Search Results
Alfred J. Kahn Papers, 1919-2009
11.76 linear feetDorothy Hutchinson papers, 1943-1955+
4 boxesCase records, notes and outlines for courses, notes for papers presented at conferences, and printed material. Dorothy Hutchinson was involved in the areas of adoption, foster parents, and unwed mothers.
Eduard Lindeman papers, 1911-1953
18 boxesPapers and manuscripts of Eduard Christian Lindeman.
Eveline Mabel Richardson Burns papers, 1930-1985
41.5 linear feetFred Berl papers, 1913-1981, bulk 1944-1981
6 linear feetCorrespondence, manuscripts, biographical and printed materials. The first series contains a small amount of personal and professional correspondence from the 1940s to 1970s, manuscripts of poetry and of theses and research papers from Berl's graduate studies at Leipzig and Columbia, biographical materials including photographs, reminiscences by and about Berl, and a few documents from his early years in Germany. The second and larger series includes papers which were posthumously arranged for publication by Susan Leibtag. The bulk of these writings are on topics related to psychology and social welfare, with a small number on philosophy and on Jewish identity as it relates to social work.
Gertrude Vaile papers, 1892-1954
1.67 linear feetThe collection covers Vaile's career from her days as a social worker in Chicago and Denver through her teaching positions. Included in the collection are teaching outlines, correspondence, printed material, and some typescripts of Vaile's writings.
Jessie Taft papers, 1888-1961, bulk 1920-1961
1.5 linear feetCorrespondence with friends and patients, manuscripts and printed copies of Taft's many scholarly articles, notes for the courses which she taught, and case histories of some of her patients. Correspondents include James R. Angell, Ruth Benedict, and Karen Horney.
Marion E. Kenworthy Papers, 1915-1980
14 Linear FeetCorrespondence, manuscripts, memoranda, awards, photographs, clippings, and other printed materials of Kenworthy. These materials deal mostly with her academic career, her work as a consultant, especially as a member of the National Civilian Advisory Commission of the Women's Army Corps during World War II, and the endowment of a Professorial Chair of Psychiatry in her name at the Columbia University School of Social Work in 1956. Among the cataloged correspondents are Dwight D. Eisenhower, Herbert H. Lehman, Karl A. Menninger, and Eleanor Roosevelt.