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Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland.[X]
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Economic conditions. (2)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. (2)
College Club (Cleveland, Ohio) (2)
Europe -- Description and travel. (2)
Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. (2)
Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. (2)
Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. (2)
Women philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (2)
World War, 1914-1918 -- Personal narratives. (2)
Accokeek Foundation. (1)
Ambassadors -- United States. (1)
Ambassadors' spouses -- United States. (1)
American Friends Service Committee. (1)
Anshe Chesed Congregation (Cleveland, Ohio) (1)
Banks and banking -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Beech Brook, Inc. (Pepper Pike, Ohio). (1)
Birth control -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Birth control clinics -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Birth control. (1)
Bolton family. (1)
Bolton, Frances Payne Bingham, 1885-1977. (1)
Braverman, Libbie L. (Libbie Levin), 1900- (1)
Businessmen -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Businesswomen. (1)
Cafarelli Opera Company. (1)
Cafarelli, Carmela. (1)
Cafarelli, Rocco. (1)
Campbell, Thomas F. (1)
Case Western Reserve University. Dept. of History. (1)
Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
City Club of Cleveland. (1)
City planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Civic leaders -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Ethnic relations. (1)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. (1)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- History. (1)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Race relations. (1)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social conditions. (1)
Cleveland City Forge and Iron Company. (1)
Cleveland Hearing and Speech Center. (1)
Cleveland Public Library (1)
Cleveland Restoration Society. (1)
Cleveland State Univeristy. (1)
Cleveland State University. College of Urban Affairs. (1)
Cleveland State University. Dept. of History. (1)
Cleveland Tool and Forge Company. (1)
Cleveland Trust Company. (1)
Cleveland-Akron Bag Company. (1)
Coins -- Collectors and collecting. (1)
College administrators -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
College teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Consumers League of Ohio. (1)
Counselors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Crime -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Criminal justice, Administration of -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Cuba -- Foreign relations -- United States. (1)
Cuyahoga County Relief Administration. (1)
Deaf -- Means of communication. (1)
Democratic Party (Cleveland, Ohio). (1)
Democratic Party (Mentor, Ohio). (1)
Diplomatic and consular service, American -- Cuba. (1)
Diplomatic and consular service, Hungarian. (1)
Diplomats -- United States. (1)
East End Neighborhood House (Cleveland, Ohio) (1)
Fabiani, Henry B. (1)
Family planning (1)
Family planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Fischgrund family. (1)
Fischgrund, Esther, 1891-1995. (1)
Fischgrund, Seymour. (1)
Fish Furniture. (1)
Fleming family. (1)
Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing. (1)
Frankel family. (1)
Frankel, Burton. (1)
Frankel, Rita. (1)
Friends of Howe Mansion. (1)
Friends of Shaker Square. (1)
Garfield family. (1)
Garfield, Edwina Glenn, 1895- (1)
Garfield, Helen Newell, 1866-1930. (1)
Garfield, James A. (James Abram), 1831-1881. (1)
Garfield, James A. (James Abram), II, 1894- (1)
Garfield, James Rudolph, 1865-1950. (1)
Harmon family. (1)
Harpists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Hearing impaired -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Hearing impaired -- United States. (1)
Historic preservation -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Holden family. (1)
Holden, Albert Fairchild, 1866-1913. (1)
Holden, Katharine Davis. (1)
Housing -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Hungary -- History. (1)
Industries -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Irish American Archives Society (Cleveland, Ohio) (1)
Irish Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Irish Americans. (1)
Irish-American Partnership. (1)
Israel -- Description and travel. (1)
Italian American women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish authors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish businesspeople -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish educators -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish religious schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Jewish teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Kenyon family. (1)
Lake County (Ohio) -- Politics and government. (1)
Lake County Bar Association. (1)
Lake County Committee on Aging. (1)
Legal Services Association of Lake County (Ohio). (1)
Legislators -- United States. (1)
Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs. (1)
Mayors -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography (1)
McBride family. (1)
McBride, Donald, 1884-1927. (1)
Mentor (Ohio) -- Politics and government. (1)
Minorities -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. (1)
Municiapl home rule -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Musicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Neighborhood planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Northern Ireland -- Politics and government. (1)
Norweb family. (1)
Norweb, Emery May. (1)
Norweb, Raymond Henry, 1894-1983. (1)
Nursing -- United States. (1)
Ohio State University. Dept. of History. (1)
Opera -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Opera companies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Philosophical Club of Cleveland. (1)
Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland. (1)
Police -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Political campaigns -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Presidents -- United States -- Family. (1)
Ralph family. (1)
Remington family. (1)
Republican Party (Ohio) (1)
Republican Party (U.S. : 1854- ) (1)
Riots -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Root & McBride Company. (1)
Shaker Square (Cleveland, Ohio) (1)
Shipbuilding industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Shipping -- Great Lakes. (1)
Singers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Slovak Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Slovak Americans -- Societies, etc. (1)
Social Welfare History Group (1)
Social service -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Social service -- Ohio -- Mentor. (1)
Sotak, Anna M., ca. 1893-1976. (1)
Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Strikes and lockouts -- Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Tax Remission--Ohio--Cleveland Heights. (1)
Tax remission--Ohio. (1)
United States. Congress. House. (1)
United States. Dept. of State. (1)
United States. Federal Security Agency. (1)
University of Free Europe in Exile. (1)
Wade family -- Periodicals. (1)
Western Reserve Historical Society. History Library. (1)
Wing family. (1)
Wing, Marie Remington, 1885-1982. (1)
Winous Point Shooting Club. (1)
Women -- Services for -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Women -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland (1)
Women -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Women in politics -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Women in politics -- Ohio -- Mentor. (1)
Women in politics -- United States. (1)
Women lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Women lawyers -- Ohio -- Mentor. (1)
Women legislators -- United States. (1)
Women musicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Women volunteers in social service -- Ohio. (1)
Women's health services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
World War, 1914-1918 -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
World War, 1939-1945 -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (1)
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
1Title:  Donald McBride Family Papers     
 Creator:  McBride, Donald Family 
 Dates:  1857-1989 
 Abstract:  Donald McBride was a lawyer and businessman and son of John Harris McBride, owner of Root & McBride Company, a leading wholesale dry goods establishment in Cleveland, Ohio. Donald's brothers, Malcolm and Herbert, were officers in Root & McBride Company. His sister Grace was married to Dr. George Crile, and his sister Edith was married to Henry S. Sherman, chairman of Society for Savings, 1903-1936. Donald's wife, Mary Helen Harman McBride, was daughter of industrialist Ralph A. Harman, who ran Cleveland Forge and Iron Company, was a founder of Cleveland Trust Company, and a director of Cleveland Electric Railway Company. Mary Helen's sister Grace was married to Samuel Livingston Mather, and her sister Sue was married to diplomat John Pelenyi. Her great aunt, Grace Harman Wade, was married to Jeptha H. Wade. The collection consists of Harman and McBride family correspondence, genealogies, coats of arms, reminiscences, memorials, school reports, scrapbooks, ledgers, journals, diaries, newspaper clippings, obituaries, reprints, autograph book, receipts, verses, blueprints, speeches and photographs. Included are personal papers for Ralph A. Harman, Sue Wade Harman and John Pelenyi, Susan Fleming Wade, Donald McBride and Mary Helen McBride, as well as business records, recollections and scrapbooks of Ralph A. Harman relating to the early business, industrial and social history of Cleveland. 
 Call #:  MS 4585 
 Extent:  10.80 linear feet (10 containers, 14 oversize volumes, and 1 oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  McBride, Donald, 1884-1927. | McBride family. | Harmon family. | Kenyon family. | Fleming family. | Wade family -- Periodicals. | Root & McBride Company. | Cleveland Tool and Forge Company. | Cleveland City Forge and Iron Company. | University of Free Europe in Exile. | Cleveland Trust Company. | Cleveland-Akron Bag Company. | Winous Point Shooting Club. | Beech Brook, Inc. (Pepper Pike, Ohio). | Businessmen -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Strikes and lockouts -- Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Industries -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Banks and banking -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Shipping -- Great Lakes. | World War, 1914-1918 -- Personal narratives. | Europe -- Description and travel. | Shipbuilding industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Diplomatic and consular service, Hungarian. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Economic conditions. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. | Hungary -- History.
 
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2Title:  Anna M. Sotak Papers     
 Creator:  Sotak, Anna M. 
 Dates:  1939-1976 
 Abstract:  Anna M. Sotak (ca. 1893-1976) was an Officer of State Savings and Loan in Cleveland, Ohio, which was instrumental in assisting area Slovaks acquire real estate. She was also active in local Slovak fraternal organizations. The collection consists of correspondences, speeches, and financial records relating to Slovak fraternal organizations and activities, and to Sotak family business and personal transactions, including minutes of the Slovak Catholic Federation of America, reports to conventions, radio talks from the Slovak Hour, and articles for "Zornicka." 
 Call #:  MS 3813 
 Extent:  1.40 linear feet (2 containers) 
 Subjects:  Sotak, Anna M., ca. 1893-1976. | Slovak Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Slovak Americans -- Societies, etc. | Businesswomen.
 
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3Title:  Carmela Caferelli Papers     
 Creator:  Cafarelli, Carmela 
 Dates:  1912-1976 
 Abstract:  Carmela Cafarelli was an Italian-American opera star, founder of an opera company, and accomplished harpist from Cleveland, Ohio. Her father, Rocco Cafarelli, was a renowned Italian harpist who had immigrated to Cleveland in the 1880s, and was his daughter's earliest teacher. At the age of eight, she began study with master harpist Henry B. Fabiani in Cleveland. As a harpist, she toured the United States and abroad. She also became a solo harpist for the Cleveland Orchestra. Cafarelli studied voice with William Saal in Cleveland, and later attended the Conservatorie Santa Lucia and the Reale Accademia Filarmonica Romana in Italy, earning diplomas in both voice and harp. After her return to the United States in 1924, she undertook additional musical studies with Benjamino Gigli and Pietro Audisio of the New York Metropolitan Opera. In 1929, she returned to Cleveland, and in 1934, founded the Cafarelli Opera Company. This group toured throughout the United States and put on many charitable performances in Northeast Ohio. Cafarelli stopped performing in 1945, but continued to head her opera company and became a leading philanthropist and promoter of the arts in Cleveland. The collection consists of memoirs; family histories; notes; musical scores and manuscripts of compositions; an address book; correspondence; catalogues; student notebooks; poetry; scrapbooks containing newspaper clippings, reviews of performances, and articles; programs; and a travel journal. Included are musical compositions by Carmela Cafarelli; her father, Rocco Cafarelli; and her teacher, Henry B. Fabiani. 
 Call #:  MS 4719 
 Extent:  0.80 linear feet (3 containers) 
 Subjects:  Cafarelli, Carmela. | Cafarelli, Rocco. | Fabiani, Henry B. | Cafarelli Opera Company. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Musicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women musicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Opera companies -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Opera -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Harpists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Singers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Italian American women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Italian Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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4Title:  Marie Remington Wing Family Papers     
 Creator:  Wing, Marie Remington Family 
 Dates:  1846-1980 
 Abstract:  Marie Remington Wing was a Cleveland, Ohio, lawyer who served on the Cleveland City Council (1923-1927), as Solicitor for the Village of Mentor, Ohio (1929-1936), and as Regional Attorney for the Social Security Board (1936-1953). She was also involved in numerous professional, civic, and health organizations in Cleveland and in Mentor. Wing came from a distinguished Cleveland family, which included her uncle, George Clary Wing, an author and attorney who served in several United States government departments. Marie's father, Francis Joseph Wing, was a judge in the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas and in the United States District Court for Northern Ohio. Her older sister, Virginia Remington Wing, was, like Marie, a social activist, working for the Red Cross, the Cleveland Anti-Tuberculosis League, and the Cleveland Health Council's Health Education Department. She was also the secretary of both the Brush Foundation and the Sight Saving Council. Marie's longtime companion, Dorothy Smith, worked with the YWCA, founded an insurance business, and was an executive for the East End Neighborhood House. Marie Wing's niece, Stephanie Ralph, was a school psychologist, and her husband, Paul Ralph, was also prominent in the academic world. The collection consists of diaries, correspondence, newspaper clippings, miscellaneous memorabilia, financial and legal papers, and records of Marie Wing and her family, and those of the organizations they served. Included are the diaries of Wing's grandfather, Stephen Remington, who served in the Civil War as a private in the 19th Battery, Ohio Light Artillery. 
 Call #:  MS 4655 
 Extent:  5.00 linear feet (5 containers and 4 oversize volumes) 
 Subjects:  Wing, Marie Remington, 1885-1982. | Wing family. | Remington family. | Ralph family. | Consumers League of Ohio. | Democratic Party (Cleveland, Ohio). | Democratic Party (Mentor, Ohio). | East End Neighborhood House (Cleveland, Ohio) | Cuyahoga County Relief Administration. | United States. Federal Security Agency. | Lake County Committee on Aging. | Legal Services Association of Lake County (Ohio). | Lake County Bar Association. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women lawyers -- Ohio -- Mentor. | Women in politics -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women in politics -- Ohio -- Mentor. | Social service -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Social service -- Ohio -- Mentor. | Women volunteers in social service -- Ohio. | Lake County (Ohio) -- Politics and government. | Mentor (Ohio) -- Politics and government.
 
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5Title:  College Club of Cleveland Records and Photographs, Series II     
 Creator:  College Club of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1890-2017 
 Abstract:  The College Club of Cleveland was founded on January 15, 1898 in Cleveland, Ohio. Louise Pope and Carolyn Shipman, two college graduates, were concerned with promoting the "social, philanthropic, and literary interests" of other college-educated women in the Cleveland area. The club started with 88 members from 17 colleges and universities. Miss Pope was elected the first president of the College Club, while Miss Shipman served as the first secretary. The group met twice a month on Monday afternoons. The collection consists of official documents, marketing material, newsletters, reports, financial and membership records, and photographs. 
 Call #:  MS 5414 
 Extent:  26.50 linear feet (43 containers and 1 oversize volume) 
 Subjects:  College Club (Cleveland, Ohio) | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Women philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Tax remission--Ohio. | Tax Remission--Ohio--Cleveland Heights.
 
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6Title:  Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland, Inc. Records     
 Creator:  Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland, Inc. 
 Dates:  1917-1988 
 Abstract:  Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland opened its first clinic on March 20, 1928 in theOsborn Building, located at Huron Road and Prospect Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio. Before the organization was recognized for its affiliation with Planned Parenthood Federation of American Inc., it was known as the Maternal Health Center. The center was started by Dorothy Hamilton Brush, Katherine Bingham Fisher and Hortense Oliver Shepard, a group of women who wanted to help families who needed birth control services for social and economic reasons. When the organization first began, services were only available to married women. As the organization grew, however, so did the number of services it offered. By 1965, the organization had added a west side branch, a fertility clinic, and a "mobile unit" that dispersed various maternal health services around the Cleveland area. In 1966, the Maternal Health Association changed its name to Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland (PPGC). Today the organization has been expanded to six different locations in Greater Cleveland and offers a variety of services including contraceptives, disease prevention education, pregnancy testing, HIV testing, and health services to men. The collection consists of correspondence, photographs, financial documents, meeting minutes, talks, educational pamphlets, press releases, event invitations, essays, newsletters, research reports, progress reports, and annual reports. 
 Call #:  MS 4982 
 Extent:  5.01 linear feet (3 containers, 1 oversize folder and 18 oversize volumes) 
 Subjects:  Birth control -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Birth control clinics -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Birth control. | Family planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Family planning | Planned Parenthood of Greater Cleveland. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Services for -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women's health services -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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7Title:  College Club of Cleveland Records     
 Creator:  College Club of Cleveland 
 Dates:  1893-2006 
 Abstract:  The College Club of Cleveland was founded on January 15, 1898 in Cleveland, Ohio. Louise Pope and Carolyn Shipman, two college graduates, were concerned with promoting the "social, philanthropic, and literary interests" of other college-educated women in the Cleveland area. The club started with 88 members from 17 colleges and universities. Miss Pope was elected the first president of the College Club, while Miss Shipman served as the first secretary. The group met twice a month on Monday afternoons. The collection consists of official documents, flyers, letters, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks, ledgers, minute books, audit reports, programs, and photographs. 
 Call #:  MS 4983 
 Extent:  14.0 linear feet (15 containers, 11 oversize volumes, and 1 oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  College Club (Cleveland, Ohio) | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | World War, 1914-1918 -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | World War, 1939-1945 -- War work -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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8Title:  Libbie L. Braverman Papers     
 Creator:  Braverman, Libbie L. 
 Dates:  1925-1991 
 Abstract:  Libbie L. Braverman was a nationally prominent teacher, author, lecturer, and consultant in the field of Jewish education. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, she moved to Cleveland, Ohio, while in high school. She received a teaching certificate from Cleveland Normal School (ca. 1920) and a B.S. in Education from Western Reserve University in 1933. From 1946-1952 she was director of the Euclid Avenue Temple School and in 1945, became the first woman elected to the Board of the National Council for Jewish Education. She wrote numerous books and articles, including many co-authored with Nathan Brilliant. She was married to architect Sigmund Braverman in 1924. The collection consists of articles, pamphlets, speeches, book reviews of books written or co-written by Braverman, religious school materials, correspondence, and honors and awards, given to, or established by, Libbie Braverman. The collection is of particular interest to researchers studying the development of Jewish education, especially the congregational weekend school. In addition, her articles on life in Palestine in the 1930s and 1940s are significant. 
 Call #:  MS 4566 
 Extent:  1.80 linear feet (3 containers) 
 Subjects:  Braverman, Libbie L. (Libbie Levin), 1900- | Anshe Chesed Congregation (Cleveland, Ohio) | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish educators -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish religious schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish authors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Israel -- Description and travel.
 
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9Title:  Rita Frankel Family Papers     
 Creator:  Rita Frankel Family 
 Dates:  1887-1995 
 Abstract:  Rita Frankel (b. 1929), a social worker and active member in the Jewish community, was born in Cleveland, Ohio, to Manny and Eva Heisler Hartenbaum. She married Burton Frankel in 1953, and later earned her M.A. in Counseling and Human Services from John Carroll University. She was employed as Displaced Worker Service Coordinator and Counselor at Cuyahoga Community College from 1978 to 1991. Esther Metzendorf Fischgrund, a relative of Frankel's, was a widely respected businesswoman and community leader. Following her marriage to Seymour Fischgrund in 1916, the couple opened Fish Furniture on Euclid Avenue in downtown Cleveland. The collection consists of certificates, correspondence, newspaper clippings, and speech texts. 
 Call #:  MS 5036 
 Extent:  0.60 linear feet (2 containers) 
 Subjects:  Frankel, Rita. | Frankel, Burton. | Fischgrund, Esther, 1891-1995. | Fischgrund, Seymour. | Frankel family. | Fischgrund family. | Fish Furniture. | Counselors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish businesspeople -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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10Title:  Frances Payne Bolton Oral History Interviews     
 Creator:  Bolton, Frances Payne 
 Dates:  1989 
 Abstract:  Frances Payne Bingham Bolton was a Republican congresswoman from Ohio's 22nd congressional district. Bolton served on the committees of Indian Affairs (1940) and Foreign Affairs (1941-1968), participating in foreign aid hearings and conducting study trips abroad, including a trip to the Middle East in 1947 and one to Africa in 1955. She served as a congressional delegate to the United Nations Eighth General Assembly, and was involved with the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association and helped organize the Accokee Foundation to protect the Potomac shoreline across from Mount Vernon. Mrs. Bolton had a long-time interest in nursing and nursing education and provided funds to establish the nursing school at Western Reserve University, as well as founding the Payne Fund to assist a variety of educational and other charitable programs. The collection consists of transcripts of 16 interviews conducted with individuals who had known and worked with Frances Payne Bolton in her capacity as United States Representative from Ohio's 22nd District (1940-1968), as a member of the Republican Party, in her family and personal interests, or in her many philanthropic and advocacy endeavors. The interviews were conducted in 1989 by Leslie Anne Solotko as part of the project conducted at the Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio, to process the papers of Congresswoman Frances Payne Bolton (MS 3943). Questions focused on Mrs. Bolton's personality and career; and her political, family, business, and personal interests. Interviewees included Viola Anderson, David K. Ford, Zelma George, Donald W. Gropp, Alice Hansen, Robert E. Hughes, Theodore F. Owen, H. Chapman Rose, Rozella M. Schlotfeldt, John Burns Simpson, Margaret Chase Smith, Robert Ware Strauss, Charles A. Vanik, Helen Wallace, Paul W. Walter, and Fred White. 
 Call #:  MS 4616 
 Extent:  0.40 linear feet (1 container) 
 Subjects:  Bolton, Frances Payne Bingham, 1885-1977. | Bolton family. | United States. Congress. House. | Republican Party (U.S. : 1854- ) | Accokeek Foundation. | Mount Vernon Ladies' Association of the Union. | Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing. | Republican Party (Ohio) | Women legislators -- United States. | Legislators -- United States. | Nursing -- United States. | Women in politics -- United States. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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11Title:  James A. Garfield II Family Papers     
 Creator:  Garfield, James A. II 
 Dates:  1869-1965 
 Abstract:  James A. Garfield II was the son of James Rudolph and Helen Newell Garfield, and grandson of United States President James A. Garfield. He was raised with his brothers at Hollycroft, the family home in Mentor, Ohio, next to Lawnfield, residence of Lucretia Rudolph Garfield, the president's widow. He graduated from Williams College in 1916 and served in World War I. He married Edwina Forbes Glenn in 1917. They lived in Cleveland and Mentor, Ohio, while James pursued various business ventures. Edwina moved to Florida with her daughters, Helen Louise and Elizabeth, after the couple divorced in the 1930s. The collection consists of correspondence, an autograph book, scrapbooks, speech reading lessons, drawings, newspaper clippings, and notebooks of President James A. Garfield, James Rudolph and Helen Newell Garfield, and James A. and Edwina Glenn Garfield. The papers relating to President Garfield include a scrapbook compiled in 1874 containing documents which refute charges regarding improprieties in military contract awards, a political tract annotated by President Garfield, and a collection of Garfield "Maxims," as well as commemorative publications and a scrapbook of condolences sent to the family after his death. The collection also contains correspondence and other documents related to James Rudolph and Helen Newell Garfield, including teaching materials for speech reading used by Helen Newell Garfield, and letters of Edwina Glenn Garfield to her husband James A. Garfield II discussing concerns of a young, upper class wife of the 1920s. 
 Call #:  MS 4580 
 Extent:  1.80 linear feet (6 containers) 
 Subjects:  Garfield, James A. (James Abram), II, 1894- | Garfield, James A. (James Abram), 1831-1881. | Garfield, Edwina Glenn, 1895- | Garfield family. | Garfield, James Rudolph, 1865-1950. | Garfield, Helen Newell, 1866-1930. | Cleveland Hearing and Speech Center. | Presidents -- United States -- Family. | Hearing impaired -- United States. | Hearing impaired -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Deaf -- Means of communication. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
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12Title:  R. Henry Norweb Family Papers     
 Creator:  Norweb, R. Henry Family 
 Dates:  1880-1989 
 Abstract:  Raymond Henry Norweb was born in England and moved to Elyria, Ohio, with his family in 1907. He became a diplomat with posts in various countries, including France, Japan, the Netherlands, the Dutch East Indies, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Portugal, Peru, and Bolivia. His last assignment was as ambassador to Cuba, 1945-1948. His wife, Emery May Holden Norweb, was the daughter of Albert and Katharine Davis Holden and granddaughter of Liberty Holden, owner of the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Emery Holden graduated from the Westover School in Connecticut in 1916, and then did hospital work with the American Ambulance Corps in France until her marriage to Henry Norweb in 1917. Dring their world travels, she collected Pre-columbian and Oriental art, which became the basis of collections at the Cleveland Museum of Art, where she served as a benefactor, officer, and trustee. Despite Norweb's worldwide assignments, the family maintained a home in Bratenahl, Ohio. Their children were Jeanne, Albert, and R. Henry Jr. Henry and Emery Norweb were both noted experts on world and U.S. coins, and the Norweb collection is one of the finest ever collected. The collection consists of scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, correspondence, manuscripts, travel memoirs, diaries, scripts, lectures, and notebooks. Emery May Norweb wrote diaries, memoirs, and articles on the many countries they visited, including an unpublished travel guide to the Netherlands. In addition, the collection contains family correspondence, including letters from Horace, Henry, and Emery May Norweb while living in Europe during World War I. The correspondence also includes copies of some State Department letters; correspondence on the purchase of coins for the Norweb collection; and letters from Albert and Katharine Holden to their daughters. Several scrapbooks contain photographs and clippings of Norweb's assignment as ambassador to Cuba 1945-1948. One scrapbook covers the courtship and married life of Albert and Katharine Holden. Emery May Holden's diary, 1916-1918, covers her life in Paris before and after her marriage to Henry Norweb. 
 Call #:  MS 4577 
 Extent:  3.40 linear feet (4 containers) 
 Subjects:  Norweb, Raymond Henry, 1894-1983. | Norweb family. | Holden family. | Norweb, Emery May. | Holden, Albert Fairchild, 1866-1913. | Holden, Katharine Davis. | United States. Dept. of State. | Coins -- Collectors and collecting. | Diplomatic and consular service, American -- Cuba. | Ambassadors -- United States. | Ambassadors' spouses -- United States. | Diplomats -- United States. | World War, 1914-1918 -- Personal narratives. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cuba -- Foreign relations -- United States. | Europe -- Description and travel.
 
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13Title:  Thomas F. Campbell Papers     
 Creator:  Campbell, Thomas F. 
 Dates:  1897-2004 
 Abstract:  Thomas Campbell was an author, community leader, and professor and university administrator who co-founded the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University and served as its director. Campbell served as president of the City Club of Cleveland, and was instrumental in opening its doors to women. He directed the Cleveland Heritage Program for Cleveland Public Library. He ran for mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1977. He founded the Irish American Archives Society and was deeply involved in the Irish American community of Cleveland, as well as numerous other groups in the Cleveland, Ohio area. The collection consists of agendas, awards, biographical data, correspondence, diaries, a dissertation, examination papers, flyers, invitations, magazine articles, memberships, minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, photographs, plays, poems, programs, recipes, reports, resumes, speeches, workshops and writings. 
 Call #:  MS 4925 
 Extent:  9.43 linear feet (10 containers and 3 oversize folders) 
 Subjects:  Campbell, Thomas F. | Case Western Reserve University. Dept. of History. | Ohio State University. Dept. of History. | Cleveland State Univeristy. | Cleveland State University. Dept. of History. | Cleveland State University. College of Urban Affairs. | Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs. | Cleveland Public Library | City Club of Cleveland. | Irish American Archives Society (Cleveland, Ohio) | Western Reserve Historical Society. History Library. | Cleveland Restoration Society. | Friends of Howe Mansion. | Social Welfare History Group | Friends of Shaker Square. | Irish-American Partnership. | American Friends Service Committee. | Philosophical Club of Cleveland. | Irish Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Irish Americans. | College teachers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | College administrators -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Civic leaders -- Ohio -- Cleveland | City planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Crime -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Criminal justice, Administration of -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Housing -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Historic preservation -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Mayors -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Biography | Minorities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Municiapl home rule -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Neighborhood planning -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Police -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Political campaigns -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Riots -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Economic conditions. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Ethnic relations. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- History. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Race relations. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social conditions. | Shaker Square (Cleveland, Ohio) | Northern Ireland -- Politics and government.
 
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