These multi-generational family paper collections are drawn from two institutions to form one inter-related collection of New York State material, spanning the 17th through the 20th centuries. The materials include almost every non-digital format in which people recorded their experiences, including diaries, letters, court documents, maps, photographs, deeds, account books, leases, pamphlets, tax receipts, and church records. There are 21 separate family paper collections, which often intersect through intermarriage and/or business relationships. Together they offer overlapping insights into forces of social change that affected Americans, especially war, land development, creation of transportation networks, and scientific advances. The families (with an example of the topics they illuminate) are: Anderson (Louis Kossuth); Burgess (political science); Chrystie (US Navy); (De Witt) Clinton (Erie Canal); Devereaux (Utica business development); Fish (Revolutionary War); Goldmark (American Chemical Society); Harison (Constitutional Convention); Hoyt (NYC social life); Jay (anti-slavery); Kane-Hand (railroads, Spanish-American War); Kent (Chancellor of NYS); Kernan (railroads); Ludlow (estate records); Morgan (Congress); Mott (subdividing the Bronx); Renwick (physics, engineering); Sage (lumbering, subways, canals); Van Schaack (Tories); White (hydraulic cement, canals); and Williams (geology, paleontology).
Division of Rare & Manuscript Collections
405 linear feet
1686 - 1969
New York State, New York City, Connecticut, Indiana, Kansas, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin; and Ontario