked twenty-nine years for Lincoln National Life Insurance. He wrote numerous unpublished works, including a biography of his brother, artist Abel G. Warshawsky. The collection consists of catalogs, certificates and awards, correspondence, deeds, financial records, lists, newspaper clippings, and his writings. | | | Call #: | MS 5008 | | | Extent: | 1.40 linear feet (2 containers) | | | Subjects: | Warshawsky, David, 1893-1989. | Insurance agents -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish authors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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