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Folder

Personal

Online

The Personal series (2.2 linear feet, 1 oversize box, and digital files; 1922-2012) contains information about Stanford Ovshinsky's life outside of work. This includes a wide variety of documents, beginning with his birth certificate, high school materials, and photographs from his childhood and marriage to his first wife Norma. A copy of Ovshinsky's FBI file, which he requested through the Freedom of Information and Privacy Act (FOIPA), is also available in this section, along with documents and correspondence demonstrating his political leanings and involvement. Family communication and financial records, a love letter from Iris Ovshinsky and the couple's marriage certificate, a book of remembrances from Ovshinsky's 80th birthday, his early efforts at poetry, selected excerpts from works about Ovshinsky's life, and his autobiographical drafts also appear in this series.

Folder

Personal

Online

The Personal series (0.1 linear feet, 57.4 MB) contains various items relating to Hugh Acton as a designer including: magazine and newspaper articles written about Acton, Acton's self-written personal histories and resumes, product lists of Acton's works, photographs of Acton, a photograph of Acton's work studio, and legal documents concerning the Acton Stacker. The collection also includes the video featuring Acton, "Time With an Artist", produced by the Nora Modern furniture company in 2014.

Folder

Personal Files

Online

The Personal files series (0.6 linear feet, 1948-2015 with gaps) consists of two groupings: Childhood and High School. The Childhood group includes photographs, correspondence, an ephemera collection of monster movie ads, diaries, and samples of Ovshinsky's earliest writing and first newsletters. The High School group contains memorabilia from Ovshinsky's high school years, including photographs, personal writings, an independent literary magazine, and yearbooks. Folders in this series include Ovshinsky's own reflections on his childhood and adolescence. The series also contains Ovshinsky's preface to the collection, contained in a file labeled "Inventory and backstories." This file provides Ovshinsky's description of the contents of the collection and a detailed account of his life experiences from his perspective in 2015. However, although the order of materials remains the same, the box numbers indicated in Ovshinsky's description are obsolete; please refer to the contents list below to locate files.

Folder

Personal Files

Online

The Personal Files series (0.75 linear feet) includes records related to. Turcotte's personal life and career. Material includes awards and honors received by Turcotte, records relating to various societies and organizations he was a member of, and his professional activity, including his Curriculum Vitae, which includes both a paper and a digital copy. The series also includes a transcript of an interview with the Center for the History of Medicine, which contains extensive biographical information. A digital copy of the transcript is also included.

Folder

Personal Papers

Online

The Personal Papers series reflects aspects of Claudius Grant's military, professional, and personal lives. It includes a multi-volume diary written while serving in Co. D, 20th Michigan Infantry in the Civil War (1862-1865) and which documents daily activities in camp and on the march; comments on drunken officers; a criticism of Colonel A. W. Williams; accounts of the sieges of Knoxville and Petersburg and of the battles fought during May and June in 1864, especially the battle of the Wilderness. The series also includes correspondence (mainly with Grant's mother and wife) while he was a student at University of Michigan and during the Civil War. ASmong other topics, these letters explain the resolutions asking for the resignation of Colonel Williams; describe a march through Kentucky and the battle before Petersburg. Other highlights include letters to William H. Pettee (Dec. 6, 1880) concerning the establishment of a school of mines at the University and Harry B. Hutchins (Sept. 18, 1905) discussing the relative merits of the Michigan Union and Alumni Also included is a paper (Oct. 18, 1899) on the Battle of Horseshoe Bend.; letter, Dec. 6, 1880, to William H. Pettee concerning the establishment of a school of mines at the University; letter, Sept. 18, 1905, to Harry B. Hutchins discussing the relative merits of the Michigan Union and Alumni Memorial building projects. The series also includes some miscellaneous deeds as well as a paper (Oct. 18, 1899) on the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in Kentucky during the Civil War.

Folder

Personal papers

Box 1
Online

The Personal papers series includes genealogical information, correspondence, personal diaries, photographs, military records, and other materials.

Griffin's correspondence--primarily with his wife and father, Samuel H. Griffin--includes an 1849 letter concerning a trip to the California gold fields; letters from an 1860 journey from St. Joseph, Missouri, to the gold fields of Pikes Peak, Colorado; and 133 letters to relatives and friends from 1861-1864 written while he was an officer in the Union army from 1861-1864. Much of this correspondence was concerned with home affairs, but they also express admiration for the men in his company and criticism of the officers and of the political intrigues in company promotions. There is a good account of a march and skirmishes in the swamps of Louisiana along the railroad with camps among the alligators and mosquitoes, a description of Ship Island and its sickness and hardships, and reports of the fall of New Orleans, the battles of Baton Rouge, Port Hudson and those on the march with Sherman. Letters from McMinnville, Tenn. tell of the building of a bridge and fortifications and of the friendly relations between himself and the Michigan troops and the people of the area. There are also letters on Griffin's fatal wounding; letter, 1836, of Isaac Griffin describing life in the Niles area; a letter by his son Edwin C. in which he describes the Grand Army of the Republic convention held in Detroit, 1882. Correspondents include John Bennett, Isaac Griffin, Paschal A. Pullman, Lucius M. Wing, and John Woodruff.

Griffin's diaries also provide first-hand reports of his experiences before and during the Civil War. The 1853 volume details his time in California gold fields; the 1856 volume details a trip from Council Bluffs, Iowa to Salt Lake City, Utah; and a brief 1859 volume documents his journey from St. Joseph, Missouri to Pikes Peak, Colorado. The remaining two diaries provide a window into Griffin's experiences with the Union Army, giving good descriptions of troop movements, conditions in the army and countryside, and observations on the commands under which he served. The 1862 diary describes the Mississippi campaign under General Butler in which Griffin was a captain in Company A, 6th Michigan Infantry. The 1864 diary tells of Sherman's Georgia campaign in which Griffin was killed as a lieutenant colonel in the 19th Michigan Infantry.

The series also includes military and civilian records such as commissions, resolutions, and miscellaneous items in addition to photographs of Griffin (in uniform) and of his father, Samuel H. Griffin.