Guide to Manuscript Collections University of Notre Dame Archives Notre Dame, Indiana 1993 (c) Copyright 1993 by the Archives of the University of Notre Dame. All rights reserved. ----- Contents Introduction List of University Records in the Archives List of Collections Not Described in This Guide Descriptions of Collections List of Collections Described in This Guide Index ----- Introduction Father Edward Sorin, the founder of the University of Notre Dame, also founded the university archives. In his Chronicles of Notre Dame du Lac he describes the charters granted the university and its manual labor school and says that they "remain in the archives as the most precious monuments that could be in its possession" (page 55 of the manuscript translation made by J.M Toohey in 1895). In the nineteenth century a student could come to Notre Dame as a minim, an elementary-school student, and stay to attend college preparatory courses, college courses, and post-graduate studies. James F. Edwards arrived in 1859 as a minim and remained at Notre Dame until his death fifty-two years later. Starting in 1876, Edwards served Notre Dame as a history professor and librarian. During his undergraduate years, Edwards began his career as a collector, a career that continued all his life. He wanted to acquire mementoes of the American Catholic hierarchy. He imagined a Bishops' Memorial Hall containing a portrait of, a vestment from, and a manuscript by every bishop in the United States. He managed to acquire a great deal more than he set out to collect. He set up his Bishops' Memorial Hall in the hallways of the main building at Notre Dame and displayed a good many objects from it at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago (1893). He found that many bishops had no interest in maintaining files of their own correspondence; some willingly turned all their papers over to him. These papers became the first manuscript collections held by the university archives. Edwards did not seem to have much interest in preparing systematic inventories or descriptions of the manuscripts in his possession. Paul Foik, CSC, the librarian who succeeded him in 1911, began to prepare a calendar summarizing the contents of each document in Edwards' collections. Thomas T. McAvoy, CSC, archivist from 1929 until 1969, supervised a more extended effort to create a calendar as a master finding aid for the manuscripts in the archives. Other finding aids from this period generally favor item-level description as well, though Father McAvoy also produced the earliest collection-level descriptions and sent them to the Library of Congress to be included in the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. Father McAvoy acquired new manuscript collections and a great deal of microfilm, including records from the archives of European mission societies and of the Congregatio de Propaganda Fide in the Vatican. Thomas Blantz, CSC, archivist from 1969 until 1978, had his staff continue making calendar entries, but also had them start making less detailed, folder-level inventories. When Wendy Clauson Schlereth, the present archivist, took over, she recognized that her staff could not possibly achieve item-level control over the vastly expanded holdings of manuscripts acquired by Father Blantz and in her own collecting campaigns. She hired assistants who had graduate degrees in archival administration and who produced inventories based on principles of group description. Early in the 1980s the staff of the university archives started to use computers to produce better finding aids. They developed a consistent format for inventories. They added inventories of individual manuscript collections or university record groups to a master database of finding aids, a database that also includes the collection-level descriptions in this guide and records of new accessions. They produced computerized versions of old finding aids and used computers to generate keyword indexes. Archivists distinguish between archives and manuscript collections. The term archives applies both to the old records of an institution and to the office that has custody of them. Notre Dame administrators send files they no longer need to the archives; the files they send constitute part of the archives of the university. Any manuscript material that does not fit this strict definition of archival records belongs in a manuscript collection. Traditionally repositories have excluded archival records from published guides to their manuscript collections. This guide contains a list of our archival holdings but generally provides no more detailed description of them. Although this guide emphasizes manuscript collections, it also contains descriptions of our microfilm, photographs, audio-visual material, and printed material. In most cases such material came out of manuscript collections, removed for purposes of preservation but still part of the manuscript collection from which it came. Although drafts of this guide often described such material in separate entries, I have included all material related to a given manuscript collection in the description of that collection. The papers of Michael Mathis, for example, include 46 linear feet of manuscript material, 15 audio tapes, 2 reels of movie film, 2.5 linear inches of photographs, 53 glass slides, 8 reels of microfilm, 1 filmstrip, and 1 linear inch of printed material. The typical guide entry consists of the name of a collection, its dates, its extent, a note on what finding aids are available, a note on restrictions, an identification of the person or organization that generated the collection, a description of its contents, information on the languages used in the collection and its source, and finally its collection codes. The name of a collection is generally the same as the name of the person or organization responsible for accumulating the material in it. The extent of a collection is most often expressed in linear measure, an indication of how many feet (or inches) a collection takes up on the shelf. The most common forms of finding aid are those mentioned above: a calendar contains summaries of individual documents; an item list mentions each document without summarizing it; a folder list contains the name of each folder, sometimes with a more detailed description of the contents of each; and an inventory generally contains introductory material to supplement the list of a collection's contents: a general account of the scope of the collection, a biographical sketch or an institutional history, a series outline revealing the structure of the collection, a description of the contents of each series, and indexes. Any manuscript collection can have restrictions specified by the donor or by the university archivist. The lack of a note concerning restrictions does not guarantee that a given collection has no restrictions. Since many of our modern donors have signed contracts that sometimes contain complicated provisions, researchers who hope to use a collection should write or call in advance to find out if the collection is open for research. University records are generally closed for seventy-two years from the date of their creation; some, such as records of student grades, confidential letters of recommendation in student files, or financial records, may be closed indefinitely. The last line of each guide entry requires a little more explanation. It contains the collection codes used to identify the collection in computerized finding aids. The first letter of each collection code indicates the type of material associated with the code; the other three letters indentify the collection itself. For example, the papers of Michael Mathis contain manuscript material (CMTH), audio-visual material (AMTH), photographs (GMTH), microfilm (MMTH), artifacts (OMTH), and printed material (PMTH). Many people have contributed to the making of this guide. Since 1965 archivists at Notre Dame have been preparing collection-level descriptions such as these. Since 1974 they have been available to researchers who visit the archives in the form of typewritten drafts kept in three-ring notebooks. In the last two years, I have revised all of these drafts and have written a good many new guide entries. With the help of library faculty and staff, we have added the descriptions in this guide to computer databases and have sent them to the National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections at the Library of Congress. We still do not have guide entries for all of our collections. Some collections have not yet been processed, some are closed, some are of little significance outside Notre Dame, some do not lend themselves to collection-level description, and some have been omitted for other reasons. Following this introduction I have provided a list of university records held by the Archives and a list of collections not described in the guide. After the last guide entry I have placed a list of collections described in the guide and an alphabetical index. Numbers in the index generally refer to guide entries; only those that begin with p. refer to pages. In order to avoid confusion between page numbers and guide-entry numbers, I have numbered only pages that do not contain guide entries. Wm. Kevin Cawley Notre Dame, Indiana ----- University Records in the Archives Governing Boards UBTS Board of Trustees: post-1967 ABTS Board of Trustees: post-1967 (audio-visual) UBTR Board of Trustees: pre-1967 (1913-1967) UBLT Board of Lay Trustees: 1921-1967 MBLT Board of Lay Trustees: 1921-1967 (microfilm) GBLT Board of Lay Trustees: 1921-1967 (photographs) UBFE Fellows of the University of Notre Dame du Lac: 1967-1979 ULCC University Local Council Minutes Book: 1923-1935 UWAC Women's Advisory Council: 1952-1976 GWAC Women's Advisory Council (photographs) UTAC Trustees and Advisory Council Affairs (Assistant to Vice-President for Public Relations) President UPEL President 1856-1906 MPEL President 1856-1906: Letters for 1871 (microfilm) UPWC President 1905-1919: John W. Cavanaugh, CSC UPBU President 1919-1922: James A. Burns, CSC UPWL President 1922-1928: Matthew Walsh, CSC GPWL President 1922-1928: Matthew Walsh, CSC (photographs) UPCO President 1928-1934: Charles L. O'Donnell, CSC GPCO President 1928-1934: Charles L. O'Donnell, CSC (photographs) UPOH President 1934-1940: John F. O'Hara, CSC UPHO President 1940-1946: J. Hugh O'Donnell, CSC APHO President 1940-1946: J. Hugh O'Donnell, CSC (audio-visual) UPCC President 1946-1952: John J. Cavanaugh, CSC UPCC President 1946-1952: John J. Cavanaugh, CSC GPCC President 1946-1952: John J. Cavanaugh, CSC (photographs) UPHS President 1952-1987: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC APHS President 1952-1987: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC (audio-visual) GPHS President 1952-1987: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC (photographs) PPHS President 1952-1987: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC (printed) UPML President 1987- : Edward Malloy, CSC UPGE President: General Education Board (Rockefeller): 1908-1937 UPLM President: Laetare Medalists: 1883-1937 UPAA Academic Assistant to President: Philip Moore, CSC UAPW Assistant to President 1958-1959: John Wilson, CSC UCSM Assistant to President 1960-1976: George Shuster Executive Vice-President UVMU Executive Vice-President 1928-33: Michael Mulcaire, CSC UVOH Executive Vice-President 1933-34: John F. O'Hara, CSC UVOC Executive Vice-President 1934-46: J.H. O'Donnell, CSC / J.J. Cavanaugh, CSC UVMR Executive Vice-President 1946-49: John Murphy, CSC UVHS Executive Vice-President 1949-52: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC GVHS Executive Vice-President 1949-52: Theodore M. Hesburgh, CSC (photographs) UVJO Executive Vice-President 1952-87: Edmund Joyce, CSC AVJO Executive Vice-President 1952-87: Edmund Joyce, CSC (audio-visual) GVJO Executive Vice-President 1952-87: Edmund Joyce, CSC (photographs) UVEB Executive Vice-President 1987- : William Beauchamp, CSC AVEB Executive Vice-President 1987- : William Beauchamp, CSC (audio-visual) UTRE Treasurer: 1887-1900 MTRE Treasurer: Legal Papers (microfilm) UADR Director of Athletics: ca.1910-1922 (Harper, Rockne, etc.) UADR Director of Athletics: ca.1922-1929 (Rockne) UADK Director of Athletics: 1940s-1970s (Krause) UABM Business Manager of Athletics: ca.1900-1935 GASI Sports Information Department (photographs) UASI Sports Information Department: 1950-1984 UPAB Executive Assistant to President and Executive Vice-President: William Beauchamp Provost UVAA Director of Studies / Vice-President for Academic Affairs UPAR Provost: Annual Reports MPFF Provost: Former Faculty Files (microfilm) UPFF Provost: Former Faculty Files UPFS Provost: Search Committee Files MPFS Provost: Special Subject Files (microfilm) UPMO Provost, Associate: Edward Malloy UPSJ Provost, Associate: Sister John Miriam Jones GPSJ Provost, Associate: Sister John Miriam Jones (photographs) UADN Dean of Administration: Leo Corbaci and Daniel Winicur UADA Assistant to Dean of Administration: Daniel Osberger UAPA Assistant to President for Planning and Analysis: Thomas E. Stewart UCAS Coordinator of Analytic Studies UAFS Facilities Services Buildings Files: 1971-1985 UOMA Officer of Military Affairs (re WWI Training): 1917-1920 UOAD Admissions, Undergraduate UPRO Registrar Office Files MPRO Registrar Office Files (microfilm) GPRO Registrar Office Files (photographs of commencements) MPRR Registrar: Student Records (microfilm) UPRR Registrar: Student Records USTF Student Files MSTF Student Files (microfilm) Student Affairs UQAM Council of the Prefect of Discipline Record Book 1844-1847 UVSA Vice-President for Student Affairs USDC Vice-President for Student Affairs: Disciplinary Case Files GVSA Vice-President for Student Affairs (photographs) UOCM Campus Ministry AOCM Campus Ministry (audio-visual) GOCM Campus Ministry (photographs) UOPT Prefect of Religion: Religious Survey Files: 1920s, 1930s UUCH University Chaplain UVET Vetville Chaplain's Records UQAG Brownson Hall Rector Disciplinary Record Book: 1926-1928 USDS Dean of Students: Student Unrest Material: 1969-1971 GSDS Dean of Students: Student Unrest Material (photographs) UQAB Notre Dame Laymen's Retreats: 1920-1936 USRL Office of Residential Life: Outside Handbooks (printed) USPL Placement Bureau: 1956-1963, 1970-1973 USEC Security Department UOSA Student Activities Office AOSA Student Activities Office (audio-visual) GOSA Student Activities Office (photographs) USVS Volunteer Services Advanced Studies UAVP Vice-President Advanced Studies GAVP Vice-President Advanced Studies (photographs) UARP Research and Sponsored Programs Business Affairs UVBA Vice-President Business Affairs UVBG Vice-President Business Affairs: Martin Gillen Papers UBVW Vice-President Business Affairs: Jerome Wilson, CSC UQAL Auditor: American Bank Note Co. File: 1938, 1944 MVBC Cedar Grove Survey Records (microfilm) UBFA Financial Aid and Scholarship Office / Student Employment MBFA Financial Aid and Scholarship Office / Student Employment (microfilm) UGPR Martin Gillen Property Records GGLN Martin Gillen (photographs) UBPL Personnel UBPP Physical Plant GBPP Physical Plant: Sacred Heart Church Renovation Photographs and Rubbings UBKS Bookstore / Student Store: Inventory, Orders: 1859-1926 Public Relations, Alumni Affairs, and Development URVP Vice-President for Public Relations and Development / University Relations (James W. Frick) URVA Associate Vice-President for Public Relations and Development / University Relations (Murphy, Conklin) UFDA Notre Dame Foundation 1953-1959: John J. Cavanaugh, CSC PFDA Notre Dame Foundation 1953-1959: John J. Cavanaugh, CSC (printed) UFDB Notre Dame Foundation 1959-1961: John Wilson, CSC GFDB Notre Dame Foundation 1959-1961: John Wilson, CSC (photographs) UFDC Notre Dame Foundation 1961-1964 / Vice-President for Public Relations and Development: John E. Walsh, CSC GFDC Notre Dame Foundation 1961-1964 / Vice-President for Public Relations and Development: John E. Walsh, CSC (photographs) UDEV Development MDEV Development: Deceased Alumni Files (microfilm) GDEV Development (photographs) UDIS Information Services ADIS Information Services (audio-visual) GDIS Information Services (photographs) UALM Alumni Association GALM Alumni Association (photographs) UAMS Alumnus Magazine Editor GAMS Alumnus Magazine Editor (photographs) UC23 Class of 1923 Alumni Secretary's Records GC23 Class of 1923 Alumni Secretary's Records (photographs) UC26 Class of 1926 and pre-1924 Alumni Secretary's Records UC27 Class of 1927 Alumni Secretary's Records UC29 Class of 1929 Alumni Secretary's Records UPRH Public Relations Dept.: Haley and Gibbons GPRH Public Relations Dept.: Haley and Gibbons (photographs) GINM Insight Magazine (photographs) GNDM Notre Dame Magazine / Notre Dame Alumnus (photographs) UPUB Printing and Publications GPUB Printing and Publications (photographs) UEBF Endowment and Building Fund MEBF Endowment and Building Fund Ads in South Bend Tribune: 1921-1922 (microfilm) URMA Rockne Memorial Association Fund-Raising Records: 1931 ULYA Notre Dame Library Association: ca.1959-1969 APHR University Photographer (audio-visual) GPHR University Photographer (photographs) University Committees UACO Academic Council: 1920-1961 UCCS Centennial of Science at Notre Dame Committee Records: 1964-1966 UCVC Center for Continuing Education Visitation Committee: 1970s UCHU Committee on the History of the University UQAD Executive Centennial Committee: 1940-1942 UFBA Faculty Board in Control of Athletics: 1902-1951 UFMM Faculty Meeting Records: 1844-1919, 1934-1986 UFGB Gettysburg Celebration Committee: 1962-1963 GFGB Gettysburg Celebration Committee (photographs) UOFF Officers' Meetings Records: 1969-1977 (General Counsel) USTN President's Advisory Committee on the Stevenson Endorsement: 1952-1953 USLC Student Life Council / Campus Life Council UTFA Task Force on Whole Health and Alcohol (Roger Jacobs' files) UCPH University Committee Protection Human Subjects UYOW Year of Women Committee (Charlotte Ames' Files) Colleges and Schools UCAL College of Arts and Letters UQAE College of Arts and Letters Faculty Meeting Records: 1936-1958 UGAD Admissions, Graduate UASS Summer Sessions UCBA College of Business Administration GCBA College of Business Administration (photographs) UCEN College of Engineering UCSI College of Science UGCN Graduate Council / Committee on Graduate Studies: 1923-1980s UGSC Graduate School (Assistant Vice-President for Advanced Studies) MGSC Graduate School (microfilm) ULAW Law School ALAW Law School (audio-visual) GLAW Law School (ID photographs probably from student files) ULWL Law School Library, 1954-1965 UFMT Faculty Meetings Minutes - Miscellaneous Colleges: ca.1936-1943 Departments and Programs of Study UDAE Dept. of Aerospace Engineering GDAE Dept. of Aerospace Engineering (photographs) ACMA Dept. of American Studies (audio-visual) UDAM Dept. of American Studies: Red Smith Lectures GDOA Dept. of Art (photographs) UDBS Dept. of Biological Sciences (formerly Microbiology) ADBS Dept. of Biological Sciences (audio-visual) UDBK Dept. of Black Studies GDBK Dept. of Black Studies (photographs) UDBM Dept. of Business Organization and Management GDBM Dept. of Business Organization and Management (photographs) UDCG Dept. of Chemical Engineering ADCG Dept. of Chemical Engineering (audio-visual) GDCG Dept. of Chemical Engineering (photographs) UQAP Dept. of Chemistry UDCE Dept. of Civil Engineering UDCT Dept. of Communication and Theatre (American Studies) ADES Dept. of Earth Sciences (audio-visual) GDES Dept. of Earth Sciences (photographs) UDES Dept. of Earth Sciences / Geology UDED Dept. of Education UDEE Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering UDEN Dept. of English UDGV Dept. of Government and International Studies UDHS Dept. of History UDMK Dept. of Marketing UDMH Dept. of Mathematics GDMH Dept. of Mathematics (photographs) UDME Dept. of Metallurgical Engineering and Material Science UDML Dept. of Modern and Classical Languages UDMU Dept. of Music UDPL Dept. of Philosophy UDPY Dept. of Physics UQAI Dept. of Psychology UDAS Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology UDTH Dept. of Theology ADTH Dept. of Theology (audio-visual) UESM Engineering, Science, and Management War Training UEMB Executive MBA Program UFMT Faculty Meeting Minutes - various departments: ca.1935-1944 UFWP Freshman Writing Program - Former Faculty Files: 1975-1985 UMBD Admissions, MBA: Applicant Files UMDI Medieval Institute GMDI Medieval Institute (photographs) UMSA Master of Science in Administration (MSA) GMSA Master of Science in Administration (photographs) UPNV Program in Non-Violence: 1970-1981 UPLS General Program of Liberal Studies: 1950s- APLS General Program of Liberal Studies (audio-visual) USSF Social Science and Foreign Affairs Project (Emerich Francis) Centers and Non-Teaching Research Departments MCVL Center for Civil and Human Rights, Chile (microfilm) UCCE Center for Continuing Education ACCE Center for Continuing Education (audio-visual) GCCE Center for Continuing Education (photographs) UCEL Center for Experiential Learning UPSM Center / Institute for Pastoral and Social Ministry APSM Center / Institute for Pastoral and Social Ministry (audio-visual) GPSM Center / Institute for Pastoral and Social Ministry (photographs) UCPL Center for Pastoral Liturgy UCFS Center for Social Concerns UCSM Center for Study of Man / of Contemporary Society ACSM Center for Study of Man (audio-visual) UCRC Civil Rights Center Records (collected by Archives) UCIR Committee on International Relations UCIA Council for the International Lay Apostolate (CILA) UCSW Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism UCUM Catholic Committee on Urban Ministry (CCUM) UARS Institute for Advanced Religious Studies ULBD Lobund (notebooks, contamination reports, etc.): 1950s-1970s GLBD Lobund: ca.1940s (photo album) UJMC Maritain Center AJMC Maritain Center (audio-visual) UNWF Nieuwland Foundation: 1936-1940 GNWF Nieuwland Foundation: 1936-1940 (photographs) UOER Office of Educational Research UBRT Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory / Milton Burton GBRT Notre Dame Radiation Laboratory / Milton Burton (photographs) URLP Religious Leaders Program (CPSM) URIN Retreats International (CPSM) UPBD Upward Bound UVBL Vector Biology Lab Student Government and Organizations USGT Student Government UGSU Graduate Student Union (includes Graduate Council) UQAQ Equestrian Club, Notre Dame / Saint Mary's College: 1987-1991 UHPC Hall Presidents Council UCCH Chapel Choir UCJF Collegiate Jazz Festival GCJF Collegiate Jazz Festival (photographs and posters) UDOM Dome yearbook: ca.1955-1977 GDOM Dome yearbook (photographs) USFT Flanner Tower Resident Assistant Material (Kevin Virostek) UGCL Glee Club AGCL Glee Club (audio-visual) GGCL Glee Club (photographs) PNDP Glee Club (printed) USGR Grace Tower Hall Council and Rector's Records CGAR Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) Post #569 - Notre Dame: 1897-1915 UKOC Knights of Columbus - Notre Dame Chapter #1477 GKOC Knights of Columbus - Notre Dame Chapter #1477 (photographs) UNDC Notre Dame Chorale GNDC Notre Dame Chorale (photographs) UNUT Nutting for President / Free City Day Material (1970) UOBS Observer GOBS Observer (photographs of Hesburgh / Joyce Special Issue 1987) UPST Philomathean Standard: 1872-1876 UAPS Saint Aloysius Philodermic Society: 1850-1876 UCPS Saint Cecilia Philomathean Society: 1858-1894 USSP Saint Stanislaus Philopatrian Society: 1878-1885 USCO Scholastic: 1877-1913, 1964 UUGH Union of Graduate Historians: 1975-1977 ABND University Bands (audio-visual) ASND WSND Radio (audio-visual) CDFT Notre Dame Draft Counseling Center PDFT Notre Dame Draft Counseling Center (printed) CVFW Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post #286 - Notre Dame: 1921-1923 Academic Services UARC Archives GARC Archives (photographs) PARC Archives (printed) UORL Archives: Oral Histories (transcripts) AORL Archives: Oral Histories (tapes) GEHF Archives: St. Edward's Hall Fire Exhibit (photographs) GVIA Archives: Vincentians in America Exhibit (photographs) UART Wightman Art Gallery / Snite Museum of Art MART Wightman Art Gallery / Snite Museum of Art (microfilm) UBMH Bishops' Memorial Hall (see also Edwards Papers) OBMH Bishops' Memorial Hall (artifacts) GBMH Bishops' Memorial Hall (photographs) AEDM Educational Media (audio-visual) UFCB Faculty Club: early 1960s UISD Information Systems, Director of USTL Social Science Training Lab Surveys UFRV Social Science Training Lab 1990 Freshman Religious Surveys UODL Libraries: Director's and General Files OODL Libraries: Director's and General Files (tiles from mural) MODL Libraries: Director's and General Files (microfilm) GODL Libraries: Director's and General Files (photographs) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (Robert J. Havlik) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (William A. Berndt) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (Charlotte Ames) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (Francis P. Clark) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (David G. Donovan) UOAL Libraries: Faculty and Staff Files (Dolores Tantoco-Stauder) Academic Journals and Organizations CAUP American Association of University Professors - Notre Dame Chapter UHTC History Teachers' Club: ca.1940-1967 UJFL Journal of Formal Logic UEJO Notre Dame English Journal UJED Notre Dame Journal of Education CTNS New Scholasticism UPBK Phi Beta Kappa - Notre Dame Chapter: 1946-1970 URPO Review of Politics USXI Sigma Xi - Notre Dame Chapter: 1950s, 1980s GSXI Sigma Xi - Notre Dame Chapter (photographs) Miscellaneous University Records OAND Artifacts: Notre Dame ULDG Early Notre Dame Student, Class, and Financial Books / Ledgers USRC Faculty Searches Files (Samples from Various Searches) UQAC Gibbons, James, CSC: Notes concerning Notre Dame Buildings and Grounds UKKK Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and Notre Dame: 1920s, 1930s, 1970s GLAE Laetare Medalist Collection (photographs) GLOL Land O'Lakes (Wisconsin) Meetings (photographs) UQAJ Military at Notre Dame (Woodward's) Material: 1858-1964 UQAA National Congress of Religious Meeting at Notre Dame (1952) GQAA National Congress of Religious Meeting at Notre Dame (photographs) ULEG Notre Dame / CSC Legal, Tax, and Real Estate Documents GNDA Notre Dame Architectural Drawings (see also Sollitt Graphics below) MNDA Notre Dame Architectural Drawings: Memorial Library (microfilm) AUND Notre Dame Audio-Visual Collection URPT Notre Dame Financial, Cost, Statistical, Audit, and Budget Reports GSBH Notre Dame Football Scrapbook: 1913 (photographs) GUND Notre Dame Graphics / Oversize Graphics Collection UWW1 Notre Dame in World War I: Collected Material GWW1 Notre Dame in World War I: Collected Material (photographs) UWW2 Notre Dame in World War II: Collected Material GWW2 Notre Dame in World War II: Collected Material (photographs) GNDL Notre Dame Life (photographs) UNDR Notre Dame Miscellaneous University Records GNDG Notre Dame Photographs, Clippings, and Engravings MNDP Notre Dame Printed (titles) (microfilm) PNDP Notre Dame Printed Material MNDP Notre Dame Printed Material (microfilm) GSBA Notre Dame Scrapbook: ca.1860-1870s (photographs) GSBI Notre Dame Scrapbook: ca.1896 (Scholastic illustrations) GSBC Notre Dame Scrapbook: ca.1910-1913 (photographs) GSBE Notre Dame Scrapbook: ca.1920 (photographs) GSBD Notre Dame Scrapbook: ca.1935 (photographs) GSBG Notre Dame Scrapbook: 1867-1869 (photographs) GSBF Notre Dame Scrapbook: 1898 (photographs) GSBB Notre Dame Scrapbook: 1900-1904 (photographs) CNDS Notre Dame Student Manuscripts Collection GNDS Notre Dame Student Manuscripts Collection (photographs) CZDI Notre Dame Women's Caucus GSOL Sollitt Graphics (see also Notre Dame Architectural Drawings above) USRN Sorin Hall GSRN Sorin Hall (photographs) University Auxiliary Enterprises and Organizations CAVE Ave Maria Magazine: 1865-1944 GAVM Ave Maria Press (photographs) CAVM Ave Maria Press: 1940s- UGDM Golden Dome Productions (VISN transcripts) AGDM Golden Dome Productions (audio-visual) MNCU Notre Dame Credit Union - Annual Reports and Account Cards (microfilm) CRKF Rink Foundation: 1952-1987 GRKF Rink Foundation: 1952-1987 (photographs) CSMY Saint Mary of the Lake (Chicago) Records: 1856-1861 ----- Collections Not Described in This Guide PBAE Aidan, Brother: Extracts (concerning CSC history) CAME Ames, Charlotte M136 Art Collection Appraisal Sheets, 1960s (microfilm) OACR Artifacts: Catholic / Religious OAXX Artifacts: Miscellaneous OARR Artifacts: Relics, Mementoes OASC Artifacts: Scientific and Photo Instruments CACS Association of Contemplative Sisters ANND Audio-Visual Collection (nothing pertaining to Notre Dame) CZAB Baestle - Bonte - DeSeille Family (ca.1837-1960) GBAU Bauer, E., CSC (photographs) GBED Bednar, John J., CSC (photographs) CBRG Bergin, Thomas P. GBRG Bergin, Thomas P. (photographs) GBLA Blain, J. F. (photo album) CBOW Bowman, David, SJ GBOW Bowman, David, SJ (map) ABOW Bowman, David, SJ (audio-visual) MBOW Bowman, David, SJ (microfilm) CFRB Brennan, Frank CBRC Burtchaell, James Tunstead, CSC CZDO Cackley, John N. Jr (concerning George Gipp Sweater) GZDO Cackley, John N. Jr (photographs) CCAP Cappon, John C. MGCD Cardenas, Gilbert - Mexican-American Collection (microfilm) GCAR Carey, Charles, CSC (photographs) CCHI Catholic Church: Archdiocese of Chicago - School Board CACI Catholic Church: Archdiocese of Cincinnati CAGA Catholic Church: Archdiocese of Galveston CAMI Catholic Church: Archdiocese of Milwaukee CANY Catholic Church: Archdiocese of New York CASM Catholic Church: Archdiocese of Saint Paul - Minneapolis CASA Catholic Church: Archdiocese of San Antonio CDAB Catholic Church: Diocese of Albany CDBR Catholic Church: Diocese of Brooklyn CDBF Catholic Church: Diocese of Buffalo CDCV Catholic Church: Diocese of Covington CDFR Catholic Church: Diocese of Fall River CDFW Catholic Church: Diocese of Fort Wayne CDGB Catholic Church: Diocese of Green Bay CHAR Catholic Church: Diocese of Hartford CDLC Catholic Church: Diocese of La Crosse CDMA Catholic Church: Diocese of Marquette CDNA Catholic Church: Diocese of Nashville CDNC Catholic Church: Diocese of Natchitoches CDPA Catholic Church: Diocese of Pittsburgh - Alleghany CDPV Catholic Church: Diocese of Providence CDRO Catholic Church: Diocese of Rochester CDTR Catholic Church: Diocese of Trenton MDIR Catholic Directories (microfilm) PDIR Catholic Directories PNIS Catholic Newspapers, Special Issues CCPI Catholic Periodicals Index PCPR Catholic Press (printed material) M139 Census of Indiana, 1830 (microfilm) M138 Census of Kentucky, 1810, 1820, 1830 (microfilm) GCHC Chacon, Eusebio (photographs) GCIV Civil War (photographs) CZDQ Civil War: Irish Brigade, CSC Chaplains and Nuns CCOP Clark, Francis: Estate (copies, transcripts, translations) CFCP Clark, Francis: Personal and Office Records MFCM Clark, Francis: Movies and Comics Collection (microfilm) MFCS Clark, Francis: Sports Collection (microfilm) GCLV Cleaver, W.E. (photo album) GCLE Clements, L. Spalding (photographs) MCMM Collection of Miscellaneous Manuscripts (microfilm) GCMM Collection of Miscellaneous Manuscripts (photographs) CCMM Collection of Miscellaneous Manuscripts GZEM Collins, Clifford M., ND Comptroller (photographs) CZEM Collins, Clifford M., ND Comptroller (1930-1935) GCGN Conghan, Paul R., Scrapbook (photographs) CSCF Congregation of Holy Cross Saint Joseph's Farm OSCF Congregation of Holy Cross Saint Joseph's Farm (artifacts) CCCT Consultation on Common Texts GNEG Copy Negatives CORS Corson, Dorothy PCGH Coughlin, Charles E. (printed material) PBFC Cullen, Franklin, Brother, CSC (concerning CSC history) CZDN Curran, Charles (printed material concerning 1967 boycott at Catholic University) GCRR Curry, James M. (photo album) GDAG Daguerreotypes and Ambrotypes (photographs) CDNH Danehy, James P. CDSR Desrosiers, Elaine Sister OP (J.J. Cavanaugh Letters, 1963-1975) CZEJ Devere, Aubrey CDFY Duffy, Joseph CWFE Eagan, William F. GEDS Edes, Ella B. Scrapbook (photographs) CJEG Egan, John J., Msgr. GESN Eisenman, J.C. (photo album) PEUL Eucharistic Congresses GLJE Evers, Luke J., Msgr (photographs) CEWE Ewens, Mary, Sister CFAC Faculty Drafts and Manuscripts (miscellaneous) CWMF Fairley, William M. GFMR Farmer, William (Bill) CEAF Fischer, Edward A. PEAF Fischer, Edward A. (printed material) CZCY Foley, Philip (1845-1847) CZDH Fox, Thomas CFRS Fransen Brothers GFRS Fransen Brothers (photographs) CJLG Garcia, Jorge L. GPNN Glass Plate Negatives (photographs) GGPN Glass Plate Negatives: Contact Prints (photographs) CZCC Goldsborough, Howes CREG Gordon, Robert E. OREG Gordon, Robert E. (artifacts) CGND Gundlack, Gregory T. (Marketplace Study data) CGUT Gutschick, Raymond CHAL Haley, J. Arthur and Mary CHAM Hamilton, William Thomas (includes WNDU records) AHAM Hamilton, William Thomas (audio-visual) AHRV Harvey, Arthur, CSC (audio-visual) CRJH Havlik, Robert J. CZEL Heiser, Agatho, Brother, CSC (diary concerningJames Burns, 1940) CZED Hellmuth, Paul: collected material concerning Tom Dooley AZED Hellmuth, Paul: collected material concerning Tom Dooley (audio-visual) OZED Hellmuth, Paul: collected material concerning Tom Dooley (artifacts) GZED Hellmuth, Paul: collected material concerning Tom Dooley (photographs) CZDM Hemenway, Abby M. Clippings of Civil War Poetry CHER Hering, Frank E.: letters received, 1949-1950 GHER Hering, Frank E. (photographs) CZEA Herman, E.W.: diary, 1861-1864 MHIS Historic Editions, Books, and Local History (microfilm) CHDK Holoubek, Joseph and Alice CZEH Holtz, Lou (manuscript concerning 1989 visit to White House) GHOR Horstmann, Ignatius (photographs) MHNL Hungarian National Library Documents (microfilm) CIJP Intercommunity Justice and Peace Center MIRE Ireland, John Archbishop (Minnesota Historical Society microfilm edition) GKLY Kelly, Thomas, CSC (photographs) GRAM Knute Rockne: All American (photographs from movie) CKOP Koperski, Veronica, Sister OBHB Lange, Bernard B., CSC (artifacts) GBHB Lange, Bernard B., CSC (photographs) GLNS Lantern Slides (photographs) CLWR Lawrence, Marie (re Phi Beta Kappa) 1972-1987 CLEN Lenihan, Mathias C., Bp LOCL Local History (printed material) PLCL Local History (printed material) AMAN Manier, Edward (audio-visual) CMRT Marti, Fritz GMCD McAdams, Gerald E. (photo album) CMCC McCartney, Patrick F.J. PMCC McCartney, Patrick F.J. (printed material) CZDP McGillycuddy, James (1825-1837) CMGR Meagher, James L. (Christ's Kingdom on the Earth) MMEX Mexico: Documents concerning Religious Persecution, 1910-1920 (microfilm) CZCW Michigan Superintendent Indian Affairs (1845-1848) CDCM Miller, Donald C. (one of the Four Horsmen) GMIL Miller, Grover, Scrapbooks (photographs) CZEC Mulcahy, Francis P.: Memoirs (oral history) CNUE National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs (NCUEA) ANUE National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs (audio-visual) CNEA Neal, Marie Augusta (Sister, SND) MNEW Newspapers (microfilm) PNEW Newspapers (printed material) CNOR Norris, James (Catholic Relief Services) PNOR Norris, James (printed) GFLD Notre Dame Fieldhouse Student Projects (photographs) GNOV Novack, Kathi Skytta (photographs) PNVK Novak, Michael (printed material) CWDN Nutting, Willis CDOB O'Brien, David J. GJHO O'Donnell, J. Hugh, CSC (photographs) GMEA O'Meara, Kenneth (photographs) CDJO O'Neill, Daniel J. ODJO O'Neill, Daniel J. (artifacts) GDJO O'Neill, Daniel J. (photographs) GOCC Ohio Catholic Churches and Institutional Buildings (photographs) UORL Oral Histories (audio-visual) MPRS Paris, City of, Deliberations of City Bureau (microfilm) CFMP Parsons, Florence M.: some concerning John M. Ryan, CSC GFMP Parsons, Florence M.: some concerning John M. Ryan, CSC (photographs) GPSC Pascal Tomaszewski, Brother, CSC CPRC Perch‚, Napol‚on J. PPER Periodicals, Miscellaneous (printed material) CZEG Pfeil, Nicholas Reverend (1906-1914) CPIK Pike, Frederick B. CJRP Pleasants, Julian R. PLSH Polish Material (printed material) GPOR Portrait Collection (photographs) PPER Praying (serial) URIN Retreats International GROC Rockne, Knute (photographs) COAR Romero, Oscar A., Cardinal Archbishop of San Salvador CRUN Runkle, Donald CRYD Ryder, Eliot P. PSMC Saint Mary's College / Sisters of the Holy Cross (printed material) GSAL Salazar, Emilio (photographs) GSCN Scanlon, Ray, Scrapbook (photographs) CTJS Schlereth, Thomas J. GTJS Schlereth, Thomas J. (photographs) MSER Serials, Catholic (microfilm) PMUS Sheet Music Collection (printed material) CJWS Silver, James W. GSKE Skelly, Norb (photographs) PSAN Social Action Notes for Priests (printed material) CZDJ Social Justice (1942) M4400 South Bend / Mishawaka City Directories (microfilm) CZEI Spalding, Edyth MJLS Spalding, John L. Bishop (microfilm) GSPW Spanish-American War (photographs) CRWL Special Papal Commission on Birth and Population Control GRWL Special Papal Commission on Birth and Population Control (photographs) CLFS Stauder, Lawrence F. CZBP Stephan, Edmund A. (oral history) CJAS Storey, James A. (Notre Dame Scrapbook, ca.1908-1911) GJAS Storey, James A. (photographs from scrapbook) ASTY Storey, Richard (audio-visual) GSLV Sullivan, Edward (photo album) CSZA Szczesniak, Andrew L. CJAT Thie, Joseph A. (historical notes) GTNY Tierney, Henry, Scrapbook (photographs) GTTS Tintypes (photographs) GUFC Unidentified Faculty Collection (photographs) CVDR Vanderhaar, Gerard CRWA Walsh, Robert CWEG Wegs, J. Robert AWEG Wegs, J. Robert (audio-visual) CWHI Whitman, John A. GWHI Whitman, John A. (photographs) GWIL Wilson, John, CSC (photographs) CDHW Winicur, Daniel H. GDHW Winicur, Daniel H. (photographs) GWOO Woodward, Robert, CSC (photographs) GCEX World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (photographs) CZEK Wurzer, F. Henry CZEE Wurzer, Henry C. (Morris Inn File, 1949-1952, 1980) GYOU Youngerman, Frank A. (photographs) CZOT Zotti, Mary Irene (includes printed and audio-visual material) ----- 1 Abell, Aaron Ignatius, 1903-1965. Papers, 1960s. 8 linear inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Professor of history at the University of Notre Dame, 1945-1966. Manuscripts dating from the early 1960s, having to do with American Catholic Thought on Social Questions, an anthology edited by Abell and published posthumously in 1968; including drafts of his introduction and bibliography, notes on essayists included in the anthology, photocopies of essays included, and galley proofs. CAAR 2 Acton, Charles Januarius, 1803-1847. Letters sent, 1821-1837. 10 letters. English churchman, cardinal in Italy. Personal letters to his mother, 1821-1837, and to his sister, Lady Throckmorton, 1831 and 1837. In French and English. Gift of Shane Leslie. CZAA 3 Alban, Brother, 1845-1885. Ledgers, 1862-1877 (?) 2.5 linear inches. Professor of phonography at University of Notre Dame (1873-1878), and later professor at Sacred Heart College, Watertown, WI. Books appearing to be bookkeeping workbooks or, less likely, actual accounts, tentatively identified as belonging to Brother Alban; the books, written in shorthand, refer to transactions between persons who could not be identified as Notre Dame students, large shipments to cities of materials that could not be identified, and very large exchanges of money. The ledgers are most likely workbooks used for the purpose of shorthand and accounting instruction at the University of Notre Dame. CALN 4 Albertson, George, 1886-1929. Papers, 1916-1929. 5 inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Folder list. Catholic priest, professor of botany and bacteriology at the University of Notre Dame (1921-1929), and Dean of the College of Science at Notre Dame (1927-1929). Class and lecture notes (from Holy Cross College and Catholic University), exams, and a gradebook (Notre Dame). CALB 5 All Hallows College (Dublin, Ireland). Records, 1842-1956 (bulk 1842-1877). 5 linear inches. 3 reels of microfilm. Calendar on reel three. All Hallows College was established in 1842 by John Hand to train young men to work in foreign missions, especially among the Irish and other English-speaking emigrants. In 1892 the college came under the control of the Vincentian Fathers. Photostats, typewritten transcipts, and microfilm copies of original correspondence and reports of All Hallows College, Dublin, Ireland. Two reels of microfilm contain American missionary correspondence, 1842-1877, in part from members of the American hierarchy, to members and officers of All Hallows, including Bartholomew Woodlock, Daniel Moriarty, and Thomas Bennet, Provincial of the Carmelites. The third reel contains a calendar of the college's correspondence with bishops around the world during this period. Compiled by Patrick F. Murray as a master's thesis in 1956, it includes but is not limited to the letters in the first two reels. There are also photostats of letters to Father Woodlock, 1858-1873, and photostats of correspondence from the Diocese of Hartford, 1844-1847. In English and French. Microfilm made by the National Library of Ireland. CAHC; MAHC 6 Allen, Barbara, 1946- . Oral histories, 1991. 2 linear inches. 19 cassette audio tapes. Contractual restrictions may apply. Professor of American Studies, University of Notre Dame. Interviews concerning military and wartime experiences and how those experiences influenced perceptions of the 1991 Gulf War against Iraq. Interviews were conducted by eight students in Barbara Allen's oral history class (Spring semester 1991). CALL; AALL 7 American Association of University Professors. University of Notre Dame Chapter. Records, 1946-1973. 4 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Inventory. The local chapter was founded in 1945, as an affiliate of the national AAUP, for the purpose of "facilitating a more effective cooperation among teachers" and promoting "the standards, ideals, and welfare of the profession." The chapter's activities include researching and publishing reports on faculty compensation, academic freedom, and tenure; offering advice to Notre Dame administration on academic, administrative, and disciplinary matters; and publishing a newsletter. Correspondence, minutes, meeting material, subject files, and publications. Principal correspondents include the chapter's presidents and secretaries, national AAUP officers, and Notre Dame administrators. CAUP 8 American Federation of Catholic Societies. Collection, 1901-1961. 2 linear inches. 9 reels of microfilm. Contractual restrictions may apply. Narrative description of each reel. A loose union of organizations that tried to mold Catholic opinion, influence legislation, and promote decency in entertainment and motion pictures. Anthony Matr‚ served as national secretary of the federation. Material concerning the American Federation of Catholic Societies and Anthony Matr‚, its National Secretary; consisting of proceedings of annual meetings, the federation's bulletin, 1906-1919, issues from the weekly press service of the federation's Social Service Commission, 1913-1918, scrapbooks and newspaper clippings, and various editions of the federation's constitution and bylaws; with correspondence of Anthony Matr‚ and other federation officials to Catholic and secular organizations and leaders including Woodrow Wilson, William Jennings Bryan, and Robert Lansing; correspondence between Matr‚'s sons, Richard and Frank, and Sister Mary Adele Francis Gorman containing comments on her dissertation and reflections on the activities of their father and the federation; and correspondence with manuscript repositories. Collected by Sister Mary Adele Francis Gorman in support of her doctoral dissertation on the AFCS (University of Notre Dame, 1962). CAFC; MAFC; PAFC 9 Americanism Collection, 1892-1953. 2 reels of microfilm. 10 inches of printed material. An alleged heresy in the American Church evidenced by a French translation of Walter Elliot's biography of Isaac Thomas Hecker, founder of the Paulist Fathers. The doctrines in question were condemned by Leo XIII in the apostolic letter Testem Benevolentiae, but American bishops and Paulists said that nobody in the United States taught these doctrines. Correspondence of William Henry O'Connell, rector of the North American College in Rome (1895-1901) and Cardinal Archbishop of Boston (1907-1944), and John Ireland, Archbishop of Saint Paul (1888-1918), with Countess Sabina di Parravicino of Milan, the Italian translator of Ireland's speeches; correspondence of John Joseph Glennon, Cardinal Archbishop of St. Louis (1903-1946); John Joseph Keane (1839-1918), Bishop of Richmond (1878-1888), first rector of Catholic University (1889-1896), administrator in the Vatican (1896-1899), and Archbishop of Dubuque (1900-1911); John Lancaster Spalding, Bishop of Peoria (1876-1908); and John Zahm, CSC, scientist, author, professor at the University of Notre Dame (1875-1892), and provincial of the Congregation of Holy Cross (1895-1906). Also printed material, photocopies, and microfilm of clippings, books, and pamphlets concerning the controversy; with copies of works by Albert Houtin, Henri Delassus, George Fonsegrive, Eduardo Soderini, Edouard Lecanuet, Felix Klein, Emmanuel Barbier, Walter Elliott, Charles Maignen, Juliette Heuzey Goyau, Thomas T. McAvoy, and others. In French, English, and Italian. Source: Centro di Foto documentazione, Polotenico di Milan and the Library of Congress. Collected by Thomas T. McAvoy. MAMR; PAMR 10 Amerika Publishing Company. Records, 1905-1925, (bulk 1923-1925). 1 minute book. 1 reel of microfilm. Narrative description. Founded by the German Literary Society of St. Louis in 1923; faced bankruptcy charges in 1925. Minutes of meetings of the Board of Directors, 1923-1925; stock certificates; and a letter to the director of the German Literary Society, 1905. CAPC; MAPC 11 Archivio Vaticano. Fondo Bolognetti, 1610-1642 (bulk 1633-1639). 4 reels of microfilm. Volumes 3, 4, 19, and 108 of the Fondo Bolognetti in the Vatican Archives. Papers concerning the English colonization of Maryland, some of them involving Lord Calvert, Baron of Baltimore; correspondence of Gregorio Panzani, Pope Urban VIII's secret agent in England, along with a handwritten copy of his diary (1634-1636); letters received by Giorgio Coneo concerning Panzani's mission; and other correspondence of Coneo (1634-1639). In Italian, Latin, and French. MVAT 12 Armsey, James W., 1917- . Papers, 1946-[ongoing]. 64 linear feet. Prior written permission required from James W. Armsey. Series outline and folder list. Ford Foundation executive. Ford Foundation Executive Committee and Board of Trustee dockets (1958-1977), budget papers (1969-1977), information and discussion papers (1960-1977), professional staff biographies, directory of personnel, and personnel reports (1958-1977), program reviews and reports (1965-1977); office files of the Special Program in Education (1958-1970), including correspondence, college and university profiles, visitation memoranda, dockets and review papers; office files of the Educational Television Project (1952-1973), including memoranda, reports of meetings, and papers by outside consultants, with some discussion of communication satellites; papers related to the Journalism Project (1961-1970), the Minority Higher Education Project (1951-1976), and Requests for Grant Action (1957-1976) documenting the Foundation's support of humanities and the arts, minority higher education, education and research, and national affairs, and the activities of the Foundation's International Division; with accounts of the history of the Foundation (1911-1956), Annual Reports (1956-1977), and Financial Statements (1949-1975); also papers documenting the career of Henry T. Heald, president of Illinois Institute of Technology (1940-1952), chancellor of New York University (1952-1956), and president/trustee of the Ford Foundation (1956-1965), for whom Armsey worked at each of these institutions; consisting of speeches written by Armsey and delivered by Heald, reports, proposals, and memoranda (1946-1958). CARM 13 Association of Chicago Priests. Records, 1966-[ongoing]. 22 linear feet. 5 linear inches of photographs. Restricted by contract. Folder list with index. Correspondence, proposals, reports, surveys, mailings, ledgers, salary s chedules, calendars, press releases, agenda, minutes, case studies, constitutions, contracts, retirement plans, fund-raising papers, invoices, receipts, tax returns, newsletters, and photographs; concerning diocesan and religious priests, priestly training, pastoral development, Jewish oppression, anti-Semitism, concern for the poor, abortion, battered children, black clergy, busing, celibacy, canon law, research and development, the permanent diaconate, the draft, amnesty, due process, Catholic education, El Salvador, justice and the energy crisis, the Equal Rights Amendment, experimental ministries, marriage and family life, farmworker ministry, gay rights, the B-1 bomber, the death penalty, gun control, housing, Illinois prisons and jails, inner-city parishes, interracial justice, liberation theology, liturgy, campus ministry, priestly morale, peacemaking, resigned priests, selection of bishops, the Washington 19 Case, women religious, and youth ministry; involving the Committee for Non-ordained Ministry, Committee on Nominations, Committee on Parochial Experimentation, Committee on Youth Ministry, Ad Hoc Committee on Liturgy, Appointment Policies Committee, Alliance to End Repression, American Management Association, American Jewish Committee, Archdiocese Conference of Laity, National Assembly of Women Religious, Association of Episcopal Clergy, Association of Pastoral Trainers, Concerned Canon Lawyers, Black Caucus, Chicago Center for Achievement of Human Potential, Chicago Presbyteral Senate, Priests for a Free Ministry, Hispanic Caucus, Priests' Retirement Mutual Aid Association, National Council of Catholic Bishops, National Federation of Priests' Councils, Illinois Catholic Conference, National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, Priests' Councils of New York, Seminarians for Ministerial Renewal, National Catholic Welfare Conference, Young Adults Catholic Action Federation, and Young Priests' Caucus; with material concerning Father Andrew Greeley and John Cardinal Cody. CACP; AACP; GACP 14 Audran, Ernest, 1823-1899. Papers, 1840-1892. 10 linear inches. 16 photographs. Inventory. Catholic priest, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Cathedral in Vincennes, Indiana, 1846-1868, and thereafter rector of St. Augustine's Church, Jeffersonville, Indiana; defender of Catholic civil rights. Chiefly correspondence, but also clippings, notes, sermons, circulars, and photographs. Correspondents include James McMaster and Bishops Francis Chatard, Celestine de la HailandiŠre, Maurice de Saint-Palais, Napol‚on Joseph Perch‚, and James Wood. CAUD; GAUD 15 Ave Maria Magazine. Records, 1865-1944 (bulk 1895-1929). 2.5 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Catholic weekly magazine founded by Edward F. Sorin in 1865. Daniel E. Hudson served as editor from 1875-1928. Chiefly manuscripts submitted for publication, 1890s-1920s, with work by John Ayscough, A. M. Berlinquet, Nora Byeman, L. Joan Chubb, the Countess de Courson, Charles A. Dobson, Joseph Dutton, Maurice Francis Egan, M. de la Fontaine, Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, Marie Marchal, Edward Wilbur Mason, Marian Nesbitt, M. Barry O'Delany, Christian Reid, Nigel Robinson, Magdalen Rock, Anna T. Sadlier, Charles Warren Stoddard, and others. Also editorial correspondence, 1895-1929; a ledger listing Ave Maria subscribers, 1894-1896; and manuscripts of obituaries, 1891. CAVE 16 Ave Maria Press. Records, 1940-[ongoing]. 190 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Inventory sent by publisher David Schlaver, CSC. Catholic publishers of books and educational material. General files of publisher John L. Reedy, CSC, 1953-1983, editorial files 1956-1983, and financial records 1940-1983; including correspondence, biographical profiles of authors, permissions, diaries, agenda, logs, lists, reprints, and records of advertising, publicity, and circulation; with material concerning conferences and meetings, bishops' synods, syndicated columns, Today magazine, A.D. magazine, the Ave Maria Board of Governors, the relationship between Ave Maria and the University of Notre Dame, the Catholic Press Association, and King's College of Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania. CAVM; GAVM 17 Baart, Peter A., 1858-1908. Papers, 1882-1907. 5 linear feet. 3 photographs. Restricted by contract. Inventory with index to correspondence. Catholic priest, pastor of St. Mary's Church in Marshall, Michigan, secretary to the school board of the Diocese of Detroit, and authority on canon law. Correspondence, records of canon law cases, papers related to his study of Catholic orphanages, Orphans and Orphan Asylums (1885), pamphlets on Catholic problems, and photographs. Correspondents include Arthur Preuss, William H. Sadlier, Bishop Henry J. Richter, and Francesco Cardinal Satolli. CBAA; GBAA 18 Bach, Ferdinand Dominic. Correspondence, 1839-1842. 2 linear inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Correspondence concerning the foundation of the Fathers of Mercy in the United States. Includes 34 transcribed and xeroxed letters written between Bach and Fathers Jean Baptiste Rauzan, SPM, and Jacques Le Vassuer, SPM, both of whom were at the Fathers of Mercy House in Paris. Also includes a xerox of a 1932 letter to Thomas McAvoy, CSC, concerning Bach. The Society of the Fathers of Mercy (SPM) became Congregation of the Fathers of Mercy (CPM) circa 1960. In French. CBCH 19 Bachofer, Cletus S. (Cletus Shelley), 1913-1964. Papers, 1931-1964. 10 linear inches. 57 photographs. Contractual restrictions may apply. Folder list. Catholic priest, biology professor at the University of Notre Dame (1948, 1950-1964), and visiting research professor at the Argonne National Laboratory (1949), an Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) facility near Chicago. Correspondence (1938-1964) with AEC officials, colleagues, and students; grant applications, contracts, reports and other material relating to his experimentation in radiation biology and neuro-physiology for the AEC (1951-1964); personal documents; a scrapbook; and photographs. CBAC; GBAC 20 Badin, Stephen T., (Stephen Theodore), 1768-1853. Papers, 1768-1943 (bulk 1830-1846). 1 linear inch. 2 microfilm reels. 1 medal. Father Badin, the first priest ordained in the United States of America, arrived in South Bend in 1830 and established the St. Joseph Mission on the present site of the University of Notre Dame. Baptismal register of Badin's Mission at Notre Dame (1830-1841); a few letters by Badin including one to Bishop William Quarter of Chicago (1846) and drafts of a letter to the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in Paris (1845) with translation; copies of documents of Badin's baptism and ordination; documents that mention him, some dating from the twentieth century; photocopies of Badin's accounts recorded in the ledgers of Lathrop Minor Taylor and of S. Hanna & Company (originals held by the Northern Indiana Historical Society); and microfilm containing letters from Badin to Archbishop John Carroll of Baltimore (1796-1812) concerning Badin's experience as Vicar General of Bardstown (originals in the Baltimore Archdiocesan Archives). Also a religious medal that belonged to Badin. In English, French, and Latin. CZCF; MZCF; OZCF 21 Baraga, Frederic, 1797-1868. Papers, 1809-1908. 7 linear inches. 3 reels of microfilm. Narrative description of each reel of microfilm. Missionary among the Chippewas in Wisconsin and the upper peninsula of Michigan (1831-1853). Consecrated a bishop in 1853, he served as Bishop of Sainte-Marie (1857-1865) and of Sault Sainte-Marie and Marquette (1865-1868). Copies of typewritten transcripts of documentation assembled by the Bishop Baraga Association in support of the cause for his canonization as a saint; consisting of letters, reports, journal and account-book entries, and invoices. Also microfilm containing correspondence, 1850s-1860s; an Indian language (Ottawa or Chippewa) catechism; an introduction to Catholicism in North America, in German, possibly written for the Leopoldine Society; and correspondence and records of the Michigan Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior, 1825-1850, concerning a conflict between Baptist and Catholic officials over the proceeds coming from the sale of mission lands near Grand Rapids, Michigan, with correspondents including Bishop Peter LeFevre, John Tyler, James Polk, department officials and representatives of the litigants. Source for Department of the Interior material: National Archives, Washington, D.C. Other material: the Archives of the University of Notre Dame. In English, German, and Ottawa or Ojibwa. CBAR; MBAR 22 Bardstown (Ky.). Board of Trustees. Records, 1782-1827. 1 reel of microfilm. Typescript minutes of the Board of Trustees of the town of Bardstown, Kentucky, including sale of lots with names, deeds and transfers, construction of market houses, slave rules, expenses, elected officials, election results, and fire protection. MKYB 23 Baroni, Geno C. (Geno Charles), 1930- . Papers, 1962-1984. 37 linear feet. 1 linear foot of photographs. Folder list. Monsignor Baroni was Director of Urban Affairs for the Archdiocese of Washington (1967), program director of USCC Urban Task Force (1970), founder and president of the National Center for Urban Ethnic Affairs (1971), and founder of the Catholic Conference on Ethnic and Neighborhood Affairs (1974). He was appointed Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development by President Carter (1977). Correspondence, speeches, scrapbooks, clippings, agenda, reports, newsletters, pamphlets, photographs, plans, bills, questionnaires, statistics, training courses, and background papers; concerning catechetics, teaching, work with youth, race relations, black power, civil rights, fair housing, integration, poverty, birth control, minimum wage, credit unions, co-op housing, welfare, crime, Catholic Action, voter registration, urban rehabilitation, and ethnic populations of cities all over the United States; with material concerning the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, United States Catholic Conference, Citizens' Crusade against Poverty, home rule for the District of Columbia, Upward Bound, and Baroni's work at HUD. CBRN; GBRN 24 Bartholomew, Paul Charles, 1907-1975. Papers, 1930s-1975. 12 linear feet. 12 audio tapes. 47 photographs. Contractual restrictions may apply. Series description, folder list. Professor of political science at Notre Dame (1930-1975); Republican Party activist. Includes correspondence; manuscripts and reprints of his articles; drafts, research notes, and copies of three of his books: Profile of a Precinct Committeeman (Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.: Oceana Publications, 1968), The Indiana Third (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1970), and The Irish Judiciary (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Dame Press, 1971); transcripts of his lectures and speeches; grade books and course outlines; correspondence, reports, and minutes relating to his work with the Community Conservation Board of Chicago, the Indiana Commission on State Tax and Financing Policy, and the Republican National Committee; newspaper clippings relating to the Notre Dame mock political convention and Washington tour for Notre Dame students, two programs started by Bartholomew; tape recordings of lecture and research notes; and photographs. CBRW; ABRW; GBRW 25 Bauer, Burnett C. (Burnett Calix), 1916- . Papers, 1947-1962. 3 linear inches. Folder list. South Bend (Indiana) businessman and activist in the Christian Family Movement (CFM). Correspondence with Pat and Patty Crowley and others; minutes, lecture notes, newspaper clippings, and newsletters (Christian Family Notes, 1948, and Christian Family Bulletin, 1949-1950) concerning Bauer's involvement in the founding and early activities of CFM. The documents in the collection are all photocopies; Bauer has retained the originals. CZAR 26 Bayley, James Roosevelt, 1814-1877. Papers, 1839-1872. 2.5 linear inches. Calendar with index. First bishop of Newark and eighth archbishop of Baltimore. Personal correspondence, 1839-1872, mostly from members of Bayley's family. CBAY 27 Beichner, Paul E., 1912- . Papers, 1943-1974. 4 linear inches. Priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross; professor of English, University of Notre Dame, 1945-1952, 1971- , and Dean of the Graduate School, 1952-1971. Woodcuts used in Beichner's Once Upon a Parable: Fables for the Present, 1974, and copies of published papers by Beichner, 1943-1960. CBEI; OBEI 28 Belloc, Hilaire, 1870-1953. Diary and sketchbooks, 1889-1912. 1 linear inch. Item list. Diary dating from 12 April to 11 October 1889, including some sketches and drafts of poems; sketchbook dating from 1891, with monochromatic drawings of American landscape; sketchbook dating from 1893-1894, with watercolors of French landscape and buildings; sketchbook dating from 1912, with pencil drawings of European scenes, including mountains, bridges, cathedrals, steeples, towers, soldiers, and Robespierre's house. Acquired by purchase from estate of Douglas Woodruff in 1978. CBEL 29 Benavides, Alonso de, fl. 1630. Memorial, 1634 Feb. 12 . 58 leaves. Franciscan missionary to New Mexico, 1625-1630. Photostat of a report concerning Franciscan missions among the Indians of New Mexico, written by Alonso de Benavides and presented to Pope Urban VIII, 12 February 1634. In Italian. Source: Propaganda Fide Archives, Vatican City. Photocopied from Monsignor Peter Guilday's copy, 1944. CZCH 30 Benet, Mary. Papers, 1963-1978. 2 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Folder list. Educator, civil rights activist, founder of the Chicago Urban Apostolate for Sisters, and chair of the personnel task force of the Archdiocese of Chicago School Study Commission. Correspondence, clippings, and publications of Sister Mary Benet, including The New Sister (1969); and correspondence, reports, minutes, and clippings from the School Study Commission, 1970-1971. CBEN 31 Benoit, Peter L. Diary, 1875. 1 linear inch. Josephite visitor to the United States. Photocopy of typewritten transcript of Canon Benoit's diary of a trip to America, 6 January to 8 June 1875, including descriptions of Josephite missions among freed slaves. Original diary in three volumes remains in the Mill Hill Fathers Archives, St. Joseph's College, Mill Hill, London, N.W. 7, England. The Josephite Fathers have a microfilm copy of the diary in their archives: 1130 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD, 21202. Transcribed from microfilm by Peter E. Hogan, SSJ, in 1965. CBNO 32 Berkery, John J., d. 1989. Papers, 1932-1988. 9 linear feet. 4 linear feet of printed material. Contractual restrictions may apply. Inventory. Roman Catholic priest; one of the founders of the Young Christian Workers in the United States. Correspondence; manuscripts of Berkery's memoirs of the Catholic Action movement; newsletters; clippings, including articles by and about Joseph Cardinal Cardijn; photocopies and mimeographed material including pieces by Pat Keegan and Paul McGuire. With the exception of one folder concerning St. Therese of Lisieux, the papers all pertain to the Young Christian Workers, Young Christian Students, Christian Family Movement, and other Catholic Action organizations. Also books, booklets, magazines, pamphlets, papal encyclicals, tracts, and other printed material related to Catholic Action, YCW, YCS, CFM, the Second Vatican Council, and St. Therese of Lisieux. CBRK; PBRK 33 Bertrand Family. Genealogical material, ca.1665-1964. .15 linear inches. Copies of lineages and official documents concerning the Bertrand family of Niles, Michigan, and its forebears. CZAO 34 Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. Biblioteca Barberiniana. Manuscripts, 1600s-1700s (bulk 1600s). 15 reels of microfilm. Library founded by Francesco Barberini in 1632, acquired and made part of the Vatican Library by Pope Leo XIII in 1902. Correspondence and manuscripts in the Barberini collection of the Vatican Library, including documents concerning activities of Pope Urban VIII, a member of the Barberini family. The Vatican Library's manuscript collections are divided according to language group; languages using the Latin alphabet are classified as Latin. The Barberini Library contains over 10,000 Latin codices; this microfilm contains Barberini Latin codices 8614-8660. Vatican Library. In Latin, Italian, and French. MBBR 35 Binsfeld, Edmund L. (Edmund Louis), 1905-1985. Papers, [ca. 1920-1950s]. 3.75 linear feet. Box list. Catholic clergyman, writer, librarian, and archivist of the Kansas City Province of the Society of Precious Blood. Articles, newspaper clippings, lectures, unpublished papers, and a small amount of correspondence relating to writers and literary topics. Correspondents include Jean Charlot and Sister Mary Madeleva, CSC, president of St. Mary's College in Notre Dame, Indiana, 1934-1961. CBIN 36 Bishops' Memorial Hall. Collection, [ca.1870-ca.1910]. 6.5 linear feet of photographs. 20 linear feet of artifacts. 2.5 linear inches of manuscript material. Inventory. Photographs and photomechanical prints of individual Catholic clergy and religious, especially portraits of the popes and the hierarchy of the Catholic Church; religious artwork; groups of Catholic religious, clergy, and lay people; Catholic missions and missionaries in the United States, Japan, and India, specifically the Bengal region which became East Pakistan and then Bangladesh; and Catholic churches, schools, orphanages, and other institutions. The photographs and prints were collected largely by James F. Edwards for the Bishops' Memorial Hall at Notre Dame, which was a museum and archives dedicated to preserving the history of American Catholicism. The collection concentrates on the American church, but it also includes photographs and prints relating to Catholics and their institutions elsewhere, most notably Canada and Europe. Also vestments, crucifixes, candles, and other religious artifacts associated with American bishops and prominent priests; and an inventory of the contents of Bishops' Memorial Hall (1908-1909). GBMH; OBMH; UBMH 37 Bitting, William C. (William Coleman), 1887- . Papers, 1927-1932. 3 linear inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Member of the investment securities firm of Bitting & Co. Correspondence, memoranda, bonds, printed announcements, circulars, clippings, photographs, and religious pictures; concerning the issue of mortgage bonds and loans to churches, hospitals, religious orders, and charitable organizations including the Roman Catholic dioceses of St. Augustine, Baltimore, Detroit, Manila, San Antonio, Santa Fe, Seattle, Galveston, El Paso, Toledo, Chicago, Indianapolis, Altoona, Fort Wayne, Wheeling, Cleveland, Monterey-Fresno, Vancouver, Mobile, and Richmond; the Catholic Church in Bavaria, Methodist Episcopal Church, Protestant Episcopal Church, Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist General Convention of Texas, Baptist State Convention of North Carolina, and Salvation Army; Chautauqua Institution, Neighborhood Association of St Louis, Baylor University; Franciscans, Dominicans, Sulpicians, Lorettines, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, Sisters of Charity, and other religious orders; and many individual hospitals and Catholic, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Campbellite, Lutheran and Episcopalian churches. CBIT 38 Blanchet, Francis Norbert, 1795-1883. Papers, 1846-1902 (bulk 1846-1882). 2.5 linear inches. Item list. Missionary in the Pacific Northwest in the 19th century; named vicar-general of the Oregon country in 1838 and first bishop of Oregon City (later known as the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon) when the episcopal see was created in 1846; developed the Catholic Ladder (1859) as a teaching device for the Indians to illustrate the history and beliefs of the Christian faith. Letters and papers from Blanchet's trips to France (1846) and South America (1856-1857); correspondence with Major Edward Mallet (1881-1882), with a few letters exchanged between Mallet and Bishop Augustin Magloire Alexander Blanchet (1883); letters, pamphlets and clippings involving Archbishops F.N. Blanchet, Charles J. Seghers, William H. Gross, and Alexander Christie; and a few papers and clippings involving the Diocese of Vancouver Island, suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Oregon City. CBLN 39 Blanqui, Louis Auguste, 1805-1881. Papers, [1830s-1880s]. 21 reels of microfilm. Manuscript inventory on microfilm dated 27 March 1899. It generally provides a brief physical description without indicating contents. French socialist and architect of secret societies who participated in the revolutions of 1830, 1839, 1848, and 1871. Correspondence, journals, manuscripts, notes, printed articles, newspapers and other periodicals; concerning Blanqui's life, philosophy, and revolutionary activities, including his account of the events of 1848. BibliothŠque Nationale, Paris. In French. MBLQ 40 Blayney, Lindsey, 1874-1971. Papers, 1959-1973. .15 linear inches. An educator and a veteran of World War I; received an honorary degree from the University of Notre Dame. Copies of reminiscences by and of Blayney. Includes some information on the Blayney family. CZAC 41 Boland, John P., 1888-1968. Papers, 1910-1968. 5 linear feet. 33 scrapbooks. 1 folder of photographs. Contractual restrictions may apply. Series outline and folder list. Diocesan priest and labor activist. He served in several Buffalo parishes before being named the first chairman of the New York State Labor Relations Board, a position he held until 1942. He helped found the Buffalo Diocesan Labor College in 1938 and was active in many labor organizations, including the Catholic Industrial Conference of America. Following World War II, Monsignor Boland worked for War Relief Services (National Catholic Welfare Conference) in Europe and the Middle East and served as a labor relations consultant to General Douglas MacArthur in Japan. He was pastor of St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Buffalo from 1943 until his retirement in 1967. Throughout his career, Monsignor Boland wrote and spoke extensively on the labor movement and the Catholic Church. Correspondence, extensive newspaper clippings on labor activities of the 1930s and 1940s, notes on cases heard by the New York State Labor Relations Board (1939-1942), speeches and essays by Boland, records from his postwar trips to Europe and Japan, and photographs. CBOL; GBOL 42 Bolger, Henry J., 1900-1964. Papers, 1929-1952. 2.5 linear inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Professor and chairman of the University of Notre Dame physics department, 1936-1964; project director for the Manhattan Project, 1943-1945. Correspondence, notebooks, class record books, passport and immunization record. CBLG 43 Bornemann, George, 1838-1924. Papers, 1889-1925. 3 linear inches. Inventory. German parish priest, pastor of St. Paul's Church in Reading, Pennsylvania. Correspondence, notes, church documents, and printed material; concerning Bornemann's work as a leader of the German American Catholic Congresses and his interest in organizations of German American Catholics such as the Staatsverband Societies of Pennsylvania and Ohio, the Catholic Central Verein, and the Amerikanish Deutschen Priester Vereins. Correspondents include J.N. Enzlberger, William Faerber, Joseph Schroeder, and bishops Leo Haid, OSB, and P.J. Hurth, CSC. In German, English, and Latin. CBNM 44 Bowman, N. R. Notebook, [ca.1832]-1852. 1 volume and 2 fragments. A manuscript book of notes and comments on various scriptural passages by a Methodist minister in Indiana and two loose fragments of similar notes. CZBA 45 Boyle, Paul M. (Paul Michael), 1926- . Papers, 1960-[ongoing]. 59 linear feet. 4 linear feet of printed material. Restricted by contract. Inventory with index. Catholic priest and canon lawyer; Superior General of the Congregation of the Passion (1976-1989) and Bishop of Mandeville, a Vicariate Apostolic in Jamaica (1991- ). General correspondence files (1960-1990); lecture notes and student papers from courses on canon law taught by Boyle; correspondence and reports from his tenure as president (1964-1965) of the Canon Law Society of America; subject files (1965-1974) on canon law as it affects religious life; correspondence, minutes, memoranda, and financial reports (1974-1983) from Boyle's close association with Stewardship Services Inc. (La Salette Fathers) and the Religious Communities Trust; minutes and meeting material from Boyle's tenure as president (1969-1974) of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men (CMSM), with correspondence and committee material from his work as CMSM representative to Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Center for Intercultural Formation, Sacred Congregation for Religious, and Union of Superiors General; and material concerning the 1987 Synod of Bishops on the role of the laity, Vatican finances, the Pontifical Commission for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law, and the Pontifical Commission on Religious Life in the United States of America. CPBY; PPBY 46 Breig, Joseph A. (Joseph Anthony), 1905- . Papers, 1919-1975. 15 linear feet. 10 photographs and 40 negatives. Catholic journalist. Correspondence, manuscripts, photographs and printed material; including clippings and offprints of articles, columns, and book reviews representing Breig's interest in Catholicism, the Garabandal Apparitions, abortion, and Humanae Vitae; with samples of editorial work and promotional material, cartoons by Earl Wolf based on ideas suggested by Breig, and poems by Breig's friends. CBRI; GBRI 47 Brennan, Thomas J.,1898-1972. Papers, 1906-1971. 7 linear inches. 2.5 linear inches of photographs. Folder list. Professor of philosophy at the University of Notre Dame, 1931-1972. Sermons and speeches collected or delivered by Brennan, 1906-1964; writings on philosophy collected by Brennan; correspondence, 1952-1971; photographs; and the program from the world premiere, held in South Bend, of the film Knute Rockne: All American. CBRE; GBRE 48 Brent, Daniel, 1774-1841. Letter book, 1833-1836. 1 linear inch. Transcription of letters, 1833-1836. American Consul at Paris. Letter book with entries dating from 10 August 1833 to 1 April 1836, including letters to John Quincy Adams, President Andrew Jackson, Secretary of State Louis McLane, Secretary of State John Forsyth, Edward Stubbs of the State Department, William Brent, Robert Walsh, Philip Kearny, Senator Peleg Sprague, George Law, William B. Taylor, Felix Cicognani (U.S. Consul at Rome), and John W. Parker (U.S. Consul at Amsterdam). CBNT 49 Brent, John Carroll. Letter book and photographs, 1848-1850. .5 linear inches. 1 linear inch of photographs. American lawyer. Letter book with entries dating from 13 May 1848 to 22 April 1850, including letters to Robert Walsh (U.S. Consul, Paris), John Jay, Commodore W.C. Bolton, Daniel J. Carroll, General Jackson Morton, William Carroll, and James Richard; and photographs. CBET; GBET 50 Brothers of Holy Cross. Midwest Province (Notre Dame, Ind.) Collection, 1822-1974. 5 linear inches. Folder list. Obituary book of deceased brothers (1822-1878); last wills of many brothers (1843-1885); register of brothers at Notre Dame (1842-1850); list of brothers associated with Notre Dame (1923-1948); correspondence and personal documents of various brothers. CSCB 51 Brownson, Henry F., (Henry Francis), 1835-1913. Papers, 1855-1908. 2 linear feet. Calendar with index. Son of Orestes and Sarah (Healy) Brownson; one of the leaders of the American Catholic Congress of Baltimore in 1889; author of a three-volume biography of his father and editor of his father's works in twenty volumes. Correspondence, material on the American Catholic Congress of Baltimore (1889), and miscellaneous material including one scrapbook of clippings. CBRH 52 Brownson, Orestes Augustus, 1803-1876. Papers, 1823-1876. 9 linear feet. 90 volumes of printed material. 1 photograph. 1 walking stick. Calendar with index; also A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of the Orestes Augustus Brownson Papers (University of Notre Dame Archives, 1966). Associate of the New England Transcendentalists; convert to Roman Catholicism; founder, editor, and chief author of the Boston Quarterly Review (1838-1842) and Brownson's Quarterly Review (1844-1864 and 1873-1875). He wrote essays on Church and State, civil and religious freedom, Catholic education, the philosophy of science, and the conflict between conservative and progressive forces in the Church. Correspondence, journal, clippings, and manuscript drafts of books, speeches, articles, and essays, both published and unpublished, 1823-1876; including correspondence with the Comte de Montalembert, Louis Veuillot, Lord Acton, John Henry Cardinal Newman, George Bancroft, Salmon Chase, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Isaac Hecker, Henry David Thoreau, and Archbishops John Hughes, Francis Patrick Kenrick and Martin Spalding; manuscripts of essays by Albert Brisbane, Archbishop Francis P. Kenrick, George Thompson and others; a photograph of Orestes Brownson and his walking stick. Also printed material consisting of The Boston Quarterly Review (1838-1842), Brownson's Quarterly Review (1844-1864, 1873-1875); a twenty-volume set of The Works of Orestes A. Brownson (1882-1887) edited by his son Henry and annotated by his biographer, Thomas R. Ryan; and books by and about Brownson. Papers available on microfilm from the Archives of the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, 46556. Gift of Henry F. Brownson, 1890. CBRO; GBRO; MBRO; OBRO; PBRO 53 Brut‚, Simon, 1779-1839. Papers, 1810-1839. 2 reels of microfilm. 1 missal. Microfilm of correspondence of Simon Gabriel Brut‚, first Bishop of Vincennes (1834-1839), both before and after his appointment as bishop, made from documents in various collections held by the University of Notre Dame Archives. Consists mainly of letters handwritten by Brut‚, with some printed material and correspondence received by Brut‚. Correspondents include William Gaston, Rev. Stephen T. Badin, and bishops Joseph Rosati, CM, John Timon, CM, John Baptist David, SS, Guy Ignatius Chabrat, and Anthony Blanc. Also a missal used by Brut‚ as a missionary priest in Maryland. In English, French, and Latin. MSGB; OSGB 54 Buell, Don Carlos, 1818-1898. Papers, 1841-1862. 5 linear inches. United States Army General, Adjutant General of the Department of Texas (1853-1856) and Commander of the Department of the Ohio (1861-1862). A manuscript book of special orders of General William S. Harney, General Persifor Frazer Smith, and Colonel Albert S. Johnston (1853-1856); a manuscript book of letters sent by Buell to assorted military departments and units, primarily concerning orders and monthly strength returns (1853-1856); a book of printed General Orders of the Department of the Ohio (1861-1862); a four-page biography of Buell; and an unidentified index (1841-1846). CBUE 55 Burke Family. Papers, 1863-1913. 6 items. Civil War pension documents of private Mathew Burke (Company I, 23rd Regiment of New York National Guard); a contract involving Annie J. Cunningham (1893) and an undertaker's bill for the funeral of Mary C. Cunningham (1906); and jubilee cards for Sister Mary Dominic (1913). These persons are probably forebears of Joseph P. Burke, Notre Dame class of 1925. CZBR 56 Burns, James A. (James Aloysius), 1867-1940. Papers, 1880s-1940. 5 linear inches. 1 reel of microfilm. 1 audio tape. Folder list. Professor of chemistry, 1895-1900, and president, 1919-1922, University of Notre Dame; priest of the Congregation of Holy Cross. Correspondence (1880s-1940), primarily with Francis W. Howard, 1905-1940; and printed material. Microfilm contains Burns' diary (1867-1940), which includes accounts of conversations with leaders and officials of the University of Notre Dame including John W. Cavanaugh, Andrew Morrissey, John A. Zahm, William Corby, and Archbishop John Joseph Keane; concerning budgetary questions and strategies, battles over educational policy, changes in parietals, campus politics, the death of Fr. Corby, the Spanish-American War, and Vatican reaction to Zahm's book on evolution in 1899. Microfilm also contains a biographical sketch of Zahm and statistical analyses of students by classes (1895-1899). CBUR; MBUR; ABUR 57 Burrell, David B. Papers, 1972-1974. 5 linear inches. 2 photographs. Folder list. Professor of philosophy, University of Notre Dame, 1964- . Papers include reports of the University of Notre Dame Task Forces on academic discipline, enrollment, physical facilities, and research and instruction; correspondence, reports, and minutes, University of Notre Dame Committee on University Priorities, 1972-1974; an evaluation of the University of Notre Dame Philosophy Department; and photographs. CBRL; GBRL 58 Bussard, Paul C., 1904- . Papers, 1929-1978. 2 linear feet. 19 photographs. Series outline. Editor and publisher of Catholic Digest. Clippings documenting Bussard's development of the Leaflet Missal (1929-1930), his reports from Europe (1947), and his participation in the Holy Year Press Flight (1950); correspondence, memoranda, reports, budgets, graphs, affadavits, depositions, pleadings, subpoenas, and clippings related to his suit against St. Thomas College and Catholic Digest, initiated in 1969 when the college, to which Bussard had given his stock in the magazine, removed him from his job as publisher; including legal files of Bussard's attorney, James R. McClure, and letters to and from Archbishop Leo Binz, Archbishop Leo C. Byrne, and Bishop James P. Shannon; manuscripts of Bussard's sermons on the collects of the Roman Missal and of his unpublished book The Case of the Catholic Digest; copies of his books Life and Death in the Philippines (New York: Vantage, 1978) and How to Get Ready to Die (Hicksville, NY: Exposition, 1978); and photographs. CBUS; GBUS 59 Butler, Paul M., (Paul Mulholland), 1905-1961. Papers, 1950-1960. 52 linear feet. 12 record albums. Folder list with index. Democrat, supporter of Adlai Stevenson, elected Indiana Committee man, 1952; member of the Executive Committee of the Democratic National Committee, 1953; Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, 1954-1960. Correspondence, voting records and fact sheets, proceedings, newspaper clippings, phonograph recordings, and other material relating to the Democratic Party and political life, principally between 1950-1960. Gift of Mrs. Anne Butler, widow of Paul M. Butler, 1962. CBUT; ABUT 60 Byrne, James E., 1945- . Papers, 1967-1973. 3 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Series description. Graduate of Notre Dame, 1968; co-founder and coordinator of the charismatic Christian community known as True House in South Bend, Indiana; director of the Communication Center of the International Conference of the Catholic Charismatic Renewal; and author of Threshold of God's Promise, 1971. Correspondence relating to the operation and mission of the True House community in South Bend and subject files including newsletters, minutes, community reports, and clippings of articles dealing with the Pentecostal movement. CJEB 61 Cadotte Family. Papers, 1783-1975. 1 volume. 9 linear inches. Wisconsin fur traders. Ledger containing records dating from 1773 to 1863; mostly financial accounts with a few notations concerning more personal matters; and related material, 1963-1975, including photostats of the ledger, drafts and the final copy of an English translation by Evan Hart and Elizabeth Hart Bennett, notes for the translation, periodicals containing articles dealing with the fur trade, and background information on Jean Baptiste Cadot. Elizabeth Hart Bennett, in cooperation with her brother Evan Hart, the historic site supervisor for the Minnesota State Historical Society (1963-1964), translated the Cadotte Family Account Book (1773-1863) held by the Archives of the University of Notre Dame. In French and English. CCAD 62 Callahan, Patrick Henry, 1866-1940. Papers, 1908-1939. 2 linear inches. Contractual restrictions may apply. Folder list. Varnish manufacturer and Catholic layman, active in social reform organizations including the Anti-Saloon League, Catholic Conference on Industrial Problems, Catholic Association for International Peace, and World Fellowships of Faiths. Chiefly mimeographed copies of letters, 1923-1939, involving Monsignor John A. Ryan, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Joseph Kennedy, Josephus Daniels, H.L. Mencken, and others; concerning such topics as Hitler, Father Coughlin, pacifism, anti-semitism, profit sharing, and religious tolerance; with a few autograph letters from Callahan to Frederick Kenkel of the Catholic Central Verein; and a paper by William E. Ellis, "Patrick Henry Callahan: A Kentucky Democrat in National Politics," 1976. CCLN 63 Cardinal, Edward V., (Edward Victor) 1897-1981. Papers, 1920-1969. 7 linear feet. 14 photographs. Ellis material restricted by contract. Folder list. Priest; professor of history, Viator College, Bourbonnais, Illinois, 1924-1929, and Loyola University, Chicago, 1938-1946; director of Sheil School, Chicago, 1946-1953; and Catholic spokesman for the National Conference of Christians and Jews (NCCJ), 1940s-1950s. Correspondence, 1941-1955; copies of letters from John Tracy Ellis, 1927-1970, and of a memoir by Ellis; sermons and writings by Cardinal; correspondence, minutes, and printed material from such organizations as NCCJ, 1940s-1950s, Catholic Youth Organization (CYO), 1943-1954, and Sheil School, 1943-1954; Cardinal's subject files concerning brotherhood (1930s-1960s), American Catholic history (1920s), youth, adult education, and Bishop Bernard Sheil; printed material on anti-semitism (1940s-1950s), the NCCJ (1940s-1950s), the Sheil School (1943-1954), and the CYO (1943-1954); transcriptions of the annual reports of Catholic Indian mission schools, 1820s-1840s; and photographs. CCRD; GCRD 64 Carey, Graham. Clippings, 1925-1931. 4 linear inches. Photocopies of clippings from British newspapers and journals, most of them by or about Hilaire Belloc, with a few about G.K. Chesterton, Lytton Strachey, and H.G. Wells, and a few by Arnold Bennett, J.B. Priestley, Alice Meynell, and other writers of their time; concerning Catholicism, fundamentalism, and English history and historiography; with reviews of Belloc's books, accounts of his lectures, and descriptions of his controversies. PCRY 65 Carey, Lewis J. (Lewis James). Transcripts of historic letters, 1785-1858. 38 items. Three John Paul Jones letters to Thomas Jefferson (that have been published in the Jefferson Papers); one Benjamin Franklin letter to John Langdon (25 October 1788) concerning abolition; and thirty-two letters (1826-1858) of Jonathan Knight to Nathan, Ann, and Abel Whealdon of Harrison and Morgan Counties, Ohio. There are also two Carey sketches among these papers, one of Knight, the other of a friend of Will S. Porter (O. Henry). Knight was a prominent civil engineer associated with the construction of the National Road and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and from 1855 to 1857 a Whig member of Congress. CZAD 66 Carrico, Joseph Leonard, 1881-1944. Papers, 1910-1936. 2 linear inches. Item list. University of Notre Dame professor of English, Director of Studies from 1929-1944. Letters from William Butler Yeats, A.E. Housman, Hilaire Belloc, Louise Imogen Guiney, Henry Austin Dobson, Maurice Francis Egan, Joyce Kilmer, Alice Meynell and others, many of them giving or refusing permission to use copyrighted material in A Book of Lines, an anthology of lyric poetry edited by Carrico (1913); manuscripts of essays and sermons; and information on a curriculum proposal in the College of Arts and Sciences. CCRE 67 Carrier, J. C. (Joseph Charles), 1833-1904. Papers, 1864-1872. 5 linear inches. Pastor of St. Patrick's Church in South Bend, Indiana; Civil War chaplain; professor of natural history; curator of the science museum at Notre Dame; president of St. Mary's College in Galveston, Texas, 1874-1876. Manuscripts of his translation of Ambroise Guillois's Explication Historique, Dogmatique, Morale, Liturgique, et Canonique du Cat‚chisme; one folder detailing his gift of foreign coins to the University; copies of reports on educational institutions of the Congregation of Holy Cross, 1872; and articles by Carrier concerning Catholic higher education, 1872. CCRI 68 Carroll, John J. (John Joseph), 1856-1916. Papers, 1884-1888. 2 linear inches. Folder list. Pastor of St. Thomas Parish, Chicago, Illinois. Manuscript book containing Carroll's sermons, 1884-1888, a list of Christmas offerings for St. Thomas Church, and the church financial statement, 1887. CCLL 69 Carroll, Patrick Joseph, 1875-1957. Papers, 1928-1937. 1.25 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Item list. President of Sacred Heart College, Wisconsin, 1904-1907, President of St. Edward's University, Austin, Texas, 1907-1910, professor of English at University of Notre Dame 1910-1913 and 1922-1941, editor of the Catholic weekly magazine The Ave Maria, 1934-1952. Correspondence concerning work for The Ave Maria, including letters to editor, Eugene P. Burke, CSC, letters from his readers expressing admiration for his writings, and correspondence from his first years as editor; with copies of some of his poems and two manuscript notebooks of poetry. CCRL 70 Casasanta, Joseph J., 1901-1968. Papers, 1928-1940. 8 items. Item list. Music teacher at the University of Notre Dame, 1920-1942; head of the Department of Music, 1927-1937. Letters, agreements, and memorabilia concerning Casasanta's Notre Dame fight songs. CZBS 71 Catholic Art Association. Records, 1937-1970. 7.5 linear feet. Contractual restrictions may apply. Folder list with index. Correspondence of CAA executive secretaries Ann Grill (1948-1955), Isabelle Mercer (1955-1967), and Maureen Murphy (1968-1975) with members, including Graham Carey, Ade Bethune, E.M. Catich, Thomas Phelan, Paul Furfey, Lavina Finin, William Finin, Edward Rice, and Esther Newport; annual reports (1958-1967) and minutes and meeting material from CAA meetings and conventions (1930s-1960s); articles by CAA members such as Carey and Bethune; drafts and revisions of CAA constitutions; copies of Highlights, a newsletter for high school students, and the CAA College Committee's Newsletter; correspondence and sample copies of publications of CAA-sponsored organizations for colleges and elementary schools (1930s-1950s); correspondence and programs from CAA traveling art exhibitions (1930s-1950s); and CAA-related printed material. CCAA 72 Catholic Central Verein of America. Records, 1826-1972 (bulk 1908-1952). 9 linear feet. 11 reels of microfilm. 7 linear feet of printed material. Contractual restrictions may apply. Inventory with index. A national union of Catholic lay societies founded in 1855. The original organization consisted almost entirely of societies serving German Catholic immigrants and their families. The Verein underwent a major reorganization ca. 1900, becoming a national association built upon state federations of Catholic societies, rather than having each local society hold direct membership in the national association. A permanent Central Bureau was established at St. Louis, Missouri, in 1908, with Frederick P. Kenkel as director. An affiliated National Catholic Women's Union (originally the Frauenbund) was established by 1916. The two organizations generally held joint conventions at both the national and state levels. The Verein and the Women's Union engaged in such activities as newspaper publishing, assisting German immigrants, providing aid to the sick, providing a form of life insurance for members, and assisting widows and orphans. The two organizations had lost most of their German character by the end of World War II, and eventually the Central Verein changed its name to the Central Union. Correspondence files from the Central Bureau, most of them involving Frederick P. Kenkel and dating from his term as director (1908-1952); concerning Central Verein business and Catholic topics of the day, including a large file on anti-Catholic speakers claiming to be ex-priests and nuns. Correspondents include John J. Cochran, Brother Joseph Dutton, Mary Filser Lohr, Joseph Matt, John Rothensteiner, and George Shuster, and many prominent German Catholics. Microfilm contains notes on early proposals for a Central Verein, ca. 1853; minutes of annual national conventions, 1855-1865, including treasurer's reports, corresponding secretary's reports, and resolutions; national convention programs, ca. 1888-1962; state convention programs, ca. 1896-1960; constitution and bylaws, 1895; constitutions of German Catholic benevolent societies; correspondence of Frederick P. Kenkel, 1938-1945; and a scrapbook from the 1937 Central Verein convention. Printed material consists largely of convention material (programs, proceedings, and official reports of national and state conferences) with material from every national convention from 1893 through 1967, except for 1902, 1907, 1915, 1965, and 1966. Programs generally contain greetings to the delegates from dignitaries of the host city, histories of host cities and parishes in host cities, histories of the national or state Verein, statements from national or state officers, a schedule of convention events, letters from church dignitaries, lists of officers, lists of delegates, lists of organizing committee members and sponsors, and advertisements. Also Social Justice Review (1963-1980) and a card index to Social Justice Review (1908-1955). In German and English. CCCV; MCCV; PCCV 73 Catholic Church. Synods, 1829-1963. 1.75 linear feet. In the Catholic Church, a diocesan synod is a convocation of vicars, abbots, canons, religious superiors, seminary rectors, and prominent priests of a diocese brought together by the bishop to discuss problems and policies, formulate regulations, and propose legislation. Lay people may also be invited. Members of a synod vote on measures proposed, but the synod has only consultative power; the bishop must ratify whatever the synod recommends before it becomes law. Proceedings, statutes, acts, decrees, and constitutions of diocesan and provincial synods of Little Rock, Denver, Wilmington, Savannah, Alton, Chicago, Springfield, Fort Wayne, Vincennes, Kansas City, Leavenworth, Louisville, Baltimore, Boston, Fall River, Crookston, Duluth, Natchez, Kansas City, St. Joseph, St. Louis, Omaha, Newark, New York, Rochester, Syracuse, Cincinnati, Oklahoma, Oregon City, Altoona, Erie, Harrisburg, Philadelphia, Richmond, Nesqually, and Superior. Also synod material from dioceses in England (Westminster), Scotland (Edinburgh), and India (Patna). Other collections in the Archives of the University of Notre Dame contain synod material from dioceses of Belleville, Evansville, Indianapolis, Lafayette, Covington, Owensboro, Detroit, St. Cloud, Lincoln, Trenton, Buffalo, Bismark, Fargo, Cincinnati, Toledo, Portland, Providence, Nashville, LaCrosse, and Madison, and from dioceses in Ireland. PSYN 74 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Baltimore (Md.) Collection, 1717-1960 (bulk 1800-1899). 3 linear feet. 42 reels of microfilm. Item list. Until 1808, the Diocese of Baltimore encompassed all of the United States. In 1808, with the establishment of the Dioceses of Boston, Bardstown, and Philadelphia, Baltimore became the first archdiocese in the United States. Its archbishop had metropolitan authority over other dioceses until 1846. Although the Diocese of Richmond was established in 1820, it had no bishop from 1822 until 1841; the Archbishop of Baltimore served as its administrator. Correspondence and copies of correspondence, including three autographs of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, several autographs of Archbishop John Carroll, and correspondence of Bishop John Cheverus of Boston, Bishop Michael Egan of Philadelphia, Daniel Brent, John Carroll Brent, and Howes Goldsborough of Easton, Maryland; diary of Archbishop Ambrose Mar‚chal, 1818-1827; diary and account book of Archbishop James Whitfield, 1827-1828; clippings and related material. Also microfilm of the correspondence of Archbishops John Carroll, Leonard Neale, Ambrose Mar‚chal, James Whitfield, Samuel Eccleston, Francis Patrick Kenrick, Martin John Spalding, James Roosevelt Bayley, and James Cardinal Gibbons; with letters from Stephen T. Badin, Peter Joseph Lavialle, William George McCloskey, Charles Nerinckx, and John Baptist David. Some of the correspondence from the Baltimore Cathedral Archives is available not only on microfilm but also in the form of photocopies; some of this correspondence is also available in typewritten transcripts. Originals acquired by James Edwards from 1860 to 1900; transcripts and copies acquired at various times between 1870 and 1960; the microfilm was acquired circa 1962 from the Baltimore Cathedral Archives. CABA; MABA; CZCC 75 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Boston (Mass.) Collection, 1817-1952. 2.5 linear inches. Preliminary item list. Established in 1808 as a suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, it included all of New England until 1875, when it became an archdiocese with metropolitan authority over other dioceses in the province of New England. Correspondence, including original letters and photostats from the Archdiocesan Archives of Boston and the National Archives. Correspondents include missionary priests Stephen Theodore Badin and John Thayer; Jean Lefebvre de Cheverus, first bishop of Boston, and Benedict Joseph Fenwick, second bishop of Boston; and Joseph M. Finotti, collector of Catholic Americana. Also records of the Tabernacle Society of the Convent of Notre-Dame, Berkeley Street, Boston (1898-1906) consisting of correspondence of Lillian Westervelt concerning vestments for churches and priests throughout New England; material concerning Bishop David William Bacon of Portland, Maine; clippings, articles, pamphlets, and pictures. Collection was begun by James Edwards. Some material (circa 1952) was a gift of William John Guerney. CABO 76 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Chicago (Illinois). Collection, 1845-1974 (bulk 1849-1901) 1 linear foot Diocese created in 1843 with William Quarter as its first bishop. Quarter was succeeded in 1848 by James Oliver Van de Velde; in 1854 by Anthony O'Regan; in 1859 by James Duggan and Thomas P. Foley, who served as coadjutor to the mentally incapacitated Duggan from 1870-79. Chicago was then raised to an archiepiscopal see and Patrick A. Feehan was consecrated archbishop in 1880. Feehan's successors in the 20th century were James Edward Quigley (1903-1915), George William Mundelein (1916-1939), Samuel Alphonsus Stritch (1940-1946), Albert Gregory Meyer (1946-1965), John P. Cody (1966-1982) and Joseph Bernardin (1982- ). Occasional letters from Bishops Quarter, Van de Velde, O'Regan, Duggan, Foley, Feehan, and Quigley, and from Auxiliary Bishop Alexander J. McGavick and Bishop John McMullen, vicar general (1877-1879) and administrator (1879-1880) of the diocese; manuscripts by Bishop O'Regan, including a sermon on Immaculate Conception and a Biblical exegesis; and photostats of letters from Chicago received by Edward Sorin, CSC. Also pamphlets, parish histories, clippings, and material on the Catholic contribution to the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893. Collection was begun by James Edwards in the 1890s. Photostats of the letters to Edward Sorin are from the Provincial Archives. The O'Regan exegesis was a gift of James J. McGovern. CACH 77 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Detroit (Mich.) Collection, 1797-1870. 3 linear feet. Calendar of correspondence. Contractual restrictions may apply. Established in 1833, the diocese included territory presently covered by the states of Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin, and the parts of North and South Dakota east of the Mississippi. It became an archdiocese in 1937, with metropolitan authority over the Province of Michigan, including the Dioceses of Grand Rapids, Marquette, Lansing, and (in 1938) Saginaw. Correspondence of Rev. Gabriel Richard, co-founder and vice-president of the University of Michigan and U.S. Representative from Michigan; of Frederic Baraga, missionary to the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan and later bishop of Marquette, Michigan; and of Bishops Frederic R‚s‚, Peter Paul Lefevre, and Caspar Henry Borgess. Other correspondents include the missionary Rev. Francis Xavier Pierz; the civic leader Rev. Martin Kundig; Rev. Edward Sorin, founder of the University of Notre Dame; Indian chiefs and petitioners; priests of the diocese and members of the American hierarchy. Also a baptismal and matrimonial register (1833-1841) of a missionary of Eastern Michigan, the Rev. Ghislain Boheme; an account book of the Huron Mission of Detroit (1733-1751); an Indian prayer book (13 January 1820); an obituary register (1863-1865), possibly of Bertrand Cemetery; papers concerning St. Ann's Parish, Detroit; photostats of papers and correspondence of Gabriel Richard; transcriptions of letters from Frederic Baraga to his sister Amalia and photostats of baptismal records of his mission at St. Joseph (1835-1854); letters from Edward Sorin to Bishop Lefevre; transcriptions of records of the American Fur Company (1835-1847); and clippings, photographs and pamphlets dealing mainly with the early history of Detroit. Father Pierz's letters from this collection are included on a microfilm (one reel) of Pierz papers held by the Notre Dame Archives. CDET 78 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Dubuque (Iowa). Collection, 1843-[1936]. 1 linear inch. Item list. The Diocese of Dubuque was erected in 1837 with Jean Mathias Peter Loras as first bishop, succeeded by T. Clement Smyth in 1857 and John Hennessy in 1866. Letters sent by Bishops Loras and Hennessy; manuscripts of lectures by Bishop Loras; drawings of saints for the Dubuque Cathedral; and Denkschrift of Adam Handl, Richmond (Washington County), Iowa, 1861. In English and German. CADU 79 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Louisville (Ky.) Records, 1808-1961 (bulk 1870-1905). 12 linear feet. 8 reels of microfilm. Inventory. Erected in 1808 as the Diocese of Bardstown, a suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, with Benedict Joseph Flaget as the first bishop. The see was transferred to Louisville in 1841. Martin John Spalding became coadjutor bishop in 1848 and succeeded to the episcopate in 1850 and served in that position until 1864, when he became Archbishop of Baltimore. His brother, vicar general Benedict J. Spalding, served as administrator until the third bishop, Peter Joseph Lavialle, was consecrated in 1865. William George McCloskey served as fourth bishop (1868-1909), with John Lancaster Spalding as his secretary and later chancellor (1868-1872) and Michael Bouchet as his vicar general (1871-1903). Denis O'Donaghue served as fifth bishop (1910-1924) and John A. Floersh as sixth bishop (1924-1937) and first archbishop (1937-1967). (The diocese became an archdiocese in 1937.) Thomas McDonough served as second archbishop (1967-1981) and Thomas C. Kelly as third. Chiefly correspondence files of Michael Bouchet acting in his capacity as vicar general (1871-1903), including many letters addressed to Bishop McCloskey, who referred them to Bouchet for action. Also receipts and accounts of purchases (1840-1919); legal records and property deeds (1798-1914); parish records and surveys (1879-1832); case files on clergy and religious of the diocese (1880-1904); records of marriage cases, annulments, and dispensations (1887-1907); and subject files, including correspondence with the Congregatio de Propaganda Fide in the Vatican (1817-1838), diocesan documents (1810-1861), correspondence of priests and other Catholics during the early years of the diocese, documents regarding the history of the diocese, reports of societies in the diocese, undated sermons, and other documents of the daily operations of the diocese and its priests and bishops. Correspondents include bishops Simon Brut‚, Guy Ignatius Chabrat, Benedict Joseph Flaget, John Louis de Cheverus, John Lancaster Spalding, Martin John Spalding, Joseph Macheboeuf, Peter Joseph Lavialle, and William George McCloskey; Benedict Joseph Spalding and other members of the Spalding family; and Trappists of the Abbey of Gethsemani; with a diary of Bishop Flaget (1813?), photocopies of letters from Bishop Flaget to St. Sulpice Seminary in Paris (1808-1858), lectures and a thesis of Martin John Spalding, records of subscribers to the Louisville Cathedral (1849) and Rev. Stephen T. Badin's will. Microfilm contains a diary (1815) and a letterbook (1828-1837) of Bishop Flaget, an account book of Bishop Chabrat (1835-1836), records of St. Francis Xavier Church in Marion County, Kentucky (1846-1912), a list of priests ordained by Bishop John Floersch (1923-1962), letters from priests of the diocese to Rev. Louis Deppen, editor of the Louisville Record, providing autobiographical information to be used in obituaries (1915), and other letters from bishops and priests of the diocese. In English, French, and Latin. Flaget's letterbook and records of St. Francis Xavier Church filmed by the Microfilm Center at the University of Kentucky. Bouchet's files and some other material collected and filmed by Francis P. Clark. CDBL; MDBL 80 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of New Orleans (La.) Collection, 1576-1897 (bulk 1786-1897). 34 linear feet. Established in 1793 as the Diocese of Louisiana and the Floridas, it took in all the territory from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic Ocean and from Canada to the Gulf of Mexico except the territory of the Diocese of Baltimore (i.e., territory belonging to the United States). Before 1793 Louisiana had been under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Santiago de Cuba, before 1762 under the authority of the Diocese of Quebec. Chiefly papers of bishops Luis Penalver y Cardenas, 1793-1810; Louis Guillaume-Valentin Dubourg, 1815-1826; Joseph Rosati, CM, apostolic administrator, 1827-1829; Leo Raymond de NeckŠre, 1829-1833; Anthony Blanc, 1835-1860; Jean Marie Odin, 1861-1870; Napol‚on J. Perch‚, 1870-1883; Francis X. Leray, 1883-1887; and Francis Janssens, 1888-1897. Other correspondents include the Capuchin bishop, Cyril Antonio Sieni, better known as Bishop Cyril of Barcelona, who was the first resident bishop to have jurisdiction over Louisiana, 1784-1793; Rev. Thomas Hassett, administrator of Louisiana, 1801-1803; Father Antonio de Sedella, auxiliary vicar and pastor of the parish of St. Louis, New Orleans, who was a leader in the power disputes that plagued the new diocese in the first years of the nineteenth century; and Frederick Lacheze of Guadelope, West Indies (1820s and 1830s). Also a microfilm copy of a diary kept by Archbishop Jean Marie Odin. A microfilm edition (12 reels) of the records of the Diocese of Louisiana and the Floridas (1576-1803) with an accompanying guide has been published by the University of Notre Dame Archives (1967). Gift of Francis Janssens, Archbishop of New Orleans, in the 1890s. CANO; MANO 81 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Philadelphia (Pa.) Collection, 1793-1889. 1 linear foot. 2 linear inches of printed material. Item lists. The diocese of Philadelphia was created in 1808 with Michael Egan, OFM, pastor of St. Mary's Church, as the first bishop. A controversy over trusteeism had embroiled St. Mary's parish since 1796 and would continue to mar the episcopacies of Egan (1810-1814), Henry Conwell (1820-1830), and Francis Patrick Kenrick (1830-1851). Before it was raised to an archiepiscopal see, John Nepomucene Neumann served as its fourth (1852-1860) and James Frederick Wood as its fifth (1860-1875) bishop. Wood served as first archbishop of the metropolitan see (which covered the entire state of Pennsylvania) until his death. Patrick J. Ryan, coadjutor bishop of St. Louis, succeeded Wood (1884-1911). Letters, pamphlets, clippings and manuscripts of speeches and sermons, with material concerning a riot in 1844 over the version of the Bible to be used in public schools, the Eucharistic Convention held in Philadelphia in 1899 sponsored by the Priests' Eucharistic League, and the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia. Correspondents include the prelates of the diocese in the 19th century and laymen. Also typed copies and photostats of German letters, 1891-1892, from Msgr. Joseph Schroeder, professor of Dogmatic Theology, Catholic University, to Father Herman Joseph Heuser, professor at St. Charles Seminary, Overbrook, Pennsylvania, assistant editor of the American Catholic Quarterly Review; manuscript drafts of speeches and sermons by Archbishop Ryan; and a manuscript copy of Bishop Henry Conwell's summons to Rome. Several items were gifts from Mr. Frank Reuss and Bishop Ignatius Horstmann to James Edwards. In English and German. CAPH; MAPH; PAPH 82 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Saint Louis (Mo.) Collection, 1764-1912. 1 linear foot. 23 reels of microfilm. Item list. Permission to publish any letters or other historical data contained on the microfilms must be obtained in writing from the Archivist of the Archdiocese of St. Louis. An index to the Diocesan Archives of St. Louis, most of which was filmed in 1966, may be found in the St. Louis Historical Review, vol. I no. 1, October 1918, pp. 24-39. The Sulpician Louis William Valentine Dubourg, who had been the administrator of the Louisiana Territory since 1812, was named Bishop of Louisiana in 1815. Joseph Rosati was consecrated his coadjutor in 1825. When Dubourg resigned in 1826, the diocese was divided into the dioceses of New Orleans and St. Louis with Rosati as first bishop of St. Louis. Peter Richard Kenrick was named Rosati's coadjutor in 1841, and succeeded him in 1843 to begin a 52-year term as bishop and archbishop. (St. Louis was elevated to an archiepiscopal see in 1847). Upon Kenrick's return from attending Vatican Council I (1869-1870) where he had voiced strong opposition to the doctrine of papal infallibility, he went into seclusion leaving diocesan affairs in the hands of his coadjutor, Patrick John Ryan. When Ryan was named archbishop of Philadelphia in 1884, Kenrick resumed full control of the diocese. In 1893 Bishop John Joseph Kain of Wheeling, West Virginia, was named coadjutor and succeeded Kenrick in 1896. Letters of the Vincentian Provincial John Timon to Joseph Rosati, 1822-1839, and letters, 1841-1842, from Pierre Jean De Smet, SJ, missionary to the Indians, to his religious superiors; pamphlets and papers concerning the St. Louis World Fair of 1904; clippings about Bishop Kenrick's Golden Jubilee, 1891; and photostats of transcripts of letters, mostly to Rosati, from Simon Brut‚, Gabriel Richard, Stephen T. Badin, and others. On microfilm: nineteen reels of diocesan correspondence involving Dubourg, Rosati, Kenrick, and Kain, priests and laymen of the diocese, and many members of the American hierarchy, with records of synod and council meetings; one reel concerning the Sisters of Loretto, mostly material in the 1820s and 1830s; and three reels of historical material collected by Henry van der Sanden (d. 1910), Chancellor of the Archdiocese of St. Louis and diocesan historian. Archives of the Diocese of St. Louis. Some items were gifts of Sister M. Lilliana Owens, S.L. Films were made of the diocesan records by Francis P. Clark in 1966. CASL; MASL 83 Catholic Church. Archdiocese of Westminster (London, England). Collection, 1580-1828. 3 reels of microfilm. Item list. Letters, pamphlets, and documents dealing with Catholicism, religion, and government in the English colonies of North America and in the United States; with notations of volume, number, and page of the location in the Archives of the Archdiocese of Westminster. Source: Archives of the Archdiocese of Westminster and Library of Congress. MDWE 84 Catholic Church. Congregatio de Propaganda Fide. Records, 1622-1903. 152 reels of microfilm. Between 1966 and 1987 the Academy of American Franciscan History published United States Documents in the Propaganda Fide Archives, a calendar in eleven volumes covering 1673 to 1892. Researchers in the University of Notre Dame Archives may also use a less detailed calendar of later material. The Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith had control over all Roman Catholic missionary activity from the time of its foundation by Gregory XV in 1622. It had authority over the Catholic Church in the United States until 1908. It consisted of a Cardinal Prefect and other cardinals appointed by the pope. They held a regular monthly meeting and formed commissions to deal with particular problems. In weekly meetings the Cardinal Prefect and the Secretary of the Congregation dealt with routine matters. Every two months the pope met with members of the congregation to answer questions that required his authority. Records pertaining to the United States and territories that became part of it; consisting of decisions and decrees of the Congregation, correspondence with interested parties (often bishops and priests in the United States), and papers consulted or generated in monthly and weekly meetings, in audiences with the pope, or in meetings of commissions. In Latin, Italian, French, and English. MPRF 85 Catholic Church. Diocese of Alton (Illinois). Collection, 1870-1881. 2 folde