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Kelsey Museum of Archaeology records, 1890-2001
132 linear feet (in 245 boxes)
The Kelsey Museum of Archaeology records document the administration of the museum from its founding in 1929 and the research and field activities of University of Michigan archaeologists and classical scholars dating back to 1890. The material consists of files of Kelsey Museum director's and curator's and University of Michigan scholars closely associated with the museum or active in archaeological work prior to the museum's founding. The papers include extensive correspondence files; field notebooks, maps, photographs, reports, and other research material from archaeological expeditions; drafts of articles and books; teaching material; and administrative records
The Kelsey Museum of Archaeology records have been treated and described here as a single collection divided into a number of subgroups. In the collection guide prepared by the Kelsey Museum, these subgroups were treated as individual collections, each with a separate finding aid and box numbering sequence beginning at one. The largest subgroup by far is the Francis Willey Kelsey papers, totaling 66.5 linear feet. Artifacts from excavations conducted by Kelsey formed the basis of the Museum's collection.
Papers Kelsey Box # Arthur E.R. Boak 1-3 Campbell Bonner 1 Orma Fitch Butler 1-24 Inst. of Archaeological Research 1-7 Thomas Jerome Spencer 1-20 Francis Willey Kelsey 1-156 Kelsey Museum 1-5 Robert H. McDowell 1 Enoch Ernest Peterson 1-8 217-224 Louise Adele Shier 1-9 John Garrett Winter 1 Carthage Excavations 1-15
Topical Files
Papers, 1920-1962 of Arthur Edward Romilly Boak, Professor of History at the University of Michigan (1914-1958); Henry Russell Lecturer, 1949-1950; Jerome Lecturer, 1951-1952; member of the University of Michigan Expedition to Karanis, 1924-1925 and 19311932; scholar in the field of Ancient History; Fellow of the International Institute of Arts and Letters and member of numerous other scholarly societies; author or co-author of eleven books; includes letters, notes, maps, focusing on the archaeological expeditions to Karanis, Dimé and Seleucia; Boak's involvement with the Institute of Archaeological Research; "Historiae" notes and illustrations for his book on World History: correspondence with Francis Kelsey on the papyri: and research notes and photographs of the papyri used in preparation of his article "The Building of the University of Michigan Papyrus Collection", published in 1959.