Library Collections Search Results
Modify Search  |  New Searchrss icon RSS | Saved Results (0)
Search:
shakers in keywords [X]
Manuscript Collection in format [X]
Results:  192 Items
Sorted by:  
Page: Prev  ...  6 7 8 9 10  Next
Format
Manuscript Collection[X]
Subject
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (31)
Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (26)
Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (18)
Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (14)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Race relations. (13)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Politics and government. (12)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. (11)
Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (11)
Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland (10)
Education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (10)
African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (8)
Bellefaire Jewish Children's Home (Shaker Heights, Ohio) (8)
Jews -- Education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (8)
Community centers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (7)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland (7)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies, etc. (7)
Lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (7)
Schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (7)
Zionism. (7)
Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland (6)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Economic conditions. (6)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Social conditions. (6)
Conservative Judaism -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (6)
Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland (6)
Jewish religious education -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (6)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Social life and customs. (6)
Rabbis -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (6)
Synagogues -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (6)
Arts -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Jewish Community Federation (Cleveland, Ohio) (5)
Jewish day schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Jewish orphanages -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Political campaigns -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Social settlements -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (5)
Businessmen -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Cleveland (Ohio) -- Ethnic relations. (4)
Clubs -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Curriculum enrichment -- Ohio. (4)
Educational evaluation -- Ohio. (4)
Educational innovations -- Ohio. (4)
Educational surveys -- Ohio. (4)
Environmental protection -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Homeowners' associations -- Ohio -- Shaker Heights. (4)
Jewish Community Center of Cleveland. (4)
Jewish Family Service Association (Cleveland, Ohio). (4)
Jewish community centers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Jewish orphanages -- Ohio -- University Heights. (4)
Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History. (4)
Jews -- Recreation -- Ohio -- Cleveland. (4)
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation Records, Series V     
 Creator:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation 
 Dates:  1973-2001 
 Abstract:  The Martha Holden Jennings Foundation is an educational foundation founded by Martha Holden Jennings in 1958. It funds educational projects throughout the Cleveland region and all of Ohio. The collection consists of agendas, applications, brochures, annual reports, budgets, certificates, correspondence, evaluations, financial statements, lists, memoranda, minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, notes, photographs, proposals, publications, receipts, reports, speech texts, studies, surveys, 35mm slides and transparencies. The bulk of the collection contains grant proposal files and includes material relating to preschool, elementary, and secondary education in public urban, suburban and rural schools, teacher education, and nontraditional enrichment programs offered by a variety of organizations. Of particular note are materials on math and science education, alternative schools and educational programs, and educational programming provided by numerous universities and colleges, as well as museums and historical societies, cultural organizations and other civic and educational groups. 
 Call #:  MS 4914 
 Extent:  15.00 linear feet (15 containers) 
 Subjects:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation | Education -- Ohio -- Endowments. | Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Educational evaluation -- Ohio. | Educational innovations -- Ohio. | Educational surveys -- Ohio. | School improvement programs -- Ohio | Curriculum enrichment -- Ohio. | Teachers -- Training of -- Ohio. | Teachers' workshops -- Ohio | Alternative education -- Ohio | Museums -- Educational aspects -- Ohio | Museums and schools -- Ohio
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation Records, Series VII     
 Creator:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation 
 Dates:  2011-2017 
 Abstract:  The Martha Holden Jennings Foundation is an educational foundation founded by Martha Holden Jennings and her nephew Arthur S. Holden, Jr., in 1958. Since its inception, the foundation has funded educational projects and programs throughout Ohio. The collection consists of annual reports, board minutes, executive director reports, grants, and newsletters. 
 Call #:  MS 5484 
 Extent:  17.00 linear feet (17 containers) 
 Subjects:  Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Education -- Ohio -- Endowments | Curriculum enrichment -- Ohio | Educational innovations -- Ohio | Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Museums -- Educational aspects -- Ohio | School improvement programs -- Ohio | Teachers -- Training of -- Ohio | Teachers' workshops -- Ohio
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation Records, Series VII     
 Creator:  Martha Holden Jennings Foundation 
 Dates:  2011-2017 
 Abstract:  The Martha Holden Jennings Foundation is an educational foundation founded by Martha Holden Jennings and her nephew Arthur S. Holden, Jr., in 1958. Since its inception, the foundation has funded educational projects and programs throughout Ohio. The collection consists of annual reports, board minutes, executive director reports, grants, and newsletters. 
 Call #:  MS 5484 
 Extent:  17.00 linear feet (17 containers) 
 Subjects:  Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Education -- Ohio -- Endowments | Curriculum enrichment -- Ohio | Educational innovations -- Ohio | Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Museums -- Educational aspects -- Ohio | School improvement programs -- Ohio | Teachers -- Training of -- Ohio | Teachers' workshops -- Ohio
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Nordson Foundation Records     
 Creator:  Nordson Foundation 
 Dates:  1952-1988 
 Abstract:  The Nordson Foundation (1952-1988) was originally created by Walter G. and Virginia Nord. Walter Nord was the president of U. S. Automatic Corporation (f. 1909) of Amherst, Ohio, a company which manufactured screw machine parts for the automotive industry. Walter Nord and his sons, Evan and Eric Nord, organized the Nordson Corporation in 1954 as a subsidiary of U. S. Automatic Corporation. The Nordson Corporation, headquartered in Westlake, Ohio, is a multinational company that designs, manufactures, and markets systems that apply adhesives, sealants, and coatings to a broad range of consumer and industrial products during the manufacturing process. The Nordson Foundation was a philanthropic organization which provided financial support primarily in the areas of public service, social problems, family services, and education. The Nord family, including Walter's sons Eric and Evan Nord, and Cleveland lawyer William Ginn, guided the foundation through 1980. In 1988 the foundation was reorganized to create the Nord Family Foundation and the Nordson Corporation Foundation. Since its inception, the Nord Family Foundation has primarily served Lorain County, Ohio, and has been based in the Lorain-Elyria area. As of 1993, the foundation was headquartered in Elyria, Ohio. Its charitable activities, however, have sometimes reached into neighboring locales, particularly Cuyahoga County and Cleveland, and touched other areas of Ohio and the nation. In addition to the foundation, the Nord family is also noted for its involvement in the development of inventions, including innovations in areas as diverse as spray painters and robotics. The collection consists of articles of incorporation, minutes of the board of trustees, policies and procedures, a mission statement, resolutions, correspondence, financial reports, contract bids and specifications, newspaper clippings, memoranda, pamphlets, publications, accounting journals, budgets, tax returns, affidavits, and materials related to projects and activities of the foundation, with grant proposals (1980-1984) compromising the bulk of the materials. The files include the minutes, cases, photographs, and organizational materials of the Neighborhood Concepts Company (1984-1986), a Lorain-Elyria housing rehabilitation program initiated through the funding of the Nordson Foundation. The records of the Nord Family Foundation and the Nordson Corporation Foundation are not part of this collection. 
 Call #:  MS 4641 
 Extent:  16.20 linear feet (18 containers) 
 Subjects:  Nordson Foundation. | Nordson Corporation. | Neighborhood Concepts Company. | Charities -- Ohio -- Lorain County. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Lorain County. | Housing rehabilitation -- Ohio -- Lorain County. | Social service -- Ohio -- Lorain County. | Human services -- Ohio -- Lorain County.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Saint Luke's Foundation Records     
 Creator:  Saint Luke's Foundation 
 Dates:  1954-2009 
 Abstract:  Saint Luke's Foundation was established in 1997 after the Saint Luke's Medical Center was sold to Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation and its regional partners, the Sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine. The foundation was created to help continue the philanthropic mission of the Saint Luke's Medical Center and Saint Luke's Hospital Association. This collection consists of institutional and administrative records for Saint Luke's Foundation, Saint Luke's Medical Center and Saint Luke's Hospital Association, grant records from Saint Luke's Foundation, as well as some artwork and photographs related to these organizations. 
 Call #:  MS 5472 
 Extent:  30 linear feet (29 containers) 
 Subjects:  Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Saint Luke's Foundation Records     
 Creator:  Saint Luke's Foundation 
 Dates:  1954-2009 
 Abstract:  Saint Luke's Foundation was established in 1997 after the Saint Luke's Medical Center was sold to Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation and its regional partners, the Sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine. The foundation was created to help continue the philanthropic mission of the Saint Luke's Medical Center and Saint Luke's Hospital Association. This collection consists of institutional and administrative records for Saint Luke's Foundation, Saint Luke's Medical Center and Saint Luke's Hospital Association, grant records from Saint Luke's Foundation, as well as some artwork and photographs related to these organizations. 
 Call #:  MS 5472 
 Extent:  30 linear feet (29 containers) 
 Subjects:  Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Thomas H. White Foundation Records     
 Creator:  Thomas H. White Foundation 
 Dates:  1939-2011 
 Abstract:  The Thomas H. White Foundation was established in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1913 by industrialist Thomas H. White (1836-1914). The foundation supports education and social welfare programs that benefit residents of Cleveland and northeast Ohio. The collection consists of agendas, correspondence, financial documents, lists, memoranda, grant proposals with attachments, and reports. 
 Call #:  MS 5310 
 Extent:  21.00 linear feet (21 containers) 
 Subjects:  Philanthropy -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Education -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Endowments.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  William Bingham Foundation Records, Series III     
 Creator:  William Bingham Foundation 
 Dates:  1955-2016 
 Abstract:  The William Bingham Foundation was established in 1955 in Cleveland, Ohio, by Elizabeth Bingham Blossom with the proceeds of an inheritance from her brother, William Bingham II. Grants were originally given to institutions of learning, hospitals, and public charities in Ohio. After the death of Elizabeth Bingham Blossom in 1970, other family members maintained control of the foundation, and the focus of grantmaking changed to include organizations in the fields of the arts, sciences, education, and health and human services. Projects related to urban revitalization, adult psychological development, and nuclear issues were also undertaken. Environmental issues also took center stage in grants funding by the William Bingham Foundation. A majority of the collection contains materials related to grants administration, grant proposals, grant decisions, and grant reports. The rest of the collection consists of annual reports and annual meeting documentation, articles of incorporation, Blossom and Bingham family history, budgets and balance sheets, certificates, codes of regulations, committee records, correspondence, financial statements and reports, handbooks, investments, legal documents, meeting minutes and notes, special projects, photographs, reports, and tax records. 
 Call #:  MS 5458 
 Extent:  46.20 linear feet (47 containers) 
 Subjects:  Bingham, William, 2nd, 1879-1955 | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Blossom, Elizabeth Bingham, 1881-1970 | Bingham family | Blossom family | Gale family | William Bingham Foundation | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Ellie Fund Records     
 Creator:  Ellie Fund 
 Dates:  2001-2010 
 Abstract:  The Ellie Fund was created in 2001 in Cleveland, Ohio, when the Gerson-Margolis Foundation changed its name in memory of Eleanor Rosenfeld Gerson. The foundation terminated in 2012. The collection consists of grant proposals and attachments for projects approved and declined for funding at foundation board meetings. These include budgets, correspondence, evaluations, financial statements, and grant proposals. 
 Call #:  MS 5273 
 Extent:  2.00 linear feet (2 containers) 
 Subjects:  Gerson, Eleanor Rosenfeld, 1916-2000 | Gerson family. | Philanthropy -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations | Margolis, Margaret Gerson.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Women's Law Fund Records     
 Creator:  Women's Law Fund 
 Dates:  1968-2002 
 Abstract:  The Women's Law Fund was a nonprofit organization founded in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1972 dedicated to eradicating gender discrimination in employment, education, government benefits, and housing. Under the direction of Jane M. Picker and Lizabeth A. Moody, the organization secured attorneys and provided funding for litigation related to women's issues. Most notably, the fund supported LaFleur, et al. v. Cleveland Board of Education, et al., a case that reached the U.S. Supreme Court in a landmark ruling concerning mandatory maternity leave for female employees. In the 1990s the fund focused on female age discrimination and discrimination faced by American women employed overseas by American companies. The Women's Law Fund disbanded in 2006. The collection consists of agendas, annual reports, correspondence, financial records, meeting minutes, memorandums, magazine articles, newspaper clippings, reports, resumes, and video tapes. 
 Call #:  MS 4970 
 Extent:  91.94 linear feet (99 containers) 
 Subjects:  Women's Law Fund (Cleveland, Ohio) | Sex discrimination against women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Sex discrimination against women -- United States. | Women's rights -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women's rights -- United States. | Women -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- United States. | Women -- Employment -- Law and legislation. | Women in education -- Legal status, laws, etc. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Trials, litigation, etc.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Dr. Zelma Watson George Papers and Photographs     
 Creator:  George, Dr. Zelma Watson 
 Dates:  1881-1994 
 Abstract:  Dr. Zelma Watson George (1903-1994) was born in Texas in 1903. As an African American woman coming of age in the early twentieth century, she and her family endured discrimination in many situations. She graduated from high school in Topeka, Kansas, went on to college at the University of Chicago, and eventually earned her Ph.D. from New York University. She moved to Cleveland, Ohio, in the 1940s and became renown for her musical talents and research, diplomatic career, her contributions to the civil rights movement locally, and her career as an administrator and educator/lecturer. The collection consists of agendas, awards, brochures, budgets, by-laws, calendars, cassette tapes, certificates, charters, contracts, correspondence, diaries, a dissertation, financial documents, flyers, forms, guest books, invitations, journal articles, lectures, magazine articles, memoranda, minutes, music scores, negatives (approximately 20), newsletters, newspaper articles and clippings, note cards, notes, passports, photographs (approximately 1300), play scripts, policies, press releases, programs, publications, record albums (LPs), reel-to-reel tapes, reports, resolutions, resumes, rosters, scrapbooks, slides (approximately 620), speeches, VHS tapes, and wills. 
 Call #:  MS 5415 
 Extent:  55.4 linear feet (70 containers and 7 volumes) 
 Subjects:  George, Zelma Watson | African American women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Civil rights -- United States. | Social service -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | African Americans -- Education (Higher) -- United States. | African American women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | African Americans -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Nina Freedlander Gibans Family Papers     
 Creator:  Gift of Nina Gibans 
 Dates:  1890-2016 
 Abstract:  Nina Freedlander Gibans has been active in Greater Cleveland's arts, culture and educational community for nearly six decades as an arts advocate, administrator, author, and teacher as well as a community volunteer. Gibans was born on July 30, 1932. Her family, the Freedlanders, were, according to family legend, peddlers who headed west in the 1880s from Buffalo, New York. They settled in Wooster, Ohio in the 1940s, where they founded and operated Freedlander's Department Store. After her marriage to architect James Gibans, the family moved to San Francisco where James found work. It was the height of the Beat Era; there Nina often gave poetry readings and had connections with Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Upon her family's return to Cleveland in 1960, Gibans immersed herself in the local and regional arts community. She has been the executive producer of five video programs, three of which have been shown on local public television. Gibans has also served on many panels, boards and committees of local, state and national cultural and civic organizations. The Nina Freedlander Gibans Family Papers collection consists of awards, a book, booklets, certificates, correspondence, a dissertation, family trees, financial records, incorporation articles, interviews, lesson plans, newspaper clippings, patents, photographs, publications, reports, a scrapbook, scripts, speeches, tapes, and yearbooks. 
 Call #:  MS 5446 
 Extent:  4.2 linear feet (5 boxes, including one oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  Gibans, Nina Freedlander | Freedlander family | Women television producers and directors -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Women authors -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jews -- Ohio -- Wooster
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Myra Caley Gibbs Papers     
 Creator:  Gibbs, Myra Caley 
 Dates:  1884-1972 
 Abstract:  Myra Caley Gibbs (1871-1964) was a Warrensville Township, Ohio, native and descendant of Daniel and Moses Warren. She married Samuel L. Gibbs, who helped the Van Sweringen brothers develop Shaker Heights. She also maintained an interest in the North Union Shaker community. The collection consists of newspaper clippings, correspondence, diaries, a journal, genealogical materials, a probate inventory, writings, and scrapbooks for Gibbs and some members of her immediate family. 
 Call #:  MS 4111 
 Extent:  0.75 linear feet (2 containers) 
 Subjects:  Gibbs, Myra Caley, 1871-1964. | Caley family. | Gibbs family. | Shakers -- Ohio -- North Union.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Cornelia Schnurmann Foundation Records     
 Creator:  Gift of Cornelia Schnurmann Foundation, 2005; Paul Mazoh, 2007 
 Dates:  1895-2005 
 Abstract:  Cornelia Schnurmann was born in Karlsruhe, Germany in 1901, the daughter of a wealthy, well known philanthropic Jewish family. Little is known about her early life. In 1940, Schnurmann faced deportation to a Nazi concentration camp. A Catholic friend assisted her escape to Luxembourg where she found refuge in a convent and was given shelter by the Catholic Nuns. She came to America on August 20, 1941, and her journey was self-sponsored. Schnurmann, age 40 and unmarried, was the sole surviving member of her family. Whether her family died in the Holocaust or whether they were deceased at the time she left Germany remains unknown. In Cleveland, Ohio, she joined friends Dr. Julius and Helen Weil, respectively the director of Montefiore Home for the Aged, and head of its social services department. At Montefiore, Cornelia worked with the Weils in developing an occupational therapy department, a sheltered workshop, as well as therapeutic and innovative programs for the aging population. She died in an automobile accident in July, 1960. At her request, Dr. Weil served as executor and administrator of her estate, and, per her request, used a portion of the estate to create Schnurmann House, a multi-building complex dedicated to housing for the elderly, social activities, and social services. The Cornelia Schnurmann Foundation Records collection consists of an address book, agendas, agreements, applications, appraisals, articles of incorporation, artwork, background information, a binder, blueprints, a booklet, certificates, codes of regulation, a constitution, a contract, corporate papers, correspondence, court records, deeds, donation slips, easements, eulogies, financial ledgers and statements, floor plans, a folder from Heritage Gardens, government records, invitations, a last will/testament, letters, lists, loans, maps, medical records, meeting minutes, a menu, newsletters, newspaper articles and clippings, notes, pamphlets, a passport copy, pension plans, photographs, plot plans, policy statements, population surveys, programs, proposals, requests for funds, reports, resolutions, resumes, schedules, sentimental items, social security cards, speech texts, thank you notes, time cards, a timeline, and waivers of lien. 
 Call #:  MS 5463 
 Extent:  5.2 linear feet (6 boxes including one oversize container) 
 Subjects:  Life care communities -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Endowments -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Jewish aged -- Institutional care -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Samuel Goldhamer Papers, Series II     
 Creator:  Goldhamer, Samuel 
 Dates:  1905-1968 
 Abstract:  Samuel Goldhamer (1884-1982), was the executive director of the Jewish Community Federation (JCF) of Cleveland, Ohio, from 1907-1948. He initiated a community-wide drive to expedite fund raising, a concept which became common throughout the United States. A resident of Shaker Heights, he published a book in 1963, titled Why Doncha Write a Book? A Half-Century of Experience in Jewish Communal Life. The collection consists of articles, correspondence, newspaper clippings, mailing lists, photographs, programs, testimonials, scrapbooks, and book manuscripts pertaining to Goldhamer's life and involvement with the JCF. 
 Call #:  MS 5336 
 Extent:  1.40 linear feet (2 containers) 
 Subjects:  Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  A. Donald Gray Papers     
 Creator:  Gray, A. Donald 
 Dates:  1917-1943 
 Abstract:  A. Donald Gray (1891-1939) was a notable landscape architect and designer in Cleveland, Ohio from 1920-1939. Gray worked briefly with Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., in Brookline, Massachusetts, before establishing a landscape architecture practice in Cleveland. He designed many private gardens and estates for some of the most elite families of Cleveland and its outlying suburbs, including the noted private development of Fairhill Road houses in 1931. Gray was also the landscape designer for several public projects, including the Cedar-Central apartments, the first federal public-housing project in the nation, and many of Cleveland's public parks. Perhaps his most notable achievemant was the creation of the WPA-funded Horticultural Gardens for the Great Lakes Exposition, 1936-1937, some of which remain on the site north of Cleveland's Municipal Stadium. The gardens were named for Gray as a memorial after his death. Gray took several trips to England, South America, Mexico and elsewhere throughout his career to study the landscaping of great houses and public places. He also contributed a regular gardening column to the Cleveland Press during the mid-1930s. The collection consists of some personal records, but largely records pertaining to Gray's numerous landscape design projects, including projects for William S. Halle, Mrs. Leonard C. Hanna, Edwin C. Higbee, Fred and Robert Lazarus of Columbus, Ohio, Crispen Oglebay, John Sherwin, and the Van Sweringen brothers. The records consist of correspondence, invoices, receipts, drawings, plans, photographs, blueprint designs, financial records, etc. The collection contains significant material regarding the Fairhill Road houses of the Fairmount Road Group Development Association, the Cedar-Central Housing Project, Cleveland city park projects, and, in particular, the Horticultural Gardens of the Great Lakes Exposition. Included are articles and clippings from Gray's gardening column in the Cleveland Press, lectures, travel reports, personal and financial papers and papers regarding Gray's personal residence, material pertaining to the preservation and restoration of the Dunham Tavern on Euclid Ave. in Cleveland, and photograph albums and photograph scrapbooks of Gray's trips and design projects, some by the noted photographer Margaret Bourke-White. 
 Call #:  MS 3470 
 Extent:  16.30 linear feet (28 containers, 9 oversize folders, and 21 rolled blueprints) 
 Subjects:  Gray, A. Donald (Albert Donald), 1891-1939 -- Archives. | Dunham Tavern. | Cedar-Central Housing Project (Cleveland, Ohio) | Great Lakes Exposition (1936-1937 : Cleveland, Ohio) | Landscape architects -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Archives. | Landscape architecture -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area. | Landscape gardening -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area. | Landscape contracting -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area. | Landscape architectural drawing -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area. | Horticultural service industry -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area. | Gardens -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area -- Design. | Gardens -- Ohio -- Cleveland Metropolitan Area -- Specifications. | Urban beautification -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Historic buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Conservation and restoration. | Parks -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Description and travel -- Views. | South America -- Description and travel -- Views. | Mexico -- Description and travel -- Views. | Nassau (Bahamas) -- Description and travel -- Views.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Material on the Nickel Plate Road     
 Creator:  Hampton, Taylor 
 Dates:  1869-1960 
 Abstract:  Taylor Hampton (Virginia Taylor) was a personal friend of the Van Sweringen brothers who shared their interest in railroads. The collection consists of manuscript notes and copies or originals of magazine and newspaper articles, pamphlets, blueprints, maps, annual reports, financial statements, stock certificates, time tables, charts, and letters used by Hampton to research her book, The Nickel Plate Road, the history of a great railroad. The book was published in 1947. 
 Call #:  MS 3114 
 Extent:  2.80 linear feet (7 containers) 
 Subjects:  Van Sweringen, Mantis James, 1881-1935. | Van Sweringen, Oris Paxton, 1879-1936. | Hampton, Taylor, (Virginia Taylor), 1910- | New York, Chicago, and St. Louis Railroad Co. | Lafayette, Bloomington and Muncie Railroad. | Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad Co. | Northern Ohio Food Terminal. | Nickel Plate Road. | Railroads -- United States. | Railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Stations. | Railroad terminals -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  James C. Hardie Papers     
 Creator:  James C. Hardie 
 Dates:  1952-2002 
 Abstract:  James C. Hardie (1922-2009), an independent development and public relations consultant in Cleveland, Ohio. Through his professional relationship with industrialist and philanthropist Frederick Crawford (1891-1994), Hardie was impressed with the caliber of Cleveland corporations and their ability to support educational endeavors as well as with the region's pioneering work in philanthropy, most notably its creation of the first unified community fund raising campaign. Hardie became Vice President of Case Institute of Technology in 1967. He held the same office when Case merged with neighboring Western Reserve University in 1967, serving there until 1969. While at Case and CWRU he continued to develop new and innovative ideas in the development/fundraising field and was allowed by the university to consult for John Carroll University's development department. Through his work with John Carroll University and other such opportunities, he broadened his career purview and embraced new concepts. He became involved with the American College Public Relations Association, a relationship that led him to envision many more opportunities in the development field. Hardie also continued to develop new insights, ideas, and methods for development campaigns on his own. Most significant was his "top 100" philosophy which was a change from generally accepted practice in the field. Hardie proposed that 75% of any fundraising goal needed to come from the top 100 prospects, 20% from the next 400 and all the remaining gifts would only make up 5% of contributors. He first used this technique on a campaign he was asked to run at Case Western Reserve University. This strategy was highly successful and he continued to use it with almost all of his clients. After being asked to consult for St. Luke's Hospital in Cleveland, Hardie decided to leave CWRU. In June of 1969 he formed his own consulting firm to focus on assisting non-profit organizations with development including capital campaigns, general fundraising, bequests and deferred gifts programs, feasibility studies, and public relations. He also often assisted with the hiring and training of development staff for these institutions. Hardie created a very successful consulting career, working with more than sixty mostly northeastern Ohio clients, mostly cultural, educational and service institutions. His consulting work raised hundreds of millions of dollars for his clients and greatly boosted Cleveland's national reputation as a center for philanthropy. He also advised some 200 other non-profit institutions regarding their development and philanthropic needs on an unpaid basis. He was one of the founders of The Corporate 1% Program for Higher Education, a program designed to increase corporate giving to higher education, and was a trustee of the George S. Dively Foundation. The collection consists of agendas, annual reports, brochures, budgets, calendars, charts, client publications, correspondence, datebooks, financial reports, forms, grant proposals, invoices, job descriptions, lists, magazine and newspaper articles, memoranda, minutes, newsletters, newspaper clippings, news releases, notebooks, notes, outlines, photographs, presentations, reports, speeches, statistics, and studies. 
 Call #:  MS 5078 
 Extent:  50.40 linear feet (51 containers) 
 Subjects:  Hardie, James C., 1922- | Crawford, Frederick C., 1891- | Case Western Reserve University -- Charitable contributions. | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) -- Charitable contributions. | Cleveland Museum of Natural History -- Charitable contributions. | Cleveland Play House (Organization : Cleveland, Ohio) -- Charitable contributions. | Fairview General Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) -- Charitable contributions. | Hawken School -- Charitable contributions. | Salvation Army -- Charitable contributions -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Vocational Guidance and Rehabilitation Services (Cleveland, Ohio) -- Charitable contributions. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Fund raising -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Nonprofit organizations -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Finance. | Corporations -- Charitable contributions -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Businesspeople -- Charitable contributions -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Fund raising consultants -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Women's Civic Club of Cleveland Heights Records     
 Creator:  Women's Civic Club of Cleveland Heights 
 Dates:  1917-1966 
 Abstract:  The Women's Civic Club of Cleveland Heights was a civic and cultural club organized in 1917, in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. It has been active in civic, educational, legislative and recreational affairs of Cleveland Heights. The collection consists of press releases, minutes, histories, newspaper clippings, bulletins, and scrapbooks. 
 Call #:  MS 3641 
 Extent:  1.40 linear feet (4 containers) 
 Subjects:  Women's Civic Club of Cleveland Heights. | Women -- Ohio -- Cleveland Heights -- Societies and clubs. | Cleveland Heights (Ohio) -- History.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Manuscript CollectionRequires cookie*
 Title:  Bernard Rich Hollander Papers     
 Creator:  Hollander, Bernard Rich 
 Dates:  1894-1976 
 Abstract:  Bernard R. Hollander (1927-1975) was a prominent Cleveland, Ohio, attorney who was a leader in many legal, civic, Jewish and educational organizations, including Anshe Chesed Congregation, the National Federation of Temple Brotherhoods and Expo Israel '70. The collection consists of correspondence, notes, writings, appointment calendars, clippings, memorabilia, papers relating to Hollander's activities in various Jewish organizations, and business or legal papers of Sidney and Helen Rich Hollander, Hollander Drug Company and Louis Rich. 
 Call #:  MS 3979 
 Extent:  4.30 linear feet (5 containers) 
 Subjects:  Wadsworth, Elijah, 1747-1817. | Wadsworth family. | Whittlesey, Elisha, 1783-1863. | Hinde, Thomas S. (Thomas Spottswood), 1785-1846. | Connecticut Land Company. | Ohio. Militia -- History -- War of 1812 -- Sources. -- Sources. | Real property -- Ohio -- Western Reserve. | Postmasters -- Ohio -- Western Reserve. | Ohio -- History -- War of 1812 -- Sources. | United States -- History -- War of 1812 -- Sources. | Ohio -- Politics and government -- 1787-1865. | Western Reserve (Ohio) -- History -- Sources. | Trumbull County (Ohio) -- History -- Sources. | Western Reserve (Ohio) -- Surveys.
 
  View Finding Aid  |  View XML  
Page: Prev  ...  6 7 8 9 10  Next