{"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982\u0026page=136","prev":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982\u0026page=135","next":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982\u0026page=137","last":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982\u0026page=138"},"meta":{"pages":{"current_page":136,"next_page":137,"prev_page":135,"total_pages":138,"limit_value":10,"offset_value":1350,"total_count":1371,"first_page?":false,"last_page?":false}},"data":[{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1132","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Medicare, 1976/1979","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1132#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1132","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1132"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1132","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Medicare","title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Medicare"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare, 1976/1979"],"text":["Welfare: Medicare, 1976/1979","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(6 folders)","box Box 516"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1976/1979"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1976-1979 August-December"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1146,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(6 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 516"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1976,1977,1978,1979],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1131","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1132"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1133","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Medicare, 1979/1981","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1133#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1133","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1133"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1133","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Medicare","title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Medicare"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare, 1979/1981"],"text":["Welfare: Medicare, 1979/1981","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(6 folders)","box Box 517"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1979/1981"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1979 January-July, 1980-1981"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1147,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(6 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 517"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1979,1980,1981],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1132","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1133"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1134","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Medicare, 1982","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1134#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1134","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1134"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1134","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Medicare","title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Medicare"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Medicare, 1982"],"text":["Welfare: Medicare, 1982","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(2 folders)","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1982"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1982"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1148,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(2 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1982],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1133","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1134"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1135","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance, 1973/1974","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1135#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1135","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1135"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1135","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance","title_ssm":["Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance, 1973/1974"],"text":["Welfare: National Health\n                  Insurance, 1973/1974","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1973/1974"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1973-1974"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1149,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1973,1974],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1134","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1135"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1136","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Nursing Homes, 1973/1979","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1136#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1136","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1136"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1136","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Nursing Homes","title_ssm":["Welfare: Nursing Homes"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Nursing Homes"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Nursing Homes, 1973/1979"],"text":["Welfare: Nursing Homes, 1973/1979","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1973/1979"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1973-1979"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1150,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1135","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1136"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1137","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50), 1973","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1137#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1137","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1137"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1137","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50)","title_ssm":["Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50)"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50)"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50), 1973"],"text":["Welfare: Older Americans Comprehensive\n                  Services Amendments of 1973 (S. 50), 1973","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1973"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1973"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1151,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1973],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1136","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1137"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1138","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations, 1973/1980","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1138#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1138","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1138"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1138","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations","title_ssm":["Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations, 1973/1980"],"text":["Welfare: Professional Standards Review\n                  Organizations, 1973/1980","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(2 folders)","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1973/1980"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1973-1980"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1152,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(2 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1973,1974,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979,1980],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1137","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1138"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1139","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Social Security, 1974","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1139#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1139","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1139"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1139","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Social Security","title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Social Security"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security, 1974"],"text":["Welfare: Social Security, 1974","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","box Box 518"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1974"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1974 August-December"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1153,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 518"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1974],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1138","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1139"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1140","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Social Security, 1974/1975","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1140#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1140","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1140"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1140","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Social Security","title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Social Security"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security, 1974/1975"],"text":["Welfare: Social Security, 1974/1975","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(6 folders)","box Box 519"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1974/1975"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1974 January-July, 1975"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1154,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(6 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 519"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1974,1975],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1139","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1140"}},{"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1141","type":"Item","attributes":{"title":"Welfare: Social Security, 1976/1977","breadcrumbs":{"id":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1141#breadcrumbs","type":"document_value","attributes":{"value":{"ref_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1141","ref_ssm":["viu_viu01886_c02_c1141"],"id":"viu_viu01886_c02_c1141","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssi":"viu_viu01886_c02","parent_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_ids_ssim":["viu_viu01886","viu_viu01886_c02"],"title_filing_ssi":"Welfare: Social Security","title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security"],"title_tesim":["Welfare: Social Security"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Welfare: Social Security, 1976/1977"],"text":["Welfare: Social Security, 1976/1977","Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files","(7 folders)","box Box 520"],"parent_unittitles_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"parent_unittitles_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","Series II: Legislative Files"],"normalized_date_ssm":["1976/1977"],"unitdate_other_ssim":["1976, 1977 November-December"],"level_ssm":["Item"],"level_ssim":["Item"],"component_level_isim":[2],"sort_isi":1155,"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"physdesc_tesim":["(7 folders)"],"containers_ssim":["box Box 520"],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"child_component_count_isi":0,"date_range_isim":[1976,1977],"_nest_path_":"/components#1/components#1140","timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z","collection":{"numFound":1,"start":0,"numFoundExact":true,"docs":[{"id":"viu_viu01886","ead_ssi":"viu_viu01886","_root_":"viu_viu01886","_nest_parent_":"viu_viu01886","ead_source_url_ssi":"data/uva-sc/viu01886.xml","title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"normalized_title_ssm":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"text":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982","10320-a, -b","ca. 310,200 items","There are no restrictions.","The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71","These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.","See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.","English"],"collection_title_tesim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"collection_ssim":["Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers \n         ca.\n         1954-1982"],"level_ssm":["collection"],"level_ssim":["Collection"],"unitid_ssm":["10320-a, -b"],"unitid_tesim":["10320-a, -b"],"repository_ssm":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"repository_ssim":["University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept."],"acqinfo_ssim":["These two additions to the Harry F. Byrd, Jr. Papers\n            were given to the Library by Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of\n            Winchester, Virginia, on January 14, 1981 (10320-a) and\n            December 16, 1982 (10320-b)."],"has_online_content_ssim":["false"],"physdesc_tesim":["ca. 310,200 items"],"accessrestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThere are no restrictions.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"accessrestrict_heading_ssm":["Access Restrictions"],"accessrestrict_tesim":["There are no restrictions."],"arrangement_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThe original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003e\n        \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\u003c/item\u003e\n          \u003citem\u003eSeries VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               \u003clist type=\"simple\"\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries C: Oversize Folder\u003c/item\u003e\u003citem\u003eSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71\u003c/item\u003e\u003c/list\u003e\u003c/item\u003e\n        \u003c/list\u003e\n      \u003c/p\u003e\n    "],"arrangement_heading_ssm":["Organization"],"arrangement_tesim":["The original folder arrangement of the Harry F. Byrd, Jr.\n         papers was entirely alphabetical. Because the collection was a\n         large one, several series were created by separating the files\n         pertaining directly to legislation from the others. All of\n         Byrd's papers, excluding the speech series, were in reverse\n         chronological order and this order has been maintained within\n         each year. The years have been arranged with the earliest year\n         coming first in sequence.","Series I: Speeches (Boxes 1-12)\n          Series II: Legislative Files (Boxes 13-527)\n          Series III: Transitional Legislative Files (Boxes\n               528-530)\n          Series IV: Administration Files (Boxes\n               530-541)\n          Series V: Personal Papers (Boxes 542-549)\n          Series VI: Publicity (Boxes 550-560)\n          Series VII: Public Activities (Boxes\n               560-588)\n          Series VIII: Miscellaneous Papers \n               Subseries A: Cassette Tapes (T-931-937)Subseries B: Daily Carbons (50 Cubics)Subseries C: Oversize FolderSubseries D: Card File Tray # 71"],"prefercite_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003ePapers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"prefercite_tesim":["Papers of Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Accession #10320-a, -b, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va."],"scopecontent_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eThese additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eDecisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in \u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eRecords Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories\u003c/title\u003e by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eCongressional Record\u003c/title\u003e inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026amp; 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eThe public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.\u003c/p\u003e\n      ","\u003cp\u003eSeries eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.\u003c/p\u003e\n    ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \n\u003ctitle type=\"simple\" render=\"italic\" href=\"\"\u003eVirginia is for Lovers\u003c/title\u003e), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          ","\u003cp\u003eCorrespondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr.\u003c/p\u003e\n          "],"scopecontent_heading_ssm":["Scope and Content"],"scopecontent_tesim":["These additions to the papers of \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., of \n         Winchester, Virginia, consist of ca.\n         310,200 items (588 Hollinger boxes and 50 cubics) ca.\n         1954-1982, chiefly papers pertaining to his years of service\n         in the United States Senate. These include speeches,\n         legislative files, transitional files from the beginning of\n         his Senatorial career, administrative files, publicity files,\n         public activity files, cassette tapes, printed material,\n         memorabilia, index cards, certificates and awards, bound\n         volumes, and photographs.","Decisions concerning the processing and retention of\n         individual files were made by the Curator based upon the\n         recommendations in Records Management Handbook for United States Senators and Their Repositories by Karen Dawley Paul, Archivist Senate Historical\n         Office.","The first series contains both typed manuscript and\n         electrostatic copies of speeches by Senator Byrd and\n         statements released by his office; copies of the \nCongressional Record inserts included by Byrd; and press releases\n         concerning speeches. This series is the only group of papers\n         in this collection kept by Byrd's staff in regular\n         chronological order. The remainder of Byrd's papers were filed\n         in reverse chronological order by the staff and that order has\n         been maintained for the rest of the collection.","The second and largest series in the collection consists of\n         Senator Byrd's legislative files which are listed\n         alphabetically in the box listing by folder heading and are\n         arranged in reverse chronological order within each year. The\n         filing arrangement used by Byrd's office changed in 1972 from\n         previous years; the original folder heading was retained for\n         individual files but the collection has been arranged in\n         several series for the convenience of the researcher. A\n         complete list of the folder headings can be found in the box\n         listing but several topics of interest are noted in this\n         paragraph. These include: agriculture (Boxes 13-24); \n         American Revolution Bicentennial\n         Commission(Boxes 25-27); armed services (Boxes\n         41-75); Byrd's committee work, the largest number of files\n         being for the \n         Armed Services Committee(Boxes 146-148)\n         and the \n         Finance Committee(Boxes 148-158);\n         correspondence with other Senators and Congressmen (Boxes\n         161-177); the Byrd Amendment concerning Judge Tenure (Boxes\n         187-188); the Supreme Court (Boxes 191-193); \n         Jimmy Carter's Policy on Energy (Box\n         226); the Energy Crisis (Boxes 227-239); the \n         New York City Bailout (Boxes 177-179); the\n         Arab-Israeli War and \n         Middle East conflict (Boxes 263-265,\n         271-273); the \n         Central America conflict (Boxes 266-268); \n         Iran (Boxes 270-271); the \n         Panama Canal Treaty (Boxes 274-283); \n         Rhodesia and chrome (Boxes 283-285);\n         relations with the \n         Soviet Union (Boxes 285-287); \n         Saudi Arabia (Boxes 287-288); \n         Henry Kissinger (Boxes 288-289); the \n         VietnamWar and public opinion (Boxes\n         291-295, \u0026 329); the restoration of citizenship to \n          Robert E. Lee (Boxes 328-329); the\n         Taft-Hartley Act (Boxes 359-362); political affairs (Boxes\n         383-392); communications from the office of the President\n         (Boxes 405-411); federal tax reform (Boxes 429-441); revenue-\n         sharing (Boxes 454-456); \n         Virginia affairs (Boxes 463-499); the \n         Portsmouth Public School controversy (Box\n         496); and Watergate and public opinion (Boxes 499-510).","The third series constitutes the transitional files, ca.\n         1964-1966, in use by Byrd's office when he was appointed to\n         complete his father's term in the Senate in 1965, including\n         memoranda files concerning upcoming legislation (Boxes\n         528-529), speech drafts for 1966 (Box 530), and civil rights\n         files, 1965-1966 (Box 528).","The administrative files comprises the fourth series of the\n         collection and includes memoranda to and from the staff and\n         the legislative and administrative assistants, White House\n         nominations, form letters, and other office concerns.","The fifth series consists of the personal papers of Senator\n         Byrd, including files concerning the controversy over the \n         Jack Anderson column about Byrd;\n         biographic material; Byrd business papers (1970-1972); \n          Byrd family papers (1954-1982); caricatures\n         of political figures by \n         Jeff MacNelly (Box 548) including \n          Harry F. Byrd, Jr., Richard M. Nixon, Mills Godwin, Gerald Ford, Henry Kissinger, Lyndon B. Johnson, and others;\n         miscellaneous photographs of Byrd with various groups and individuals (Box 549); and Byrd's \n         South Pole trip to commemorate the\n         fiftieth anniversary of the flight of his uncle, \n          Richard E. Byrd, over the \n         South Pole in 1929 (Box 549).","The sixth series contains publicity files, chiefly\n         newsletter responses from constituents, press correspondence\n         and requests, and newsclippings concerning the Senator and his\n         activities.","The public activities files in series seven has folders on\n         the \n         Annie J. Bronson Charitable Foundation;\n         appointments; donations; 1976 election congratulations,\n         campaign invitations and questionnaires (this is the only\n         campaign related material in this collection, except for a few\n         pieces of memorabilia); invitations accepted; memorablilia,\n         including bicentennial flags, first day covers, medallions and\n         commemorative coins, presidential ceremonial pens from \n          Jimmy Carter and \n          Ronald Reagan, campaign buttons, patches,\n         pins, and a 1970 election rubber stamp \"Virginians Vote for\n         Byrd\"; and VIP correspondence files, created by culling\n         especially notable correspondents from transitory and\n         temporary files not otherwise retained with the rest of the\n         collection. Correspondents are noted in the folder listing for\n         boxes 585-587.","Series eight consists of miscellaneous papers and materials\n         including cassette tapes removed from the collection and\n         stored separately, fifty cubics of daily carbons, 1973-1982,\n         which this department hopes to microfilm at a later date,\n         oversize material, and a card file tray containing 3 x 5 index\n         cards with the filing categories used by Byrd's office after\n         1972.","Correspondents include: Hank Aaron, David C.\n                  Acheson, Spiro Agnew, Lindsay Almond, Mayor Marion S.\n                  Barry, William C. Battle, Lloyd Bentsen, W. Michael\n                  Blumenthal, William F. Bolger, Daniel J. Boorstin,\n                  J.S.F. Botha, Chester Bowles, Patrick Buchanan, James\n                  L. Buckley (with his maiden speech, April 20, 1971),\n                  Warren E. Burger, and George Bush","Correspondents include: Joseph A. Califano, James\n                  Callaghan, Johnny Carriger (songwriter of \nVirginia is for Lovers), Jimmy Carter, William J. Casey, John B.\n                  Connally, John Warren Cooke, Robert Cranborne, Rowley\n                  Cromer, Virginius Dabney, John N. Dalton, Simcha\n                  Dinitz (Israeli Ambassador), Raymond J. Donovan,\n                  James B. Edwards, Julie Eisenhower, Melih Esenbel\n                  (Turkish Ambassador), Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Jerry\n                  Falwell, James Farley, Gerald R. Ford, Henry Ford II,\n                  B.G. Fourie (South African Ambassador), Vasco Vieira\n                  Garin (Portugese Ambassador), Arthur Godfrey, Mills\n                  E. Godwin, Jr., Barry Goldwater, Albert Gore, Sr.,\n                  Alan Greenspan, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, Armand Hammer,\n                  W. Averell Harriman, Ali Hedda (Tunisian Ambassador),\n                  Linwood Holton, Hubert H. Humphrey, Muriel Humphrey,\n                  Lyndon Baines Johnson, Clarence M. Kelley, James J.\n                  Kilpatrick, Henry A. Kissinger, Edward I. Koch,\n                  Melvin R. Laird, Henry Luce III, Mike Mansfield, and\n                  John O. Marsh, Jr.","Correspondents include: Frank McCarthy, George\n                  McGovern, Edwin Meese, Walter F. Mondale, Hans J.\n                  Morgenthau, Roger Mudd, Edmund S. Muskie, Paul H.\n                  Nitze, Richard M. Nixon, Frederick R. Nolting, Jr.,\n                  Sandra D. O'Connor, Charlton Ogburn, Shimon Peres,\n                  Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Donald T. Regan, William H.\n                  Rehnquist, J. Sargeant Reynolds (speech, April 21,\n                  1971), Eliot L. Richardson, Charles S. Robb, Oral\n                  Roberts, Pat Robertson, Nelson Rockefeller, David\n                  Rockefeller, William P. Rogers, Jane Russell, William\n                  Saxbe, James R. Schlesinger, Richard S. Schweiker,\n                  James C.H. Shen (Ambassador, Republic of China),\n                  George P. Schultz, William E. Simon, Howard K. Smith,\n                  Margaret Chase Smith, D.B. Sole (South African\n                  Ambassador), Berndt Von Staden (Federal Republic of\n                  Germany Ambassador), George Stevens, Jr., Sir John\n                  Stevens, Lewis H. Strauss, Robert S. Strauss, James\n                  D. Theberge (Nicaraguan Ambassador), Kenneth W.\n                  Thompson, Fumihiko Togo (Japanese Ambassador), John\n                  Tower, William M. Tuck, Stansfield Turner, John\n                  Warner, William H. Webster, W.C. Westmoreland, Murat\n                  Williams, Ardeshir Zahedi (Iranian Ambassador), and\n                  Elmo Zumwalt, Jr."],"userestrict_html_tesm":["\u003cp\u003eSee the \n          \u003cextref type=\"simple\" href=\"https://www.library.virginia.edu/policies/use-of-materials\"\u003e\n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy.\u003c/extref\u003e\u003c/p\u003e\n      "],"userestrict_heading_ssm":["Use Restrictions"],"userestrict_tesim":["See the \n          \n            University of Virginia Library’s use policy."],"physloc_html_tesm":["\u003cphysloc\u003e\u003c/physloc\u003e\n      "],"language_ssim":["English"],"total_component_count_is":1370,"online_item_count_is":0,"component_level_isim":[0],"sort_isi":0,"timestamp":"2026-06-23T07:35:01.921Z"}]}},"label":"Breadcrumbs"}}},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/viu_viu01886_c02_c1141"}}],"included":[{"type":"facet","id":"repository_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Repository","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","value":"University of Virginia, Special Collections Dept.","hits":1371},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982\u0026f%5Brepository%5D%5B%5D=University+of+Virginia%2C+Special+Collections+Dept."}}]},"links":{"self":"https://arvasarchive.org/catalog/facet/repository_ssim.json?f%5Bcollection%5D%5B%5D=Harry+F.+Byrd%2C+Jr.+Papers+%0A+++++++++ca.%0A+++++++++1954-1982"}},{"type":"facet","id":"collection_ssim","attributes":{"label":"Collection","items":[{"attributes":{"label":"Harry F. 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