Bruce Dwyer collection, 1921-1923
1 folder
The Bruce Dwyer collection consists of collected student life ephemera relating to Edgar Samuel Bacon, a student who enrolled in the University of Michigan in 1921.
1 folder
The Bruce Dwyer collection consists of collected student life ephemera relating to Edgar Samuel Bacon, a student who enrolled in the University of Michigan in 1921.
10 linear feet
The Bryant Walker collection consists largely of correspondence from throughout the world with conchologists. There are, in addition, his manuscripts of his writings, various lists, charts, and inventories, and miscellaneous family materials and a University of Michigan student notebook of a class on physics.
0.6 linear feet (2 boxes)
Correspondence and miscellaneous business papers including Civil War letters exchanged between John C. Buchanan and his wife, Sophia Bingham Buchanan, while he was serving as first lieutenant in Co. D. of the 8th Michigan Infantry. Many of the letters are almost sermons and philosophical essays about his home and family, religion, his country and the war and its leaders. Others are detailed descriptions of camps and camp life, such as Seabrook plantation in South Carolina and its Negroes, James Island and its reptiles; his quarters and food; sea transports; marches, skirmishes and battles with the Army of the Potomac in the Maryland campaign and around Fredericksburg. The collection also includes letters from Claude Buchanan while he was a student at the University of Michigan; letters (1847-1858) of J. Irwin Beaumont of Mississippi and Minnesota to Angie Bingham (Gilbert); notebooks, speeches, business papers, and a diary of a trip to the South in 1884 made by Claude Buchanan.
0.7 linear feet — 1 oversize folder
The Buckbee Family Papers includes a variety of material but is most significant for its documentation of the Civil War service of Julian E. Buckbee and for the many letters exchanged with his sons Henry Cheever and Julian Edward, Jr., who served in the military during the Spanish-American War. These later letters provide a unique look into daily life during the war and at home in Illinois at the turn of the century. The letters contain both original and photocopied letters, along with transcriptions, to and from Julian Edward Jr. and Henry Cheever Buckbee during their service from April to September 1898. The photocopies all have matching original letters except for letter dated August 21, 1898, and those that were small notes probably sent with packages.
Other files in the collection include newspaper articles, genealogical information, and other various materials related to the Buckbee family from 1859 to 1999; photographs (duplicates and originals) of family members, scenes from the Spanish-American War, and of the family-owned Winnetka Inn located in Winnetka, Illinois; various letters to and from Julian Edward Buckbee Sr., military documents, and other materials relating to E.J. Buckbee's service in the Civil War; and later family papers which include reminiscences of Julian Buckbee Sr., and letters from Cheever D. Buckbee during his military service in 1942. There are also letters of William L. Church written during the Civil War and relating to his visits to various Illinois regiments. Of special note is a letter he received from Colonel William Gamble describing the operation of Illinois troops at the Battle of Gettysburg.
3 microfilms (1 linear foot)
The Buck family collection includes correspondence, diaries, legal papers, newspaper clippings, and other materials relating to farm life, personal affairs, and the Civil War. Included are letters of Curtis Buck and Andrew Buck relating to the Civil War. Also of interest is a letter of John Bettis, June 10, 1864, regarding his running a saw and grist mill in Chattanooga during the war. Other family members represented in the collection are Charles W. Buck and Myron and Susan Field Buck.
The Budget series, 1926-1980 (1 linear foot), is arranged chronologically and contains budget requests and supporting information for the museum. Generally, there is one folder per fiscal year, through some early years have been filed together. The files include some personnel information about staff salaries and activities.
2 linear feet
The Budgets series (2 linear foot) is arranged chronologically (1962-1993) and is comprised mostly of budget sheets and correspondence. The materials can be used to study projects undertaken, staffing changes, and how CRLT reacted to the budget cuts of the early 1980s. In addition, the files are one of the few sources of information on the first ten years of the center's existence. [Box 1, 15]
The Buell Family series (.25 linear feet) contains information gathered from family members, newspaper and other articles, and information drawn from county/town records on the history of the Buell family in England, Connecticut and Michigan. A manuscript on the history of the Buell family in Michigan, written by the donor of the collection, can be found in the folder: Manuscript: "Fathers and Sons: An American Story."