Dr. S. Alphonse Daudelin's final report as High Commissioner of the United States to the International Maritime Exposition, held in Bordeaux, France in 1907. The report is addressed to Elihu Root, then Secretary of State.
A letter from a wine and spirits syndicat, to S. Alphonse Daudelin. The letter expresses the well wishes of the Syndicat upon the news that Daudelin was to become a chevalier in the Legion d'Honneur.
Program for a dinner hosted by the Russian representative to the International Maritime Exposition. The program includes both the menu and list of wines.
Program for a dinner hosted by Dr. Daudelin in his role as High Commissioner of the U.S. to the International Maritime Exposition. The program includes both the menu and list of wines. An image of President Theodore Roosevelt is on the front cover, and an image of the U.S. Pavilion at the exposition is on the back cover.
Photograph of Louis-Èmile Bertin personally autographed to Daudelin on September 11, 1907. Bertin was a noted French naval engineer who hosted a banquet in Daudelin's honor when we was awarded the Ledion d'Honneur
Photograph of Dr. S. Alphonse Daudelin, taken at the Panajou Frères studio in Bordeaux, France. This photograph was taken while Daudelin was the High Commissioner of the United States to the International Maritime Exposition.
These are papers that belonged to Dr. S. Alphonse Daudelin and some documentation concerning the 1994 exhibit that was presented in honor of Dr. Daudelin. There are documents from his university years in Montréal as well as many documents concerning the International Maritime Exposition held in Bordeaux in 1907. There is also correspondence with various political figures.
The records of the Western Massachusetts locals and district councils of the UBCJA documents the rise of unionization among carpenters in the Connecticut River Valley since the 1880s. This collection represents a merger of separate accessions for the District Councils in Springfield (MS 110), the Pioneer Valley (MS 231), and Holyoke (MS 108), along with post-merger records for Local 108. In general, each has been maintained as a distinct series.
Oral history with the Gagnon family, part of the Franco-American community in Springfield since 1953. Topics include their participation in Franco-American activities at St. Joseph’s Church, their interest in Franco-American studies, and what nationality means to them, as people with roots in America, Canada, and France.
Collection includes statutes and by-laws, minutes, administrative records, correspondence, financial records and receipts, scholarship records, publications, records of programs and events, and artifacts and ephemera.
Marguerite Delavarre Dubois kept this diary from 1907-1908. Most entries were made in 1907 and describe her social life in New York City; study of French and German; painting; attendance at theaters; visits to Saratoga, Lake George, Plattsburgh, Montreal, Albany, and the Catskills.