The Alida Perreault Papers consist largely of correspondence sent to Alida throughout her life from family, friends, and romantic interests. The correspondence is entirely personal, save for the letters concerning the South Hadley Women's Club. As Alida was president of the club, those letters are largely formal invitations and responses to other women's clubs in neighboring towns. There is also an extensive selection of greeting cards, sent for Christmas, birthdays, and other holidays over the years. There is a small assortment of newspaper clippings about Alida, as well as other ephemera. One interesting set of correspondence is a selection of literature from prospective universities and colleges, sent in 1932 to Alida as a graduating high school senior. The documents provide insight into the typical opportunities offered to young women at the time.
The collection documents an extended French-Canadian family network that traversed the U.S. and Canada border. Discussions of visits between family and friends reveal information about travel, social visiting patterns, and the role of correspondence in maintaining family ties over long distances. As the collection consists largely of letters from a young woman's adolescence, the content shows language, topics of conversation, and interests of a teenager in the early 1930s. The cards and letters from friends and suitors offer a picture of social norms for young adults.
Letters, notes, and postcards to Alida Capistrant are from friends and family, ranging in date from 1924 to 1941, and contain small, daily moments and conversations that reflect growing up, childhood friendship, and the strength of familial ties. Letters detail the death of Alida's grandmother and her sister Emma, summer boyfriends (i.e. Billy, Everett), Alida's homesickness during an extended vacation, and favorite pastimes.
Esther Fogg is Alida's most prolific correspondent from 1926-1933. A childhood friend from Fairfield, Connecticut, she provides frequent updates on her daily life, sometimes multiple times a week. The letters of Edna and Raymond Grenier, and Aurore A. Nadeau span the years 1930 to 1932, and include several greeting cards. All of the letters are sent from Biddeford, Maine, except for two which are sent from Berthierville, P.Q. A notable item in the collection is an event program written in French from Saint-Joseph College sent by Raymond while he was attending the college.
William McEwan, one of Alida's romantic interests, expresses his desire to see Alida, to receive a photograph of her, and for her to write him long letters. Bill describes his life at the Williston Academy and the school's soccer, track, and basketball teams, as well as an extracurricular soccer team called the Worthington Pumps. He also includes short poems, witty phrases, and frequent mentions of his love for her.
The content of letters from Freddie A. Mitkiewicz, Alida's second romantic interest, focus on his life aboard the USS Memphis, and then the USS Whitney, periodically mentioning the gun exercises the crew practices, and the places he visited, including Panama, the Perlas Islands, Guantanamo Bay and Hawaii. He briefly speculates that he will see armed conflict with Japan, and notes that most of the men on board have similar views. In addition to the Navy, he talks about his feelings for Alida.
Alida Capistrant's contributions to the South Hadley Women's Club, in particular her leadership role as president, are well documented in letters between various women's clubs in Western Massachusetts and invitations to club events.
Other materials include an assortment of greeting cards and newspaper clippings, which shed some light on Alida Capistrant's interests. She was very active socially, from acting in plays, to hosting a girls' bicycle team in her home, to traveling. Her religious loyalty and tolerance in her married years are both evident in the clippings.
A small collection of papers from the Walsh family of Ware, Massachusetts are included in this collection. The connection between the Walsh family letters and the bulk of the collection is unclear. The Walsh family papers are all addressed to a Jane O. Walsh or a Jennie O. Walsh. As these are addressed concurrently and to the same address, it is difficult to tell if Jennie and Jane are the same person or not. The letters are from friends and family as well as from a few businesses and organizations. These materials also include receipts for products including a fur coat (purchased in 1920), New York Life Insurance Company dividend slips from the early 1920s (and one from 1928), and a collection of correspondence from the Tilton Seminary (now Tilton School) of Tilton, New Hampshire. Starting in 1921, Jennie O. Walsh's son Gordon Walsh attended the school as a boarding student. This correspondence includes letters from both the principal of the school and his secretary and are mostly focused on recruiting Gordon to the school in 1921 and his first semester there in late 1921.
Finally, other seemingly unrelated materials include two handwritten real estate deeds for property in Brooklyn dated 1906, several sales letters from the Shepard Stores in Boston, a travel brochure from upstate New York, a religious poem, and several documents.