Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Dates:
-
1989-1994
- Size:
-
0.5 cu. ft. (1 document box)
- Collection ID:
- Accession 94-121
- Repository:
-
Smithsonian Institution Archives
These records document efforts to preserve the Moenjodaro cultural site on the Indus River in Pakistan, especially the 14th meeting of the International Consultative Committee on Moenjodaro in November 1993. The work seems to have been largely a project of the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Records include correspondence, art...
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Smithsonian Institution. Assistant Secretary for Museum Programs
- Dates:
-
1972-1986, with related records from 1879-1899 and 1965-1976
- Size:
-
163.32 cu. ft. (160 record storage boxes) (2 document boxes) (1 12x17 box) (34 oversize folders)
- Collection ID:
- Record Unit 342
- Repository:
-
Smithsonian Institution Archives
This record unit documents the work of the assistant secretary for Museum Programs. The office directed the operations of the Conservation Analytical Laboratory, Office of Exhibits Central, Office of the Registrar, the Smithsonian Institution Archives, Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, and the Institution's functions under ...
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Hough, Halley Brewster Savery
- Dates:
-
1940-1941
- Size:
-
270 Items ((on partial microfilm reel))
- Collection ID:
- AAA.houghall
- Repository:
-
Archives of American Art
Correspondence, press releases, and miscellaneous publications, chiefly relating to Savery's work as chairman of Art Week and related activities with the National Council for Art Week in Washington state.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
National Congress of American Indians
- Dates:
-
1952-1997
- Size:
-
24 Videoreels (1/2 inch)
1 Videocassettes (Hi8)
3 Sound cartridges
1 Sound recording (dictaphone belt)
10 Videocassettes (VHS)
442 Sound tape reels (1/4" open reel)
30 Videocassettes (U-matic)
713 Sound cassettes
- Collection ID:
- NMAI.AC.010.001
- Repository:
-
National Museum of the American Indian
The National Congress of America Indians (NCAI), which describes itself as the oldest and largest American Indian and Alaskan Native organization in the United States, was founded on November 16, 1944, in Denver, CO and is still active today. NCAI was founded to serve as a link between individual tribal councils and the United States government but also aimed to educate the general public about Indians, preserve Indian cultural values, protect treaty rights with the United States, and promote Indian welfare. This collection of National Congress of America Indians Audio and Film Recordings contains materials created by and for NCAI to maintain a record of organizational proceedings and events between 1952 and 1997. Recorded in various formats, the bulk of this collection is on 1/4" open reel to reel tapes and sound cassettes. The events represented in this collection include annual and mid-year conventions, executive council meetings, congressional hearings, intertribal institutes and a variety of workshops and meetings regarding economic, civil and educational issues facing indian country.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Smith, Gordon R.
- Dates:
-
1994
- Size:
-
0.1 Cubic feet (1 box, 7 items)
- Collection ID:
- NMAH.AC.0700
- Repository:
-
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Photographs from a project entitled "Kentucky Coal Country," in which photographer Gordon Smith concentrates on economic and social factors in Kentucky. The photographs document poverty, erosion of the land through strip mining, and other harsh realities in Kentucky.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Dates:
-
1942-1946
- Size:
-
16.5 cu. ft. (2 record storage boxes) (29 document boxes)
- Collection ID:
- Record Unit 87
- Repository:
-
Smithsonian Institution Archives
This collection includes records concerning the Board's projects, general correspondence, committee and organization work and information concerning specialized data and special subjects. Postwar regional administration records, geographic reports, country information files, photographs and uncompleted project records are also included, a...
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Medicine, Beatrice
- Dates:
-
1914, 1932-1949, 1952-2003 (bulk dates, 1945-2003).
- Size:
-
28 Linear feet (65 document boxes, 1 box of oversize materials, 1 box of ephemera, 1 shoebox of index cards, 1 map drawer)
- Collection ID:
- NAA.1997-05
- Repository:
-
National Anthropological Archives
The Beatrice Medicine papers, 1913-2003 (bulk 1945-2003), document the professional life of Dr. Beatrice "Bea" Medicine (1923-2005), a member of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, anthropologist, scholar, educator, and Native rights activist. The collection also contains material collected by or given to Medicine to further her research and activism interests. Medicine, whose Lakota name was Hinsha Waste Agli Win, or "Returns Victorious with a Red Horse Woman," focused her research on a variety of topics affecting the Native American community: 1) mental health, 2) women's issues, 3) bilingual education, 4) alcohol and drug use, 5) ethno-methodologies and research needs of Native Americans, and 6) Children and identity issues. The collection represents Medicine's work as an educator for universities and colleges in the United States and in Canada, for which she taught Native American Studies courses. Additionally, because of the large amount of research material and Medicine's correspondence with elected U.S. officials and Native American leaders, and records from Medicine's involvement in Native American organizations, the collection serves to represent issues affecting Native Americans during the second half of the 20th century, and reflects what Native American leaders and organizations did to navigate and mitigate those issues. Collection materials include correspondence; committee, conference, and teaching material; ephemera; manuscripts and poetry; maps; notes; periodicals; photographs; training material; and transcripts.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Takaki, Michiko, 1930-2014
- Dates:
-
1921-2011
bulk 1960s
- Size:
-
134.16 Linear feet (167 boxes, 7 rolls, and 7 map-folders)
- Collection ID:
- NAA.2016-23
- Repository:
-
National Anthropological Archives
The papers of Michiko Takaki, 1921-2011 (bulk 1960s), document her field work among the Kalinga people of the northern Philippines and her professional contributions as a faculty member at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. The papers consist primarily of economic and linguistic field data gathered between 1964 and 1968, used in the production of her doctoral dissertation ("Aspects of Exchange in a Kalinga Society, Northern Luzon," 1977) and throughout her anthropological career. The collection consists of field notes, maps, photographic prints, negatives, slides, sound recordings, recorded film, data and analysis, correspondence, working files and drafts, and publications.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
Crain, E. Gene, 1934-
Anderson, Susan
- Dates:
-
1999 March 7-May 22
- Size:
-
107 Pages (Transcript)
- Collection ID:
- AAA.crain99
- Repository:
-
Archives of American Art
An interview of Gene Crain, conducted 1999 March 7-May 22, by Susan Anderson, for the Archives of American Art, in the law offices of Gene Crain, Newport Beach, California.
Found In
Collapse [ ]
Expand
- Creators:
-
National Congress of American Indians
- Dates:
-
1933-1990
bulk 1944-1989
- Size:
-
251 Linear feet (597 archival boxes)
- Collection ID:
- NMAI.AC.010
- Repository:
-
National Museum of the American Indian
The National Congress of American Indian (NCAI), founded in 1944, is the oldest nation-wide American Indian advocacy organization in the United States. The NCAI records document the organization's work, particularly that of its office in Washington, DC, and the wide variety of issues faced by American Indians in the twentieth century. The collection is located in the Cultural Resource Center of the National Museum of the American Indian.